There are restaurants, and then there are experiences that quietly rearrange the way you think about food. Minibar by José Andrés, tucked inside a discreet townhouse on E Street NW in Penn Quarter, belongs firmly in the second category. I walked in with high expectations and still left astonished — which, honestly, is the highest compliment I know how to give a dining room.
Minibar holds two Michelin stars, a distinction it has earned and kept through years of boundary-pushing culinary creativity. But what strikes you first is not the accolades — it’s the intimacy. The space seats just twelve guests at a time around a pristine counter that faces the open kitchen. There are no hidden back-of-house mysteries here. You watch every course take shape directly in front of you, finished by chefs who clearly love what they do and are happy to tell you about it.
The tasting menu runs somewhere between twenty and thirty courses, each one arriving as a small, jewel-like composition that challenges your assumptions. One course might be a single perfect olive — except it isn’t an olive at all, but a sphere of olive oil encased in a delicate gel membrane that bursts on your tongue. Another might be a frozen bite of foie gras, or a whisper-thin cracker topped with something you would never guess in a dozen tries. Every dish arrives with a brief, enthusiastic explanation from whoever is plating it, which turns each course into a little conversation rather than a transaction.
The wine and beverage pairing is equally considered. The sommelier matches each sequence of courses with selections that range from rare Spanish cavas to unexpected natural wines from small producers you likely have not encountered before. Non-alcoholic pairings are available and just as thoughtfully composed, which is a rarity worth noting.
Penn Quarter is one of DC’s most walkable neighborhoods, sitting between the Mall and Chinatown, so an evening at Minibar fits naturally into a bigger night out. Arrive a little early, walk through the National Gallery of Art’s sculpture garden just a few blocks south, then make your way to the restaurant feeling pleasantly unhurried.
Reservations open about two months in advance and move quickly — this is not a spontaneous dinner. Plan ahead, set a calendar reminder, and treat it as the occasion it deserves to be. Prices are substantial, but the kitchen delivers a level of precision and imagination that justifies every dollar. Whether you’re celebrating something specific or simply want to hand the evening over to one of the most talented culinary teams in the country, Minibar delivers on every promise.
Washington has no shortage of exceptional restaurants, but very few offer this combination of world-class technique, genuine warmth, and sheer sense of wonder. If you visit DC and leave without at least trying to secure a reservation, you’ll spend the flight home wondering what you missed.