The Top 100 Places to Eat Near Mom’s Uyghur Cuisine
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Rank 1. Oyster Oyster
American
A Michelin-starred vegetable tasting menu in Shaw that will make you forget you're not eating meat, and actually mean it. The chef turns local farm produce into nine courses of genuinely surprising food, the kind where a potato or a squash does something you didn't expect. The crowd skews thoughtful and curious rather than preachy about it. You leave feeling weirdly good, which isn't something tasting menus usually pull off.
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Winner · Outstanding Chef · Rob Rubba
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
- Food & Wine 2025 · The Top 15 US Restaurants
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Rank 2. Causa
Nikkei Peruvian
Tucked into Blagden Alley, Causa is a Michelin-starred tasting menu spot for about 20 people, so it already feels like a secret. The chef blends Japanese technique with Peruvian ingredients in a way that actually makes sense, moving you from Lima's coast up through the Andes and into the Amazon over the course of a meal. The crowd leans date-night and serious-eater, the kind of people who researched this place weeks ago.
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
- James Beard Awards 2025 · Winner · Best Chef: Mid-Atlantic · Carlos Delgado
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Nominee · Best New Restaurant
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Rank 3. Mita
Vegetarian Peruvian
Michelin-starred plant-based Peruvian tasting menu in Shaw sounds like a sentence designed to start arguments, but Mita genuinely earns it. The kitchen ranges across Latin America, and the food is inventive without being smug about it. The crowd is curious and mostly sober, here for the ride. Two format options mean you can commit as much as you want. Wear something that says you made a reservation two weeks ago.
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
- Punch 2025 · Best New Bartenders · Lou Bernard
- James Beard Awards 2025 · Nominee · Best New Restaurant
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Rank 4. Amazonia
Amazonian Peruvian
- Spirited Awards 2026 · Top 10 Nominee · World’s Best Spirits Selection
- Spirited Awards 2026 · Top 10 Nominee · Best U.S. Restaurant Bar
- James Beard Awards 2025 · Winner · Best Chef: Mid-Atlantic · Carlos Delgado
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Rank 5. The Dabney
American
A Michelin-starred fine dining room tucked down a cobblestone alley in Shaw, which already tells you something about its personality. The hearth does real work here, giving everything a quiet smokiness that ties the Mid-Atlantic cooking together. The crowd skews date-night and special-occasion, but the recently added à la carte option means you're no longer locked into a full tasting menu commitment just to get in the door.
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
- James Beard Awards 2025 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Restaurant
- Washingtonian 2026 · #15 · 100 Very Best Restaurants
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Rank 6. Bresca
Contemporary New American
Bresca is a Michelin-starred bistro on 14th Street that somehow feels like your neighborhood spot and a special-occasion splurge at the same time. The room is pretty wild, with a moss wall and surreal gold accents that make first-daters and dressed-up regulars feel equally at home. The cooking is genuinely creative without making you feel dumb for enjoying it, and the service hits the rare sweet spot of polished but not precious.
- AAA Four Diamonds
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
- Spirited Awards 2024 · Top 10 Nominee · Best U.S. Restaurant Bar
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Rank 7. The Red Hen
Italian
A rustic Italian spot in Bloomingdale that's been earning its Michelin Bib Gourmand for a reason, The Red Hen is reliably packed with the kind of neighborhood crowd that books weeks out and still shows up early. Exposed brick, reclaimed wood, and moody lighting give it a farmhouse warmth without trying too hard. The pastas are the move, and the bar is a solid fallback when you forgot to make a reservation, which you did.
- Michelin Guide Bib Gourmand
- The Rammys 2025 · Finalist · Chef of the Year · Mike Friedman
- Washingtonian 2026 · #18 · 100 Very Best Restaurants
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Rank 8. Jônt
American, Japanese
Ryan Ratino holds two Michelin stars here, and the room earns every one of them. It's a counter-style tasting menu above Bresca, with sharp-suited servers and chefs moving like they choreographed the whole thing. Japanese seafood and wagyu meet flawless French technique, and dessert gets its own dedicated counter. The crowd dresses up and means it. Worth every penny if you're the kind of person who thinks dinner should feel like an event.
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Rank 9. Baan Mae
Laotian
Seng Luangrath basically put Laotian food on DC's map, and her Shaw restaurant is where she's having the most fun with it. The menu roams across Southeast Asia, the room skews young and curious, and the vibe is casual enough that you won't feel weird ordering the FiLao-O-Fish sliders, a deadpan McDonald's riff that somehow works better than it has any right to. Go hungry and share everything.
