Palermo, Sicily bleg

In a bit of time I will be there for four days. Please tell me what I need to know, food of course included. I’ll be able to do a day trip, but mostly I’ll be in Palermo.
Originally posted on Marginal Revolution – click to see comments and suggestions.
Also see “Palermo notes” on Marginal Revolution.

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Huascaran Restaurant

Huascaran Restaurant, web site (flash and music), 3606 Mount Vernon Avenue, Alexandria, VA, 703-684-0494, right across from the Birchmere (Metro Trip Planner – opens in new window) [Yelp | Metromix]
This is a broadly average Peruvian restaurant with lots of local color and atmosphere. Its distinguishing feature is that they serve cuy – guinea pig – on a regular basis. Technically it is listed as a special, so call ahead, but usually they seem to have it. The sauce is delicious, especially on the potatoes. The key to eating the cuy is to chew on the fatty skin and the sauce and not obsess over getting all the meat. You can’t, not even if you use your fingers and teeth, as you ought to. Overall this restaurant is not perfect but it has high points and I definitely recommend it as a unique experience.

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Posted in Alexandria, Peruvian, Virginia | Comments Off on Huascaran Restaurant

Sei

Sei, web site, 444 7th Street NW, Washington, DC, 202-783-7007 (Metro Trip Planner – opens in new window) [Washingtonian | WaPo | Don Rockwell | Yelp]
Asian fusion, most of all Japanese but not just. If you go heavy on the small dishes and the sushi and sashimi you can have an excellent meal. The wasabi guacamole is quite interesting, as are the excellent pork buns. The “fish and chips” rolls are recommended as are many of the other rolls. Not cheap. All-white interior with a shi-shi crowd. Overall I have been glad the two times I ate here but beware that at least half of the main courses are boring. If you are afraid of leaving hungry, just stock up on the pork buns.

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Posted in Asian (Pan-Asian), Chinatown/Verizon Center, DC, Japanese, Sushi | Comments Off on Sei

Mobile, Alabama bleg

I’ll be there soon and I’ll have a free day — maybe even a day and a half — and I’m wondering what to do. For all the talk about markets in everything, I can’t find a good guide book on Alabama. This worries me only a little. There is Alabama Off the Beaten Path but first I would like to know the path. Your suggestions are very much welcome and since they are coming in an intellectual vacuum they will have even more influence than usual. (Imagine handing Road to Serfdom to a thirteen-year-old.) What and where does one eat? I’ll also be driving on to a talk in Biloxi, in case you know of anything interesting, or any good food, on the Mobile-Biloxi route.
I am, in fact, very excited to be visiting Mobile for the first time.
Originally posted on Marginal Revolution – click to see comments and suggestions.
Also see “Fairhope, Alabama” posted on Marginal Revolution.

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Himalayan Heritage

Himalayan Heritage, web site, 2305 18th Street NW, Washington, DC, 202-483-9300 (Metro Trip Planner – opens in new window) [WaPo | MenuPages | AllMenus | Don Rockwell | Yelp | Gayot]

Both Nepalese and Tibetan, I am a big fan of this place. The momos — dumplings — are excellent. Anything they do with beans is recommended. The spicy chicken dishes, including the different forms of chicken barbecue, are very tasty and different from what you can get elsewhere in the area. This is quite simply a very good ethnic restaurant with a pleasant environment and it does not cost a fortune either.

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Posted in Adams Morgan/Mount Pleasant, Current Favorites, DC, Nepalese, The Best, Tibetan | 3 Comments

Michael’s Noodle House

Michael’s Noodle House, 10038 Darnestown Road, Rockville, MD, 301-738-0370 (Metro Trip Planner – opens in new window) [Gazette.net | Washingtonian | SilverChips | Yelp | Gayot]

Imagine a combination of A&J and Hong Kong Palace and you have what is perhaps the best Chinese restaurant in this area right now. The dishes are a mix of Sichuan, Taiwanese, and Manchurian.

