geekchick: (fridge)
World's shortest review of 2941: ZOMG. *thud*



I felt like splurging on a really nice dinner this weekend, and my original plan was to go to Willow. Unfortunately there wasn't a single table available on Saturday night, so I poked around OpenTable for a bit to see if I could find a decent alternative. I'd heard more than a little favorable mention of 2941 before and they had a table available at 9:30, so I was game to check it out. Scott Bryan is currently guesting as executive chef, after Jonathan Krinn decamped in order to (apparently) open a new restaurant in Tyson's Corner; when his temporary residence is up in January, he'll be replaced by Bertrand Chemel.

The restaurant is tucked away in the Fairview Park office park, on the bottom floor of an office building housing General Dynamics. You wouldn't expect much atmosphere from that description, but you'd be wrong. We didn't have much of a view outside since it was long-since dark, but stopped to admire the waterfalls and koi pond on the way out. We got there around 9:15, but a table was open and we were seated within about five minutes. We took a peek at the wine list -- 53 pages with options ranging from around $30 to $4000 for the 1959 Château La Mission Haut-Brion, Grand Cru Classé -- but decided in the end to just go with a couple of glasses of Sangiovese, which neither of us had tried before, since we were unlikely to finish an entire bottle of anything. (Note to self: 2001 Villa la Selva Felciaia) It didn't end up matching terribly well with the entree I eventually decided on, but it was perfectly enjoyable on its own. First, we were presented with an amuse consisting of a single jumbo shrimp on a fennel puree with a lemon vinaigrette. For the first course we had the Maine lobster salad with fava been puree, white asparagus, and rainbow greens (I confess I'm still unsure what they actually are) and the roasted beet salad with toasted walnuts, Roquefort, aged sherry vinegar and frisee. The beet salad was awarded the "reality-shifting dish of the evening" honors, as I don't like blue cheese and my dining companion doesn't like beets, but surprisingly we both really enjoyed the combination of beets/walnuts/cheese/vinegar. Our main courses were honey and soy marinated Chilean sea bass over seared spinach, topped with braised squash and green papaya, and braised veal with potato puree, bacon, crimini mushrooms, pearl onions and a Bordelaise sauce. I liked my fish well enough, although to my taste it could've been cooked for about a minute and a half longer than it was. The veal, however, was absolutely amazing. I always feel bad about liking veal and don't order it on my own anymore, but oh my god was the taste incredible. (I also had a small bout of guilt over having the fish, since I remembered that it's on the seafood watch list.) Neither of us really had room for dessert after that, although the roasted pineapple with muscovado ice cream looked really tempting. At the end of your meal, they bring out a bowl containing a giant heap of cotton candy. Some of the Yelp reviews mention not being terribly pleased by the service, but I thought it was perfectly fine. Not stellar, not bad.

I certainly foresee going back there again, even if they'll have changed chefs at least once by the time I manage to get back. It's not going to be a regular occurrence, but for special occasions it's definitely staying on the options list. Maybe next time I'll really splurge and try the tasting menu and wine pairings.
geekchick: (cooking)
One thing that definitely says "fall" to me is the smell of roasting turkey coming from the kitchen. Mmmmm. (And don't forget the cat glued to your side every time you walk into the kitchen while said turkey is cooking.)

The very first turkey I ever made was for the first Thanksgiving dinner I ever hosted, I think ten years ago now. I cooked for fifteen people; talk about jumping in on the deep end. Surprisingly, it turned out really tasty (with minimal phonecalls to my mom for help) and I don't think any of the later ones have come out nearly as well. The worst was the one that just absolutely refused to cook all the way through thanks to a lot of really wet stuffing; it ended up pink on the bottom and dried out on top, and just my luck that was for another large Thanksgiving gathering. How embarrassing. =) (If you're coming to Thanksgiving dinner here and plan to consume meat, not to worry: I don't stuff turkeys with anything much more than a mirepoix anymore, the bread-based stuff Chris handles separately.)
geekchick: (carbs)
Completely mediocre.

Wait, that's not even 10 seconds. Okay, expanding on that: way too much "fudge swirl" (bleah), the "hint" of cinnamon is completely undetectable, and there's nothing even remotely resembling chile in it. It's okay chocolate ice cream, but it's not even close to what I was hoping for.


Speaking of mediocre, I'm thinking tonight might be an okay time to go see Tokyo Drift. I haven't seen either of the previous two movies, but I'm pretty sure there's nothing resembling a backstory I need to know. ;) I harbor exactly zero illusions that there's anything like a coherent plot, I'm going to see it to watch the drifting. (I'm thinking of maybe using the free tickets we got from the local swank theater when a bulb on a projector burned out 15 minutes into "Poseidon", assuming we can on opening weekend. Even with the eye candy, I'm sure "free" is about the right price for this flick.) [Edit: It's not showing at the place we have free tickets, and it was completely sold out at the theater we went to, so it was "Nacho Libre" instead.]

[livejournal.com profile] nminusone, you wondered how bad it would be? Apparently they do a Skyline GT-R conversion on a '67 Mustang fastback in one evening. *cough*
geekchick: (webcam)
Friday night was a lovely social evening of the sort I haven't had in a while. [livejournal.com profile] aroraborealis was in town and [livejournal.com profile] nminusone and I met up with her and the lovely[livejournal.com profile] tikva (and Brodie) and [livejournal.com profile] dragoncrunchies for mezze at Zaytinya (another restaurant run by the folks behind Jaleo and Cafe Atlantico). The food varied from "this is pretty good" to "ohmygod, I could die happy right now", the white wine/vodka/pomegranate juice cocktail was tasty (and dangerous, it didn't taste alcoholic at all), and the company was a lot of fun. I'm reminded of how much I really enjoy going out for dinner with friends and spending the evening talking and laughing and enjoying good food, I don't manage to do that nearly as often as I should.

After heading home and making a quick stop at Wegmans, Chris and I went to go see "V for Vendetta". I actually thought it was reasonably well done, but then I'm not a purist about these sorts of things and can be happy without a direct book-to-film translation. I had some quibbles with a couple of changes they made, but overall I didn't find it particularly disappointing.

Yesterday Chris and I decided to raid Tyson's so we could hit The Body Shop for smelly stuff for him and Sephora for "make your skin look better and minimize wrinkles" stuff for me and then continue with the mezze theme and have dinner at Lebanese Taverna in Tyson's II. After dinner, we came home and curled up on the sofa to watch "Matchstick Men".

Today's accomplishments have consisted entirely of cleaning off my desk a bit and shredding a bunch of paper and doing a little bit of gardening just in time for the possible snow on Tuesday. Sheesh. Given the time, I doubt there will be much more accomplished than that. Perhaps some laundry and hopefully clearing out the guest room a bit, and definitely cleaning up after the various pets.

-----

I've noticed I haven't felt much like writing here lately, and I've been particularly bad about commenting and even worse with responding to email. My moods are up and down, mostly down. I suspect it's in large part hormonal, but there've been some changes in my supplements lately that probably aren't helping much. I've been pretty grumpy today for various reasons; digging in the dirt helped, but it's getting too dark to continue and that leaves me with housework that I really don't much want to do. Meh.
geekchick: (mmm...sushi)
I've just been reminded that next week is DC Restaurant Week. I have a sneaking suspicion that I'm way too late to get reservations at some of these places, but I'm sure I'll try anyway.

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