neotoma: Neotoma albigula, the white-throated woodrat! [default icon] (foodie- bunny)
([personal profile] neotoma Apr. 8th, 2007 09:43 pm)
[livejournal.com profile] ellen_fremedon and I went to the National Museum of the American Indian to see the "Identity by Design" exhibit, which is absolutely gorgeous and very interesting from a textile fan's point of view.

We ate at the Mitsitam Café inside the museum. The Mitsitam has five diffrent cuisine stations -- Northern Woodlands, South America, Northwest Coast, Mesoamerica, and Plains. We were interested in food that was unlike anything we could get elsewhere, so Mesoamerica (tamales without cheese) and Plains (buffalo burgers and buffalo steak) were ruled out.

I went to the Northern Woodlands and got a full spread. The soup was Peanut and Turtle, Venison Terrine for appetizer, the entre was Roasted Maple Turkey with cranberry relish, with two side dishes -- Wild Rice & Watercress salad and Roasted Vegetable Bulbs -- with Maple Agua Fresca to drink and Pinenut-Rosemary tart for dessert.[livejournal.com profile] ellen_fremedon had Three Sisters Soup (white bean, corn, and squash), Green Papaya and Sea Bass Ceviche, Mexican Hot Chocolate to drink and Indian Pudding for dessert.

Obviously we shared our food and spent much of the meal making happy foodie-noises at each other.

The Peanut and Turtle soup was mostly potatoes and lima beans with yellow-ish things that might have been sweet potato -- and might not. The turtle was a mild, reddish meat and the peanut was a foamy mild taste. The Three Sisters Soup had white beans, corn, squash and tomato and might have been made with a chicken stock base. The Vension Terrine was absolutely delicious and smoothly textured.

My Roast Maple Turkey was nicely juicy -- the maple was light enough not to be overpowering, yet still gave flavor to the turkey. The Green Papaya and Sea Bass Ceviche was light and tasty, though I didn't notice the papaya amid the bell pepper and onion bits.

The Wild Rice and Watercress salad was a delicious vinegarette that I'm fairly sure I can recreate. It was wild rice, watercress, pine nuts, shredded carrots, cranberries, and sunflower seed with vinegar. The Roasted Vegetable Bulbs were mostly tiny quartered and roasted baby squash, along with onions, scallion, and mushrooms, but very very good.

The drinks were quite unusual. Ellen's Mexican Chocolate wasn't too sweet or thin -- more like drinking a melted dark chocolate bar than anything else. My Maple Agua Fresca was not too sweet and spiced with chile.

The Indian Pudding was very simple -- maple syrup and corn meal, but tasty. The Rosemary-Pinenut tart was a bit more complex, flavored with lemon with the pinenuts.

Ellen decided that Mitsitam Café is *the* place that she will take visitors, and I agree. The food is excellent if you're willing to try the odder items, and instead of paying for the ambiance of a fancy restaurant, all your money goes into really tasty food. The menu apparently changes daily, and after 3pm some of the offerings are closed down for the day, so get there early for lunch, not late.

If you're visiting from out of town, the NMAI is at 4th and Independence, at the eastern end of the Washington Mall next to Air & Space. The closest Metro is L'Enfant Plaza -- you walk a few blocks north and east to get to it. The Mitsitam Café is inside, on the groud floor towards the back.

From: [identity profile] leni-jess.livejournal.com


Thank you for that dining rec! I shall be in Washington sometime next August (after Prophecy), working my way through as many branches of the Smithsonian as I can manage. And I see that exhibition will still be on. I can't recall how many years it was since I last had the chance to vidit s good Amerind museum (though I went to as many as I could, going around the USA in, um, 1993?).

From: [identity profile] neotoma.livejournal.com


Do you have any part of a weekend? If so, I will glad come down and be a local guide.

From: [identity profile] leni-jess.livejournal.com


That's a friendly offer, and I'd hope to take you up on it (see next para). I'd certainly like to meet you, and it would be fun to have company.

I'll be staying with [livejournal.com profile] meri_oddities (who'll be working weekdays, like you), probably around 17-26 August, but one day of one of the weekends I'm there she's going to be running and I, well, don't run. Maybe we could get together then, if it's not a massive journey for you into centralish Washington? A museum/exhibition and lunch? Or a visit to one of the gardens?

Will you be at Prophecy? I should have a better idea of my movements then, and Meri will of her plans, too. We could get something sorted out then, if that's agreeable. (And if you can't get to that, we can still talk on LJ/in emails.)

From: [identity profile] neotoma.livejournal.com


I know [livejournal.com profile] meri_oddities -- she's on the same Metro line as I am, just on the other end of it.

I could certainly meet you downtown somewhere. There are a lot of good places to meet on the Mall, depending on what museums you're interested in seeing.

I'm not going to Prophecy -- no money for trips like that right at the moment, and I was so frustrated with the problems at The Witching Hour that I don't want to spend more money on HP-cons. They are very expensive, and I can spend less going to the local SF con and not have to worry about things so much.

From: [identity profile] leni-jess.livejournal.com


I can sympathise on the 'throwing money away' thing. If I hadn't been passing through, as it were, on the way back from Sectus, I'd never have signed up for Prophecy (which was [livejournal.com profile] cordelia_v's fault; she talked me into it).

I haven't done much research on what-to-see-in-Washington yet, to catch up on changes since I was last there. But there's always another Smithsonian museum! We can agree on one later, yes? If there are exhibitions you haven't seen, but wish to, you might like to say. (I'm up for practically anything except Air and Space – done that – and most modern art – I like quite a lot, but am massively indifferent to a whole lot more.)

That's something pleasant to look forward to. I assume you'd be taking the metro in, as I will; no doubt a museum foyer would be a good place to meet.

From: [identity profile] strangemuses.livejournal.com


Agreed on the Cafe. It's top notch. The cafe over in the National Gallery of Art used to be my favorite, but this one is quite superior.

That exhibit is excellent. I saw it a couple of weeks ago.

From: [identity profile] neotoma.livejournal.com


I want to go there again and try *weirder* things. I think all the various regional foods have something to offer, but it was disappointing to see so many people go for buffalo-burgers. Not that buffalo isn't nice, but you can get it a lot of places nowadays. How often are you going to find Maple Roast Turkey (well, okay, I did something similar several years ago using a New American recipe, but I've never seen similar at a restaurant).

From: [identity profile] tekalynn.livejournal.com


It sounds fantastic! Makes me jealous that I'm on the opposite side of the country. : ) Thanks for the recommendation, I'll definitely check it out if I ever get there (and if it's still there by the time I *do* get there.)

From: [identity profile] amanuensis1.livejournal.com


Oh, man, that all sounds wonderful. *waves foodie flag*
ext_281: (Default)

From: [identity profile] the-shoshanna.livejournal.com


Oh, that sounds utterly fantastic. I will be in D.C. in July, and I will definitely try to go there!
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