Where We Drink
Service Bar
BAR926-928 U Street NW, Washington, DC 20001 · U StreetHigh-energy, unpretentious, and speakeasy-style without the formality; the U Street cocktail bar from Chad Spangler and Glendon Hartley is a spot locals treat like a living room. Famous for the Frozen Old Fashioned (Chartreuse, brown butter, applewood smoke, served slushie-cold from the machine) which Bon Appétit called America's best frozen cocktail. Best for late-night bar hopping or post-dinner drinks; arrive before 9 if you want a seat.
Allegory
BAR1201 K Street NW, Washington, DC 20005 · Penn QuarterPenn Quarter's storytelling speakeasy hidden inside the Eaton DC, where the iconic Ruby Bridges mural now frames a dystopian "Banned in DC" narrative. Low light, leather banquettes, and a hardback menu featuring 17 "chapters" of molecular cocktails illustrated with toy-based art. Best for a moody date or a solo seat to explore the three-act menu through a spirit-forward drink.
The Round Robin Bar
BAR1401 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20004 · Penn QuarterA historic, oil-portrait landmark inside the Willard InterContinental where Henry Clay introduced DC to the mint julep. Green leather banquettes and a circular bar built for political maneuvering. Best for a weekday lunch drink or a pre-dinner rendezvous to impress quietly.
barmini by José Andrés
BAR501 9th Street NW, Washington, DC 20004 · Penn QuarterThe intimate twelve-seat cocktail counter from José Andrés in Penn Quarter, sister room to Minibar, where every drink is built like a course on a tasting menu. Theatrical, technical, prepaid, and reservation-only. Closer to dinner theater than a bar. Best for an anniversary or a one-night experience worth the lead time.
Where We Eat
Pascual
RESTAURANT732 Maryland Avenue NE, Washington, DC 20002 · Capitol HillCasual, sharing-style contemporary Mexican that delivers Mexico City flavor in DC, recommended in the Michelin Guide. Chefs Isabel Coss and Matt Conroy (also of Lutece in Georgetown) build the menu around tetelas, tlayudas, and lamb neck barbacoa, with a small but considered cocktail program leaning on mezcal. Best for a long weeknight dinner with three other people. Reservations are a challenge.
MITA
RESTAURANT804 V Street NW, Washington, DC 20001 · ShawThe Michelin-starred plant-based Latin American tasting room from Venezuelan chefs Tatiana Mora and Miguel Guerra in Shaw, where vegetables drive a 14-course journey from Brazil to Bolivia. The arepa basket is the calling card, with three sauces (chontaduro butter, cashew sour cream with chili oil, guasacaca). Best for a long, slow dinner with someone who appreciates technique without expecting meat at the center. Tasting menu only, with four-, six-, and 14-course formats.
Where We Stay
Waldorf Astoria Washington DC
HOTEL1100 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20004 · Penn QuarterThe 1899 Romanesque Revival Old Post Office on Pennsylvania Avenue, restored to its historic grandeur after $200 million of renovation and operating as a Waldorf Astoria since 2022. The 12-story Clock Tower stays open to the public for free, the views from the upper floors are the best in DC, and the soaring atrium lobby anchors the architecture. Peacock Alley pours classics in residence; José Andrés' The Bazaar is the in-house dining room.
The Willard InterContinental
HOTEL1401 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20004 · Penn QuarterThe 1850 Beaux-Arts grand hotel two blocks from the White House, the address where Lincoln stayed before his 1861 inauguration and where the term "lobbyist" was reportedly coined for the men who pursued President Grant in the very lobby of the building. Mark Twain wrote portions of *The Gilded Age* here. Peacock Alley promenade, oil portraits, the architectural anchor of presidential Washington since the Civil War.
Where the Chapter Begins
Click through for what to drink between flights.