Rumi’s Bistro

Rumi’s Bistro, web site, 523 Maple Avenue, Vienna, VA, 703- 242-2138, where Nizam’s used to be. (Metro Trip Planner – opens in new window) [Yelp]

Excellent Afghan, this place earns a regular spot in my repertoire. The Afghan take on fesenjan (walnut and pomegranate sauce) is tasty and hard to get elsewhere. Good Aushak. Truly delicious Dulme (pepper stuffed with ground beef, rice around it, and on top yogurt sauce). All the dishes here seem to be at least good, note however it is slightly more expensive than many other Afghan places around the area, a main dish can run $18 for instance. There is also a kabob place downstairs (Kabob Tavern, Zabihah), cheaper and more mom and pop in feel, run by the same owners.

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Chasin’ Tails, Cajun Seafood and Bar

Chasin’ Tails, Cajun Seafood and Bar, web site, (it is in The WestLee building, Google Maps does not display this address properly, use 2198) 2200 N Westmoreland Street, Arlington, VA, 703-538-2565 (Metro Trip Planner – opens in new window) [Google | WaPo | dishtip | Washingtonian | FallsChurchTimes | NoVA Mag | Don Rockwell | Yelp]

The name of the place says it all. I had good catfish there, good fries, good rice and red beans. I didn’t have time to try the signature dish of boiled crawfish, as spicy as you want them. The place does not offer you a fork but expects you to eat everything with your hands, a sign of civilizational advance I would say. Currently I would rate this place as the Cajun leader of the area. It looks distressingly corporate, and the food is too salty, but still it is good. Worth a try.

When you are done walk down two doors to the left to One More Page Books, excellent, and hardly known, most evenings they close at 8 so maybe start with the bookstore first.

Also see “Poker-Playing Brothers Hope to Cash in With New Westlee Eatery.”

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Hot Spot (Hot Spot Hot Pot Restaurant)

Hot Spot, web site, 3232 Old Pickett Road, Fairfax, VA, 703-537-0325 (Metro Trip Planner – opens in new window) [Google | Don Rockwell | Yelp]

This is Chinese food, exactly the kind of hot pot meal which has grown so popular in China itself. But note it is run and (mostly) patronized by Koreans. Fear not, the quality is excellent and the ma la spicy broth is as good and as authentic as you could expect. $22.95 for all you can eat is a bargain because the execution on ingredients is strong. The place fills up early, so make sure you have a reservation, and also make sure you have at least 90 minutes to actually spend over the meal itself. Recommended.

From the web site: “Hot Spot is our mixture of Chinese hot pot and Japanese Shabu-Shabu with a Korean Flair. We can unofficially refer to it as ‘Asian-style fondue.’”

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Mio

Mio, web site, 1110 Vermont Avenue NW, Washington, DC, 202-955-0075 (Metro Trip Planner – opens in new window) [Google | WaPo | dishtip | Washingtonian | City Paper | Don Rockwell | Yelp]

Let’s start with the good news. This is an entire restaurant of Puerto Rican food, a cuisine hard to come by in these parts. It has more Puerto Rican dishes than just about any restaurant in Puerto Rico proper, namely dozens. So it’s worth going. But then there is the bad news. It tastes good but not great and indeed not even excellent. Just OK. Furthermore it is not cheap. And for others, the trendiness of this place may be further bad news. Now here’s the “can’t decide whether this is the good or bad news”: I suspect if you ordered every item on the menu, and figured out which were the best ones, you could have a properly good meal here. But for most of you, that’s not in the cards.

So this is a place to be tried, but revisited only if you can crack the code, which I couldn’t.

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Pictures on ethnic menus

Blake Shurtz, a perceptive MR reader, asks:

What are your thoughts on pictures, or a lack thereof, on ethnic food menus? Do you think better dishes have pictures? Why doesn’t every dish have a picture? The logic of fast food is to show pictures/numbers for non-english speakers to be better informed, but the converse doesn’t seem to happen as often.

Pictures are most likely a good sign when they are dingy and the menu plastic is peeling off. Even then the food may be bad, but at least you know you have a mom and pop operation which is not very polished on the tech side. “Nice” pictures are a bad sign. Pictures are least likely to be a bad sign for Vietnamese food, when they are basically neutral and also fairly common. Think of the Vietnamese as trying to go mainstream with their food but in any case failing. Pictures for Thai food are becoming a worse sign over time. As more people come to learn Yam huapli thot, the pictures are coming to signal that the restaurant is making a determined appeal to uninformed buyers. There is a subset of cranky but excellent Chinese restaurants that offer (non-corporatized) pictures of some of their dishes, including those with tofu. This segment of the market is dwindling but still can be found. The choice of what gets a photo is determined by the expected quality of the image (whole fish get showcased), rather than the taste of the dish per se.

Originally posted on Marginal Revolution – click to see comments and suggestions.

