October 29, 2008

Teff Love: Zenebech Injera

In a DCist interview several weeks ago, Tyler Cowen declared that Zenebech Injera at 6th and T Streets NW was serving up the best Ethiopian food in town. We put the advice of the economics professor/ethnic eats guru to the test.

On a sunny Friday afternoon, a steady stream of customers wanders in and out. Cabbies drive up to the door—literally onto the sidewalk—to grab their to-go containers. Definitely a good sign. The cashier dashes out to an idling bus to deliver lunch to its driver. A baker emerges from the kitchen with hunks of bread fresh from the oven. It is baked wrapped in banana leaves and accentuated with black seeds of which no one knows the English name. I’d only ever heard of injera. A Google search later reveals that the bread is called dabo, and the seeds are coriander.

Menus are hidden against the wall, but most patrons know exactly what they want. Those who don’t just ask the man at the counter. “I want something with lamb,” says a woman there for the first time. Spicy or mild? We go for the kitfo, the raw, minced beef that Cowen says is the thing to get. The pile of raw, freshly ground meat is completely lean and deep red in color. The taste is beefy but subtle, and a pile of berbere spice adds a powerful kick when dusted onto the kitfo.

Housed in the main refrigerator display case are the reddest slabs of meat you’ll ever see—cuts from a lamb slaughtered that very morning. That afternoon it was selling for $4.75 per pound. Lamb derek tibs, sautéed with onions, are deep in flavor, though they could be more tender. The quality of the kitfo and sight of the fresh lamb on display make you want to gnaw on the lamb in its raw form, or at least wish it were cooked a little rarer. Vegetable highlights include Zenebech’s shiro, so creamy you’ll swear it’s half butter, but it’s just spiced chick pea flour and vegetable oil. Gomen, collard greens flecked with minced garlic, is another highlight. Nearly all meals are $8.50 or $9. A veggie side dish is $2, but if you ask nicely, they may throw it in for free.

Sitting next to the lamb on display are a few jugs of peeled garlic cloves and plenty to drink. The case is filled with two liter sodas, juices, and Coronas. Heineken bottles and Bud Ice cans line each wall. Depending on the time of day, far more customers come in for a single beer in a paper bag (while they can) than for Ethiopian food. But along with the 40 oz. Steel Reserves are no less than five types of Ethiopian beer. At $2.50 a bottle, the retail prices may be Zenebech’s greatest asset. Styrofoam cups are available. Try the Meta.

And the injera? It's why Zenebech occupies its Florida Avenue corner. Zenebech supplies the stuff to Ethiopian restaurants and stores across the region; they'll sell it retail to you, too. All this means that the injera is impeccably fresh. Moist and spongy. No dryness or frayed edges. Zenebech was supplying close to 30 local Ethiopian purveyors this summer, though business is down at the moment.

We’re not ready to hand Zenebech the best in D.C. label just yet. We’re eager to try Meaza, praised recently by Cowen and Tom Sietsema. Two blocks away, Etete’s kitchen still earns our praise, and you can be served in their smart dining room for just a dollar or two more per entrée, but you’ll have to leave a tip and you can’t get a $2.50 beer. For an ambiance-free meal (or ambiance-filled if you think beer fridges are pretty), good, filling cheap food, or to supply the injera for your next Ethiopian dinner party, head to Zenebech.

Zenebech Injera
608 T Street NW
Washington, DC 20001
(202)-667-4700

Metro: Shaw/Howard University

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Comments (8) [rss]

etete is great as long as you don't have to share that beautiful dining room with drunk-as-all-hell 23 year old bleached-blonde ditzes who have to SCREAM EVERY WORD so that everyone in the restaurant can hear them.

especially when they yell, "we'll, you'll be the first yankee i've ever had!"

yeah, i hope you had fun at the rock and roll hotel that night, you annoying bitch.


sorry, i don't know where that came from!

 

Has anyone noticed a marked decline in the spiciness of Ethiopian food downtown? I have to tell the server to make it extra spicy, otherwise it ends up at Red Sea/Meskerem levels of blandness. This happened to me with Indian food; I'll order something vindaloo expecting toxic levels of spiciness and end up with something that's barely warm. I know it's standard for foreign cooks to "adapt" to honkey tastes, but still. Half the fun of rich, spicy dishes is all that quality time you get to spend on the commode. And if Monkey ain't spending marathon sessions on the commode reading Infinite Jest, evacuating fire, and burning the drapes,Mmonkey ain't happy.

 

@IMGoph: I really don't understand why Etete gets so much business. Their food is ridiculously sub-par. Of course, being Ethiopian, my standards may be a little too high. Even so, I just don't get it.

@monkeyrotica: well, that's an unfortunate side-effect of having clients that can't "handle" foods when they get too spicy. I think for the most part all of the places on 9th St keep it relatively real. Try Zola's (across the street from DC9), which is technically an Eritrean restaurant (same shit). Their food is usually very spicy.

 

speaking of Meta beer, anyone know a place you can buy a 12 pack or something? ive had it at a couple of Ethiopian restaurants and ive come to look forward to it almost as much as the food. and i enjoy Dukem on U st as the food is good and they sometimes have live traditional music and dancing. not sure how authentic any of it is since i hail from detroit, but spiciness was right at the top end of enjoyable for me, and i do tend to like spicy food. anyway, where can i get some Meta to take home?

 

The beer at Zenebech is all retail and meant for at home consumption only. $2.50 is the price of a beer because $15 is the sixpack retail price there (and my bet is you're unlikely to find it cheaper elsewhere, though I don't know for sure). If you wanted 12 or more, maybe they would give you a discount. But Zenebech is probably the place to get your Meta 6-packs. Though I don't think that's what Joe is drinking.

 

Here's a question -- are there any Ethiopian joints in D.C. that deliver?

 

Checked out Zenebech last year -- the food is great but the ambiance is off-putting. Do as the Ethiopians do and get take-out.

@monekeyrotica: I don't see that the U Street / Shaw places have become less spicy. If they don't reach your colon-scorching ideal, you can always ask for more spice on the side.
For all the trash I talk about Dukem's service and crowd control, they still make a mean meal and have good performances if you can grab a table.
Zed's in Georgetown and Meskerem in AdMo, however, are years past their prime. The fare is tame and has the critical pale mass to match.

 

i went on sunday. my advice: go during the day, get lamb derek tibs with gravy, and only with take-out can you buy beer or wine. the mild is mild. enjoyed it and will return!

 
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