January 2007: 100 Very Best Restaurants

Reviewed by Todd Kliman , Ann Limpert , Cynthia Hacinli

Cathal Armstrong's seasonal cooking shines in this stylish bar, bistro, and tasting room.

Restaurant Eve

110 South Pitt Street
Alexandria, VA
Phone: 703-706-0450

Cuisines:
English/Irish/Scottish, American, Modern

Opening Hours:

Wheelchair Accessible:
Yes

Nearby Metro Stops:
King St.

Price Range:
Very Expensive

Dress:
Upscale Casual

Noise Level:
Intimate

Reservations:
Recommended

Special Features:
Late Night, Party Space, Kid Friendly

Website:
Click here to open in new window.

Best Dishes
Papri chaat; lobster bisque; crab bisque; bacon-egg-and-cheese salad; bouillabaisse packed with cod and clams; charcuterie; any foie gras preparation; tarte Tatin; Eve’s Temptation cocktail.

Price Details:
Bistro entrees, $25 to $35.
Tasting room menus, $85 and $110.
Weekday Lickity-Split lunch menu (in the bar), $13.50.

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Reader's Rating:
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No. 6: Restaurant Eve 

In the past two years, chef Cathal Armstrong and Meshelle Armstrong have upped Alexandria’s restaurant/nightlife profile with the playful and delicious Restaurant Eve. More recently, they’ve added the irreverent Eamonn’s with the cocktail-and-nibble lounge, PX, above it. And the empire continues to expand: The Armstrongs are adding a dining room downstairs and a bar and lounge upstairs.

You’d think that running two extra businesses plus overseeing a remodeling might sap energy from the flagship, but Eve is as exuberant as ever. Armstrong’s sourcing from local farms is impeccable, and if he can make it himself, he will.

House-made charcuterie, ballotine of free-range chicken, confit of house-cured pork belly—all are labor intensive, and all are on Restaurant Eve’s Bistro menu. Other highlights include bacon, egg, and cheese salad, crisp Muscovy duck leg with lentils, Casco Bay cod “clam chowder,” and buttermilk panna cotta.

In the serene Tasting Room, Armstrong stretches out with complex, thoughtful cooking that knits together his Irish upbringing, his French training, and his grasp of the American culinary moment. None of it feels stagey. You can move from a Cashel bleu cheese with brown bread and smoked-ham vinaigrette to a Jerusalem-artichoke velouté with black truffles to a butter-poached Maine lobster with ginger to a molten-chocolate caramel cake without thinking about the array of influences you’ve just passed through.