Buffets: When a Bowl of Lettuce Just Won’t Do…
Hunger! It must be satisfied. And occasionally, when we need food, we make a decision to spend a greater portion of our income than we normally might to get a meal. This is called “going out,” “eating out,” what have you. The expectation, for the most part, is that you, the diner, will be getting a better meal, a bigger meal, and a more filling meal.
Well, it may be time to curb our expectations. According to a recent article in the Washington Post, restaurants are “getting crafty” and looking for ways to manipulate recipes and use tricky plating techniques to cut costs. And damned if they didn’t get me twice recently, I believe. Saturday at brunch, at Domku in Petworth, the Nordic eggs benedict left me quite peckish (it was good, and would have been perfectly satisfying if I was ten). Other diners had similar complaints. And a recent salad at Cosi had about one emaciated buffalo wing’s worth of chicken in it. The entire salad, about 90 percent greens, didn’t even fill the bowl.
So, what am I getting at here? Why a brief roundup of decent, not terribly expensive buffets in the Washington D.C. area, of course. Suggestions come from Washington City Paper food critic Tim Carman and, you know, some friends that like to eat. The entire task of compiling these selections was easier said than done. Just check out this frustrated response to my buffet inquiry from City Paper food writing contributor Erin Zimmer: “Yeah, sometimes I wish I was in Vegas and could just cruise the cheap buffet scene. I used to hit up one on M Street at the late Mediterranean eatery, Little Cafe, where it was 9-bucks for Turkish pizzas, salads, some hot stuff, fruit. Decent, but gone, so that doesn’t help huh. Fogo de chao [is good] even though it’s a wallet-sucker.” Feel free to add suggestions in the comments section.
-Indique Heights, right by the Friendship Heights Metro stop, has a weekend buffet from noon to 3 pm on Saturdays and Sundays. The cost is $15 per person for adults and $9 per person for kids. Look for the mini dosa man, serving up made-to-order crepes with lentils and mildly spiced potatoes.
-Levi’s Port Cafe, near the Washington Navy Yard, has baked chicken, fried chicken, smothered pork chop, yams, potato salad, macaroni and cheese and cabbage, and none of the vegetables are cooked in meat, so there are vegetarian options. The price is $12.95.
-At Epicurean and Company, on Connecticut Ave just north of the Van Ness-UDC Metro stop, breakfast is $5.49 a pound, and lunch and dinner are $6.99 a pound. There’s a veggies and salad bar and continental cuisine: Chinese-American, European, sushi, deli section, plenty of variety. (This one might fall into the “cafeteria” category rather than the buffet class.)





)



May 6th, 2008 at 12:16 pm
Every three months or so, Sushi Taro has an all-you-can-eat buffet. One on National Sushi Day, one to celebrate the Cherry Blossoms, etc. It costs $35 or so. It’s the best all-you-can-eat sushi buffet out there. They have toro. They have uni. They’ll even make you hand rolls. Enjoy.
I also believe that the Mayflower does a seafood buffet still, as did the Ritz out in Tyson’s, but it’s been many years since I’ve tried either.
May 6th, 2008 at 1:34 pm
Epicurean has a restaurant with a buffet on Georgetown’s campus too. I’ve only been once (the buffet was free for students the first day it opened) but was pleasantly surprised by the quality/variety of the food. I guess I’ll have to go back though, and see if it’s as good when I’m paying $7/pound for it.
May 6th, 2008 at 2:03 pm
Ruth, I can’t thank you enough. This is the most exciting thread I’ve ever come across.
More suggestions people! More suggestions!!!
Burp…
May 6th, 2008 at 4:05 pm
Lunchtime at Mehran in Foggy Bottom you can eat all of the greasy-spoon Punjabi standards you can stomach - Tandoori chicken, chicken/Lamb curry, chickpeas, lots of veggies, naan (and beyond…) - for around $7.95. Fair Foggy Bottom doesn’t offer much else that is cheap that isn’t also extremely routine, so Mehran is a star on a stark strip of restaurants on the south side of Penn between 21st and 22nd street.
May 6th, 2008 at 7:56 pm
Mo Co has plenty of weekday lunch buffets, mostly at the Indian restaurants (vegetarian too). I work at NIST in Gaith. & my 2 faves are the $8.50 Italian buffet at Mangiare Bene (not incl. the 20% off for NIST employees!) & the $8 Asian buffet at City Lights Buffet behind Lakeforest Mall.
Skip the buffets by the pound - you don’t get close to a scale until check out time & you get more bang for the buck with the all you can eat places. Focus on the proteins & veggies, skip the starches. Some places include desserts & beverages…