Larry Forgione's Signature Cafe at Lord & Taylor

Reviewed by Todd Kliman , Ann Limpert , Cynthia Hacinli

Retro sandwiches--near the shoes.

Larry Forgione's Signature Cafe at Lord & Taylor

5255 Western Ave., NW
Washington, DC
Phone: 202.362.9600

Cuisines:
Deli/Quick Bites, American

Opening Hours:

Wheelchair Accessible:
Yes

Nearby Metro Stops:
Friendship Heights

Price Range:
Inexpensive

Dress:
Informal

Noise Level:
Intimate

Reservations:
Not needed

Special Features:
Kid Friendly

Website:
Click here to open in new window.

Best Dishes
Tea sandwiches, such as egg salad, tuna salad, and chicken salad; frozen yogurt.


 

Reader's Rating:
No Reader Reviews

Tea sandwiches at Larry Forgione's Signature Cafe at Lord & Taylor in Chevy Chase. Photograph by Stacy Zarin-Goldberg.

Tea sandwiches at Larry Forgione's Signature Cafe at Lord & Taylor in Chevy Chase. Photograph by Stacy Zarin-Goldberg.

Honey, they’ve supersized the tea sandwiches at Lord & Taylor in Chevy Chase.

Used to be you’d get a triangle each of egg, tuna, and chicken salad plus a wedge of date nut bread with cream cheese. Together they added up to a whole sandwich. But that was when the eateries at L&T were known as the Bird Cage.

It’s a new day. Larry Forgione has taken over the restaurants now known as Larry Forgione’s Signature Cafes, and the sandwiches—a staple since the ’50s—have doubled in size. Though the price has gone up a couple of dollars, the ’50s-style, Junior League-ish fillers still ring retro—no capers in the tuna, no curry in the chicken salad. And they’re as delicious as ever.

In the old days, the triangles were served alongside tall, elegant glasses of rainbow-colored sherbet or a very grown-up salad bowl heaped with chicory lettuce, moundlets of shredded carrots and beets, and slivered radishes.

Now the tea sandwiches show up with fruit (unless you request a green salad), and a swirl of tart frozen yogurt that tastes like a leaner version of the yogurt gelato you find in Italy.

There’s no replicating the easy charm of that long-ago era, but there’s one thing the new supersized tea sandwich has over the old: It’s easier to share.