The Washington Post - 13.03.2020

(lu) #1
the washington post

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friday, march 13, 2020

eZ

14


casual Dining


Photos by deb Lindsey For the Washington Post

BY TIM CARMAN

T


o better understand the
heat grading system at
Wooboi Hot Chicken —
and by “understand,” I
mean determining the point at
which I lose all hope for living —
I ordered three sandwiches from
the Herndon storefront and took
them to my car, where I could
cough my lungs out in private.
Chef and owner Minwoo Choi
has classified his six h eat levels —
or “power” levels, as he labels
them — as “classic” (no heat);
levels one, two and three; “code
red” and “code blue” (presum-
ably the color you turn when you
stop breathing). For my first
tasting, I did away with the
bottom two grades and jumped
directly to the mid- and upper
tiers. My order included the

sando with level-two spice, the
Clubhouse with level three and
the “code red” Thousand sunny,
which is Wooboi’s take on a KFC
Double Down, with two fried-
chicken cutlets serving as the
bread. (obviously, you can cus-
tomize each sandwich to your
own heat tolerance.)
To me, the level-two sando is
everything you could possibly
want from a hot chicken sand-
wich, save perhaps for the insane
amount of scoville units neces-
sary to prove your alpha-male
indifference to pain — and your
complete disregard for flavor. My
sando was sprinkled with a 12-
plus-ingredient spice blend built
around jalapeño peppers, and its
heat was ample, stinging the
tongue without e xterminating its
taste buds. The cider coleslaw
see casual on 15

Wooboi, that’s a hot chicken sandwich


To best experience the Herndon shop, avoid

the superhot spice blends

If you go
Wooboi hot chicken
139 spring st., suite 1, herndon,
Va., 703-435-3 70 3;
wooboichicken.com.
hours: 1 1 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday
through Fr iday; 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
saturday.
nearest Metro: n/a
Prices: $2.99 to $12.99 for all
items on the menu.

aBOVE: The sando with level-
two heat and a side of fried okra
at Wooboi Hot chicken in
Herndon. lEFT: carlos
Marquiz seasons the fried
chicken. Diners may never
grasp the precision behind
every spice blend.

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