DC & Maryland eats, 2021 edition.

I made a trip! To see baseball! Two trips, in fact, but only one involved a hotel stay, as I went down to the University of Maryland and stayed rather than boomeranging back and forth to Delaware (it’s a short drive but often a miserable one). For the first time in over a year, I have some restaurants to report on, in DC and the Maryland suburbs.

Mandalay is a local legend, a Burmese restaurant in Silver Spring. I don’t think I’d ever had Burmese food prior to this, so I have nothing to which I can compare this meal, but it was both spectacular and a truly new experience. We ordered four dishes: the eggplant fritters, the green tea leaf salad, nanjee thoke, and shrimp with sour mustard. Nanjee thoke is a noodle dish with curried chicken strips, onion, and cabbage, tossed with Burmese dressing, a mixture of peanuts, sesame seeds, horse gram bean powder, and fish sauce; the latter two ingredients are fermented, and both high in glutamates, the source of umami flavors. Sour mustard is also a fermented dish, a Burmese analogue to kimchi or sauerkraut, made from mustard greens and fermented with ginger and a salt brine. Those two dishes were like nothing I’d ever eaten. Both start out with a funky front note of something fermented, something slightly off, but then the umami comes out, along with sweet/spicy flavors in the noodles and tangy flavors in the shrimp (with a lot of onions that give a hint of sweetness), so that when you finish a bite, you can’t wait to have the next one. The fritters were custardy inside, and came with a very potent sour and spicy dipping sauce that paired well with the fried eggplant but also came in handy for the salad, which was woefully underdressed, with neither enough salt nor enough acidity. The next time I get mustard greens from our CSA, I’m going to try to replicate the sour mustard pickle, though.

Call Your Mother is a mini-chain of “Jew-ish delis” that make some incredible bagel sandwiches, which start with some damn fine bagels. I got the Sun City, an everything bagel with eggs, bacon, and spicy honey. That last element could easily have overwhelmed the sandwich, but there was just enough to give the sandwich a little kick and to give the bacon that sweetness you might get from “accidentally” letting it sit in the maple syrup that slid off your pancakes.  My wife got the Gleneagle, a za’atar bagel (already interesting) with candied smoked salmon cream cheese (even more interesting) and cucumbers. They use coffee from Lost Socks Roasters, located just over the line in DC’s Takoma Park neighborhood. It is a Jacob Wohl-certified Hipster Coffee Shop™ and it’s also excellent – if I’d thought of it, I would have grabbed a bag of beans – but I had their espresso at their shop and a drip coffee of a custom blend they make for Call Your Mother. 

Franklins Brewery is a restaurant, a brewery, and one of the coolest general stores you will ever find – the food is fine, the beer is good, but go for the store, which has all manner of eclectic, weird, and interesting knickknacks and gifts (as well as various craft beers). They make a solid crab cake, and the pork in their Cuban sandwich is tangy and smoky, but if you’re eating here, try the beer; I enjoyed the Rubber Chicken Red, an American Amber with very little hoppiness, but would also recommend the Highland Hugh (a Strong Scotch) and the HVL (a Honey Blonde, maybe a bit sweet for fans of IPAs or other hoppy beers). The store even has a small but well-curated selection board game collection, including several Ticket to Ride and Catan titles and a nice selection of the single-play Exit games. The outdoor seating area was a plus – I’m not vaccinated at all, so I’m still not eating inside any restaurants – and I imagine it’ll be packed the moment the weather warms up.

Comments

  1. Eats posts are back! If you like crab cakes, Koco’s Pub in Baltimore makes the best one.

  2. Excellent choices all around. I once had a smoked sour beer from Franklins that was truly one of the strangest beer experiences of my life. And I worked in Georgetown before moving to Chicago last year, and it absolutely killed me when Call Your Mother opened a location 2 blocks from my former office just after I left.

    I hadn’t heard of Mandalay as I didn’t venture in the suburbs too often when I lived there, but there are a few really notable Burmese and Laotian restaurants in DC, cuisines I wasn’t familiar with before. I highly, highly suggest Thip Kao (https://www.thipkhao.com/) next time you’re in town.

    • I would second Thip Khao, the Moak Paa (fish steamed in banana leaves) is great and relatively easy to reproduce at home.

    • Agreed on Thip Khao, or if in NoVA go to Padaek, their original restaurant, instead

  3. Have had “call your mother” on my list to get to for a while, the growth they’ve had in the last few years has been remarkable (think I saw they grew or plan to add another 5 locations through the pandemic).

  4. Excellent choices all, although I haven’t tried Call Your Mother yet. We used to go to Franklin’s regularly, and hopefully will some day do so again. The store is indeed a hoot, and has the added benefit of offering some excellent and obscure beers for sale.

  5. Love Franklin’s! The beer and general store make it worth the drive for me from VA. It’s a hidden gem
    Thanks for highlighting it.

  6. Back when I was a student at UMD, Franklin’s was the go-to for taking your parents out to lunch or dinner when they visited campus (along with Ledo’s, which people in Maryland like but is only so-so in my book). Fond memories there for sure.

    • I can honestly say I’ve never tasted a pizza like Ledo’s. The sauce tastes like a diabetic’s nightmare. It belongs on a dessert menu.

    • Yeah, especially because they pair that sweet sauce with a flaky crust. Almost like a bizarre pie.

  7. Burmese food is truly different, and in too low availability in the US generally. Tea leaf salad (dressed properly) is fantastic.

  8. Next time you are in DC, Keith, I highly recommend this place: https://www.crystalsunflower.com/
    It’s a vegetarian restaurant, and it is my favorite restaurant all time, and I am NOT a vegetarian, but their food is amazing in my humble opinion.

  9. I am on day two of three of the sour mustard pickle recipe from the Post that our host links to. It says that after adding the water & vinegar mix, to add water if needed to cover, but I would suggest waiting a few hours before doing so. The greens wilted some when I first poured the brine over them, but not enough and they weren’t close to covered, so I added water. But by the end of the day, they were more wilted and are now swimming in the brine.

    Smells great. We’ll see tomorrow night how they turned out.

    • Ended up okay, but I want to try again with less liquid, more ginger and cutting back on the salt.