Tuesday, April 25, 2006

One Brunch in Bangkok

We're big fans of fancypants Duangrat's Thai country cousin Rabieng. We'd read about their Thai Dim Sum Brunch, but only recently were we able to muster the energy for a good 25 minute drive just to enjoy our first meal of the day. DCist ran AC’s review of this brunch last week.




Those interested in checking out the brunch should note that some of the thirty dishes on the dim sum brunch menu are simply scaled down versions of regular menu items, and other dishes are offered on the regular menu as appetizers. Though we were admittedly disappointed that the brunch menu wasn't a total departure from their regular menu, it's a fun way to try a number of items that you might not normally order at dinner when their whole fried fish is competing for your attention.

We started off with the chive dumplings. Doughy on the inside, crispy and bubbly on the outside, these represent some of the best dumplings in the area.
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Another standout was the marinated beef strips with sticky rice. The rice was a little bit dry for sticky rice, but the strips of beef had an amazing coating of spices and a crisp texture.
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The “Som Tom” papaya salad was good, but we’ve had spicier and more flavorful renditions of this Thai classic.

The Grilled Green Curry Shrimp Satay erred on the side of savory instead of too sweet. And the shrimp had a nice grilled char.
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We were a bit disappointed by the Bangkok St. Peking Duck Rolls, as a plain flour tortilla was used instead of the sticky, pliable rice paper crepe that is normally used. Nonetheless, it's hard to resist roasted duck, scallions and hoisin sauce.
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The Crispy Tofu Triangles served with a sweet chili dipping sauce are a common appetizer at Thai restaurants, and AK can't ever get enough deep fried tofu. We were hoping that we might absorb a few beneficial isoflavones to cancel out some of the duck.

But Rabieng's great contribution to D.C. area Thai cuisine is the Rice Cake with Coconut Pork Sauce. It's also listed on the regular menu as "Tidbit" under "Old Time Classics." Slightly puffed rice was densely packed into a thin and crispy cake and paired with a deep red sauce of minced fatty pork with rich coconut curry.
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And the guava nectar, though from a can, was a refreshing brunch alternative to OJ.

For a Thai dim sum brunch, go to Rabieng:

5892 Leesburg Pike
Falls Church, Virginia
(703) 671-4222

—AC & AK



Monday, April 24, 2006

Balkan Burger Joint

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Last week, DCist ran AK's post, "The New King of Burgers?" about a glorious Bosnian carryout, Cosmopolitan Cafe. We always enjoy a good burger, but we take special interest when a new ethnic joint puts its own twist on a classic meal.

In this case, Cosmpolitan offers pljeskavica, the Balkans version of the hamburger: mildly spiced ground beef sandwiched by their thick and spongy grilled housemade bread and served with white onion slices, a dollop of sour cream, and ajvar, a red pepper condiment.
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Another great entree is the cevapi, a plate of homemade cylinders of ground beef, served with the house bread, ajvar, and a small refreshing salad.
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We also enjoyed the cheese burek, a baked filo dough pastry filled with a mix of cheeses. The pastry is buttery and flakey on the outside, and doughy inside- delicious.
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To drink, we tipped back the Slovenian soda, Cockta, an herbal beverage that tasted a lot like a cross between black currant and chinotto.
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Afterward, pop in next door to score some Croatian chocolates at Plava Laguna.

Wash a Bosnian Burger down with a bottle of Cockta at Cosmpolitan Cafe:

Cosmopolitan Cafe
5902A N. Kings Highway

Alexandria, Virginia
(703) 329-3303

Please note that on our last visit, the sign above the cafe still read "Abi II Carryout," which is a Salvadoran joint that swapped spaces with Cosmopolitan some months ago.

—AC & AK



Thursday, April 20, 2006

Donut Disturbed

Last weekend, AC and I went on a donut binge to three purveyors of weekend-only donut specials. DCist ran my piece on our excursion today, but we wish to share with you some extra photographic evidence of this truly gluttonous experience. Folks, we ate 11 donuts in two days. And they were all terrific.



