Home page All news News archive RSS Feed

  • Home page
  • Food And Wine

Walnut Street Coffee | A cozy room for coffee regulars

A painting called "Edmonds Twilight" by local artist Alice Owen hangs inside Walnut Street Coffee. The moody view of Puget Sound looking...

Fish and not chips

A quick and wholesome supper was called for recently. Into the oven (190C for 40 minutes) went a jacket potato, sliced into wedges (unpeeled), each wedge coated in a mix of oil, pepper, paprika, mixed herbs, and garlic.

Just pumpkin soup

Need more be said? Well, maybe this. I used ‘freeze-cooked’ pumpkin which has been softened by the freezing process instead of by baking or boiling.

Eggs and bacon

When I feel like a treat, I make myself eggs and bacon. I usually have it on top of thin slices of a decent granary loaf, lightly buttered, the bacon on this first, then eggs on top.

Port, cheese, politics

Whilst Madsen may soon be hosting a port party - for a guest-list of one - Cambridge University’s Conservative Association is legendary for it’s bi-termly Port and Cheese parties.

Red hot chili peppers

No, I’m not talking about the US alternative rock band founded 24 years ago and enjoying a revival. I’m talking about Bhut Jolokia, a variety of chili pepper originating in Assam, India.

First pumpkin pie of the season

Pumpkins are everywhere, and I made my first pumpkin pie of the year. I used about a third of a small pumpkin, and carefully froze the rest, having discovered that they thaw out already soft and ready to use. I used my usual recipe, as I did last year.


Friends sites

  • Investment News & Strategies
  • Politics Inside Information
  • Real Estate Magazine
  • Online Latest Fashion News
  • Top press reviews
  • Health & Primary Care News
  • Hitech News Headlines
  • Auto News Journal
  • Investors Alley News
  • Family and Parenting News
  • Higher education news
  • UK News Online Edition
  • Latest Travel News
  • The Globalization News
  • Urban news info
  • Entertainment News & Information
  • International Daily News
  • Today Films & Music News
  • Wide World of Sports
kare-kare.jpg

Kare-Kare at Serye

One of the best tasting kare-kare in town can be eaten at Serye aside from Barrio Fiesta. Right after visiting my son’s grave at Loyola Memorial (in Paranaque), we went to visit Serye located just nearby. I was just expecting to take a snack but my daughter wanted kare-kare. Read more…

mango1.jpg

Hedgehogging a half mango

It’s a good way to get decent sized and shaped chunks of mango. I make cuts into the half mango about half to three-quarters of an inch apart. I do this both along the length and across it, making a criss-cross pattern. Read more…

A Trio Grows in Arlington

31.10.2006 06:20 Food And Wine

** Willow

4301 N. Fairfax Dr. Arlington

703-465-8800

www.willowva.com

Open: for lunch Monday through Friday, 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.; dinner Monday through Thursday 5:30 to 10 p.m., Friday and Saturday 5:30 to 10:30 p.m., Sunday 5:30 to 9:30 p.m. AE, V, MC. Metro: Ballston. Free underground parking. No smoking. Prices: lunch appetizers $6 to $12, entrees $8 to &16; dinner appetizers $7 to $10, entrees $14 to $32. Full dinner with wine, tax and tip $65 to $80 per person.

It's easy to picture myself in Washington when I'm refueling at Willow in Arlington: Every other employee there seems to conjure a memory of a restaurant visit in the District.

The suit at the host stand resembles the former chef from Butterfield 9, Brian Wolken, because that's who he is (though he's director of operations here). The woman behind the pastry counter, Kate Jansen, might be familiar to those who frequent Firehook Bakery, which she helped launch. As for the diminutive brunette who occasionally strolls from the kitchen to scan her audience in the dining room, that's Tracy O'Grady, the longtime chef at Kinkead's.

The recipe sounds like a hit: Three ambitious food professionals, all intimates -- Wolken and O'Grady married in the restaurant when it opened in September -- striking out on their own. Reality can nurture that happy vision, and when it does, Willow tastes like a major player. The kitchen's rib-eye steak, showered with winy mushrooms, is about as succulent as they come. When reality is less rosy at Willow -- when wine is served warm or yet another dish turns up underseasoned -- the restaurant's little annoyances swell into focus: The dining room that initially strikes you as neutral, for example, suddenly comes off as impersonal, even boring.

The stone oven off the reception area is a silent suggestion to begin a meal with something warm and crisp: one of Jansen's flatbreads. "Great to share!" promises the menu. "Watch the elbows!" It should also warn diners of the flatbreads' powers of seduction. The big rectangles look like topographical maps, all bumps and craters, and serve as tasty backdrops to some enticing toppings. As much as I like the combination of sharp blue cheese, sweet onions and fresh thyme, even better is the mix of wild mushrooms, chives, fontina cheese and white truffel oil. The oil is used with restraint, its earthy perfume cleverly evened out with lemon zest after the baked dough is pulled from the heat.

