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August 24, 2008

Rules for eating in Chilean restaurants

1. Order the avocado ("palta," not "aguacate") whenever you can.

2. Order crab, in any manifestation possible, whenever you can. There is nothing you should prefer over the crab.

3. Scallops are next in the hierarchy. The sea urchin is quite good if you like it.

4. The fish is of excellent quality but the preparations are usually boring. The greater the number of sauces you are offered, the less likely you should take any of them.

5. Fear not the mayonnaise. It is good. Really.

6. Parmesan cheese on either clams or scallops is excellent.

7. If you can, try a ham and cheese sandwich, roast beef, figs, mashed potatoes, vanilla ice cream, honey, butter, and the juices.

8. Provided you obey these rules, do not be put off by simple-sounding menus.

9. The overall quality of the food is very high, but the very best restaurants are not much better than the good restaurants. This is often the case in areas with excellent natural ingredients, as human labor becomes a less important input.

10. A subtle blending of Chilean and Peruvian food is occurring in Santiago; the Peruvian restaurants by the way are first-rate.

First posted on Marginal Revolution.

Posted August 24, 2008 09:17 AM | Permalink  |  Chile , Chilean  | Comments (1)

July 14, 2008

La Caraquena

La Caraqueña, web site, 300 W. Broad Street, Falls Church, VA, 703-533-0076, where Café Rose used to be in Falls Church City (Metro Trip Planner - opens in new window) [Yelp]

They serve Venezuelan, Bolivian, and Chilean dishes; the proprietors are Bolivians who lived for quite a while in Venezuela. Definitely above average. I loved the peanut soup (Sopa de Mani). Chilean sandwiches are hard to mimic in this country, so I didn’t order one, but I saw two go past and they looked delicious. Even their Bolivian dishes are not exactly the standard. An original place, worth having in the repertoire and a nice homey atmosphere.

Posted July 14, 2008 08:37 AM | Permalink  |  Bolivian , Chilean , Falls Church/Seven Corners , Venezuelan , Virginia  | Comments (0)

March 11, 2006

Julia's Empanadas

Julia's Empanadas
2452 18th Sreet NW, Washington, DC, 202-328-6232

  • 1000 Vermont Avenue NW, Washington, DC, 202-789-1878
  • 1221 Connecticut Avenue NW, Washington, DC, 202-861-8828
  • 1410 U Street NW, Washington, DC, 202-387-4100, there may be others as well
    (Metro Trip Planner - opens in new window) [Washingtonian | WaPo | City Paper | food-plan | yelp | openlist | Gayot]

    Should this be listed under Argentinean? Who knows. They have Chilean, Jamaican, and Bolivian style empanadas as well, even a vegan entry, all super cheap, good snacks.

  • Posted March 11, 2006 09:57 PM | Permalink  |  Argentinean , Bolivian , Chilean , DC , Downtown , Jamaican , Other , U Street  | Comments (1)

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