Colorado Kitchen does a fancy schmancy twist on the cake donut (AC usually loves cake donuts, me, not so much, but these were a different story). A trio of made-to-order piping hot assorted consists of one of each of the three varieties: powdered sugar, honey and toasted almonds, and chocolate glaze (homemade with Callebaut cocoa powder). These are served Saturdays and Sundays for brunch.



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We washed our brunch down with vintage-style bottles of Cheerwine (mute the volume before checking out this insane Cheerwine tribute site), an old-school cherry soda from North Carolina. We were shocked to see that this faraway diner was selling such an obscure soda relic from a bygone era. But of course, we were pleased.

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The Tabard Inn is rather generous with their brunch donuts, serving up six airy, porous donuts dusted with cinnamon sugar, accompanied by a small bowl of totally extraneous vanilla whipped cream. These are served during brunch on Saturdays and Sundays.


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We paired these fried dough rings with a couple of pulpy, delicious mimosas and one of Tabard Inn's proprietary brunch creations, the Cherry Thyme Fizz, a potent mixture of cherry brandy, rosewater syrup, champagne, and a sprig of thyme. Highly recommended.

At 2 Amys, a tray of large, brown, sugary donuts is the first thing Sunday guests see upon entering. This tray represents a finite donut supply; when they’re gone, they’re gone. So get them early and eat them quickly.
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Despite the fact that these were the only donuts in our survey that were not made to order, they turned out to be our favorite. The extra eggy, cinnamony, and slightly lemony dough was terrific. And they were dusted liberally with cinnamon sugar and accompanied by a similarly treated donut hole.


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Get some donuts for brunch at the following three places:



Colorado Kitchen

5515 Colorado Ave. NW

Washington, DC

(202) 545-8280



2Amys

3715 Macomb Street NW

Washington, DC

(202) 885-5700



Tabard Inn

1739 N Street NW

Washington, DC

(202) 785-1277

—AC & AK





Monday, April 17, 2006

Little Ears and Smoky Pizza

On Thursday, AK’s post on Monroe’s Italian restaurant appeared on DCist. In addition to Trattoria da Franco, this is one of our Italian standbys. The food is surprisingly good for a restaurant that seems content with its identity as a neighborhood trattoria. And their honor system policy with the large bottles of serviceable red wine at each table makes them one of our favorite Thursday night destinations. Here’s what we had:

Monroe’s Bread: A thin pizza crust baked with olive oil and topped with rosemary, kosher salt, parmesan, and chopped fresh basil. This is one of the most original homemade breads we’ve eaten. Diners have the option of enjoying it along with their olive tapenade or eggplant caviar. We usually opt for both, although, in truth, the bread does its best work on its own.



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The Corona Bean Salad: A delightfully light salad of field greens, large soft white beans (possibly butter beans), mixed amid thinly sliced red onions and roasted red peppers, all tossed in the house vinaigrette. We recommend, crunching a bunch of fresh black pepper all over the salad.
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Orecchiete with Sausage and Radicchio: Al dente “ears” of pasta mixed with a rich sauce of a mix of sweet and spicy sausage and cabbagey radicchio.



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Pizza Alla Mo
: It may not look all that impressive compared to the blistery pies served up at Pizzeria Paradiso or Two Amys, but this is a powerful pie with a three dimensional sauce that blends smokey bacon, sweet red peppers, and tart tomatoes. You can smell its smokiness as soon as the plate hits the table. It's topped with rich and fruity green olives and mozzarella, all baked on Monroe’s signature thin crust.
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Panna Cotta
: A light and refreshing eggless custard with fresh raspberries, raspberry sauce, and whipped cream. See if you can persuade your waiter to leave off the raspberry sauce and the whipped cream, as they merely detract from the simple perfection of the panna cotta.