- Bon Appétit 2025 · America's Best New Restaurants
- Washingtonian 2026 · #25 · 100 Very Best Restaurants
- The Washington Post 9 of the best restaurants in Shaw
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Rank 10. Rooster & Owl
American
A Michelin-starred prix-fixe spot in Columbia Heights where the menu bounces from steakhouse classics to Japanese yam to a pear salad doing a cacio e pepe impression, all in four courses. It sounds chaotic and it kind of is, but the kitchen sticks the landing every time. The crowd leans creative-class, dressed like they read the right newsletters. The bar will even match wines to whatever you end up ordering, which is a genuinely nice touch.
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
- The Rammys 2025 · Finalist · Formal Fine Dining Restaurant of the Year
- The Washington Post The 40 Best Restaurants In and Around D.C.
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Rank 12. 2Fifty
Barbecue
Counter-service BBQ done with serious conviction, 2Fifty smokes everything over wood until it's exactly right, and the room fills up fast with people who drove across town on purpose. The brisket and smoked turkey are the main reasons to show up, though the sides hold their own. Order more than you think you need, grab a spot if you can find one, or just take the whole fragrant haul home.
- The Rammys 2025 · Finalist · Casual Restaurant of the Year
- The Rammys 2025 · Finalist · Rising Culinary Star of the Year · Fernando Gonzales
- Time Out #8 · Best restaurants in Washington, D.C.
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Rank 13. Moon Rabbit
Vietnamese
Moon Rabbit is a modern Vietnamese restaurant where the chef's Louisiana upbringing crashes into his Vietnamese roots, and the result is genuinely surprising without feeling like a gimmick. Mochi beignets, Cajun-leaning preparations, Vietnamese classics rerouted through the American South. The Penn Quarter room is bright and lively, full of people who came ready to be curious. Dessert holds its own, which isn't something you can say everywhere.
- 50 Best 2025 · North American's Best Pastry Chef Award 2025 · Susan Bae
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Winner · Outstanding Pastry Chef or Baker · Susan Bae
- 50 Best #24 · North America's 50 Best Restaurants
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Rank 14. Elcielo Restaurant
Colombian
A Michelin-starred fine dining tasting menu that reads as a love letter to Colombia, right next to Union Market. The chef's cooking is personal and theatrical, the kind of place where dishes arrive with a little drama and a story behind them. The crowd leans toward date night and special occasions, everyone dressed up just enough. Go hungry, go curious, and let the warm staff walk you through it.
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
- The Rammys 2025 · Finalist · Service Program of the Year
- The Rammys 2025 · Finalist · Formal Fine Dining Restaurant of the Year
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Rank 15. Cucina Morini
Italian
A Sicilian-leaning trattoria in NoMa where the bar crowd spills into every corner and the energy never really dips. The kitchen makes its pasta in-house and offers half portions, which is the kind of move that actually lets you eat well instead of committing to one bowl and having regret. Comfort food done with real skill, and a room full of after-work regulars who clearly know something you don't yet.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- Time Out #12 · Best restaurants in Washington, D.C.
- Washingtonian 2026 · #36 · 100 Very Best Restaurants
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Rank 16. Masseria
Puglian Italian
A Michelin-starred tasting restaurant in a converted warehouse that somehow pulls off glamorous and unfussy at the same time. The chef's Puglian roots shape everything, and the pasta and bread courses alone justify the trip. The room draws a well-dressed crowd who came to linger, and the staff seem genuinely happy to let them. The cocktail bar up front is worth a stop on its own if a full tasting feels like a commitment.
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Rank 17. Your Only Friend
American
A Bib Gourmand sandwich bar that takes the format way more seriously than it has any right to, which turns out to be a good thing. The menu reads like someone who actually knows cocktail bars decided to open a deli instead, and the drinks are genuinely worth ordering. The crowd skews young and neighborhood-casual, the kind of people who appreciate a good sandwich and aren't embarrassed about it.
- Spirited Awards 2026 · Regional Top 10 Honoree · Best U.S. Restaurant Bar – U.S. East
- Michelin Guide Bib Gourmand
- The Rammys 2025 · Finalist · Hottest Sandwich Spot of the Year
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Rank 18. St. James
Caribbean
Modern Caribbean restaurant on 14th Street where the cooking genuinely earns its hype, which is a rare thing. The room has an industrial-cool look softened by color, and the menu is built for sharing, which gives you an excuse to order too much. Start with a rum cocktail, then work through smoky jerk brisket and whatever else the table can handle. The crowd skews date-night and friend-group, dressed up just enough to feel like the evening matters.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- Time Out #4 · Best restaurants in Washington, D.C.
- Washingtonian 2026 · #19 · 100 Very Best Restaurants
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Rank 19. Le Diplomate
French
- The Rammys 2025 · Finalist · Best Brunch of the Year
- Time Out #14 · Best restaurants in Washington, D.C.
