January 2007: 100 Very Best Restaurants

Reviewed by Todd Kliman , Ann Limpert , Cynthia Hacinli

A thrilling 30-plus course carnival of culinary surprises.

Minibar at Cafe Atlantico

405 Eighth St., NW
Washington, DC 20004
Phone: 202-393-0812

Cuisines:
Spanish/Portuguese, Modern

Opening Hours:

Wheelchair Accessible:
No

Nearby Metro Stops:
Archives-Navy Memorial
Gallery Place-Chinatown

Price Range:
Very Expensive

Dress:
Upscale Casual

Noise Level:
Chatty

Reservations:
Required

Parking:
Valet

Website:
Click here to open in new window.

Best Dishes
Olive-oil bonbons; “tumbleweed of beet”; cotton-candy-swathed eel; faux sun-dried tomatoes; salmon-pineapple “ravioli” with quinoa; roasted baby corn with sweet-corn purée; Thai frozen yogurt.

Price Details:
$125 per person.


 

Reader's Rating:
5 out of 5

No. 5: Minibar at Café Atlántico

A culinary high-wire act plays out twice nightly at this restaurant within a restaurant on the second floor of Café Atlántico. Seatings are at 6 and 8:30, on six stools at a sushi-style bar. Two chefs create some 30 morsels on a preset menu while you watch, smell, taste, and revel in food that is by turns witty, bizarre, playful, and sublime.

The presentation owes much to José Andrés’s old mentor, Ferran Adrià of El Bulli in Spain, but the format is Andrés’s own. Working with Minibar chefs Katsuya Fukushima and Ruben Garcia, he has crafted a dazzling science lab of a meal intended to wow at every turn.

By now such standbys as cotton-candy foie gras—a cube of foie on a stick crusted with corn nuts and swiped in cotton candy—and the deconstructed glass of white wine highlighting flavor notes from slivers of green apple to dabs of grape gelée have become classics. But there are always surprises: a fully cooked soft-boiled egg with sturgeon caviar; crunchy pork rinds sweet with maple syrup; confit of boneless chicken wing with tamarind, cilantro, and coconut; New New England Clam Chowder; and a beet meringue with pistachio sauce.

The one-bite format can leave some vaguely unsatisfied. But usually the show has the desired effect, and you walk out feeling that you’ve been part of a rare type of performance art.

Reader ReviewsWrite your own review
 
Excellent In Brief...
Jandru — January 23, 2009 2:19 PM
The one thing that I would want to make very clear to anyone who is thinking about Minibar, is it will be WORTH IT. Every penny of the bill. Every minute you spend hammering on the speed dial trying to get yourself a reservation and every day you More ...
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