Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Zaytinya, hands down.
Bland (except for overly salty falafel), non-authentic and really just underwhelming. Mediocre ambiance and service.
OMG yes. My husband is always recommending it to visitors because he can walk there for lunch. I always glare at him and mouth “stop. Just stop.” It’s only good if you are visiting from Ohio and think it’s exotic.
Omg. The Cleveland food scene blows DC's out of the water.
I agree! I don’t even bothering going out here any more.
My hometown of Milwaukee blows the DC restaurant scene out of the water too. I dream about dishes and restaurants there. We don’t even go out here anymore either. Overpriced, bland, and disappointing. And why no restaurateur in this area can’t put together a decent sandwich or bake an edible loaf of bread has always baffled me. Plus, no good diners, Italian, Mexican, delis, bakeries, funky coffee shops and bars that serve great food. Ahh, I am homesick.
Milwaukee? Cleveland? Why don’t we throw in Pittsburgh also since people rave about the food scene there too. I travel to all three frequently and there is nothing in any of them that would cause me to rave about any of them.
Seems like you haven’t ventured out much when visiting those places. I can give you multiple recommendations in Milwaukee that blow most DC restaurants out of the water. There is great food outside of DC. In fact, that’s where most of it is.![]()
+1000. We spent last summer vacation in upper lower Michigan, and almost every podunk restaurant was better than DC.
Unless you’re talking about Middle Eastern food in the Detroit burbs, this is simply not true. Having lived in Michigan, the food is blah. My husband and I even used to call it “Michigan good.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Founding Farmers. Mediocre food, marginal service, pretty boring menu (and I like boring sometimes!). Just so blah.
+1
+2. And the service is the absolute worst.
Your best bet at better-than-mediocre service is to sit at the bar. But, admittedly, my last visit while sitting at the bar also sucked. Still, nowhere near the general ineptitude of the serving staff who wait tables.We once sat in a booth and our waitress never returned after taking our drink order. Ten minutes later, we went and found a new waiter but never saw the first waitress again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Whoever thinks the DC area has good restaurants hasn't travelled at all.
Yeah, apparently every Midwestern city blows DC's restaurant scene away.
You'll pardon me if I take all of these claims with a large grain of artisanal salt.
Pretty sure this PP isn’t saying Midwest restaurants are better. Maybe NY, SF, etc?
Some of you need to travel more. Most major metro areas in this country (not just NY or SF and including many in the Midwest) have better food scenes than DC. Sorry if that disturbs your worldview.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Whoever thinks the DC area has good restaurants hasn't travelled at all.
Yeah, apparently every Midwestern city blows DC's restaurant scene away.
You'll pardon me if I take all of these claims with a large grain of artisanal salt.
Pretty sure this PP isn’t saying Midwest restaurants are better. Maybe NY, SF, etc?
Some of you need to travel more. Most major metro areas in this country (not just NY or SF and including many in the Midwest) have better food scenes than DC. Sorry if that disturbs your worldview.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Founding Farmers. Mediocre food, marginal service, pretty boring menu (and I like boring sometimes!). Just so blah.
+1
+2. And the service is the absolute worst.
Anonymous wrote:Oceanaire.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Whoever thinks the DC area has good restaurants hasn't travelled at all.
Yeah, apparently every Midwestern city blows DC's restaurant scene away.
You'll pardon me if I take all of these claims with a large grain of artisanal salt.
Pretty sure this PP isn’t saying Midwest restaurants are better. Maybe NY, SF, etc?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Whoever thinks the DC area has good restaurants hasn't travelled at all.
Yeah, apparently every Midwestern city blows DC's restaurant scene away.
You'll pardon me if I take all of these claims with a large grain of artisanal salt.
Anonymous wrote:I thought all purpose was prerty mediocre
Anonymous wrote:To be honest, I'd say The Inn at Little Washington. It's perfectly fine (if you ignore the price), but the hype doesn't match reality, imo.
BTDT, don't need to go back.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a theory about DC restaurants:
I think when they first open they are usually legit good. But then after that they quickly go downhill. But everyone still goes based on the hype and nobody will complain about it because "everyone else thinks it's good". And so it goes.
Honestly, I can count on one hand how many truly amazing meals I have had here.
+1
Nailed it.
Anonymous wrote:Whoever thinks the DC area has good restaurants hasn't travelled at all.