Young & Hungry: The dish on District food

Posts Tagged ‘Spice-Xing’

Young & Hungry Dining Guide by the Day: Spice Xing

hpim1952_opt

The pizza naan at Spice Xing

One by one, we’re running through the 50 restaurants that made the cut on this year’s Young & Hungry Dining Guide. If you have visited the day’s featured restaurant, let us know what you think. If you’re planning to visit for the first time, tell us about your meal when you return.

The greater D.C. area has some terrific Indian restaurants, whether Heritage India in Glover Park or Bombay Indian in Silver Spring, but none of them are like Sudhir Seth’s Spice Xing in Rockville. You likely know Seth as the man behind the spice-perfect Passage to India in Bethesda, which may make you wonder why the hell he’s opening another subcontinental outpost under a different name. Well, because the new place ventures beyond the standard regional cuisines that many Indian restaurants peddle. As the name implies, Spice Xing specializes in the unique cross-cultural dishes that have been incubated in Seth’s home country. It could be a simple roast chicken, influenced by the bland British diet, which has been dressed up with East Indian spices, or it could be the shrimp Balchao, a Portuguese-inspired dish of crustaceans in spicy vinegar sauce that comes from Goa in western India. There are also nods to the Italians (pizza naan, don’t bother) and the Persians (a lamb and apricot stew, don’t miss it) as well as many of the traditional Indian dishes that we’ve all come to embrace. Which means that at Spice Xing, you can either experiment with Indian fusion—or just fall back on an Indian classic, which may actually be a cultural fusion that has merely passed the test of time.

Spice Xing, 100-B Gibbs St., Rockville, Md., (301) 610-0303

Sudhir Seth and Monica Bhide Collaborate on Indian Crab Dinner

What started as a simple request on the DonRockwell.com board has blossomed into a full-fledged Indian crab dinner/book signing/general-foodie-wonkiness dinner at Spice Xing in Rockville on Sunday, July 12.

Sudhir Seth, chef and owner of both Passage to India and Spice Xing, will team up with cookbook author Monica Bhide to offer a three-course dinner completely focused on blue crabs. The feast starts at 6 p.m. with crab tikkis, which are essentially Bhide’s take on Maryland crab cakes, and moves on to pollachi crab masala (crab sauteed in fennel, cinnamon, pepper, and poppy seeds) and crab gassi mangalorean (crab in a curry gravy).

Sandwiched around these courses will be an aperitif called “pomegranate delight” — Bhide’s rum cocktail with pomegranate juice, lime, and grenadine — and a dessert called shrikhand, which is a strained and flavored yogurt with fresh strawberries, kiwi, and mango. The opening course will be in audio form: Bhide will talk about her latest cookbook, Modern Spice, and sign copies.

The whole shebang will set you back $60, which includes a copy of the cookbook. So what’s the catch? You have to go through DonRockwell.com to get your name added to the list. Sounds worth it to Y&H.

Khurmi Naan: The Indian Take on Pizza

Over the years, I’ve sampled garlic naan, naan stuffed with goat cheese, kashmiri naan with nuts and raisins, and, of course, regular ol’ naan blackened and blistered straight from the tandoor. But until I dined recently at Spice Xing, the new Rockville restaurant opened by Passage to India’s Sudhir Seth, I had never tried khurmi naan.

It’s naan covered with tomato sauce and sprinkled generously with shredded cheese. It is, in other words, pizza naan.

The naan fits into Seth’s precise vision of Spice Xing, which features Indian dishes influenced by those European cultures that have had a presence on the Subcontinent, whether British, Portuguese, Spanish, or French.  But since the Italians never laid a colonial finger on India, the natives had to improvise their own version of the classic Neapolitan flatbread, which wasn’t so easy in a country with few pizza or conventional gas/electric ovens.

Read More “Khurmi Naan: The Indian Take on Pizza” »

Sudhir Seth Hopes to Open Spice X-ing By End of Month

Sudhir Seth, the chef/owner behind the often-dazzling Passage to India in Bethesda, just started this week building out his latest venture, Spice X-ing, in Rockville Town Square. He hopes to open the more ambitious restaurant by the end of December in the former Stonefish Grill space, the first business reportedly to fail at the Square.

During an interview this afternoon, Seth said Spice X-ing would include, aside from the requisite butter chicken and saag paneer, a number of dishes influenced by the outside cultures that have had a presence on the Subcontinent, whether British, Portuguese, Spanish, or French. The dishes, unlike the home-style cooking found at Passage, will require a good deal of research and conceptualizing, Seth says. Also expect more small plates.

Read More “Sudhir Seth Hopes to Open Spice X-ing By End of Month” »

D.C. Dish Hall of Fame
advertisement
Crafty Bastards Blog
  • Crafty Bastards!
    Blog
Can I have seconds?

This Week

Current Issue
The Issue of Nov. 4 - 10, 2009

advertisement
advertisement