Food and Drink, News, The Daily Feed

RAMMY Winners Announced

Photo courtesy of
‘Birch & Barley – Churckey’
courtesy of ‘Daquella manera’

DC’s restaurant community gathered last night at the Marriott Wardman Park to celebrate their own in a black-tie 1940s-themed gala. The Restaurant Association Metropolitan Washington awarded the coveted RAMMY prizes last night before an audience of 1,500.

Scott Drewno from The Source by Wolfgang Puck garnered the Chef of the Year award, while Falls Church’s 2941 claimed the Fine Dining Restaurant award. 2941‘s Anthony Chavez would claim the Pastry Chef of the year award. Nicolas Stefanelli from Bibiana took home the Rising Star Award. Neighborhood Restaurant Group’s Birch & Barley claimed the Best New Restaurant prize, while BLT Steak picked up the Power Spot name. Cork Wine Bar because DC’s new best Neighborhood Gathering Place, while Alexandria’s Vermillion captured the Upscale Casual restaurant award.

Surprising no one at all, the Birch & Barley/Churchkey claimed Hottest Restaurant Bar Scene, thanks in no small part to Greg Engert’s excellent taste. Proof picked up recognition for their excellent wine program, while PS7’s just a few blocks up received the same nod for their mixology program.

Adolfo Cajchon from Seasons claimed Restaurant Employee of the Year, and Mark Politzer claimed Restaurant Manager of the Year for his work at Bourbon Steak. CoCo. Sala was voted Favorite Restaurant through online and newspaper polling.

Most interesting in this year’s awards: No honors for anyone in Maryland, nor were there any Arlington restaurants that picked up a nod in this year’s awards. Long Live the District! (Okay, and Falls Church and Old Town, too.)

The Daily Feed

Make Plans to See ‘Make No Little Plans’

Photo courtesy of
‘Screen on the Green Anticipation’
courtesy of ‘InspirationDC’

Screen on the Green doesn’t start back up until July 12, but in the meantime you can catch a great movie this Wednesday on the Mall.  The National Capital Planning Commission is sponsoring a screening of  “Make No Little Plans: Daniel Burnham and the American City” on the Mall on Wednesday at 8:30.   This documentary about the father of urban planning is sure to draw out history buffs, planners, and anyone else who loved ‘Devil in the White City‘.  And it’s the perfect place to watch a documentary about the man who helped design the National Mall as we know it.  So grab a blanket and pack a picnic and I’ll see you out there Wednesday night!

Weekend Flashback

Weekend Flashback: 6/4 – 6/6/10

Photo courtesy of

courtesy of ‘Chris Rief aka Spodie Odie’

One of the best times of my Monday is when I get to scan our Flickr pool for shots taken over the weekend. I never, ever know what’s going to turn up or what great things our contributors drop into the mix. Even though many times there are photos from the “well-known” events (like this past weekend’s Susan G. Komen Global Race for the Cure), it’s always a treat to find photos of other events, scenes, and discoveries our readers find across the weekend.

So enjoy this extra-big Flashback today, as our contributors were out in force and made it really hard for me to decide what to put into today’s roundup. Thanks to all our local photographers! And being a WeLoveDC photo contributor is really quite easy: join Flickr and start dropping local photos into our group! Maybe you’ll see one of your shots here one day…

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The Daily Feed

Cyclist Struck Twice and Killed in Southeast DC

Photo courtesy of
‘Ghost Bike’
courtesy of ‘eldan’

Sad news to start out the week: Friday night around 10:45, David Haywood Williams was riding his bike along Southern Avenue SE when he was struck by two separate cars and killed.  The driver of the first car stopped, but the driver of the second car sped off when paramedics arrived at the scene.  Police are still searching for the driver of the second car, a dark blue compact Toyota or Nissan.

It’s a sad reminder that even though DC is becoming more bike-friendly by the day, both cyclists and drivers should be aware of and respectful of one another.  Please take a moment this morning to check out the League of American Bicyclists tips for cyclists and motorists to share the road safely.