- The Washington Post The 40 Best Restaurants In and Around D.C.
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Rank 20. minibar by José Andrés
Contemporary
José Andrés holds two Michelin stars here, and the room earns every one of them. It's a tasting counter experience where the whole point is that nothing is what it looks like, and the chef's team seems genuinely delighted to watch you figure that out. Sharply dressed servers hover at the edges while guests in their best outfits crowd a curved counter, watching cooks work close enough to touch. Weird, smart, and genuinely fun.
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Rank 21. Centrolina
Italian
- James Beard Awards 2022 · Nominee · Best Chef: Mid-Atlantic · Amy Brandwein
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Restaurant
- James Beard Awards 2025 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Chef · Amy Brandwein
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Rank 22. Shia
Korean
Edward Lee's 22-seat Korean fine dining room is one of those places where every course makes you wonder why more restaurants don't cook like this. The tasting menu takes traditional Korean ingredients seriously without being stiff about it, and the Korean spirits list goes deep into territory most people have never tried. First-daters and food-curious regulars fill the tiny room, all quietly impressed and pretending they're not.
- Esquire 2025 · 50/50 · The Best Martinis in America
- Washingtonian 2026 · #37 · 100 Very Best Restaurants
- Eater The 38 Essential Restaurants Around D.C.
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Rank 23. Unconventional Diner
Modern New American
It looks like a classic diner, white walls and seafoam booths, but the menu is doing something a little sneakier. This Bib Gourmand spot in Shaw takes comfort-food staples and nudges them just far enough that you feel like you discovered something. Brunch draws the weekend crowd, and the lemon meringue pie has a devoted following. Book ahead, because the locals already figured this one out.
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- Esquire 2023 · Medina's Martini Service · The Best Martinis in America
- The Rammys 2025 · Finalist · Cocktail Program of the Year
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Rank 25. Maydān
Middle Eastern
The open fire at the center of this Middle Eastern restaurant isn't just for atmosphere, it does most of the actual cooking, and you can tell. Go for the prix-fixe and let the spreads, grilled meats, and rice pudding arrive in waves while you work through the cocktail list. The crowd leans date-night and special-occasion, everyone looking slightly more dressed up than they needed to but not mad about it.
- James Beard Awards 2022 · Nominee · Outstanding Wine and Other Beverages Program
- Eater 2018 · The Best New Restaurants in America
- Bon Appétit 2018 · #2 · America's Best New Restaurants
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Rank 26. Baan Siam
Thai
- The New York Times The 25 Best Restaurants in Washington, D.C., Right Now
- Eater The 38 Essential Restaurants Around D.C.
- Washingtonian 2026 · #76 · 100 Very Best Restaurants
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Rank 27. ROYAL DC
Latin American
A chill, all-day Latin American spot in Shaw where the food punches well above what you'd expect to pay for it. Locals who know, know. The vibe is low-key and unpretentious, the kind of room where nobody's performing for anyone. Breakfast draws a loyal crowd, and dinner moves upstairs to a cozy second floor with real character. Come hungry and order generously, because the kitchen clearly knows what it's doing.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- Eater The 15 Best Coffee Shops Around D.C.
- Time Out The 20 Best Coffee Shops and Cafés in Washington, DC
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- Food & Wine 2023 · Mentaiko and Corn Pizza · Best Dishes Our Editors Ate This Year
- Eater The 38 Essential Restaurants Around D.C.
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Rank 30. PhoXotic
Noodles
A Bib Gourmand pho shop in Bloomingdale where the broth is serious business and the menu stays in its lane, which is exactly the point. The chef came up in butchery, and it shows in bowls loaded with brisket, short rib, and beef shank, finished with torched bone marrow if you're feeling dramatic. Counter seating, QR codes, no reservations, no fuss. The crowd comes hungry and leaves very quiet, which is the highest compliment a bowl of pho can get.
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Rank 31. Pop FizzBar
Wine Bar
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Rank 32. La' Shukran
French, Levantine
Finding it is half the fun: duck into a Union Market alley, spot the green door, and climb the stairs into a jewel-toned bistro where French technique meets Levantine soul. Chef Michael Rafidi runs one of DC's most genuinely original rooms, all habibi-funk vinyl and cool-kids energy. The menu is built for sharing, the cocktails are saffron-spiked, and snapping a reservation requires actual effort. That's usually a sign.
- The New York Times 2025 · Falafel Jibneh · The Best Restaurant Dishes We Ate Across the U.S.
