July 2, 2011
Wine Boy: The Obelisk -- a capital idea!
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- Good golly! I recent spent nearly a week in our nation's capital, where the temperature was a sizzling 98 degrees. And while I perspired through a few business meetings, I knew that at the end of the day I would be sipping some lovely beverages. I did just that and then enjoyed an anniversary dinner at my favorite D.C. restaurant.

Washington is a very underrated food town, and that's a shame because the city just brims with a bevy of eateries that rival establishments in some of the more recognized culinary burgs such as New York City, Chicago and San Francisco.

My absolute favorite dining address is the Obelisk Restaurant, on P Street in northwest Washington. There is no sign on the unimposing building housing the small, one-room Tuscan restaurant, but once you've experienced the food, you'll always find your way back for more.

The four-course prix fixe menu is $70 a person, but it is worth every cent and more. The wine list is very small, but well selected with an excellent sampling from Tuscany.

Before the meal began, we were treated to four appetizers that were so good it was hard to imagine that the courses to come could be any better. They weren't -- but they were just as good!

How about these little ditties for starters: imported Italian Burrata (a fresh cheese made from mozzarella and cream) with extra-virgin olive oil, thinly sliced smoked duck breast with black cherries, fried stuffed baby artichokes and cheese-stuffed zucchini flowers.

The meal that followed included porcini ravioli with a sage butter sauce, black bass with peppers and fennel, and lamb chops with sweet onions and rapini. A cheese course and dessert capped off the meal. A bottle of 1999 Podere Brizio Brunello Di Montalcino was liquid silk and a perfect match for the ravioli, lamb, appetizers and cheese course.

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Copyright 2011 The Charleston Gazette. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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