The Daily Feed

Mike Leake Stellar For The Reds, Nats Lose 5-1

Photo By Max Cook
Photo By Max Cook

Luis Atilano’s career high seven innings pitched and six strikeouts in Saturday’s game versus the Cincinatti Reds was not enough to secure a victory for the Washington Nationals.

Reds starter Mike Leake held the Nationals scoreless through four innings and continued to outplay both the Nats and his own team while owning a 1.55 ERA in his last eight starts and driving in run support for himself.  The rookie is hitting .417 after tonight’s game where he hit two singles and scored a run. Continue reading

The Daily Feed

Nats Tops Reds to Break Losing Streak

Photo courtesy of
‘Nationals vs Mets 12’
courtesy of ‘maxedaperture’

It was a tough road trip for the Nationals, losing 7 of 10 and playing errorful ball, and that weighs on a club and their locker room.  The Nationals, though, with Strasmas on the very near horizon, weren’t interested in playing the dog on Friday night, and brought their business socks to the park. Their opponent: the first place Cincinnati Reds and pitchers Aaron Harang.

It was a sultry night at Nationals Park, with temperatures at gametime well above 90°F, and with humidity making the evening into a heavy, wet mess, it wasn’t surprising that the game would take on a snail’s pace.  No one wanted to move too quickly, and the result was a long and slow game that took nearly four hours to play.  Aaron Harang struggled in the heat, and in his four innings pitched, he would throw over 95 pitches as the Nats fought him at every turn. ¡Livan! Hernandez would go six full, but throw 100 pitches in a two-run effort. It took everything both teams had to make it to the seventh inning in the damp wet Washington evening in front of a crowd of over 33,000. That’s when the sparks flew.

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The Daily Feed

Campaigns Head To the Negative

Photo courtesy of
‘on the campaign trail’
courtesy of ‘mofo’

Well, that didn’t take long. What started last night at the campaign forum up in Ward 3, has overflowed today to Twitter, with Gray’s campaign posting a link to video of Fenty using a Blackberry to quote statistics during the debate, and then an accusation of getting them wrong.

The statistic in question? Low-income Housing. Fenty claimed that 11,000 units were “built” during his administration, which isn’t quite correct. 5,000 units were created from scratch under Mayor Fenty, and 6,000 more preserved, which is where the 11,000 figure came from.

If these are the kind of petty squabbles that are leading news cycles? We’re in for a long summer, folks, especially if we start seeing tit for tat throughout the social media space.

Life in the Capital, People, The Features

Why I Love DC: Dave Stroup

Photo caourtesy of
‘The District’
courtesy of ‘william couch’

I could write this as a “how I learned to stop hating and love DC” post, but that would be too easy. It’s too easy to simply say you love or hate this city. Some of you may know me from my time over at Why I Hate DC. I never hated DC the way the previous writers had, so it was often a difficult gig. I tried to look at things a different way, focus on how to make those things we hate a little bit better. Eventually, though, the moniker and attitude that came with the site wore me down. I didn’t so much wake up one day and realize I loved DC–rather, I decided to come home to the city I love.

I came to DC eight years ago for school. I went home for the first two summers, but after that I stayed. Compared to some this is a short time, compared to others it’s an eternity. For me, it’s been long enough to realize why I love this city. I don’t love the city for it’s monuments or museums. I don’t love it for the trendy bars and restaurants, or the numerous festivals and events. All of those things are wonderful and add to the city’s charm, but I love DC because it’s where I grew up. I don’t mean in the sense of my childhood, but where I literally grew up.

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The Daily Feed, We Green DC

Columbia Heights Farmers Market Opens Tomorrow

Photo courtesy of
‘Dreamy Creamy Chocolate’
courtesy of ‘Hoffmann’

Even the mayor will be on hand to welcome a new farmers market to the city tomorrow. The Columbia Heights Community Marketplace kicks off at 9 a.m. and runs until 2 p.m. at 14th and Park, across from Giant, Target, and Tivoli Theater.