- The Rammys 2025 · Finalist · New Restaurant of the Year
- The New York Times 2025 · The Restaurant List
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Rank 33. Marcus
American
Marcus Samuelsson's hotel restaurant in NoMa is the rare kind of upscale dining room that actually earns its price tag. The cooking pulls from all over, Southern, West African, Scandinavian, and somehow it coheres into something genuinely exciting rather than confused. The room draws a well-dressed crowd that came with a reservation and a plan. The crab rice, despite its modest name, arrives as a full production, and the blue cornbread lives up to the talk.
- Washingtonian 2026 · #32 · 100 Very Best Restaurants
- Eater Rising Chef · The 2025 Eater DC Award Winners · Anthony Jones
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Semifinalist · Emerging Chef · Anthony Jones
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Rank 34. Karizma
Modern Indian
Modern Indian in Penn Quarter with a Michelin Bib Gourmand, and it earns it. Karizma is a proper sit-down restaurant where the cooking takes Indian cuisine seriously without taking itself too seriously, so the room stays lively rather than hushed. The naan alone is worth the trip. The drinks menu, including some genuinely good alcohol-free options, is more creative than you'd expect, so don't just default to beer.
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Rank 35. Elmina
Ghanaian
Eric Adjepong runs this stylish Ghanaian restaurant on 14th Street, and it's the kind of place that makes you wonder why West African food hasn't had a bigger moment in this city until now. You can do a full tasting menu or graze from the bar menu, which riffs on Ghana's casual chop-bar tradition. The room draws a well-dressed crowd that clearly did their research, and nobody looks like they're in a hurry to leave.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- Washingtonian The Hot List: 10 Restaurants Around DC We’re Loving Right Now
- Washingtonian 2026 · #6 · 100 Very Best Restaurants
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Rank 36. Yellow
Levantine Middle Eastern
- The Rammys 2025 · Finalist · Pastry Chef or Baker of the Year · Alicia Wang
- The Rammys 2025 · Finalist · Fast Casual Restaurant of the Year
- Eater The Best Bakeries Around D.C.
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Rank 37. Eatopia Eatery
Ethiopian
- Washingtonian The Hot List: 10 Restaurants Around DC We’re Loving Right Now
- The Washington Post The 8 best Ethiopian restaurants in and around D.C.
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Rank 38. Fiola
Italian
Fiola is a Michelin-starred Italian tasting restaurant sitting on Pennsylvania Avenue, which means you're eating exceptional pasta roughly halfway between the White House and the Capitol, which feels appropriately dramatic. The room pulls off retro glitz without the stuffiness, and the crowd tends to run toward people who've loosened their ties but not their ambitions. The kitchen does modern regional Italian in a way that makes the classics feel genuinely exciting rather than dutiful.
- AAA Four Diamonds
- 50 Top Italy 2026 · #7 · The Best Italian Restaurants In The World
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
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Rank 39. Zaytinya
Mediterranean
José Andrés runs this sleek mezze spot pulling from Greek, Lebanese, and Turkish cooking, and it's earned a Michelin Bib Gourmand for good reason. The room feels breezy and modern, full of suits loosening up over spreads and pita alongside groups of friends with no plans to leave anytime soon. Order a bunch of small plates, let things pile up on the table, and let someone else figure out the bill.
- Michelin Guide Bib Gourmand
- The Washington Post The 40 Best Restaurants In and Around D.C.
- Washingtonian Where to Eat Near the National Mall
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Rank 40. Rasika
Modern Indian
Modern Indian done right, in a room loud enough that nobody's listening to your conversation anyway. Rasika pulls in a real cross-section of D.C., from Hill staffers unwinding to couples on a proper date night, and the vibe works for both. The food is confident and unfussy, the kind of cooking that makes you wonder why Indian food ever got saddled with a cheap reputation. Do yourself a favor and order extra naan, because you will run out.
- Eater The All-Time Eater 38
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- The New York Times The 25 Best Restaurants in Washington, D.C., Right Now
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Rank 41. Stellina Pizzeria
Neo-Neapolitan Pizza
Stellina earned a Michelin Bib Gourmand for a reason: the neo-Neapolitan pies coming out of that wood-burning oven are blistered, chewy, and genuinely great without costing a fortune. It's a casual counter-service spot in NoMa with colorful tiles, red stools, and an open kitchen that makes the whole place feel alive. The crowd is mostly neighborhood regulars and the occasional pizza pilgrim who did their homework. Bring cash for tiramisu on the way out.
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Rank 42. L'Ardente
Italian
- The Washington Post The 40 Best Restaurants In and Around D.C.