McDonalds Bangalore menu, By Charles Haynes

McDonalds Bangalore menu, By Charles Haynes

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Shanghai Taste

Shanghai Taste, 1121 Nelson Street, Rockville, MD (in the Woodley Gardens Park Shopping Center, right next to I-270, on the east side of the highway, north of Montgomery Avenue/Rt. 28, which is I-270 exit 6), 301-279-0806 (Metro Trip Planner – opens in new window) [Gold Star Plates | Don Rockwell | Yelp]

Ignore the regular menu, you need to order from the Chinese menu, a translation of which can be found here. Get the Xiao Long Bao (soup dumplings), which though not as good as those from NYC or California, are still pretty good, probably the best of our region. Those are the dumplings filled with liquid. If need be ask the waitress for further help but stress your bona fide credentials. The fish dishes on the Chinese menu are pretty good. IGNORE THE REGULAR MENU. This place is small and it fills up quite easily, so plan to arrive early. It is nice to have a new and fairly unique real Chinese restaurant in the basic repertoire, recommended.

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Dinner with Fuchsia Dunlop

I am pleased to have shared a meal at A&J Manchurian restaurant, in Rockville with the charming Fuchsia Dunlop. You may recall that Fuchsia has written what I consider to be the very best Chinese cookbooks in English and indeed some of my favorite books of all time. She was in town to speak at Georgetown University and to promote her new book Every Grain of Rice: Simple Chinese Home Cooking.

Fuchsia Dunlop, Copyright Colin Bell

Fuchsia Dunlop, Copyright Colin Bell

Here were a few topics of conversation and related points:

1. To what extent did excellent Chinese food, in China, go underground during the 1960s and 70s, or to what extent did those traditions need to be reconstructed?

2. Why is there good Chinese food in Panama and Tanzania (my claim not hers), but not in most of Europe, least of all Italy? Why does Latin America have so little good Chinese food?

3. Should the advanced state of Chinese food in the 18th century, relative to European food, cause economists — including Adam Smith– to revise upward their estimates of Chinese standards of living?

4. Her books are effectively written, in part, because the points are continually reduced to their simplest elements, yet those simple bits are woven together to construct and reveal multiple layers of complexity.

5. The Chinese servers seemed unsurprised by her effortless fluency in Mandarin.

6. When speaking in the United States she is often taken to some local’s idea of a good Chinese restaurant. A&J was her proposal. She was surprised that northern Virginia has restaurants which are exclusively or in significant part Peruvian-Chinese, Indo-Chinese, and Korean-Chinese.

7. To what extent do we live in an unusual temporary bubble of easy foreign access to China?

8. I consider her Hunan book to be her most significant and original achievement, but Every Grain of Rice is the most useful single all-purpose Chinese cookbook she has written. It is especially good on the vegetarian side.

9. Each of us wished to defer dictatorial ordering rights to the other.

10. At what age do people learn or discover the determination to carve out a life of (relative) freedom for themselves? To what extent is their ability to achieve such a life the result of luck or of skill?

11. The cucumber salad in hot garlic sauce was very good. No cookies.

Originally posted on Marginal Revolution – click to see comments and suggestions.

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*Every Grain of Rice*

That is the new book by Fuchsia Dunlop and the subtitle is Simple Chinese Home Cooking. The first recipe I tried (tonight), the vegetarian tofu, was an absolute knockout.

Two of Fuchsia’s previous books Revolutionary Chinese Cooking: Recipes from Hunan Province and Land of Plenty: A Treasury of Authentic Sichuan Cooking, are two of my favorite books of all time. Not just two of my favorite cookbooks, but two of my favorite books period. They offer much more than just a series of recipes.

I will buy everything she writes, forever.

Originally posted on Marginal Revolution – click to see comments.

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Rus-Uz Restaurant

Rus-Uz Restaurant, 1000 N Randolph St, Arlington, VA, 202-468-8472 (Metro Trip Planner – opens in new window) [NoVA Mag | Yelp]

Worth a visit, though it could be better. The appetizers are only so-so and rely too much on the qualities of “fried” and “bready.” The manti and the fried pasta with lamb (your best choice) were both quite good. This is the unusual restaurant where the main courses are better than the small dishes. The salads have that Russian mayonnaise thing going, ugh. I liked what I had, they don’t have enough variety here, but still at the very least you should go. It also draws an interesting crowd of Uzbekis and Russians. Right near Ballston Metro.

Uzbek cuisine – Wikipedia

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Thanh Van Restaurant

Thanh Van Restaurant, web site, 6795 Wilson Blvd. #37, Falls Church, VA (Eden Center inside the corridor near the western side of the center), 703-639-0901 (Metro Trip Planner – opens in new window) [Don Rockwell | Yelp]

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All-vegetarian and it appears to be all-vegan as well. Their Hue Spicy Soup is excellent and has one of the most interesting broths around. Their pancake is juicier and crisper than average. Overall the menu is limited but there are additional items on a buffet, of varying quality. For a vegetarian interested in Vietnamese, this place is a godsend, for others it is nonetheless above average and worth having in the repertoire.

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Posted in Eden Center, Falls Church/Seven Corners, Vegetarian, Vietnamese, Virginia | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments