Washington, D.C
Best Dishes Eater Editors Ate This Week: August 12
With Eater editors frequently dining out all over town, we come across lots of standout dishes, and we don’t want to hold back any secrets. Welcome to Eater DC’s new rotating roundup of the best things we ate as of late.
Fugazzeta at Mercy Me
Tucked inside D.C.’s Yours Truly hotel lies Mercy Me, a South American-styled escape from bustling downtown. Fugazzeta is Argentina’s answer to a deep-dish personal pizza, built with Comté, provolone, and squirty, ruby-red roasted tomatoes that scream summer. The popular order currently plays a starring role on its summer Restaurant Week tasting menu. During a weekend visit, I thought my heaping helping of chaufa (fried rice, shrimp, and heirloom corn) did the Peruvian dish justice. A big central bar made of marbled cosmic swirls is a prime place to soak up the lobby-level setup surrounded in swaying palms, giant disco balls, and a vinyl record studio. Follow the neon green-lit toucan in the back to stumble upon Tropicalia, a dreamy outdoor cocktail garden led by Minibar alum Al Thompson. 1143 New Hampshire Avenue NW — Tierney Plumb, Eater DC editor
Oysters at Petite Cerise
Between its Olympics and Bastille Day celebrations, Shaw’s year-old Petite Cerise is having a hot French summer. Window paintings of the Eiffel Tower recently led the way into the chic corner brasserie, where flickering votive candles and fresh flowers help set the mood at each table. Chef Jeremiah Langhorne, who runs Michelin-starred the Dabney a few blocks away, gives diners a close-up view of prepping and plating from a long open kitchen planted in the middle. His new four-course menu ($58) feels like a quick trip to Paris, starting with juicy Island Creek oysters dressed in diced golden beets and a yellow Chartreuse mignonette. Fluffy ricotta gnocchi got a summery upgrade with sweet corn and cherry tomato. A beautiful bowl of zucchini “noodles” also swings seasonal with help from Chesapeake blue crab. Black garlic-infused escargots double as its logo (and reminder to slow down); a gold snail-shaped paper clip attached to the tab was a cute cause for pause. 1027 7th Street NW — T.P.
Buñuelos at Pascual
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I finally checked out Capitol Hill’s months-old Pascual, award-winning chef Isabel Coss’s polished love letter to her native Mexico City fueled by an open-fire hearth. Fabulously fresh guac paired with tostadas was a great way to start. As was a symmetrically pleasing plate of sliced Asian pears and sunflower seeds doused in guajillo oil, followed by a vibrant bowl of yellow squash blossoms, minty herbs, dollops of pureed avocado, and hearty tomatoes. From there, I skipped over the meaty mains and went straight for dessert. Coss flexes her pastry muscles with colossal cinnamon-dusted buñuelos, which arrive as advertised alongside delicious chocolate and caramel sauces served with adorable wooden spoons. Down in the pretty pastel-pink bathrooms, it’s hard to miss Coss’s latest accolade: a blown-up Food & Wine cover naming her one of America’s best new chefs in 2023. 732 Maryland Avenue NE — T.P.
Cheeseburger by Steeze Burger
I’ve had my eye on Steeze Burger ever since Tim Carman named it his favorite burger last year; the photo (from Eater’s own Rey Lopez) just made it look like my platonic ideal of a cheeseburger: the gooey American slices, the pickles, the soft sesame bun, the crispy smashed patties. But while the operation is generally mobile, they spend more time in Maryland than anywhere else, which is kind of a trek for me to grab a burger. Luckily, they recently did a pop-up at Arlington’s Sloppy Mama’s BBQ, so I made my way there to sample the burger. It hit all the right notes — if I had one suggestion, I could use a touch more seasoning in the patty itself, but a complete bite with the bun and toppings struck just the right balance. Plus, the location meant an excuse to take home some pork rinds and smoked turkey (the best of the barbecued meats) for another meal. Multiple locations — Missy Frederick, Eater cities director
Roast beef sandwich at Ned’s New England Deck
The tricky thing with beloved regional dishes (celebrated in our No Taste Like Home package last week) is that they can be hard to find outside the region they’re from. I’d heard of North Shore roast beef sandwiches due to our Boston site, but I don’t spend a lot of time there so I’d never tried one — until I made my way to Ned’s New England Deck in Fairfax. Their version is great: the roast beef has the thin slicing of an Arby’s sandwich, but with better quality and a delicious sauciness. This was also my first encounter with “fluffy” lobster bisque — its butter-drenched appearance surprised me a little, but it definitely was rich and nuanced in flavor. They make a mean lobster roll, too — love that they offer the buttery Connecticut-style, but given I’d had enough butter in my soup, the Maine-influenced, lightly mayo-dressed version worked just fine for me. 10655 Fairfax Boulevard, Fairfax, Virginia — M.F.
