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January 2007: 100 Very Best Restaurants

Reviewed by Todd Kliman , Ann Limpert , Cynthia Hacinli

A theatrical, grand culinary destination.


The Inn at Little Washington

309 Middle St.
Washington, VA 22747
Phone: 540-675-3800

Cuisines:
American, Modern

Opening Hours:

Wheelchair Accessible:
Yes

Nearby Metro Stops:
None nearby

Price Range:
Very Expensive

Dress:
Formal

Noise Level:
Intimate

Reservations:
Required

Special Features:
Party Space

Parking:
Valet

Website:
Click here to open in new window.

Best Dishes
Tin of Sin; sorrel soup with custards; sashimi; hot and cold foie gras; macaroni and cheese with ham and black truffle; veal sweetbreads; artichoke-filled pasta with braised artichokes; limoncello soufflé with Meyer-lemon ice cream.

Price Details:
Prix fixe menu from $138 to $168 per person.


 

Reader's Rating:
4 out of 5

No. 7: Inn at Little Washington 

“I don’t believe less is more,” the novelist Stanley Elkin said. “I believe that less is less, fat fat, thin thin, and enough is enough.” Patrick O’Connell is Elkin’s kind of maximalist. In an age when clean-lined dining rooms are the norm—and a way to keep soaring prices more manageable—O’Connell’s countrified pleasure palace piles extravagance atop extravagance, from the tasseled linen canopies in the terrace room to the gold-leafed ceiling and 17th-century oak floor in the living room to the plates hand-painted with 24-karat gold.

This devotion to excess is matched by rigorous execution—which explains why the poppy-seed rolls are the best breads you can find in the region—and a commitment to procuring the best products money can buy, which explains why the tuna, a fish whose ubiquity has rendered it often tasteless, is the freshest and most pristine you can find. O’Connell’s version of surf and turf—a thick, ruby-colored filet of seared tuna topped with a slab of seared foie gras—is a precis of the house style, a dish of such richness and luxury that it makes most elegant restaurants look flinty by comparison.

The sumptuousness never stops, but the Inn these days seems more institution than restaurant. The kitchen under O’Connell’s eye rarely errs, but it rarely risks—and for all the technical perfection, at times you might find yourself admiring more than enjoying a course. And in an age when dining out has become an interactive adventure, a playful conversation between chef and diner, dinner at the Inn can feel more like a scripted performance, right down to the staff’s banter.

It’s not for everybody, nor was it ever meant to be.

Reader ReviewsWrite your own review
 
Good Not worth the splurge
creativedc — June 10, 2009 5:14 PM
My husband & I recently celebrated our 10th wedding anniversary at the Inn. While the food was delicious, & the wine pairings spectacular, the overall experience did not meet my expectations. It felt like the staff were trying to act formal; it put More ...
This item is under review
 
Good Mr & Mrs Mills
millsed — February 24, 2009 9:19 AM
Beautiful restaurant tucked inside a quaint little inn in not so quaint Washington, VA. We opted for the tasting menu that was comprised of several courses paired with a fine wine. Each course was a delight in culinary expression. Dishes ranged More ...
This item is under review

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