Food

8 New Restaurants to Try Now 

The Stacked, with pastrami, dijon, and slaw, at Smoked & Stacked. Photograph by Evy Mages

Smoked & Stacked 

1239 Ninth St., NW

Chef Marjorie Meek-Bradley (Ripple, Roofers Union) isn’t messing with corned beef at her new Shaw sandwich shop. It’s all about pastrami—piles of juicy, smoked n’ spiced brisket piled high atop homemade milk bread (that being said, the smoked chicken is also stellar). Early risers can hit the Convention Center eatery for breakfast sandwiches, while the lunch lineup yields DIY sandwich options and draft beer/wine.

Haikan, a new ramen shop from the Daikaya and Bantam King team, opens in Shaw. Photography by Jeff Elkins
Haikan, a new ramen shop from the Daikaya and Bantam King team, opens in Shaw. Photography by Jeff Elkins

Haikan 

805 V St., NW

The ramen gurus from Daikaya and Bantam King expand to Shaw with their biggest noodle shop yet. In addition to a fresh lineup of Sapporo-style soups, look for snack-friendly plates like Old Bay crab rangoons and ma po tofu poutine. Cocktails get equally creative (think sochu-yuzu sangria), which you can sip on a 40-seat patio.

Whitefish-salad and smoked-salmon bagel sandwiches at Bullfrog Bagels. Photograph by Scott Suchman.
The new Bullfrog Bagels restaurant offers the same great bagel sandwiches, plus creative eats like pastrami pasta.

Bullfrog Bagels

317 Seventh St., SE

The District’s most popular bagelry launches a second brick-and-mortar restaurant near Eastern Market. Owner Jeremiah Cohen offers a similar lineup of bagels and sandwiches from the H Street, Northeast flagship, but expands the lunch/dinner menus to include innovative eats like pastrami soup dumplings, house-made noodles with lox, and “Jewish ramen.”

Head to District Distilling's upstairs bar for a large collection of cocktails and spirits, plus hearty eats. Photography by Evy Mages.
Head to District Distilling’s upstairs bar for a large collection of cocktails and spirits, plus hearty eats. Photography by Evy Mages

District Distilling Co.

1414 U St., NW

The U Street corridor is home to an ambitious project: DC’s first distillery that also boasts a full-fledged bottle shop, restaurant, and bar. Ex-Bar Pilar chef Justin Bittner leads the kitchen, while former Corsair distiller Matt Strickland is behind the lineup of vodka, rum, gin, and whiskey (all in various stages of release). Pad the stomach with hearty eats like crispy suckling pig and dig into the extensive booze offerings.

Take your pizza on the roof deck at Little Coco’s. Photograph by Evy Mages

Little Coco’s 

3907 14th St., NW

The restaurateurs behind El Chucho, Bar Charley, and Slash Run are back with another neighborhood-oriented venture: a funky Italian joint in Columbia Heights. Chef Adam Harvey (formerly Jackie’s) crafts a modern menu with spuntini (snacks), creatively-topped pies like porchetta and smoked peaches, and homemade pastas. Head to the rooftop dining area for frozen bellinis or pitchers of craft beer in the sun.

The new Taco Bamba location opens with a variety of new dishes like these mushroom nachos, plus creative cocktails. Photograph by Greg Powers
The new Taco Bamba location opens with a variety of new dishes like these mushroom nachos, plus creative cocktails. Photograph by Greg Powers

Taco Bamba Vienna

164 Maple Ave. West, Vienna 

Chef Victor Albisu completes the first phase of expansion for his popular Falls Church taqueria (next year: Springfield, VA). The new, significantly larger Vienna space boasts a bigger menu with items like pork carnitas nachos, breakfast quesadillas, and a shareable grill platter. Also, for the first time: a liquor license (frozen margs!).

The owner of Al Tiramisu opens a modern Italian in Foggy Bottom. Photograph courtesy of Aperto
The owner of Al Tiramisu opens a modern Italian in Foggy Bottom. Photograph courtesy of Aperto

Aperto 

2013 Eye St., NW

Chef Luigi Diotaiuti, the owner of Dupont stalwart Al Tiramisu, debuts a modern Italian restaurant in the former Primi Piatti space. The Foggy Bottom lunch crowd can snag a three-course takeout lunch ($25), while both the afternoon and dinner menus offer plenty of options for lingering (fettuccine with crab, lamb chops scottadito). Take advantage of pleasant weather with negronis on the patio. 

BLT Prime by David Burke serves three varieties of aged steaks, plus whimsical sides like "couch potatoes." Photograph by Jeff Elkins
BLT Prime by David Burke serves three varieties of aged steaks, plus whimsical sides like “couch potatoes.” Photograph by Jeff Elkins

BLT Prime by David Burke

1100 Pennsylvania Ave., NW

Lobster-scrambled ostrich eggs, $120 steaks—and yes, wine by the spoon—are all part of the culinary lineup at the newly-opened Trump hotel restaurant and lobby bar. New York-based chef David Burke heads the luxe steakhouse (a sibling to nearby BLT Steak), which runs breakfast through dinner. 

Food Editor

Anna Spiegel covers the dining and drinking scene in her native DC. Prior to joining Washingtonian in 2010, she attended the French Culinary Institute and Columbia University’s MFA program in New York, and held various cooking and writing positions in NYC and in St. John, US Virgin Islands.