『DC's Hottest Tables: Korean Steakhouses, Puerto Rican Feasts, and Why Everyone's Fighting Over Union Market's Crab Cakes』のカバーアート

DC's Hottest Tables: Korean Steakhouses, Puerto Rican Feasts, and Why Everyone's Fighting Over Union Market's Crab Cakes

DC's Hottest Tables: Korean Steakhouses, Puerto Rican Feasts, and Why Everyone's Fighting Over Union Market's Crab Cakes

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今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

Food Scene Washington D.C.

Washington D.C.'s Culinary Renaissance: Fire-Grilled Steaks, Soulful Bites, and Global Flavors Ignite the Capital

Listeners, buckle up for D.C.'s dining scene in 2026—it's a sizzling fusion of bold newcomers and timeless traditions, where local Chesapeake oysters meet Puerto Rican mofongo under one vibrant sky. At the forefront, Ingle Korean Steakhouse on U Street Corridor fires up an $80 dinner with wok-charred asparagus and steak tartare, drawing crowds with its smoky intensity. Nearby, Springbone Kitchen's gluten-free haven in a cozy 20-seat spot dishes nutrient-packed bowls that travel as well as they tantalize, proving health can taste indulgent.

Union Market buzzes with Cowbell Seafood & Oyster, where Sara Quinteros and Chef Reid Shilling revive their legacy via hyper-fresh Baltimore-style crab cakes and fried chicken that crackles with briny perfection. In Georgetown, Brasero Atlántico's massive live-fire grill roasts prime Argentinian cuts alongside Florería Atlántico's cobalt lounge cocktails blending Latin flair with C&O Canal vibes. Park View's Qui Qui DC channels Old San Juan through Chef Ismael Mendez's colossal Chuleta Kan-Kan and mofongo, alive with live salsa and rum punches that pulse with tropical heat.

Adams Morgan's Maison elevates French whimsy in a historic brownstone, pairing smoked eel croquettes with muscat-rum daiquiris dusted in fig leaf. Downtown, Omakase Room by Tadayoshi delivers Michelin-poised 20-course ballets of Toyosu-fresh fish in blonde-wood intimacy. Trends lean scrappy and abundant—think all-you-can-eat sushi at spots like Sushi Sato—while local foragers at Poplar in Brightwood Park roast lion's mane from Rock Creek in red-tiled ovens.

Festivals amplify it all: Giant National Capital BBQ Battle on June 27-28 along Pennsylvania Avenue pits pitmasters amid White House views; Taste of Soul DC at Union Market layers fried chicken with collards; and April's Creole Food Festival at The Gathering Spot nods to D.C.'s soulful roots. Chesapeake bounty and diverse immigrant hands shape this gastronomy, from Caribbean oxtail at Isla to hyper-local low-waste plates.

What sets D.C. apart? It's politics-meets-plate: power corridors fueling inventive, inclusive eats that bridge global souls with capital grit. Food lovers, this is your cue—D.C. dines like no other..


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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI

This episode includes AI-generated content.
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