Christina G.
Yelp
What does a homesick Washingtonian eat while apartment hunting in London? Pho or Ethiopian (or just as good, Eritrean), of course! Homesick for my weekly dose of kitfo, I was excited to stumble upon Asmara. However, the excitement soon died. I started with a "spicy vegetable soup" that was not spicy, not even flavorful. Some green chilies made it OK, but the meal went downhill from there. For my main, I ordered kitfo with spinach. First issue: the kitfo was cooked. The waiter was nice when I sent it back, but when he brought it again, IT WAS STILL COOKED. I asked politely for it to be raw. The waiter said he would send the cook out and then explained to me, "We normally eat our kitfo uncooked." Duh. That was what I had requested. Perhaps he thought my gripe was that it was not cooked enough. Anyway, I waited for 15 minutes and the cook never appeared. It would have been one thing had the cooked kitfo tasted good despite not having the tartare texture I was craving, but it literally had no seasoning. Maybe a touch of berbere, but bland. Meanwhile, I started in on the spinach, which was also underseasoned and sandy, as though it had not been washed properly. Also, the injera (the bread with which you eat the food) was stale and clearly not made on- site. After 15 minutes, I realized the cook was not coming l, so I tried to flag down the waiter to pay and leave, which took 20 minutes. When he finally came around, he gave a cursory apology but clearly did not care that my dinner was uneaten. Perhaps my standards are high as I'm used to DC Ethiopian/Eritrean, where competition is fierce and a large chunk of the clientele is Ethiopian/Eritrean or eats the cuisine regularly and knows what to expect. Still, the staff's behavior indicates that they assume their customers do not know the difference between good Eritrean food and bad, and that they do not care about providing good food or service. Utter disappointment.