News & Politics

2012 Restaurateur of the Year

With talented chefs, million-dollar renovations, and a knack for charming powerbrokers, Ashok Bajaj has become one of Washington’s most successful dining impresarios.

Ashok Bajaj is the man behind some of the area’s buzziest restaurants, from power spots to food lovers’ destinations. Photograph by Scott Suchman.

Ashok Bajaj

At a time when many of Washington’s top restaurateurs are expanding far and wide–Michel Richard just opened a branch of Central in Las Vegas, José Andrés is planning a restaurant in Puerto Rico, and Todd Gray has a project in the Dominican Republic–Ashok Bajaj is content staying close to home. The longest trip between any of his six DC restaurants is four miles, the distance from his Penn Quarter supper club, 701, to his revamped Ardeo & Bardeo in Cleveland Park. No matter which Bajaj restaurant you choose–his portfolio also includes the old-world Indian Bombay Club, the forward-thinking Oval Room, the modern-Indian Rasika, and the Italian Bibiana–you can count on two things: a high level of refinement and a Bajaj sighting. Every night, he jumps into his Mercedes convertible and makes the rounds of his restaurants.

Bajaj has been pushing Washington’s restaurant scene forward for 23 years. But this year has been one of his best. He completely overhauled Ardeo & Bardeo, polishing up the dining room, installing a new chef, and making it a destination–this is the first year it’s landed on our list of 100 Very Best Restaurants. And he has announced a seventh venture, a sister restaurant to his popular Rasika, to open this spring in a luxury condo building in DC’s West End.

Asked why he hasn’t branched out to New York or London, the Delhi-born Bajaj smiles. “It would be fun, just for the kick of it,” he says. “But I enjoy being here. I love what I do, and I’ve never worked a day in my life.”

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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.