QUOTE(Fay Jai @ Feb 20 2009, 12:35 PM)

QUOTE(tighe @ Feb 20 2009, 11:17 AM)

Played hooky from work yesterday and ended up trying Hallava Falafel, a falafel truck that parks in front of the Corson Building on weekdays. I've eaten a decent amount of falafel in my time, but this was on a different level. Great messy sandwich that included beet salad, tahini and garlic sauce, tomatoes, lettuce and a pickle. Really delicious. The only bad part was that while I was waiting, I had to watch and smell the shwarma on the vertical spit. I began regretting my choice, but all worked out fine in the end, shwarma next time for sure though.
Matt Dillon and a large crew were working hard on CB garden. It looks like they've dug up just about everything they'd planted last year.
My friend Aksel and I went there a while back. He's Turkish, and LOOOOOVES Falafel, and eats it just about every place he goes. It was the first time I'd ever had Falafel, (just has never been on the radar, I guess,) and I wish I hadn't eaten it there...because I think I'm ruined for it now. It was great, and Aksel thought it was the best Falafel he's ever had in the U.S.
Glad he didn't move to Portland.
~Jason
This was definitely a, "oh, so this is what falafel is supposed to taste like" moment. Good to know that someone who knows what falafel is really supposed to taste like thought this was good stuff. Jason, given my past falafel experiences, you very well may have to go to Israel or Lebanon to find falafel better than Hallava's. Wish I'd tried one of the Jewish falafel places in Paris when I was there to know how this compares.
QUOTE
Georgetown soil + railroad + freeway + airplanes = heavy metal herbs and vegetables. I know soil does a good filtering job, but that's pretty overwhelming. If it ain't one thing, it's another. I like that chefs grow their own stuff when they can.
I think most of their edibles are being grown in the raised beds they built. Assuming they brought in new dirt for those and lined the bottoms, pollution shouldn't be a big issue. I had similar thoughts though when I first started reading about Dillon wanting to grow stuff there.