This article contains content that is written like an advertisement .(March 2017) |
Derek Brown (born September 21, 1974) is an American entrepreneur, writer, and bartender. He owned the bars Columbia Room, The Passenger, Mockingbird Hill, Eat the Rich, and Southern Efficiency in Washington, D.C. Brown is a Distinguished Fellow at Catholic University's Ciocca Center for Principled Entrepreneurship. [1]
Brown was born in Washington D.C. and grew up in Olney, Maryland. He lived briefly in Charleston, South Carolina and Atlanta, Georgia before returning to the D.C. area to attend George Mason University.[ citation needed ]
Brown began bartending in 2000 at Rocky's, [2] a bar in the Adams Morgan neighborhood of Washington D.C., before moving on to Chef Frank Ruta's Palena and becoming interested in wine. He started working at Michel Richard's Citronelle under the tutelage of sommelier Mark Slater and then moved on to work alongside Chef Johnny Monis as the sommelier at restaurant Komi and was included in Wine & Spirits magazine's 2007 Top 5 New Sommeliers in America. [3] While at Komi, Brown was a founder of the underground cocktail club Hummingbird to Mars that operated out of Bourbon in Adams Morgan.[ citation needed ]
He returned to the bar full-time in 2008. He worked alongside owners Ian and Eric Hilton to open the speakeasy The Gibson on the 14th Street Corridor in Washington, D.C., which served classic cocktails. [4]
In 2009, restaurateur Paul Ruppert approached Brown about opening a bar in a space adjacent to the Warehouse Theatre. Brown brought his brother Tom Brown on board, a bartender at wine bar Cork at the time, and they decided to turn the space into two projects. The first was The Passenger, which opened in November 2009.[ citation needed ] The Passenger is named after the Iggy Pop song of the same name. [5]
In March 2010, they opened the Brown's Columbia Room, a 10-seat cocktail location in the back of The Passenger. Columbia Room focuses on a tasting menu that combines seasonal ingredients, classic cocktails, and attention to craftsmanship. [6]
On January 1, 2015, The Passenger and Columbia Room closed. The building at 1021 7th St NW was sold to make way for an office and retail development by Douglas Development Corp. The Columbia Room re-opened in Blagden Alley in February 2016 under Brown's direction. [16] The Passenger re-opened north of its old location on 7th Street in the fall of 2016 under the sole ownership of Tom Brown. [17]
Formerly known as Laughing Cocktail, Drink Company is owned by Brown and Angie Fetherston. They formed their partnership in April 2010 and have since worked together on many projects, including a trio of bars named Mockingbird Hill, Eat the Rich, and Southern Efficiency - known as the DB3 - in the Shaw neighborhood. They also led the efforts in working with D.C. City Council to pass a proclamation naming the Rickey the official cocktail of Washington, D.C., [18] with the author of Prohibition in Washington D.C. Garrett Peck.
Mockingbird Hill, Eat the Rich, and Southern Efficiency were named among Bon Appétit magazine's 2014 "50 Best New Restaurants in America". [19] After a period of time when the three bars were turned into a seasonal, pop-up model, the location closed.
Mockingbird Hill, which opened on June 5, 2013, was a bar that specialized in sherry and was influenced by bars in Madrid. The name of the bar was derived from The Clash song Spanish Bombs which pays homage to those who fought against the fascist regime in the Spanish Civil War.[ citation needed ]
Eat the Rich, which opened on October 18, 2013, was an oyster bar created by Brown, Angie Fetherston, and oysterman Travis Croxton of Rappahannock River Oysters. Featuring local oysters and a Chesapeake Bay-centric menu, Eat the Rich was a tribute to the oyster houses of Washington, D.C., and Mid-Atlantic cuisine.[ citation needed ]
Southern Efficiency, which opened on December 21, 2013, was a Southern food and whiskey bar.
Brown had a regular web column for The Atlantic from 2009 to 2011. [20] He is now a freelance writer with articles published in The Washington Post, The Huffington Post, Entrepreneur Magazine, Punch Magazine, Table Matters, and Bon Appétit Magazine .
In 2019, Brown (with Robert Yule) published Spirits Sugar Water Bitters, an outgrowth of his work as Chief Spirits Advisor to the National Archives Foundation. [21]
In 2022, Brown published Mindful Mixology: A Comprehensive Guide to No- and Low-Alcohol Cocktails with 60 Recipes, an outgrowth of his work advocating for mindful drinking by both workers and patrons in bars. [22]
Derek Brown lives in Washington, D.C., with his son.
Brown is involved with Share Our Strength and has served as mixology chair for their Taste of the Nation fundraising event where his bars participate every year to raise money and awareness with the goal of ending childhood hunger in America.[ citation needed ] He's also an Ambassador of Washington, D.C., for Destination D.C., an organization that supports tourism and travel to D.C. He also has increasingly become an advocate for responsible, mindful drinking and non-alcoholic cocktail recipes. [28]
Komi was a restaurant in Washington, D.C. operated by Chef Johnny Monis, serving Italian cuisine and Greek cuisine.
Doris (Ris) Lacoste is an American chef, restaurateur, philanthropist, and community leader based in Washington D.C. She has been a chef in DC for over three decades and is the owner of RIS, an American bistro in Washington, D.C.
