- Washington Examiner; Capitals Hang at Maté
- Sol Food in Washington Flyer Magazine
- WashingtonPost.com - Going Out Guide: Chi-Cha Lounge
- Glover Park Eatery Reopens With New Concept
- DC Examiner, Yeas & Nays - Badge lets you cut lines (even to the loo)
- Express Weekend Pass: Recession = Drink Specials
- Washington Post - It's Latin, It's Asian, It's (Finally) Open
- Fox 5 - What's Cooking - Ceviche Wine Bar
- Capitol File - Hollywood & Vine
- Northwest Current - Restaurateur brings wine machine to Ceviche
- Washington Post Express - The Fish List: Ceviche Gone Wild
- BizBash Washington - Latin Ingredients at DC SCORES Soccer Ball
- Fox 5 - What's Cooking - Ceviche
- Washington Times - Ceviche Brings Novo Andino to Glover Park
- DC - FOOD DRINK REVIEW
- New York Times - Chi Cha
- Washington Post - First Bite by Tom Sietsema
- On Tap Magazine - New & Notable, Ceviche Glover Park
- Washington Post - Tyler Cowen's Restaurant Week Strategies
- The Onion - Mauricio Fraga-Rosenfeld
- DC Examiner - Maté turns two years old
- Daily Candy - Chi Cha Happy Hour 5-8
- DC Examiner - Friends and family surprise Mauricio
- Zagat Buzz - Peruvian: DC's New Hot Cuisine
- Metrocurean - Ceviche Moving Into Former Austin Grill Space
- Daily Candy - Maté Half Price Sushi Happy Hour
- City Paper - New Ceviche
- Washingtonian - 100 Very Best Restaurants
- Washingtonian - Peruvian Gastronomic Festival
- Capitol File at Gazuza Eye Spy
- Washington Post - Weekly Dish
- DC Modern Luxury
- Washingtonian - Best Dressed Men
- City Paper - Ceviche Review
- Washingtonian - Cheap Eats
- Washingtonian - Ceviche Review
- Washington Life Kick Off Party
- Washington Post - Ceviche Review
- Washinton Business Journal
- Washington Post - On The Town
- El Tiempo Latino
- DC One Magazine
- Washingtonian - Best Bites
- Washington Post - Gazuza
- On Tap Magazine
Washingtonian - Ceviche Review
Washingtonian - Ceviche Review
By Cynthia Hacinli
Ceviche is Silver Spring's hottest new restaurant.
That Ceviche is Silver Spring's hottest new address is no surprise. It's owned by scenemaker Mauricio Fraga-Rosenfeld, the force behind young, trendy spots like Mate, Chi-Cha Lounge, Gazuza, and Gua-Rapo. What's unexpected is its multiethnic, over-30 crowd and the food, which seems to be the point of the place. It seems Fraga-Rosenfeld has finally created a restaurant for grownups. That it is surrounded by mega-chains such as Red Lobster makes it all the more endearing.
To be sure, there's plenty of mood--a modern, red-walled dining room bathed in candlelight--and fun, too, courtesy of snappy Latin cocktails like the Brazilian Caipirinha and the Amor Prohibido, a house potion of passion fruit and tequila spiked with serrano peppers--cool yet fiery.
The namesake dish can be had in six variations, including a bland Honduran version and a too-spicy Peruvian rendition. Best by far is the classic: All four key flavors are perfectly balanced, and the fish and seafood--choices vary--taste bright and clean. Also good are sardines grilled whole; the briny, fresh-from-the-sea flavor is worth all the bones.
Where the kitchen plays to good effect is with the oversize chicken-cilantro croqueta. A mix of shredded dark and white meat and capers, the filling is reminiscent of an empanada, but the deep-fried crust makes it an entirely different mouthful. A recent addition that's also wonderful is a corn fritter that tastes like souffléd corn with melted Gruyère at its center. Papas à la huancayna, the Peruvian-Bolivian potato delicacy, is deconstructed into parts: crunchy peanuts, fluffs of ricotta, roasted potatoes, and yellow-pepper sauce. It doesn't taste like the dish that inspired it, but it's arguably better. Another newcomer, chorizo with fried potatoes, woos with its olive-oil bath infused with garlic and bay leaf.
My two favorite dishes come straight from the roasting pan: a slab of roasted pork rib, savory browned fat and all, and crisp-skin chicken cured with beer and cumin. This last is a paen to Peruvian rotisserie chicken but has a life of its own. The skin, as crusty as if it had been fried, elevates a homey standby to star status.
For minimalists and fish lovers, whole rockfish grilled with olive oil and lemon is a fine fallback--it melts in the mouth. Except for the sautéed potatoes, sides are skippable, as is dessert. And there are some flops, like an odd dish of potato, fig, and eggplant, a recent special that wasn't special at all.
The most curious dish on the menu is an Ecuadorian potato soup. Though it traditionally can be made with cow's blood and hot chili peppers, Ceviche's version goes for comfort. The creamy porridge, garnished with soft-cooked egg and chopped avocado, is soothing, the sort of thing you might crave after a hard day. It may also be a Proustian madeleine for Fraga-Rosenfeld, who spent summers with his grandparents in Ecuador as a child and who, as he ages, may be feeling the tug of his past.
http://www.washingtonian.com/articles/restaurants/1491.html


