The Washington Post - 13.03.2020

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the washington post

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friday, march 13, 2020

we can talk comfortably) and not
terribly crowded.
a: I haven’t returned to
succotash since my last review,
and america Eats tavern
doesn’t serve lunch on
Wednesday. I can’t predict how
busy (read: loud) a dining room
might be, but I think you’ll enjoy
the cooking and other comforts
of modena downtown for
Italian, Chez Billy sud in
Georgetown for french or
Convivial in Shaw for french
American.


Q: I’m turning 38 this weekend
and my dad and his girlfriend
will be in town. I would like to go
out to dinner with them and my
husband and son (age 5). I’d love
a recommendation for seafood/
lobster in Northern Virginia.
Doesn’t matter what kind —
lobster ravioli, baked lobster.
a: The $38 maine lobster at the
new annabelle in Dupont Circle
has your name on it. The entree
swims to the table with Duchess
potatoes and a swipe of bisque.


Q: my husband has been on the
hunt for fried clam bellies lately,
with no luck at his usual sources.
Any place in D.C. or close-in
maryland or NoVa that currently
has them on the menu?
a: Near Nationals Park, salt
Line offers Ipswich fried clam
bellies for $16, and Hank’s
oyster Bar (multiple branches)
sells a plate for $25. I couldn’t
track down a market price there,
but Legal sea Foods on Seventh
Street NW also serves what your
husband craves.


Q: my husband turns 50 next
month and I’m facing the
canceling of travel plans. So now
I am looking at this as an
opportunity to take him out for a
truly memorable (and splurgy)
dinner. Where would you go?
maybe a chef’s table? Just the
two of us, happy to spend big
(since we are saving on travel
now), prefer within driving
distance of D.C. and not
requiring an overnight, and we
eat everything!
a: Le Comptoir du Vin in
Baltimore is pretty wonderful,
but a tough ticket. Tr y instead
the civilized métier near the
convention center or the blissful
Pineapple and Pearls on the
Hill.


Q: What are your favorite middle
Eastern (or Turkish) restaurants
in D.C.? I’m most interested in a
restaurant where I can try dishes
that are not typically found in
middle Eastern/Turkish
restaurants in the United States
and have plenty of vegetarian
options for my vegetarian
partner.
a: Surely you know about


ask tom from 12


Zaytinya in Penn Quarter, which
was featured in a recent roundup
of my favorite places to eat and
showcases everything from
Persian yogurt soup to Turkish
chicken salad with walnut sauce
and includes 20 or more
vegetable dishes. I could graze
there for weeks and not repeat a

dish.
of the newer sources, there’s
the freshly minted albi from
chef michael rafidi. The chef’s
selections include mushroom
grape leaf dolmades, excellent
spreads with even better pita and
lamb sweetened with dates. The
hot spot has been packed every

time I’ve dropped in.

Q: In your chats, restaurants
often invite diners back for a
meal on them to make up for a
service mistake. Logistically, how
does someone actually use that
offer? Do the restaurant
managers expect they’ll be taken
up on their offer within a month?
Three months? A year? And how
would a diner inform the
restaurant that they’ll be
returning? It seems rude (to me)
to call/email a place, and say,
“Hey, you promised me a free
meal, and now I’m coming to
collect.”
a: In the cases I’ve been involved
in, a representative from the
restaurant (owner, chef,
manager, etc.) shares the best
way to contact them and the
customer follows up on their
own, presumably shortly after
the incident that prompted the
complaint in this forum.
If anyone out there has been
involved in an attempt to turn a
dining wrong into a right, I’d
welcome hearing from them to
see how the follow-up played out.

Q: In my experiences, the person
extending the offer of a
complimentary meal gives the
diner a gift certificate.
a: I like that: a set amount and
(typically) a time period in which
it can be used.

Q: Here is how to do a
complimentary right (from the
restaurant side). Back in the ’90s,
my now-wife and I were
planning a dinner for our small
wedding and settled on the now-
departed Kinkead’s. I exchanged
various communications with
the restaurant, but it was
handled poorly and gave up. (We
ended up at Two Quail, to give
you an idea of how long ago this
was). I then sent a long detailed

note (might have been email or
maybe a fax) to the restaurant
laying out in detail what went
wrong on their end. I got an
almost immediate response
containing a full apology and
offer of a dinner for four on them
(up to $250, I think). We took
them up on it within a month or
two and the dinner was handled
superbly and was excellent, of
course. We tipped on what the
bill would have been even
though they told us it was not
necessary. Just a great
experience.
a: That sounds like a Kinkead’s
response (may the chef-owner
rIP).

Q: I was invited to an apology
meal after a seriously painful
billing debacle. We went in
planning on ordering
conservatively (while the billing
error was substantial, in the end
everything worked out well), but
the chef/owner came out,
apologized again, and talked us
into a tasting menu with wine
pairings. Because this happened
during a business trip, and I
wasn’t traveling there for some
time, the apology meal was a
good six months after the
original meal. And wow, it was
good. I didn’t expect anything
except an apology. This went so
far above and beyond. Yes, we’ve
been back.
a: Which is the whole point of
an “apology” meal: getting
diners back on the restaurant’s
side, seeing customers returning
on their own — and singing the
establishment’s praises on social
media and elsewhere.
Everyone makes mistakes. It’s
how they’re handled that can
make things better or worse.

 tom sietsema hosts a weekly
Q&a on Wednesdays at 11 a.m. at
live.washingtonpost.com.

Ask Tom


deb Lindsey For the Washington Post
You could graze for days at Zaytinya and probably still not eat
everything, tom sietsema says. Plus, there are lots of veggie dishes.

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