It has the best noodles and best dumplings around; the Sichuan wontons are a must. Shredded tofu is great. Singapore Noodle is surprisingly good and quite subtle. Pork with spicy noodles, in various incarnations, is excellent. I’ve yet to try the soups but they looks very good. Go mostly with the smaller dishes.

The décor is slightly nicer than at most Mom and Pops, the owners are Taiwanese, not so much English is spoken by the staff, and it draws an older Chinese crowd, less raucous than many other excellent Chinese places. Highly recommended.

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Lahori Kabob

Lahori Kabob, 2816 Graham Rd., Falls Church, VA, 703-573-0112 (Metro Trip Planner – opens in new window) [zabihah | Yelp]
This Pakistani place doubles as a hookah joint. The one time I went the service was very weak and the atmosphere was unappealing, to say the least. It looked like a dump (in fact it was a dump) without having the charm of a good mom n’ pop. That said, the chicken karahi was excellent – very authentic – and the other dishes I sampled were at least good or maybe better than good. I’ll give it a qualified recommendation for the discerning, and in the meantime I’ll predict they either get their act together or it will collapse completely. I’d like them to succeed, but they’re not on a sustainable path.

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Posted in Falls Church/Seven Corners, Pakistani, Virginia | 2 Comments

How to think about Iranian food

Sadly, I’ve never been to Iran, though I would love to go. Here are a few tips for the Iranian food I’ve had elsewhere:
1. A good koresh (stew) almost always beats a good kabob. Ghormeh sabzi and bademjan are national treasures.
2. The choice of rice is a central decision. Get zereshk polo — barberry rice — as much as you can. Or get cherry rice, rice with pistachio, etc. All those choices are winners.
3. Lamb shank can end up being dull in a Persian restaurant. If served with dill the dish is often too dry.
4. Fesanjan, fesanjan, fesanjan. In Iceland I once ate fesenjan guillemot. The fesenjan in a can that you find in Persian groceries is actually pretty good.
5. Don’t be afraid to smear mast-o-moseer (or musir; the spellings and transliterations vary, as with many of these dishes) into your rice. Always order mast-o-moseer.
6. Soups are excellent, especially if they are fragrant and have noodle-like entities. Soups without barley are usually better than soups with barley.
7. In this country Westwood, Los Angeles has the best Iranian food overall. Check out Westwood Ave. and also Pico.
8. If you are in a country where you do not expect to see Persian food, and you see Persian food, it is usually very good. As a partial exception to a rule of good eating, a single Persian restaurant can be very good even if there are not other Persian restaurants around.
Originally posted on Marginal Revolution
Also see Persian category.

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Posted in Persian | 1 Comment

Bourbon Steak, Four Seasons Hotel

Bourbon Steak, Four Seasons Hotel, web site, 2800 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington, DC, 202-944-2026 (Metro Trip Planner – opens in new window) [Washingtonian | WaPo | Don Rockwell | Yelp | Gayot]

I have to say I was very impressed. It sounds boring by most accounts but the steak, lobster, and tuna tartare are all first-rate. Expensive, but at least you are getting something for your money. Don’t expect innovative or original cooking, but right now this is one of the best places in town.

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Posted in American, DC, Georgetown, GWU/Foggy Bottom, Seafood, Steaks | Tagged | 1 Comment

Chinese-Korean Restaurant (Han Kook Kyola? Jang Won Ban Jum?)

Chinese-Korean Restaurant (Han Kook Kyola? Jang Won Ban Jum?), 4210 John Marr Dr., Annandale, VA, 703-354-1950 (Metro Trip Planner – opens in new window) [metromix | All Taste Same | Chowhound | Yelp]
Chinese food, Korean style, plus Korean food, Korean style. In other words, a Korean restaurant with fried sweet and sour and weird noodle dishes. The standard dish here is the dark noodles in the gloopy sauce, you know the serving which looks disgusting and, to some people, is disgusting. This place is very popular with Koreans, recommended, but note that it is not worth going here for the standard Korean options, which are better elsewhere.

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Posted in Annandale, Chinese, Korean, Virginia | 3 Comments