Enjoy pizza and pasta at Monroe’s:

Monroe's
603 Commonwealth Avenue
Alexandria, Virginia
(703) 548-5792

—AC & AK



Wednesday, April 12, 2006

The Great Egyptian Smokeout

For most folks, it’s just plain common sense that you don’t go to a hookah bar for the food. But then, I’m all about bringing danger back to food writing. Cairo Cafe, a divey hookah bar near Landmark, is one of the few Egyptian places in the area. The only other one that I happen to know about, situated over near Bailey’s Crossroads, also happens to be a hookah bar. We never got over the demise of Arlington’s Pasha, which was not only a fantastic Egyptian restaurant, but easily one of our favorite restaurants in the area. So we were hoping, albeit in vain, that Cairo Cafe might be a stealth culinary treasure.

As we approached Cairo Cafe from the parking lot, the hazey image of two mustachioed men of North African origin sitting near the window became more apparent, as a massive cumulus cloud of hookah smoke parted. They surveyed us impassively, as their industrious smokey output danced along the plate glass windows before recoiling inward toward the restaurant.

My father actually thought that there might be a no smoking section, and curiously enough, the young hostess/waitress did direct us to a designated non-smoking section, a concept that grew ever more ludicrous as the restaurant soon filled with the sickly sweet emanations of the nearby party of hookah enthusiasts.

Against our better instincts, we remained. The back of the menu touts their access to “Arabic Dish Network Programs” and their “Famous Middle East Table Games.” But we were focused on simply making it through our meal.

The baba ghanouj was heavy on the oil and the garlic, and lacked any of the smokiness of our favorite renditions of this Middle Eastern standard.

Dsc00432The bazinjan mekhalil turned out be baby eggplants that clearly had been festering in some sort of otherworldly brine. They arrived resting in a pool of oil, and when pulled apart revealed a sprinkling of chili flakes. Thoughts of this dish tortured me when I awoke in the middle of the night. Perhaps these baby eggplants had been hanging out in the fridge a bit past their expiration.

The assorted pickles had the sort of deep pickling that I usually take as an indicator of homemade origin. After the baby eggplants, however, my sour quotient had been reached.

I had never heard of Koshari before, a dish that sounded like it combined moujadarah, a traditional Middle Eastern rice and lentil dish, with spaghetti and tomato sauce. This starchy bonanza of rice, pasta, and lentils, featured an underwhelming tomato sauce and mushy noodles. The caramelized onions rescued it somewhat from blandness.

Dsc00434The falafel were among the worst we’ve ever had. The feeble exterior hardly had any crunch, and the interior was an unwelcoming mass of green. I’m not opposed to falafel with a green interior, but this was the bright green hue of astroturf.

Dsc00435The “bechamel” is their version of pastitsio, and was serviceable in an institutional sort of way, though it still featured the same toothless tomato sauce.


Dsc00425And the foul (pronounced “fool”) mudames was not unsavory, as it’s difficult to ruin fava beans. But it had none of the rich garlic, lemon, and oil flavor that this dish is known for.

Dsc00429While the food was absolutely dreadful, committed Chowhounds might nevertheless be interested to know that exotic beveraging opportunities abound. We tried their cold Karkadi, which was a somewhat sweet and rather tart hibiscus tea that had been initially brewed hot and then subsequently cooled by the addition of ice cubes. Orchid, listed under “Special Hot Drinks”, was hardly floral. According to the hostess, the actual orchid comes in the form of a powder that is then added to hot sweetened milk, resulting in a sweet but gloppy beverage of indeterminate taste. Similarly, the Fenugreek drink combined hot milk and a sprinkling of the herb fenugreek that could almost pass for Doogh’s ugly step-cousin. In short, it was very herbal, very milky, and very awful- sort of like if you dropped a bunch of Italian seasoning into warm dishwater.

So, yeah, it's a week later, and the notebook that I tote along on these little adventures still reeks of tobacco. Nice.

If you’re still curious, Cairo Cafe is located at:

6244 Little River Turnpike
Alexandria, VA
(703) 750-3551

—AC



Tuesday, April 11, 2006

The Kibbitz Room Blitz

Last Friday, we ditched work and headed to Baltimore to secure our marriage license. Although we were expecting a dull and interminable wait, the City of Baltimore’s Marriage License Department was surpisingly efficient and happened to host quite a scene.

One seemingly bewildered fiftysomething gentleman was demanding that the clerk somehow produce a record of his divorce despite the fact that his divorce proceedings occurred in an entirely different state. And a young couple were resplendent in their wedding day finery as their families waited patiently in the corridor for the affirmation of their new legal status as man and wife. The groom’s ensemble, in particular, was an amazing spectacle: two-tone faux alligator dress shoes and an oversized white coat with the two designer’s  banner tags still affixed to the sleeve.

Later, we were momentarily shocked when the clerk, in the midst of rolling through our questionnaire, asked us if we were first cousins. After an uncomfortable pause, she revealed that this is a standard question, and a few minutes later, we saw that there was, in fact, a checkbox following this question on the official documents. Still, you really haven’t experienced being a couple until a total stranger asks if you’re related to each other.

Dsc00455After all that drama, some real comfort food was in order, so we set out for Attman’s Delicatessen, one of the few remaining vestiges of what was once Baltimore’s fabled “Corned Beef Row”. Until recently, anyone who recommended Attman’s typically advised to be mindful of its bombed-out surroundings. But the current state of the neighborhood is indicative of the sweeping development that seems to be revitalizing much of Baltimore. In this case, that means Attman’s is a lonely antiqued outpost amidst a sea of brand new townhouses and condos that have yet to be occupied.

Dsc00437Attman’s was established in 1915 and has been owned and operated by the same family for three generations. Though the Washington area has a handful of Jewish delis, if you want to experience the atmosphere of a true deli time capsule, similar to Katz’s in New York, you have to schlep out to Attman’s.

Dsc00438And like Katz’s, much of Attman’s available wall and counter space is crowded with the same sort of schticky Jewish deli humor that begat “Send a salami to your boy in the army.”

Dsc00452_1Be sure to snag a can of Dr. Brown’s Black Cherry, or if you’re feeling more adventurous, Dr. Brown’s Cel-Ray, the unlikely celery soda classic. Then place your order, head over to the Kibbitz Room (note requisite Hebraic style font) and wait for one of the countermen to deliver the food and the bill. 

Dsc00445_1While some of the soups and appetizers are pleasing enough, they all fall short of the very high standard once set by the sadly defunct Second Avenue Deli. Still, if you crave deli food, you’ll settle for the dilapidated casserole that is Attman’s noodle kugel. And their matzo ball soup is pleasing enough, offering nice chunks of carrot and celery, and short, fat, doughy noodles to complement the matzo balls.

But if you’re a true deli purist, you’ll steer clear of these distractions and stick with the sandwiches and the pickles.

Dsc00451The pickles were amazing- jumbo sized and listed on the menu as “green or well-done”. Of course, we sampled both. The half-sour was refreshing with a solid crunch and the right hint of sour, while the full-sour boasted the vinegary power of a deep brining. Sadly, we didn’t think to try the pickled tomatoes or pickled onions, all of which were idling in a row of barrels along the counter.

Dsc00448We had to find a way to try all the standard deli meats in one meal. Pastrami is our absolute favorite, so we had to have one sandwich solely devoted to it. The hot pastrami had the perfect ratio of fat to lean, a nice smokiness, and an extra peppery end. Though it performed well solo, I’m a condiments junky and had to make use of Attman’s proprietary deli mustard.

Dsc00449We also wanted to make sure that we sampled their corned beef, salami, and brisket, so as to hit all of their potential deli meat high points. We’re usually opposed to the sort of double and triple decker sandwiches that often take up the majority of a deli menu. After all, if a meat is truly wonderful, we want it to be showcased in its own sandwich, and not merely be a supporting player. But given our circumstances, we decided to go for the one sandwich that would offer all of the other standard deli meats in the least offensive manner: The Whopper, an absolute monstrosity stuffed with corned beef, roasted brisket, salami, swiss, cole slaw, and Russian dressing.

Dsc00436_1But instead of eating it as it’s intended, we basically deconstructed the Whopper into three separate sandwiches. The salami was a real disappointment with no rigidity and barely any spicing. We should have requested slices of their presumably housemade hard salami instead. But the corned beef was wonderful, and like the pastrami, featured just the right amount of melt in your mouth fattiness. And we almost forgot about the brisket, which was unceremoniously tucked away at the bottom of the sandwich. The brisket was definitely house roasted, juicy, and full of rich, beefy flavor.

Dsc00450We had a sampler of their rugelach for dessert, but like the appetizers, they fell short of the deli standard. Rugelach need to have a crunchy exterior, a chewy interior, and be studded with walnuts and raisins. But these rugelach were feeble and doughy, somewhat satisfying if you require a sweet ending to all that salt and pickling, but otherwise unremarkable.

Check out Attman’s Delicatessen for corned beef, pastrami, brisket and pickles at:

1019 E. Lombard St.
Baltimore, MD
(410) 563-2666

—AC



Paris Via Saigon Via Canton

Yesterday, DCist ran AC's review of Hong Kong Palace: A Feast Royale at Hong Kong Palace. Hong Kong Palace is a fantastic Cantonese restaurant in Falls Church that also surprised us with their French Style Steak, an amazing French Vietnamese inspired dish. As such, we count this among one of the most interesting Chinese experiences since our visits to Chinatown Express. Here's what we had:

The French Style Steak, a daily off-menu special, offers small chunks of steak sauteed in a light caramel sauce until crispy on the outside, sprinkled with crispy bits of garlic, and served with pickled vegetables in a fried rice-paper shell:
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The House Special Chicken, a whole slow-cooked boiled chicken served in small bone-in chunks with a ginger-scallion sauce:
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Sauteed Snow Pea Leaves
, hearty greens sauteed with cloves of garlic:
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Hot Sweet Beans Soup, a mucousy dessert soup that AC couldn't get enough of. It had tender mung beans and tiny, translucent pearls in a brackish yellow broth:
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Enjoy French Style Steak at Hong Kong Palace:

6387 E. Leesburg Pike
Falls Church
(703) 532-0940

—AK & AC



Thursday, April 6, 2006

The Holy Grail of Beveraging

This past weekend, I conducted a solo scouting mission through a broad swath of Alexandria and Annandale. I walked off with quite a haul: from Korean/French baked treats to Peruvian ice creams to South Asian sweets. But the most ground-breaking find amongst my trove turned out to be an Indian soda.

I stopped in at Shivam Music & Spices at Seoul Plaza, hoping that they might have a few scuffed and dusty bottles of Indian soda tucked away in the back. Sure enough, after walking past shelves stacked high with Bollywood DVDs and Bhangra cassettes, I saw a cluster of sodas peeking out from the lower shelves of their refrigerator.

Dsc00368I’ve had Thums Up previously, but the logo and its accompanying misspelling are just so eye-popping, I couldn’t resist buying it again. Though I remember the flavor as being similar to Mexican Coke, Thums Up actually has a much drier, more bitter taste than most colas. And it has a great deal more carbonation than Coke. Indeed, the Thums Up website implores the consumer to “Taste the Thunder!” and touts its “confident, mature, and uniquely masculine attitude.” I suspect some of that “thunder” may be from a little extra caffeination, as I’m feeling an amount of pep somewhat greater than Coca-Cola but somewhat less than Jolt. According to Wikipedia, Thums Up was originally introduced in India in 1977 to replace Coca-Cola’s withdrawal from the Indian market, but was ultimately acquired by the Coca-Cola Company in 1993.