That same interplay of heavy and light shows up in a Caesar salad rethought with shredded smoked gouda and lemon zest, its base of chopped romaine garnished with a single shiny anchovy and some house-baked croutons. The salad's equals in the beauty department are a bowl of ultracreamy butternut squash soup and an appetizer of smoked salmon. The pink fish is sliced so thin you could read through it, and it gets some swell company: a salad of diced beets, a lacy potato cake, plus accents of fresh dill and horseradish-laced creme fraiche. Sheer elegance.

O'Grady tends to underseason her food. Fortunately, she also tends to stick something on the plate to rescue the center of attention. Bland on their own, ricotta and zucchini fritters are helped by a brassy dip of roasted red peppers and tomatoes. Similarly, fritters made with fontina -- akin to fried mozzarella sticks with a little class -- are enhanced by a tomato dip emboldened by smoked paprika. A juicy but otherwise muted pork chop does a Prince Philip, letting its consorts -- an herby onion compote and elegant, nutmeg-scented spinach tartlet -- bask in the limelight of diner appreciation. A first course of potato gnocchi in a Parmesan-flavored cream sauce, however, can't get a kick-start even from its prosciutto-wrapped shrimp garnish. The dish is a bland, one-note endurance contest.

Judging from the menus of many restaurants, I have to agree with vegetarians who complain about carnivores having all the fun. I'd be upset, too, if my entree choices were limited to pasta or a pile-on of side dishes on a plate. Willow helps remedy that slight with a couple of meatless main courses that show some thought. Leading the way: a bed of creamy lentils accessorized with buttery artichoke halves, ringed in a bright carrot sauce and crowned with a beggar's purse of molten goat cheese. The earthy legumes, the sweet moistener, the clutch of tangy cheese -- each element supports and flatters the others.

Fish dishes channel O'Grady's time at Kinkead's. Herb-paved salmon comes with escorts that bite and soothe: broccoli rabe and a creamy cauliflower gratin. Halibut assumes a Mediterranean accent with olives and a broth of tomato and citrus. It's satisfying. But this time of year I'm partial to anything the chef might make with scallops.

O'Grady frequently tweaks her menu, swapping one ingredient for another or adding a new element. One dish that merits permanent residence is roast chicken, which forsakes the usual restaurant glamour treatment for something homier and infinitely more seductive. The chicken's skin, thin and crisp as parchment, yields to equally succulent flesh; credit for all the savor goes to an under-skin massage of lemon and thyme. Soft, sweet coins of carrot, a light wash of sauce and wrinkly fingers of roasted potato complete the edible picture.

Willow, which replaced the saloon known as Gaffney's Oyster and Ale House, won't dazzle you with its looks. Despite an infusion of $600,000, the 7,500-square-foot space is pretty plain, with several tables set at odd angles or smack in the middle of heavy traffic. Red curtains and muted lighting help, but neither feature is enough to compensate for a room that feels as if it's only half-decorated.

Dessert helps, particularly anything using fruit. Jansen arranges apples in a fine tart shell, gilding the treat with caramel sauce; she partners a port-glazed pear with pastry made with ground walnuts and topped with a layer of blue cheese -- the sweet and savory flavors duel for attention in your mouth. Creamy pumpkin mousse cake gets a nice lift from cranberry jam. And the pastry chef's cookie plate finds a hit parade of flavors accompanied by something better even than a cold glass of milk: buttered almond ice cream.

A revised and updated version of Tom Sietsema's book, The Washington Post Dining Guide, was published earlier this month. To chat with Tom online, click on Live Online at www.washingtonpost.com on Wednesdays at 11 a.m.

ASK TOM

"I love the fact that many area restaurants have their menus online," writes Nancy Vogel of Alexandria. "Why, though, do so many restaurants fail to have the prices of their dishes" listed as part of the preview, she goes on to ask via e-mail. "I'd rather have some idea of a restaurant's price range before going to it than to have a rude shock when I get there." The place that prompted her complaint is IndeBleu (707 G St. NW) in Washington's Penn Quarter, where dinner appetizers average $14 and an entree of spice-dusted beef tenderloin with braised vegetables costs $35 -- prices you currently learn only when you open an actual menu. That is expected to change, according to IndeBleu's general manager, Jay Coldren. He recently hired someone to oversee marketing for the restaurant, an in-house job that will include keeping IndeBleu's Web site up to date; as of press time, online matters were handled by a company based in India, making changes difficult, Coldren explained. The tweaked Web site will include prices, which were left out since the beginning, he says, because "we didn't know what the market would bear." Presumably now IndeBleu does.

  Add comment

Name: 
E-Mail: 
Comment: 
Enter code: 


Copyright © yournewsinc.com