Food

Washingtonian Readers’ Favorite Restaurants in 2018

For the 41st year, readers name their top places to eat.

Maydan’s beet borani dip, part of a multi-course holiday lamb feast. Photograph by Scott Suchman

When Rose Previte was planning Maydan, her Middle Eastern/Lebanese/North African restaurant off 14th Street, she worried nobody would like the place. Instead, she found herself with a runaway hit. In the year since its debut, Maydan has landed on our—and a slew of national magazines’—best-restaurants lists. Turns out it’s not just the professionals who love it (you already know that if you’ve tried to book a reservation): Washingtonian readers voted it 2018’s top newcomer. Read on for more favorites.

Best New Restaurant

1. Maydan14th Street corridor

A giant fire-spewing hearth—which puts out rustic roasted meats and vegetable dishes—is the centerpiece of this dramatic dining room.

2. Fancy RadishH Street

Rich Landau and Kate Jacoby—who also run Vedge in Philadelphia—work vegan wonders here. Don’t miss the “ramen” with miso carbonara.

3. A Rake’s Progress, Adams Morgan

Local, hyper-seasonal ingredients form the backbone of Spike Gjerde’s restaurant in the Line hotel.

Best DC Restaurant

1. The Dabney, Shaw

Never tried sugar toads or pawpaw? Get yourself to Jeremiah Langhorne’s Mid-Atlantic/Southern kitchen.

2. Rose’s Luxury, Capitol Hill

You don’t (necessarily) have to stand in line anymore—Aaron Silverman’s restaurant now takes a handful of reservations each night.

3. Le Diplomate, 14th Street

The French brasserie is still hugely popular—especially during chilly beef-bourguignon season.

Best Maryland Restaurant

1. Bob’s Shanghai 66, Rockville

This cash-only Chinese place is one of our favorite destinations for a dumpling fix, too.

2. Gringos & Mariachis, Bethesda

We’re fans of the margaritas, in flavors such as jalapeño-cucumber and ginger-hibiscus.

3. Volt, Frederick

The restaurant is in a lovely 19th-century brownstone, but the menu features such innovations as aerated cucumber.

A Rake’s Progress sits inside the Line hotel, formerly a church.

Best Virginia Restaurant

1. The Inn at Little Washington, Washington, Virginia

Patrick O’Connell’s pastoral fantasyland just earned a third Michelin star.

2. Ambar, Clarendon, Capitol Hill

These Balkan places are best known for all-you-can-eat deals any time of day.

3. Peking Gourmet Inn, Falls Church

Everyone in this 40-year-old dining room seems to be sharing a glossy Peking duck—for good reason.

Best Service

1. Rose’s Luxury, Capitol Hill. The thoughtfulness happens before you even get to the front door: The staff hands out warming drinks to folks shivering in line.

2. Pineapple & Pearls, Capitol Hill. Servers at Aaron Silverman’s tasting room manage to be both crisp and familiar.

3. L’Auberge Chez François, Great Falls. Everything about this Alsatian cottage is old-school, down to the servers’ red vests.

Best for a special occasion

1. Pineapple & Pearls, Capitol Hill

The price has risen to $325 a head—but that includes tax, tip, and drinks.

2. Rose’s Luxury, Capitol Hill

The private rooftop can be reserved for a blowout celebration.

3. The Inn at Little Washington, Washington, Virginia

Be sure to stick around for the tour of the kitchen, which is as over-the-top as the dining room.

The bar at the Clarendon location of Ambar.

Best Steakhouse

1. Ray’s the Steaks, Arlington

Steaks at this zero-pretension spot are both aged and butchered in-house.

2. Bourbon Steak, Georgetown

Sure, it’s a posh Four Seasons steakhouse, but our favorite things are the burgers, fries, and Bloody Marys.

3. Medium Rare, Arlington, Bethesda, Capitol Hill, Cleveland Park

The $22.95 set menu includes salad, fries, and culotte steak with an addictive secret sauce.

Best Seafood

1. Fiola Mare, Georgetown

Fabio and Maria Trabocchi’s sleek dining room specializes in Mediterranean fish and shellfish, both raw and cooked.

2. The Salt Line, Navy Yard

Chef Kyle Bailey channels New England at this breezy spot on the Anacostia River.

3. Hank’s Oyster Bar, Alexandria, Capitol Hill, Dupont Circle, the Wharf

Don’t overlook the cocktails at these snug oyster houses.

The Salt Line’s raw bar.

Best Brunch

1. Ambar, Clarendon, Capitol Hill

The all-you-can-eat spread at this Balkan restaurant includes meat pies and mini-burgers.

2. Le Diplomate, 14th Street

Pastry chef Fabrice Bendano shines in the morning—it’s worth springing for his basket of confections.

3. Farmers Fishers Bakers, Georgetown

The weekend buffet starts with cinnamon rolls and ends with cakes and pies.

Best Dessert

1. Milk Bar, downtown DC, Logan Circle, the Wharf

Christina Tosi’s bakery chain proffers nostalgic, Instagram-friendly truffles and cakes.

2. Baked & Wired, Georgetown

The best cupcakes—and cherry pie—in DC.