Pita at Yellow
I only got one chance to stop at Yellow’s Navy Yard location before it closed, so I’m going to try to make more of an effort to patronize its Georgetown outpost for great pastries and interesting coffee drinks (the peanut dalgona is an excellent combo of sweet and creamy). But the thing I keep thinking about is the pita bread. Soft, chewy, and dusted with za’atar, it’s the perfect complement to a morning sandwich stuffed with soft scrambled egg, salad, kashkaval cheese, and labneh (the half pita-sized breakfast sandwich is also the right amount to keep you full but not overly so). It’s worth the $15 semi-splurge to bring a six-pack of the breads home with you — I’ve already filled some with turkey kofta and pumpkin hummus, and see some sesame za’atar cutlet sandwiches in my future. 1524 Wisconsin Avenue NW — M.F.
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Washington, D.C
DC Council committee holds oversight hearing on MPD
WASHINGTON, D.C. (7News) — The D.C. Council Committee on the Judiciary and Public Safety is holding a performance oversight hearing on several agencies, including the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD).
Nearly 120 people are signed up to testify at Wednesday’s hearing, the bulk of which for MPD. The committee will hear from representatives and public witnesses for the Criminal Justice Coordinating Council and the Office of Police Complaints before MPD public witnesses. MPD Interim Chief Jeffery Carroll is scheduled to testify last.
“Today’s oversight hearing really continues our efforts over the last several months to work with MPD and get a better understanding of how things have changed since the increase of federal presence in our city since August,” Committee Chairwoman Brooke Pinto told 7News ahead of the hearing.
“There is always an element of the local government working with the federal government and things like FBI and ATF to get illegal guns off the street, to pursue drug cases — that level of coordination happens in any administration,” she continued. “But what we’ve seen this year is different: of National Guard troops coming to the city from all over the country, of HSI agents handling immigration enforcement, really threatening and terrorizing many of our immigrant communities who are feeling unsafe and unsure to go about their daily lives. And while we don’t have oversight over those federal agencies, it’s really important that our local Metropolitan Police Department is following our laws and is making sure that they are pursuing the public interest and protecting the public.”
In December, Pinto’s committee held a hearing on public safety in the District. Overwhelmingly, people who testified in the 12-hour hearing brought up concerns with the ongoing National Guard presence and the federal law enforcement surge, as well as the Metropolitan Police Department’s increased cooperation with immigration enforcement.
Two weeks later, Pinto led the council to send a letter to the interim chief requesting clarification about the extent of coordination amid the federal surge and under the D.C. Safe and Beautiful Task Force, which was created by a March presidential executive order last year. Interim Chief Jeffery Carroll responded, stating MPD is not working with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, but that “[M]any of the federal agencies MPD is working with during this period of enhanced federal partnership, and with which MPD has long-established relationships, now have authority to conduct civil immigration enforcement.”
The interim chief’s letter did not include the requested arrest numbers from joint patrols with federal agents, so Pinto’s committee repeated a request for those answers ahead of the oversight hearing.
In a 246-page letter sent Monday, MPD states the department does not track federal arrests made in joint patrols. The letter goes on to list federal agencies that participated in joint patrols between August and December that do not have an active cooperative agreement with MPD, or that did not have an active cooperative agreement at the time of the joint patrols, including Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Homeland Security Investigations.
“When it came to the federal questions, many of their responses were that they don’t track this information, and so one of the things I’m trying to get at today is: how can we track this information we should have access to know who is coming to roll call, where are officers being deployed?” Pinto told 7News. “We have the best police department in the country. Our officers go through robust training. We have some of the highest standards in the country, and that should be maintained and honored. And when we have these other agents here from other parts of the country or other agencies that aren’t accustomed to our practices and rules, that creates a challenge. And so that is really front of mind today for me to talk to MPD about.”
Washington, D.C
Washington County residents protest ICE detention center near Hagerstown
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Washington, D.C
Parents of National Guard member killed in DC ambush to attend State of the Union
The parents of the National Guard member who was shot and killed in an ambush attack in D.C. last year are expected to attend President Donald Trump’s State of the Union address Tuesday night.
Trump invited Specialist Sarah Beckstrom’s parents, a White House official confirmed to NBC News.
Beckstrom was one of two members of the West Virginia National Guard who a gunman targeted in an attack just blocks from the White House on Nov. 26. She died a day later, on Thanksgiving Day, at age 20.
Beckstrom, from Webster Springs, West Virginia, joined the guard in June 2023 and was preparing for a career in federal law enforcement, people who knew her told News4.
U.S. Air Force Staff Sgt. Andrew Wolfe survived being shot in the head.
Suspected shooter Rahmanullah Lakanwal was charged with murder. Prosecutors say he drove from his home in Washington state and “purposely and with deliberate and premeditated malice” shot the guard members.
State of the Union guests invited by Trump also include Erika Kirk, the widow of Turning Point USA co-founder Charlie Kirk, NBC News reported.
Learn the origins of one of the most important political events of the year in the U.S. and other interesting facts.
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