We waited all summer, and the newly remodeled J and G Steakhouse at the W Hotel was finally unveiled on Wednesday night. Located directly across from the Treasury at 515 15th Street, N.W., J and G’s new space is designed for elegant dining, as well as a chic drinking venue.
The bar space revolves around marble high-top communal table giving J and G a fresh, energetic, social feel. The new cocktail menu features new concoctions created by the mixologist Domingo, priced from $12-14 dollars. I tried the light and refreshing French 515, with a base of sparkling rose, 515 Catoctin Rye, and garnished with a lemon twist.
The bar space revolves around marble high-top communal table giving J and G a fresh, energetic, social feel. The new cocktail menu features new concoctions created by the mixologist Domingo, priced from $12-14 dollars. I tried the light and refreshing French 515, with a base of sparkling rose, 515 Catoctin Rye, and garnished with a lemon twist.
Bar 515 continues downstairs into a more low-key space below, featuring a fireplace, secluded nooks, and two-top tables for a an intimate hide-away.
The outside patio had plenty of tables, white light strands hanging from the trees, and plush seating around three gas fireplaces. This patio is a fantastic place to enjoy the cool fall season with friends, coworkers, or even a date.
The patio is equipped with a half-bar, as well as a martini cart that will roll around the restaurant offering chilled gins, vodkas, and all the garnishes you could want: blue cheese-stuffed olives, roasted red peppers, and cornichons, to name a few.
I am new to the concept of a cocktail cart, but it makes the experience of ordering a drink much more interactive, and sipping my dirty martini was the perfect way to enjoy the jazz trio playing underneath the backdrop of the Trasury building.
As for the food, a new bar bites menu features a range of dishes from $15-$30. The steak tartar sliders, crab cakes, and the classic J&G steak were all flavorful, and I cannot praise the Beef Carpaccio enough: a thin slice of beef, served with black truffle morsels, grated Parmesan, olive oil, and flat bread.
The fried onion classed up a traditional finger food, served with heirloom tomato salad and Russian dressing.
Finally, the American caviar was presented atop a dollop of crème fraîche on a crispy russet potato wedge, making a bourgeois dish entirely appetizing to a common palate such a mine.
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