- Washingtonian 2026 · #44 · 100 Very Best Restaurants
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: Mid-Atlantic · David Deshaies
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If someone asks where to get Buffalo wings in DC, this is your answer. Upstate FTW is a bar tucked inside the U Street spot Sport & Social, run by a chef who grew up in upstate New York and clearly has something to prove. The wings are crispy, properly sauced, and the result of a multi-day prep process that you won't taste so much as feel. The crowd is exactly what U Street suggests: loud, happy, not thinking about calories.
- Washingtonian 2025 · Buffalo Wings · Our Favorite Dishes of the Year in the DC Area
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Restaurateur · Scott Drewno and Danny Lee - Fried Rice Collective
- Washingtonian 2025 · Buffalo Wings · Our Favorite Dishes of the Year in the DC Area
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Rank 44. Karma Modern Indian
Modern Indian
- The Washington Post The 40 Best Restaurants In and Around D.C.
- Eater The Best Tasting Menus in D.C. Right Now
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Rank 46. Anju
Korean
Anju is a Korean gastropub on 18th Street where the whole concept is food made for drinking, which means everything arrives salty, spicy, or rich enough to justify another round of soju. The crowd is young and loud and clearly regulars, packed into a brick-walled room that manages to feel cozy at full capacity. The menu pulls from real home cooking, and that warmth comes through in every bowl.
- James Beard Awards 2025 · Nominee · Outstanding Restaurateur · Scott Drewno and Danny Lee - The Fried Rice Collective
- James Beard Awards 2022 · Nominee · Emerging Chef · Angel Barreto
- James Beard Awards 2022 · Nominee · Best Chef: Mid-Atlantic · Angel Barreto
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Rank 50. Pluma by Bluebird Bakery
Modern Bakery
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Rank 51. Chai Pani
Indian
Chai Pani brings the James Beard Award-winning Indian street food party from Asheville to Union Market, and it fits right in. The DC outpost is loud, color-drenched, and genuinely festive, the kind of place where everyone looks like they're having more fun than you until you order something. Go for the snacky stuff, the crispy bites and tangy tamarind things, and don't plan on getting out of there without overeating.
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Nominee · Outstanding Restaurateur · Meherwan Irani and Molly Irani - Chai Pani Restaurant Group
- Washingtonian 2026 · #29 · 100 Very Best Restaurants
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Rank 52. Sushi Nakazawa
Sushi
Tucked into the back of the Waldorf Astoria, this Michelin-starred omakase room is the kind of place where everyone at the counter is quietly trying to look like they do this all the time. Twenty courses of immaculate nigiri, paced over a couple of unhurried hours, with rice seasoned so precisely it almost feels personal. Splurge for a counter stool over a dining room table if you can. It costs more, but watching the chefs work is half the point.
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
- Washingtonian 2026 · #48 · 100 Very Best Restaurants
- Washingtonian Where to Eat Near the National Mall
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Rank 53. King Street Oyster Bar
Seafood
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Rank 54. Shōtō
Modern Japanese
Shōtō is a sleek modern Japanese restaurant where the room does half the work, volcanic stone cascading from the ceiling, warm wood everywhere, and lighting dialed to make everyone look suspiciously attractive. It draws the kind of crowd that dresses up without trying too hard. The menu leans on robata grilling and sushi, and the Japanese whiskey list is genuinely impressive, so let the bar be your first stop before you eat.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- The Washington Post The 40 Best Restaurants In and Around D.C.
- The Washington Post The 40 Best Restaurants In and Around D.C.
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Rank 55. Rania
Contemporary Indian
A Michelin-starred prix-fixe doing contemporary Indian in a way that feels genuinely exciting rather than just dressed up. The kitchen takes the classics seriously and then quietly does something unexpected with them, and the cocktails are built to keep pace with the bold flavors on the plate. The crowd leans date-night and special-occasion, everyone looking like they planned the outfit. Worth every bit of the commitment.
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Rank 59. Chaplin's
Noodles
Shaw's answer to ramen that actually earns the hype, Chaplin's is a noodle bar with a 21-plus door and a cocktail list that gives people something to talk about. The ramen comes hot or cold, both built with real intention, and the dumplings and small bites are as central to the meal as the noodles. The crowd skews young and loud in the best way, and nobody's leaving without dessert.
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Rank 60. Family Ethiopian Restaurant
Ethiopian
A family-run Ethiopian spot on Ninth Street that genuinely feels like someone's aunt is cooking for you, which is basically the point. The room is cheerful and unpretentious, with art on every wall and serious women running the kitchen. Order the family platter and let the injera do the heavy lifting, scooping up stews and greens that taste like they've been made with actual care, because they have.