Dsc00380_1But this unassuming bottle of Duke’s turned out to be my beveraging Holy Grail. At first glance, Duke’s looks like it wouldn’t be out of place idling in the cooler at an Esso station in 1964. In fact, I wasn’t even sure that it was necessarily of Indian provenance. And its light amber contents made me think it was probably a ginger ale. But once I was able to scrutinize it more closely, I discovered that the bottlecap read “Duke’s Masala Soda.” Very promising. As soon as I pried the bottlecap off, I discovered that they really did mean “masala”, as in the  mix of spices commonly used in Indian food. In fact, the spicing was so powerful that AK started coughing from just a whiff, and I nearly sneezed when I passed it under my nose. The only other soda to have provoked that sort of physical reaction is Blenheim's Hot Hot Ginger Ale.

It seems like they added the masala flavoring over a base of very weak ginger ale. But somehow Duke's Masala Soda works. You may not like it, but it’s unusual enough that you’ll likely finish the whole bottle before deciding how you feel about it. I think it’s one of the exotic beveraging greats- up there with Jarritos Jamaica and Sangria Senorial. And oddly enough, further scrutinization of the bottle cap has revealed that Duke’s Masala Soda is a Pepsico product. I’m assuming that, like Coca-Cola’s acquisition of Thums Up, Duke’s must have been a homegrown Indian company that was later acquired by Pepsico.

Dsc00404I also couldn’t pass up scoring this box of “Psyllium Husk!” The Art Deco style packaging looks like it hasn’t changed since its introduction 65 years ago. And you’ve gotta love the inexplicable antique telephone logo for a product that is essentially India’s answer to Metamucil: dried seed husks that apparently alleviate constipation when “taken accordingly to need with a glass of water, syrup, milk, fruit juice or salted curd or lassi.”

Dsc00420But the best part about the packaging is that the factory that churns this stuff out is apparently a selling point. How else to explain the fact that The Sidphur Sat-Isabgol Factory is listed in a font that’s only slightly less prominent than the name of the product itself, and the background features a row of factory buildings and two smokestacks offering evidence of the industry within. Though I haven’t yet required the services of the psyllium husks, rest assured that if I ever do, I’ll be taking it accordingly with salted curd.

Check out Shivam Music & Spices to score your own bottle of Duke's Masala Soda at:
4231-C Markham St.,
Annandale, VA
(703) 916-8616

—AC



Wednesday, April 5, 2006

Whole Fresh Lamb

This week on DCist, read AC's review of Jerusalem Restaurant: "We Found the Holy Land, and it's Off Route 7". Tucked away in a gritty shopping center, this excellent Palestinian restaurant beckoned us to come inside with its window stencil promising "Whole Fresh Lamb."

It would be unfair to list one or two of the items as highlights, as the entire feast (and it was--we had a lot left over) was outstanding. Here's what we had:

A fantastic salad, packed with feta cheese and fresh vegetables in a light oil and vinegar dressing:



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Foul madammas, a stew of tender fava beans, lemon juice, olive oil, and garlic:



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Maklouba, a traditional lamb, rice, and vegetable dish, accompanied by a homemade yogurt dressing:

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Mindi
, a house special,tender pieces of lamb on the bone cooked in foil along with sauteed onions and sticks of cinnamon, along with a generous portion of basmati rice. This dish truly blew us away:



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Their fresh, super doughy pita came out all puffed up from the oven, and was the perfect medium for all that lamb:
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For dessert, we had om ali, a sort of bread pudding in
a light custard with liberal amounts of golden raisins and shredded coconut. AC counts om ali as one of the best Middle Eastern treats he's ever tasted:



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And their wonderful tea provides just enough caffeinated motivation to get on with your day:
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Grub on some maklouba and mindi at:

Jerusalem Restaurant
3407 Payne Street
Falls Church
(703) 379-4200



—AK & AC



Tuesday, April 4, 2006

Hole in the Wall Fattoush

After a day of shopping in Old Town, I left lunch in the capable hands of my friend KS. She settled on Old Towne Deli, a shabby little luncheonette on Washington Street. Admittedly, I was a bit worried as to what could possibly be redeeming about this place; I was expecting just a laundry list of cold and hot sandwiches and maybe a few standard issue salads. While those items do comprise the bulk of the menu, buried on subsequent pages of the menu were a couple of Greek deli surprises.

KS’s choice was one of these specialties called Our Famous Salad Sampler. The description didn't seem too remarkable (a simple salad with or without chicken), but her brave choice inspired me to find out what other specialties this place was hiding. Toward the end of the menu, I discovered their Athenian Chicken, confirmed by the cashier and a customer as being one of the most popular dishes. It involves several pieces of grilled chicken on a bed of yellow (saffron?) rice with pita, tzatziki (a light yogurt and dill sauce), and a small Greek salad. Though the chicken could have been more flavorful and much juicier, the meal really hit the spot, and the tiny salad was surprisingly refreshing.

KS’s salad on the other hand, was out of this world. In fact, the boring “salad sampler” moniker was totally misleading. The salad is actually a Mediterranean specialty called fattoush, which is a basic salad of Romaine lettuce, tomato, cucumber, green pepper and vinaigrette that is then enhanced with toasted pita chips and a boatload of sumac, a very mild sour burgundy-colored spice. It was so simple, but absolutely delicious and executed with the freshest ingredients, including a lemon herb vinaigrette. Diners have the option of ordering it with chicken, but KS improvised off-menu style by specially requesting the gyro meat (despite my initial skepticism). Ordinarily, I would consider it high sacrilege to top a fattoush salad with gyro meat, or any other meat for that matter, but the gyro meat was tender and tasty and actually went well with the hearty salad.

On my next trip, I will definitely get my own fattoush salad and also sink my teeth into the giant wedge of homemade baklava I saw chilling as I waited for my meal.

After a lazy afternoon of bumming around Old Town,
try an outstanding fattoush salad at:

Old Towne Deli
109 N. Washington Street
Alexandria, Virginia
(703) 836-8028



—AK



Monday, April 3, 2006

Jewel of Swabia

So we're super stoked to announce that we'll each be contributing an article every week to DCist. In fact, AK's first article, a review of Bistro Europa, ran last Friday and can be found at this link. We'd love it if you checked it out.

DCist typically includes just one photo with each of their posts, so we thought we'd publish the other photos from our meal. That way, those interested in checking out Bistro Europa have a fuller representation of what to expect. And those of you who are just interested in seeing whether we made absolute pigs of ourselves can confirm that we did, indeed, make absolute pigs of ourselves.

Since AK wrote a full review, we're not going to reprise her commentary here, and you really should be reading it anyway. We'll just be posting the surplus pictures and a sentence indicating what each item is. In fact, two of our posts each week will now conform to this format, as we not only want to be informative, but also can't help shamelessly plugging our DCist efforts. Beyond those two posts, we'll continue running content that is exclusive to Suburban Tasteland- probably two additional posts a week, perhaps three if we're unusually productive.

Here's the Wiener Tafelspitz, which is boiled brisket with a horseradish cream sauce, a potato dumpling and white cabbage:

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This is the Schweinshaxe, a roasted pork shank with cabbage, and a potato dumpling:

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And this is the Schwarzwalder Kirsche Torte, or black forest cake:

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Check out Bistro Europa for a glass of pilsner and a bowl of maultaschen at:

715 King Street
Alexandria, VA
(703) 549-0533

—AC & AK