At 11 a.m., Mayor Adrian Fenty, Chairman Vincent Gray, and Councilmembers Jim Graham and Kwame Brown will kick off opening ceremonies. Dancers and actors from the Dance Institute and Gala Theatre will perform; live entertainment will take place the first Saturday of each month and include activities like tai chi and cooking demonstrations.

Come every Saturday for fresh veggies and fruit (it’s berry season, you know), meats, breads, cheeses, flowers and beat-the-heat gelato–all grown and raised within 150 miles of DC.

Thrive DC, Miriam’s Kitchen and Christ House, three local homeless services, will be gleaning leftover produce to make meals for the homeless.

The Daily Feed

BREAKING: Shooting on red line train, Union Station metro closed

UPDATE: Union Station officially re-opened.

Our own Dave Stroup is over at Union Station and is passing on reports that there’s been a shooting on a red line train, resulting in the closing of the Union Station metro. He’s been told it’s two gangs fighting on the train and at the moment the outside escalator entrance is being cordoned off.

Dave sees transit police, capitol police and DCFD conferring inside the mezzanine. He’s not seeing any EMS response. A bystander claims there’s at least one wounded individual.

1:43p: The DCFireEMS twitter account confirms the injured person, singular. WMATA’s release indicates that the shooting was in the station itself, says trains are continuing to pass through – single tracking – but not stopping.

1:45p: Dave says the station has re-opened. DCFireEMS twitter says they are transporting a single teenage male, aprox 16-17, in serious condition to the nearest trauma center.

1:49p: Dave repeats that the station has been re-opened. Reports have shifted to a large group of people fighting, not a shooting. The fight originated on the train, transit police contacted capitol police for backup.

1:52p: Witness report guns were visible but transit police say that no shots were fired. Dr. Gridlock’s update still repeats an MPD claim that shots were fired.  It’s unclear where this reporting disconnect is coming from or which side is accurate. No weapon has been recovered in a station search.

1:55p: The group was reportedly teenagers, over 30 who borded at Ft Totten and began fighting shortly thereafter. A passenger says it was difficult to get out of the way. At least one witness has stated a fear of going on camera.

1:58p: The fighting continued on the train as it progressed from Ft Totten to Union Station, happening right over seated passengers. One witness says she didn’t see a weapon but heard claims (boasts? threats?) of one, states her co-worker did see a handgun.

1:59p: Dave says Union Station officials are telling NBC4 they can’t film at Metro. They’re asking security to remove NBC4 from outside the station.

2:06p: Security apparently knows the law/rules better than the Union Station person demanding NBC4 be removed; an angry facilities person employed by Union Station is complaining about their refusal to remove them. NBC4 and ABC7 continued filming.

Entertainment, Music, We Love Music

We Love Music: Mono @ 9:30 Club 6/2/10

Copyright 2010 Randolph A. Smith

I have been tossing around the word “epic” an awful lot in conversation lately when describing concerts that I have attended. I do that on occasion; get stuck on a word or phrase that is an easy descriptor. A verbal short-cut to get to the gist of what the listener missed by not attending a particularly good show. For a long time it was “rules!” and “kicked ass!”. I still fall back on those now and again. It annoys me when I catch myself repeating these things over and over again. It annoys me because it slightly devalues these phrases and robs them of their power when they are truly applicable in writing. Lately my word has been “epic” because I truly feel that I have been lucky enough to recently attend some epic events. Epic in either sound, significance, or both.

Wednesday night’s visit to the 9:30 Club by Japanese post-rockers Mono was EPIC. Note the use of all-capital letters. I use them because there is no other word to describe Mono’s first-ever concert at the 9:30 Club and I want you to really appreciate the magnitude of EPIC-ness I am talking about here. I use all-caps in an attempt to jump-start this word that I have been over-using of late, because I have no other word to describe how huge and impressive it was when Mono performed on Wednesday night.

