Food

7 New DC Bars and Restaurants We Can’t Wait to Try

Hot openings around 14th Street, H Street, and beyond.

Live fire cooking at Maydan. Photograph courtesy of Maydan.

Maydan

1346 Florida Ave., NW

Live fire is at the heart of this atmospheric new restaurant from the Compass Rose team, which draws from home cooking traditions in  Turkey, Lebanon, Morocco, and beyond. Not only does the hearth produce flame-licked “Aleppo kebabs” and chermoula-marinated shrimp, it gives a warm glow to the gorgeous space. Plan on bringing friends—if you’re like us, you’ll want to try everything on the menu.

Maydan
Dishes at Maydan draw from grandmotherly traditions. Photograph by Photo by Jennifer Chase.

Miracle on Seventh Street a.k.a. the Christmas Bar

843 7th St., NW

The most festive bar in DC is back for another year of eggnog shots, Santa selfies, and yes, epic lines. Look for new drinks—we have our eye on that salted whiskey hot chocolate—new theme rooms (Chinese-Hanukkah!), and a lot of holiday cheer once you finally, finally get in the door.

Get in the holiday spirit at the Christmas Bar, which is back for another merry season. Photograph by Farrah Skeiky

Lucky Buns

2000 18 St., NW

Chef Alex McCoy is a bit of a burger wunder kid (case in point: his original Proper Burger). After dabbling in pop-ups, he’s set up permanent shop in a funky bar/restaurant in Adams Morgan. Don’t expect your average diner melt—the menu is filled with burgers and crispy chicken sandwiches from England, Southeast Asia, and beyond. If you’ve never tried an Aussie-style arm-dripper with chili sauce, pickled beetroot, grilled pineapple, and a runny egg—this is the place.

Chef Alex McCoy explores the burgers of Britain, Southeast Asia, and beyond at the new Lucky Buns in Adams Morgan. Photography courtesy of Lucky Buns.

Supra

1205 11th St., NW

DC’s first-and-only Georgian restaurant explores the delicacies of the Eurasian country—well beyond those cheesy kachapuri flatbreads (though they have several of those, too). Settle in to the wood-toned space for khinkali soup dumplings, chakapuli mussel stew with wine and sour plums, and a Georgian brandy cocktail or two.

Try khachapuri with egg yolk or other fillings. Photograph by Evy Mages

The Burmese Bodega

1309 5th St., NE

If you think New York bodegas rule the corner shop world, you’ve never tried the Burmese version. This new market/restaurant in Union Market packs in everything from Korean beauty products and Asian magazines to coconut-curry noodles and tandoor chicken-stuffed sandwiches. Never knew there was a Burmese equivalent to Bengay? They have that, too.

Toli Moli Burmese Bodega will have hundreds of food products. Photography by Farrah Skeiky.

Cork

1805 14th St., NW

Two 14th Street mainstays—Cork wine bar and market—are remade. Now in one location, the new digs include an all-day cafe for soups and sandwiches, a wine-centric restaurant for dinner and brunch, and retail space with cheeses, charcuterie, and more vino. Next up: an in-house winemaking operation for house rosé.

Cork Wine Bar has new digs. Photograph by Evy Mages

Bar Elena

414 H St., NE

Skeeball and spaghetti sandwiches come together at chef Adam Stein’s eclectic new H Street bar/restaurant, which takes over from Boundary Road. The owners’ “something-for-everyone” mentality means you’ll find a little of everything: games for the young and young-at-heart, a raw bar and lobster pasta for the culinary crowd, and two happy hours (early and late-night) every day of the week.

Play skeeball with a side of shrimp cocktail at Bar Elena. Photograph via Facebook.

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.