Showing posts with label Logan Circle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Logan Circle. Show all posts

Monday, January 21, 2013

The Pig: Cast-Iron Fruitcake


Bill


This holiday dessert takes a risk with chunks of bacon in a fruitcake.  For comparison purposes, this fruit cake is just a little less dense than the Entenmann's version or English Christmas pudding, but closer to those than a panettone. 


The cake's texture and ginger flavor mix with the brandied fruit and bacon chunks with pleasant results.  It pairs well with a cold winter night.  This dish deserves our great rating.
1320 14th Street Northwest, Washington, DC 20005
(202) 290-2821





Friday, November 26, 2010

Estadio: Chocolate Hazelnut Cake

Bill


Estadio's chocolate hazelnut cake is the size of a large cupcake.  It's split by a cracker-like wafer encrusted with seasalt, topped with capuccino ice cream, and drizzled with hazelnut sauce.




I would have preferred the hazelnut sauce a bit thicker.  The capuccino ice cream's flavor was decent and fairly unique.  The wafer helped the ice cream seep into the cake.  The cake itself was excellent, with a light, fluffy pastry cloud on top hiding a delightfully dense and gooey center.  This deserves our great rating.


1520 14th St., NW Washington, DC 20005
(202) 319-1404 
  
Google Map & Reviews (4/5)


Washingtonian

Yelp (3.5)
Washington Post (Critic & Readers: 2.5/4)

DC Magazine

The Hill

Examiner

Washington City Paper


Estadio on Urbanspoon


Tuesday, October 26, 2010

General Rejection: Pitango Gelato

Bill


Pitango Gelato serves something closer to colored ice.  I recently tried two flavors, and it was the worst gelato I've ever tasted.  "Unremarkable" would be too kind a description.  So would "flavored ice."  The base gelato had painfully little flavor.  I couldn't even taste milk.  One of the flavors I tried had some flecks of chocolate, and those tiny elements provided the only texture and flavor beyond ice.  A sign in the shop asserts that you're about to taste the "best gelato."  It isn't even the best gelato within walking distance. 




That said, Pitango will continue to thrive in Logan Circle, mostly for reasons beyond the gelato.  It's open late, unlike many DC dessert places that close before the usual dessert time.  It's near bars and other restaurants.  It has outdoor seating.  It serves cold sugar and fat in bowls.  These attributes make Pitango a nice spot for after-dinner or pre-bar relaxing and people watching.  Just appreciate it for what it has to offer: something completely different from the "best gelato."  If you're looking for great or even decent gelato, skip it.  We'll post reviews of gelato places we like soon.


1451 P St. NW, Washington, DC 20005
(202) 332-8877      

Google map & reviews (3/5)

Washington Post

Washingtonian (Best of Washington: Best Cool Treats: Nutty gelati)

Washingtonian Best Bites Blog: Things We Love: Briche con Gelato at Pitango Gelato

Washington Examiner

DCist

Yelp (4/5)

Pitango Gelato on Urbanspoon

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Artfully Chocolate Kingsbury Confections: Truffles

Bill

Truffles are at the extreme end of the flavor-punch spectrum, just past brownies.  A truffle must squeeze fine, deep, decadent flavor into a very small package.  In short, it should be awesomeness from concentrate. 

Artfully Chocolate’s truffles are the best I’ve tried in DC.  They are also the cheapest, especially with a volume discount, which is rare for truffles.  I’ll describe them in an order from divine to forgettable.


Pomegranate Royale.  This receives significant points for the creativity of the concept:  pomegranate molasses, crème de cassis, and cognac.  Mixing two alcoholic elements itself requires daring, world-class skill, and a hefty dose of trial and error.  This creation goes even further in combining that pairing with a unique treatment of the trendy pomegranate.  The result is devine.  Its creator picked the right chocolate: only slightly on the darker side.  The interaction of the three strong flavors of pomegranate, cognac, and dark chocolate, and the softer crème de cassis works.  Amazingly, you can taste all four elements.  Add this to our favorites.




Amaretto Marzipan.  This truffle is made of ground almonds and chocolate marzipan “laced” with amaretto.  That’s quite a tribute to Continental Europe.  The individual flavors were great, but their combination was not.  Amaretto, almonds, and marzipan are tame flavors.  That left only the relatively dark chocolate standing out.  However, the quality of the individual elements, and the textures of their combination make this one to try.


Black Forest.  Montmorency cherries, kirsch (a cherry liqueur), and chocolate make this truffle legitimately Germanic.  It would be popular at cafés from Munich to Vienna.  This was good but its taste didn’t match my excitement about the kirsch.  Kirsch is a unique (in the U.S.), strong element.  So, among these ingredients, it should carry the truffle.  Unfortunately, it was barely detectable.  Its minor role is equivalent to a chocolate-chip cookie with just one chip.


Hazelnut Toffee.  This was a more obvious concept that should easily have been executed better than it was.  The hazelnut flavor wasn’t even equivalent to that in a kinder bar or nutella, and I couldn’t find the toffee.  The toffee may have been inside the truffle, but if so, it was undetectable.  The crunchy items on top may have been the toffee, but they just tasted like nuts.  Skip this one.


Pumpkin Cheesecake.  This deserves some points for a seasonal, unique concept, but none for the execution.  Pumpkin and sweetened cream cheese (the base element in cheesecake) are mild flavors, so this mix only has the chocolate shell to pack a flavor punch.  It’s not surprising that this combination of those three elements basically tasted like nothing.  Skip this one, too.


1529 14th Street NW, Washington, DC 20005
(202) 387-2626

Saturday, October 9, 2010

Artfully Chocolate Kingsbury Confections Logan Circle: “Sinful Chocolate Cake”

Bill


This would be an excellent cake for a coffee shop or traditional café.   However, it comes just short of the expectations for the specialty chocolate café that is Artfully Chocolate Kingsbury Confections.  The cake portion is slightly dry, just noticeably stale, and a bit light on flavor.  Those small failings would still allow the cake to rank above average at most restaurants, even if paired with mediocre frosting. 




This cake’s frosting ranks better among frostings than the cake portion does in its category.  Its flavor is powerful enough to counterbalance the cake portion’s lack thereof.  The frosting strikes a tasty balance of cocoa and sugar with a chewy texture.  It’s applied to the cake in a perfect portion and presentation.  The frosting redeems the overall dish.   


I would order this cake without the whipped cream or chocolate sauce.  Both elements always add just more than zero taste to a dish.  They’re used almost purely for presentation; to create a visual impression of decadence.  DCDesserts writers and readers are too smart for such visual trickery.  The whipped cream might contaminate your cake with flat milky flavor.  The chocolate sauce, that cheap, lazy stand-in for fudge sauce that’s left after you finish the cake, only serves to remind you how great the frosting was.


1529 14th Street NW, Washington, DC 20005
(202) 387-2626

Google map & reviews (3.5/5)

Washingtonian

Washington Post (Reader: 3/4)

Washington City Paper

Examiner

Yelp (3.5/5)

D.C. Foodies

14th & You

ACKC on Urbanspoon