Washington is a great city for bumping into people. Physically small and compulsively social, it provides a wide range of acquaintance, and a narrow scope of space in which to go about your everyday business. So you are always running into someone you know — on the street, at the doctor’s office, in the pub you happened to drop into on the other side of town.
This serendipity is usually pleasing, but never more so than when you discover that a couple you’re very fond of has, completely independently of you, hit on the idea of dining at the same place and time as you. We pushed the tables together; the waiter held our order while our friends decided. Then we fell into some of the best food it’s been my pleasure to have in Washington… and also to wondering why it had been so easy to get a reservation there.
There are the prices, of course, which are set to match the restaurant’s aspirations. All right then, yes, but: Washington has lots of affluent people with silly money to spend on food. So why weren’t more of them at Mirabelle last Saturday night?
I cannot prove it, but my sense is that the crowds have not flocked as they should because the one thing Mirabelle isn’t is novel. In fact the Washington Post once described Ruta as having an “allergy to trends”. Most menus these days read as if someone sat down and said: “I like lemon meringue pie, but it’s been done. What’s our twist on the classic?”
At Mirabelle, there is no twist; the menu would not have felt out of place at an upscale country inn three decades ago. What’s special is the dishes themselves, because Ruta doesn’t do different, merely perfect.
The result is infinitely more rewarding than “Sure, you’ve had chocolate cake. But have you ever had it with lime marmalade and fermented bean sprouts?” I like trying new foods, to be sure. But a fetish for novelty is as big a mistake as a pathological fear of anything you haven’t eaten a thousand times before. Both are ways of fixating on the detail of familiarity, while missing the central point of food, which is how it tastes. And at Mirabelle, it tastes wonderful.
Figuring how to do one thing the best way is as important an innovation as thinking of a zillion different other things you might do. But in this market, I’m not sure it’s equally rewarded. The affluent young professional class is starting to look like the culinary equivalent of a jaded old roue, floating from place to place in constant search of the next rather than the one.
I’d rather have the one best than the many pretty goods. And as soon as I can figure out how to get a mortgage on the dog, I’ll be going back to Mirabelle to enjoy it.
© Bloomberg
When a restaurant is simply perfect, not novel
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