Todd Gray is an American executive chef and co-owner of Equinox on 19th, formerly Equinox, a restaurant in Washington, D.C., and of Manna, an upscale restaurant located in the Museum of the Bible, also in the capital.
Eric Ziebold is an American chef and restaurateur with two Michelin Star restaurants in Washington, D.C., Kinship and Métier. He was executive chef at CityZen from 2004 to 2014, where he won several awards, including a James Beard Award.
Uchi is a contemporary Japanese sushi restaurant located in Austin, Texas, which opened in 2003. The Japanese word "Uchi" translates to "house" in English, and the 2,700-square-foot (250 m2) space is a refurbished home. Owner and chef Tyson Cole's menu consists of hot and cool tastings, sushi and sashimi, makimono, yakimono and tempura, and a changing omakase based on seasonal items. In 2011, Cole won the “Best Chef, Southwest” award from the James Beard Foundation.
Sepia is a mid-sized, upscale restaurant run by owner Emmanuel Nony and Executive Chef Andrew Zimmerman located in the West Loop neighborhood of Chicago, Illinois. Chef Zimmerman's menu is classified as New American cuisine, and focuses on local, seasonal products. Built in Chicago's Warehouse District, Sepia was originally a print shop from the 1890s. The renovation for the restaurant, designed by Gary Lee, included putting in a custom-tile, Art Nouveau floor and hand-crafted millwork in order to enhance the historical qualities of the building. Sepia also uses vintage stemware for their tables matching the vintage interior decor of the restaurant.
Aaron Silverman is an American chef and restaurateur, known for his Michelin starred restaurants Rose's Luxury, Pineapple & Pearls, and Little Pearl in Washington, D.C. Silverman won a James Beard Foundation Award in 2016.
Rose's Luxury is a restaurant on Barracks Row in Washington, D.C., created by chef-owner Aaron Silverman. It is known for not taking reservations which creates long lines, such that a nearby bar's top cocktail is called 'Waiting for Rose's' and line waiters are reported to make up to thirty dollars an hour waiting in line. President Barack Obama celebrated his 54th birthday at Rose's after First Lady Michelle Obama previously ate at the restaurant. The opening of Rose's Luxury in 2013 was the subject of a documentary, New Chefs on the Block. Chef Aaron Silverman had prior experience at Momofuku. It opened a fine dining restaurant next door to Rose's Luxury named Pineapple & Pearls in 2016. Silverman has been the subject of a profile in The Washington Post, which characterized his work as mastery of 'the art of serious play'.
Ashok Bajaj is a restaurateur based in Washington, DC. He is head of the Knightsbridge Restaurant Group.
Lynnette Marrero is an American bartender, mixologist, and philanthropist known for creating the world's first all-female speed bartending competition, "Speed Rack." She is widely regarded as one of the pioneer female cocktail-specific bartenders in the industry, and is based in New York City.
Pineapple & Pearls is a restaurant located on Barracks Row in Washington, D.C., serving a fixed-price multi-course dinner. The Washington Post gave the restaurant a four-star review, writing that Aaron Silverman, the chef and owner, "...pushes the fine-dining cause in only exquisite directions." Pineapple & Pearls was a semifinalist in the Outstanding Restaurant category of the James Beard Foundation Awards in 2024.
Fabio Trabocchi is an Italian chef and restaurateur based in Washington, D.C., where his restaurant Fiola earned a Michelin Star. Before opening his own restaurants, Trabocchi ran kitchens in London, Virginia, and New York, winning a James Beard Foundation Award in 2006.
The Dabney is a restaurant located in Blagden Alley, in the Shaw neighborhood of Washington, D.C. Chef-owner Jeremiah Langhorne opened the restaurant in 2015, focusing on Mid-Atlantic cuisine. The Dabney was named one of the Best New Restaurants of 2016 by Bon Appétit magazine, it was a awarded a Michelin Star in 2017, and Chef Langhorne won the James Beard Award for Best Chef, Mid-Atlantic in 2018.
Ann Cashion is a James Beard Award-winning chef and restaurateur in Washington D.C.
Belinda Chang is a James Beard Award winning American sommelier, writer, and restaurateur. Chang has been the wine and service director for multiple critically acclaimed restaurants in Chicago, San Francisco, and New York City. She has authored wine notes for several cookbooks, including Charlie Trotter’s Meat and Game, and as a host on the Fine Living Network.
Tom Cunanan is a Filipino American chef in Washington, D.C.
The James Beard Foundation Awards are annual awards presented by the James Beard Foundation to recognize culinary professionals in the United States. The awards recognize chefs, restaurateurs, authors and journalists each year, and are generally scheduled around James Beard's May birthday.
The James Beard Foundation Awards are annual awards presented by the James Beard Foundation to recognize culinary professionals in the United States. The awards recognize chefs, restaurateurs, authors and journalists each year, and are generally scheduled around James Beard's May birthday.
Julie Reiner is an American mixologist, club owner, and author. Reiner is one of New York's most influential bar owners, having established the Flatiron Lounge, Lani Kai, and the Clover Club. Major publications have featured Reiner's drink recipes, including The Wall Street Journal, Playboy, Esquire, GQ, and Time Out London. Reiner has trained many female bartenders.
Hank's Oyster Bar is a chain of oyster bars in Washington, D.C., and Virginia in the United States.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)