3. Ice Cream Jubilee, Navy Yard, 14th Street corridor

We love the seasonal flavors (apple-butter/oatmeal cookie, say) at Victoria Lai’s twin ice-cream shops.

Best French

1. Le Diplomate, 14th Street.

The kitchen excels with luxuries like foie gras parfait.

2. Chez Billy Sud, Georgetown.

The pretty dining room focuses on Larousse Gastronomique classics.

3. L’Auberge Chez François, Great Falls

Meat lovers: The choucroute garnie should be one of your bucket-list dishes.

Culurgiones—a Sardinian style of pasta—and butternut-squash tortellini at Sfoglina.

Best Italian

1. The Red Hen, Bloomingdale

Home in on the pastas, especially the famed rigatoni with fennel sausage.

2. Sfoglina, Van Ness, downtown DC

Trattorias with an upscale gloss—and an expansion to Rosslyn in the works.

3. Il Pizzico, Rockville

The no-reservations pasta house has long been popular for its mushroom ravioli and bucatini.

Best Latin American

1. Oyamel, Penn Quarter

Salt-air-topped margaritas and modern-Mex small plates.

2. El Sol, Shaw

Siblings Alfredo and Jessica Solis turn out the city’s best tacos.

3. Taco Bamba, Springfield, Falls Church, Vienna, Penn Quarter

The offbeat tacos get all the attention, but we’re here for the open-faced sopes.

The dining room at Unconventional Diner.

Best American

1. The Dabney, Shaw

Almost all the cooking in this Blagden Alley kitchen takes place inside a gigantic hearth.

2. Unconventional Diner, Shaw

David DeShaies imbues diner classics—meatloaf, pot pie—with a cheffy sensibility.

3. Ted’s Bulletin, 14th Street, Capitol Hill, Gaithersburg, Merrifield, Reston

Bring the kids for pop tarts stuffed with s’mores—and grab a boozy milkshake for yourself.

Best Japanese

1. Sushi Taro, Dupont Circle

It’s hailed for the pricey omakase, but Taro also serves some of DC’s best happy-hour food.

2. Daikaya, Penn Quarter

Excellent ramen on the ground floor and a quirky izakaya above.

3. Himitsu, Petworth

Carlie Steiner mixes superlative cocktails, while Kevin Tien creates fascinating Japanese-accented plates.

Toast with sea urchin at Himitsu.

Best Chinese

1. Tiger Fork, Shaw

Hong Kong–style barbecue and street snacks are the draw at this Blagden Alley kitchen.

2. Peter Chang, Rockville, Arlington

See those huge scallion bubble pancakes sailing through the dining room? Don’t leave without trying one.

3. Chiko, Capitol Hill

Pop in for a fiery noodle bowl—or sample the entire menu at the $50-a-person tasting counter.

Best Korean

1. Mandu, Mount Vernon Square

Chiko chef Danny Lee and his mother, Yesoon, are behind this home-style spot. The late-night menu, served till 1 am Tuesday through Saturday, is especially popular.

2. Kogiya, Annandale

This K-barbecue place, with its high-quality meats and panchan, is a fixture on our 100 Very Best Restaurants list.

3. Honey Pig, Rockville, Annandale, Centreville

Tabletop grilling and plenty of soju keep these barbecue joints hopping well into the night.

Best Indian

1. Rasika, Penn Quarter, West End

The crown jewels of Ashok Bajaj’s esteemed restaurant group are known for their refined curries, on-point service, and inventive small plates.

2. Indigo, NoMa

Spicier-than-most curries and stews in a cool, graffiti-scrawled carryout space.

3. Bindaas, Cleveland Park, Foggy Bottom

Shareable plates with a creative streak—go for the corn-and-pepper-topped uttapam (rice pancake) and bacon-and-cheese naan.

The kitchen crew at Chiko.

Best Burger

1. Duke’s Grocery/Duke’s Counter, Dupont Circle, Woodley Park

The Proper Burger, topped with Gouda, sweet chili sauce, charred red onion, and aïoli, hasn’t changed a bit over the years, and that’s a good thing.

2. Shake Shack, multiple area locations

We’re hooked on these diner-style cheeseburgers with creamy Shack sauce, onions, and pickles, too.

3. Lucky Buns, Adams Morgan

Chef Alex McCoy—who first created the Duke’s Grocery burger—offers myriad spins on the patty at his own spot. You can even get a burger salad.

Best Power Lunch

1. Joe’s Seafood, Prime Steak & Stone Crab, downtown DC

An excellent happy hour and those famous crab claws keep this former bank jam-packed.

2. Old Ebbitt Grill, downtown DC

One of the country’s highest-grossing restaurants. We like it for the raw bar—and the late-night happy hour.

3. Fiola, Penn Quarter

Fabio and Maria Trabocchi’s sophisticated Italian dining room is subtly sceney.

This article appears in the December 2018 issue of Washingtonian.

Ann Limpert
Executive Food Editor/Critic

Ann Limpert joined Washingtonian in late 2003. She was previously an editorial assistant at Entertainment Weekly and a cook in New York restaurant kitchens, and she is a graduate of the Institute of Culinary Education. She lives in Petworth.