A Glowing Restaurant Review - Pineapple & Pearls
- Barracks Row Main Street

- Dec 12, 2022
- 3 min read
Check out Washingtonian's Magazine review of Pineapple & Pearls. To read the full review, check here.
715 Eighth St., SE.
There’s no sign on the door at Pineapple & Pearls—only one hot-pink, neon-lit word in the window: Fancy. Aaron Silverman’s Barracks Row tasting room, which sits next to his ever-popular Rose’s Luxury, has always taken the stuffiness out of fine dining. But after a two-year pandemic hiatus, the newly reopened restaurant is releasing a lot of pent-up celebratory energy.
“THIS IS A PARTY. Every night. You just happen to get an amazing meal while you are here,” its website reads. While there’s no official dress code, the restaurant suggests dusting off, say, a gold-sequined dress or emerald-green dinner jacket.
Alas, this being DC, the crowd the night I visited wore as much beige as it did bling. But there’s Champagne in your hand the minute you arrive, mirrored lightning bolts on the wall, and allusions to Studio 54 in the server spiel (no “Please Don’t Do Coke in the Bathroom” cross-stitches here!). Also, there are handcuffs.
The menu format has changed substantially from the restaurant’s pre-pandemic days. Gone is Silverman’s showstopping, clock-busting $325 parade of ten courses. In its place is a shorter, more manageable four-course menu for the same price. (Service is included.) There are a couple options to choose from in each category, several “gifts” along the way, and drinks that you order separately. (Before, beverage pairings were included in the set price.)
Beggars’ purses with a side of handcuffs. Photograph by Aphra Adkins.
But back to the handcuffs. Bedazzled and presented on a silver tray, they come out only for some guests, to go with an early duo of beggars’ purses. The tiny bundles of saffron- and beet-tinted crepes, topped with gold leaf and plump with caviar and lemony crème fraîche, teeter on cut-glass columns. They’re an homage to the Quilted Giraffe, the Manhattan temple of ’80s excess. There, chef/owner Barry Wine decreed that the appetizer must be eaten hungry-hippo-style, with your hands—cuffed or not—behind your back. Feels ridiculous, tastes delicious.
Other courses play it straighter. There’s “Marco’s gnocchi,” cloud-light nubs of potato and flour that nod to New York chef Marco Canora. “I’ll go until you say stop,” says the server, unleashing a shower of shaved truffles. I’m a white-chocolate skeptic, but the other pasta—chestnut-filled agnolotti singing with sage and draped in sauce made from the stuff—was just as dreamy.
I found myself scraping every bit of mushroomy chawanmushi from a long, halved stalk of bamboo—think vegetarian bone marrow—and wishing I could call the server back for just one more everything-spiced pimiento-cheese gougère, plucked from a big tray that travels the dining room. Among the larger courses, the slab of Wagyu beef drizzled with a sauce made with “pretty much an entire bottle of bourbon” and sided with buttery, oxtail-topped Robuchon potatoes is the way to go.
Not to be a buzzkill, but a few aspects of the evening could use some tweaking. Our pre-dinner cocktails—mine was an elegant piña colada riff served in a boba cup—arrived at the same time an engaging staffer popped over to present one of the evening’s early gifts… another drink. The aggressively licoricey Death in the Afternoon cocktail is made tableside with absinthe spouted from an elaborate, foot-tall glass vessel, apricot liqueur, and Champagne. Save for a mezcal-soaked whole pineapple carved tableside and a stack of funfetti birthday pancakes with a (genius) candle made of butter, the sweeter courses could be more memorable. And I’d much rather have had the Dom Pérignon that’s gratuitously poured over an amber mug of Époisses-cheese ice cream in a glass of its own.
A mezcal-soaked pineapple. Photograph by Aphra Adkins.
Japanese-style custard served in bamboo. Photograph by Aphra Adkins.
That said, the meal ends with the ultimate grace note: a snifter of amaretto, warmed over a candle and infused with the truffles the kitchen didn’t want to waste when lockdown began in 2020. And pretty much the best party favor/hangover cure ever: a hefty Wagyu burger with all the fixings, boxed to go.
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HAVE QUESTIONS?
Reach out to brian@barracksrow.org



bj38 mình thấy dạo này nhiều người nhắc nên cũng ghé thử cho biết. Không phải kiểu vào để chơi hay đọc kỹ từng mục đâu, mình chủ yếu xem trang làm có dễ dùng không. Ấn tượng đầu là load khá lẹ, chuyển qua lại vài trang không bị khựng, mở trên điện thoại cũng mượt. Mình để ý họ sắp xếp nội dung theo kiểu chia khối rõ ràng, nhìn phát là biết phần nào nói về gì, không phải mò menu mãi. Có mấy đoạn giới thiệu đặt ngay đầu nên người mới lướt qua cũng nắm được ý chính nhanh. Nói chung cảm giác là giao diện gọn, chữ dễ đọc, bố cục theo từng khối…
V8ab mình ghé thử đúng kiểu tiện tay vì thấy mọi người nhắc, chứ cũng không định tìm hiểu sâu. Ấn tượng đầu là trang nhìn khá gọn, các khối nội dung chia mạch lạc nên lướt một vòng là nắm được ý chính, không bị “ngợp” chữ. Mình dùng điện thoại mở lên thấy thao tác ổn, cuộn xuống mượt và chuyển mục không bị khựng, chắc họ có tối ưu cho nhiều thiết bị như phần giới thiệu nói. Với người mới thì kiểu trình bày này dễ chịu thật, đọc đến đâu hiểu đến đó. Mấy tiêu đề và hộp thông tin trên trang đặt rõ ràng, nhìn phát là biết đang ở phần nào của giao…
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The review mentioning the $325 four-course menu and the bedazzled handcuffs used for eating really captures Pineapple & Pearls' shift from stuffy to playful fancy. It reminds me how stick fight games also turn a simple concept into unpredictable, rule-bending fun; both create an experience where the usual expectations get flipped, kind of like that surprise amaretto at the meal's end.