In 2005, I saw Mono perform in a space no bigger than a living room on a patch of worn carpet as a stage. That show was my pick for best set in-and-around DC in 2005. It was an evening of true music nirvana. The intangible thing that I spend my life in search of. I was so shocked, enlightened, and blown away by that show I couldn’t even bring myself to write about it for months. I was speechless. I have seen Mono perform many times since and they have become one of my favorite bands of all time to watch in concert. However, none of their shows quite matched the greatness of that 2005 set – until now.
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The Daily Feed

Strasburg Overload: The Strasburg, Va. Edition

Photo courtesy of
‘Strasburg Railroad’
courtesy of ‘jpmueller99’

There’s been a whole lot of talk in this town about welcoming the prodigal son to his baseball kingdom. As much as I love the hustle and bustle of DC getting caught up in the great commotion that is Major League Baseball, I have to say that all the hype over Stephen Strasburg is getting to be a bit much.

We know he’s good. He’s got the numbers. He’s been called up. He’ll start on Tuesday (pending weather, etc.).

With that said, while I’m just as excited as the next DC-area resident to watch a young’n breathe life back into District baseball, I must say the Virginia attempt to re-name Strasburg, Va. in honor of the Nationals’ pitcher is quite an admirable stunt.

The “Rename Strasburg” campaign launched by Virginia residents Justin Ritenour and ESPN Page 2 writer Shane Igoe was mentioned via Twitter by the Sports Bog earlier today. What exactly are they campaigning for?

1. On June 8, 2010 the town of Strasburg, VA plans honor Stephen with a “Pride of Strasburg Recognition” Award
2. The Strasburg town council will also draft a resolution to rename the town “Stephen Strasburg, Virgina” should Mr. Strasburg decide to visit the town situated less than 90 miles away sometime this year
3. Upon which the newly named town would welcome Stephen into town on the back of a firetruck and honor him with a welcoming parade and police escort
4. We also invite Mr. Strasburg to throw out the first pitch to our new traveling little league team which would henceforth be known as the “Stephen” Strasburgs”

I sure do hope someone asks Stephen what his thoughts on all this are after his first outting on Tuesday. Inquiring minds (mine in particular) would like to know.

The Daily Feed

The 900 Block of Rhode Island Ave

 

Photo courtesy of
‘Metropolitan Branch Trail-13’
courtesy of ‘TrailVoice’

There’s been a good deal of controversy on some community listserves over the 900 block of Rhode Island Ave NE, which has played host to some interesting developments over the last few years.  An older grove of trees was bulldozed this week to begin the development of a new condo property by Bozzuto right opposite the Metro station there.  In addition, some residents are objecting, in cases both anonymously and strenuously, to the presence of the Metropolis Club, an AA program, as well as the DC Superior Court Center (and its one jail cell), and the Court Services and Offender Supervision Agency for DC.

It seems to me that a lot of their concerns are largely bullshit nimbyism at its finest. An AA club provides a valuable service, and when placed near to the parole agency, it can become a resource for them to use with prisoners with alcohol issues. It can become an extension of the support network, which all of the community benefits from. Since AA also meets in churches, should we ban churches from hosting AA meetings near schools?

It seems that the large police presence just a few blocks up off Rhode Island would adequately handle any policing issues near the parole office or superior court facility (and its single jail cell) and that the AA club isn’t about to be a source of violent crime.  What do you think? NIMBYism or legitimate concern?

Adventures, Entertainment, Essential DC, Fun & Games, History, Life in the Capital, Music, Night Life, Special Events, The Daily Feed

2010 Ibero-American Guitar Festival

Photo courtesy of
‘2010:53’
courtesy of ‘::FiZ::’

This evening the 2010 Ibero-American Guitar Festival kicks off at the Smithsonian Museum of the American Indian. The festival showcases classical guitarists from the Iberia peninsula, Latin America and South America. You can grab a little taste of what’s in store with the beautiful strumming of Berta Rojas.

