When I arrived at 7:45 for an 8 PM reservation and found the bar and
waiting area packed, I resigned myself to a long wait for a table. But
at precisely 8 o’-clock, the table was ready. This extraordinarily well-managed
restaurant, specializing in Low Country cooking of South Carolina, has
been a Washington
favorite through several changes of chefs, and the food continues to
be top-notch under chef Neal Langermann’s direction.
Portions are beyond generous at Georgia Brown’s. The pile of fried chicken
livers, marinated in orange juice and flavored with sage, would feed a family
of four, as would the catfish fingers, beautifully fried and served with coleslaw
and a mango-mustard tartar sauce. A couple might share a single appetizer and
then go on to separate main courses.
Low Country seafood dishes have given a New Orleans flavor to this menu: Carolina
Gumbo, a full-flavored combination of rock shrimp, chicken, and andouille sausage;
Frogmore Stew, shrimp, fish, oysters, scallops, and clams over potatoes; and
Shrimp and Grits, a lovely combination of spicy and bland—shrimp andouille
sausage served over creamy grits. If seafood doesn’t appeal, go straight
for the fried chicken—buttermilk-battered, fried crisp, and served with
mashed potatoes and collards.