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Rank 61. Beloved BBQ
Japanese
A Japanese steakhouse in Capitol Crossing where the dark walls, neon hallway, and circular tabletop grills make it clear you're not at a regular chophouse. The crowd leans toward expense-account dinners and special-occasion splurges, which makes sense once you see the A5 Wagyu on the menu. The chef keeps things sharply Japanese in spirit, and the server folding your fried rice tableside is the kind of move that makes everyone at the table stop talking.
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Rank 62. San Lorenzo Ristorante + Bar
Tuscan Italian Cocktail Bar
A veteran of one of DC's most beloved Italian kitchens hung up the white tablecloths and opened this warm, neighborhood trattoria in Shaw, named for his son. The exposed brick and painted tile floor feel genuinely Tuscan rather than decorator-Tuscan, and the pasta here is the real reason to go. It draws regulars who already know what they're ordering and first-timers who don't realize they'll be back next week.
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Rank 63. Cranes
Spanish/Japanese
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Rank 64. L’Ardente
Italian
The 40-layer lasagna here has been the talk of DC for a good reason, so go ahead and order it before you even sit down. It's a casual-ish Italian spot inside a gleaming Capitol Crossing development, wood-burning grill and pizza oven humming away while the after-work crowd unbuttons their collars. Grab a counter seat to watch the kitchen move. The Michelin Bib Gourmand nod confirms it punches well above the room's price point.
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Rank 65. Tiger Fork
Hong Kong-style Chinese
Hong Kong-style bar and kitchen tucked off the main road, which means half the fun is actually finding it. Inside it's all brick walls, dragon murals, and lanterns doing the most, with a crowd that dressed up just enough to feel good about it. The cocktails are genuinely clever, and the food, especially the chili wontons and cheung fun, holds its own. The fortune cookies dispense rap lyrics, which tells you everything about the vibe.
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Rank 66. Rumi’s Kitchen
Persian
Persian food done properly in a grand dining room that somehow still feels warm and welcoming, with earthy colors, a lively bar, and a tandoor oven you can watch from your seat. This is a full sit-down dinner spot, the kind where you settle into a high-backed banquette and let the meal stretch out. The crowd skews date night and celebration, dressed just enough to feel like the room deserves it.
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Rank 67. Queen's English
Chinese
A cozy Columbia Heights neighborhood spot doing inventive Hong Kong-inspired cooking at prices that won't wreck your night. The room is small and quietly stylish, with blue banquettes and geometric screens giving everyone a little privacy, and the Michelin Bib Gourmand crowd filling the place most nights. High-heat wok dishes that actually taste like someone's been thinking hard, not just showing off.
- James Beard Awards 2025 · Nominee · Best Chef: Mid-Atlantic · Henji Cheung
- Michelin Guide Bib Gourmand
- Time Out #9 · Best restaurants in Washington, D.C.
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Rank 68. Seven Reasons
Caribbean
A gorgeous bi-level restaurant on H Street where the kitchen pulls from Venezuela, Peru, and the Caribbean to put together plates that look almost too good to eat. The crowd skews date-night and special-occasion, people dressed up just enough to feel like they made an effort. Portions are generous and flavors are bold, which is a more welcome surprise than it sounds at this price point.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: Mid-Atlantic · Enrique Limardo
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Rank 70. Supra
Georgian Eastern European
Georgian food is having a moment, and Supra is the reason to care. It's a proper sit-down restaurant with an elegant dining room that somehow also has sheep hats hanging on the walls, which tells you everything about the balance they're going for. The khachapuri, a bread boat filled with molten cheese and a runny egg, is the dish that'll have you reconsidering all your life choices. The wine list pulls from one of the oldest wine regions on earth.
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Rank 71. Perry's
Japanese
Perry's is an Adams Morgan neighborhood Japanese spot that's been around forever, but the kitchen has quietly become one of the more talked-about in the city. The menu mixes sushi with Japanese comfort food that doesn't play it safe, think fried mochi, katsu burgers, and dumplings that have no business being as good as they are. The crowd is relaxed and local, the kind of place regulars treat like their living room.
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Winner · Emerging Chef · Masako Morishita
- The Washington Post The 40 Best Restaurants In and Around D.C.
- Eater The 38 Essential Restaurants Around D.C.
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Rank 72. Oyamel
Mexican
José Andrés runs this lively Mexican spot near the National Mall, and it draws a faithful crowd of off-duty staffers and tourists who've done their homework. Pull up a stool at the ceviche bar, order something cold, and graze through small plates that take regional Mexican cooking seriously without making you feel like you're in a lecture. The happy hour menu is a genuinely good deal in a city that doesn't always bother.