Shopping for your first instrument should be the initial step in a lifelong journey of learning and inspiration. It can also be confusing because all musical instruments come in so many different makes and models. If you’re buying your first guitar, you’ll face choices like what size guitar to buy, deciding between an acoustic or electric, or whether to invest in a new or used instrument. While there are many variables that might affect your decision, the most important thing is to find a guitar that sounds good, looks good, and feels good to play, check the next online website, they did a great review of Yamaha c40.

This year’s festival is dedicated to Manuel M. Ponce, the Mexican composer who passed away in 1948, but whose guitar compositions continue to inspire the world of international guitar. Tonight, the Manuel M. Ponce Quartet will give a talk/performance illustrating the influence Ponce has had over three centuries of music and the artist’s relationship with the great Andalusian guitarist Andres Segovia. Saturday at 2pm Leonora Saavedora talks about Ponce’s effect on Mexican traditional song.

If you can’t make it out to the festival, there’s also a live webcast of the events/performance that’s definitely worth tuning into.

Dupont Circle, The Daily Feed

Dupont Benches Get Facelift

In 1993, the National Park Service took over maintenance of Dupont Circle which is news to me.  As I strolled through the circle this morning I noticed that they were replacing a section of the circular benches that are often the subject of local area photographers.  I stopped to talk to the workers for a while who were at first skeptical when I asked them to take some pictures, but by the end of our talk they said, “Feel free to come back and take more pictures if you want.”

After a few years of exposure to the elements, the wood begins to rot which is when the NPS springs into action.  I often wondered how they got the wooden slats to bend into their arched form.  As you can see they start with one end of the board, anchor it to the concrete bench, and keep working their way down to the end, clamping it as they go.  They use fir wood due to its durability, which is key when a bunch of people are going to be sitting on it every day.

Thank you, National Park Service, for keeping Dupont Circle in tip top shape!

The Daily Feed

Taylor Gourmet coming to Dupont?

Photo courtesy of
‘Taylor Gourmet’
courtesy of ‘william couch’

Taylor Gourmet, the specialty sub shop with two locations in the District (and one planned in Bethesda), may be opening a third fourth in Dupont Circle. No solid details yet, but a Craigslist post hints more locations are on the way:

Taylor Gourmet Seeing General Manager ((Chinatown & Dupont))

We are a local gourmet deli that is expanding rapidly. We are looking to bring on some new full-time and part-time employees in order to make the transition process a bit easier. We will provide all of the necessary training, but are realistically looking for someone with some sort of retail or restaurant management experience. If you think you would be a good fit for the company, please send a brief email with resume attached to the address listed above.

Location: Chinatown & Dupont

Last Fall, Taylor opened their second location in the City Vista complex, near Chinatown at 5th and K, NW. The first location, on H Street NE opened in 2008 and was featured in Dwell Magazine.

Update: As a commenter points out, Taylor did announce expansion plans in Bethesda back in March.  It remains unclear why the Craigslist post cites Dupont as a possible location, however.

The Features, Where We Live

Where We Live: Shirlington

Photo courtesy of
‘Village at Shirlington’
courtesy of ‘Arlington County’

Welcome back to Where We Live, your bi-weekly tour through neighborhoods in and around the District. This week: Shirlington and Fairlington! For those of you whose understanding of the DC area relies on a Metro map, you might not be too familiar with this area. But you’re missing out!  While there’s no Metro station nearby, this is a very cool area filled with plenty to do.

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The Daily Feed, We Green DC

Where Does Your Recycling Go?

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Ever wonder happens to your recycling once it leaves the bin?

Arlington County recently released a video that takes you inside a recycling facility. It shows how items are sorted, where they go, and what’s made from them.

Your host? A bathrobe-clad man carrying a coffee cup labeled “dork.” Check it out for good info and good cheesy fun.