- Michelin Guide Bib Gourmand
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: Mid-Atlantic · Omar Rodriguez
- Washingtonian Where to Eat Near the National Mall
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Rank 74. Mandu
Korean
A Korean restaurant that's been proving this city thinks too small about Korean food for years now. The soaring ceilings and long bar give it a neighborhood-restaurant-that-means-business feel, and the crowd tends to be regulars who already know what they're ordering. The broths and stews are the move here, deeply comforting and genuinely fiery, and the gamjatang alone is worth the trip.
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- The Pinnacle Guide 2 Pins
- 50 Best 2026 · #55 · North America's 50 Best Bars
- Esquire 2023 · Silver Service Martini · The Best Martinis in America
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Rank 76. Tapori
Indian
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Nominee · Best Chef: Mid-Atlantic · Suresh Sundas
- Eater 2025 · The Best New Restaurants in America
- Washingtonian 2026 · #43 · 100 Very Best Restaurants
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- The Rammys 2025 · Finalist · Beer Program of the Year
- Washingtonian 9 Delicious Doughnut Shops Around DC
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Rank 78. Ottoman Taverna
Turkish
The room alone is worth the trip: honeycomb walls, a massive Hagia Sophia mural, and deep-blue pendant lights that make the whole place feel like a fever dream of Istanbul. Ottoman Taverna is a proper sit-down Turkish restaurant in Mt. Vernon Triangle, the kind where you work through cold meze and kebabs while sipping apple-rose tea. The crowd skews date-night and special-occasion, which the setting absolutely delivers on.
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Rank 80. Reveler's Hour
Italian
Cozy Adams Morgan wine bar and pasta spot that feels like a date night even when you're just catching up with a friend. The housemade pasta is the reason to come, the natural wine list is the reason to stay, and the sommelier owner will talk you into a bottle you've never heard of and will immediately want a case of. Snug tables, arched ceilings, and a crowd dressed just well enough to feel like they tried.
- Wine Enthusiast 2023 · Forward 50 Restaurants
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- The New York Times The 25 Best Restaurants in Washington, D.C., Right Now
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Rank 82. Dauphine's
Cajun & Creole
Dauphine's is a sprawling, three-level New Orleans-style restaurant that earns its Michelin Bib Gourmand the old-fashioned way: through serious Cajun and Creole cooking that couldn't care less about impressing you. The room is big and buzzy, full of the kind of crowd that orders another round before finishing the first. Go hungry, work through the oysters and the blackened crab, and save room for dessert.
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Rank 83. Raw Omakase
Omakase Sushi
Tucked on the third floor above a restaurant on 14th Street, this tiny omakase counter fits fewer than ten people, so getting a seat already feels like an achievement. The chef runs two seatings a night and moves through a tight, seasonal progression of nigiri that earns every penny of the price. The aged sake list is genuinely worth exploring. Dress sharp, arrive curious, and don't be late.
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Laos in Town is a casual Northeast DC spot that takes Southeast Asian cooking seriously, which means the spicy dishes are actually spicy and the menu goes places most Thai restaurants don't bother with. The crowd is a mix of neighborhood regulars and people who clearly did their homework. There's a solid cocktail list if you need something cold to cope with the heat, and vegans eat well here too, which is rarer than it should be.
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- The Rammys 2025 · Finalist · Service Program of the Year
- Washingtonian Where to Eat Near the National Mall
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Rank 87. Astoria DC
Sichuan Chinese
Dupont Circle Sichuan that punches well above its price tag, which is probably why the twenty-somethings here look like they've never left. It's a cool, slightly dimly lit room with a scene to match, and the kitchen backs it up with bold, funky food that earns its Michelin Bib Gourmand. The cumin lamb is the move if you're ordering for yourself. The bar takes walk-ins, which is very good news.
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Rank 89. The Bombay Club
Indian
Polished Indian dining steps from the White House, where the power-lunch crowd loosens their ties but never their ambitions. The room channels old British Raj club energy, all plush and proper, and the cooking is the real deal, ranging from Northern grilled meats to Southern coconut dishes. You'll spend half the meal squinting at the banquette trying to figure out which senator that is. That's half the fun.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- The Washington Post The 40 Best Restaurants In and Around D.C.
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Restaurateur · Ashok Bajaj - Knightsbridge Restaurant Group
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Rank 90. Michele’s
French-inspired New American
The name over the door is the chef's late mother's, and that warmth shows up in the cooking. This brasserie inside the Eaton Hotel draws a laid-back hotel crowd plus locals who figured out it's better than it has to be, doing French-touched American comfort food that skips the fussiness. Think Gulf Coast flavors and New Orleans soul, with smashburgers and crawfish pasta sharing the menu without any apology. Great for a low-key dinner when you want good food without a dress code.
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Rank 91. Karravaan
Silk Road Middle Eastern
Karravaan is a Silk Road-inspired Middle Eastern spot in Northeast DC that makes sharing feel mandatory in the best way. Think bold, spiced flavors and generous plates meant to be passed around, drawing a neighborhood crowd that comes hungry and leaves happy. The smoky eggplant dip with house-made flatbread is reason enough to show up. Wear whatever you want, order more than you think you need, and let the table figure out the rest.
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Rank 92. Pascual
Mexican
Capitol Hill's hottest reservation right now is this lively, sharing-focused Mexican spot where the cooking feels more Mexico City than D.C. The vegetable dishes are quietly the stars of the table, though the lamb barbacoa will make carnivores very happy. It draws a young, neighborhood crowd who knew early and booked faster than you did. Go with a group, order everything, and sort out the logistics of getting a table before you get excited about going.
- 50 Best #42 · North America's 50 Best Restaurants
- The Rammys 2025 · Finalist · New Restaurant of the Year
- The Rammys 2025 · Finalist · Chef of the Year · Matt Conroy & Isabel Coss
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Rank 93. The Occidental
American
This grand American dining room a block from the White House has been around forever, and a recent overhaul turned it from a dusty landmark into one of the chicest rooms in DC. Olive-green velvet booths, excellent martinis, a menu of oysters and rib eye that somehow feels both timeless and fun. The crowd skews power-lunch and date-night, everybody looking like they have somewhere to be afterward.
- Wine Enthusiast 2025 · Top 50 New Restaurants
- Washingtonian The Hot List: 10 Restaurants Around DC We’re Loving Right Now
- Washingtonian 2025 · Oysters With Beurre Blanc · Our Favorite Dishes of the Year in the DC Area
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Rank 94. Amparo Fondita
Mexican
Modern Mexican done with real care in a minimalist Dupont Circle room, where the Michelin folks handed out a Bib Gourmand and honestly, it tracks. The chef nixtamalizes corn in-house and the menu swings from a raw bar to mole-glazed halibut to sides that quietly steal the show. The crowd tends toward first dates and neighborhood regulars who've figured out that the "simple" dishes are never actually simple.
- Michelin Guide Bib Gourmand
- The Rammys 2025 · Finalist · Upscale Casual Restaurant of the Year
- Washingtonian The Hot List: 10 Restaurants Around DC We’re Loving Right Now
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Rank 96. Causa
Peruvian
Tucked into a Shaw alley, Causa is a Peruvian tasting menu spot that actually makes you feel like you traveled somewhere. Six courses move through the regions of Peru in a way that feels considered rather than educational, with serious seafood doing a lot of the heavy lifting. Upstairs at Amazonia, the bar crowd is looser and the pisco sours are good, but down here it's date-night energy and people quietly impressed by things they can't quite name.
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Rank 97. Albi
Palestinian
A Michelin-starred live-fire restaurant in Navy Yard where the Palestinian-rooted cooking is genuinely exciting, not just interesting on paper. The open kitchen's hearth runs everything, and the smoke and char show up in every course. Go à la carte if you want, but the tasting menu is the move. The room is warm and lively, the kind of crowd that dressed up a little but not too much, and the wine list leans hard into the Mediterranean.
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Winner · Outstanding Chef · Michael Rafidi
- 50 Best #6 · North America's 50 Best Restaurants
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
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Rank 98. Casa Teresa
Spanish
Spanish home cooking done with real technique, inside a light-filled dining room and patio at the Square food hall. The team came up through serious kitchens, and you can taste it, especially in the meats off the oak-and-charcoal grill. The crowd skews stylish without trying too hard, the kind of people who order a second round of croquetas without apology. Save room for the Basque cheesecake, which quietly earns every compliment it gets.
- The Rammys 2025 · Finalist · Chef of the Year · Rubén García Castilla
- Eater Chef of the Year · Rubén García
- Washingtonian 2026 · #22 · 100 Very Best Restaurants
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Rank 99. Izakaya Seki
Japanese
A genuine izakaya tucked into a DC rowhouse, where a father-daughter team turns out the kind of quiet, precise Japanese small plates that make you forget you had other plans. Regulars prop up the kitchen counter and work through the hand-doodled specials while everyone else figures out sake pairings. Tuesday nights the upstairs flips into a natural-wine bar that the industry crowd has quietly claimed as their own.
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Rank 100. All-Purpose
Pizza
All-Purpose is a sit-down pizzeria that takes its deck-oven pies seriously, and the long-fermented dough means the crust actually earns your attention rather than just holding toppings. The crowd skews young and neighborhood-ish, the kind of people who know to order the feta ranch for dipping. Italian-American sides round things out, and there are two locations if Navy Yard isn't your side of town.