![]() |
BWI again
UA 1983 BOS 0900 1036 IAD 2A 733 N343UA I think
ATC communications: yes; power ports: no. UE 7426 IAD 1120 1155 BWI 4C J31 N470UE Aircraft: no. Flight out of Boston was uneventful except for that I began to feel [w]retched just before takeoff - might have been the unattractive snacks or the OJ at the Red Carpet Club, I don't know. The FA started the bagel or banana-nut-muffin service, so before my seatmate pulled down his tray I asked to get up to go to the head: got up, and the FA rather sternly asked me to get back into my seat (we were at 26 climbing very gently to 31). Luckily there was an aisle seat on the other side of the aircraft for me to sneak into (FC was 7/8, row 1 taken up by a family of businessman, retired FA, and two kids, aged noisy and noisy). The seat-belt light went out mercifully in about a minute, and I spent the rest of this smooth flight either in the bathroom or snoozing fitfully: one of the longest hours I've spent in the air, and it was not the airline's fault, and it wasn't the weather. Arrived a few minutes early, but the jetway wasn't working properly, so it was several minutes before they got that squared away. I went on to the UE terminal, and the flight read ON TIME. Yeah! The plane was sitting there all cute and dolled up on the tarmac, and everything looked fine. Well. So. - - - It gets to be 11, and they announce that due to "minor" maintenance, the flight is on an 11:15 decision; 30 seconds later it's on 11:30. I'm being picked up at noon at BWI. Some maintenance guys drive up in their little truck and make their way into the interior of the plane; shortly they leave; then some other guy drives up in another little truck and dumps a green bag on the ground behind the plane; then the first crew drives up again and takes the bag inside the plane. And then leave again. (This is all visible; it appears incomprehensible; it is possible that someone has been inside working on the plane the whole time, but I doubt it.) So at 11:30 they say that the aircraft is on a 12:00 decision, and they will put people on a taxi: and they're only two of us anyway, the third is a nonrev. So the other passenger, Dr. Castrale (booked into this flight by the wise people at the government) and myself (booked for Mileage Plus greed), get a Washington Flyer taxicab voucher. We ask if we can't take the nonrev with us (cabs after all tend to have at least 3 passenger seats). No: against regulations, the nonrev has to sit there, the paperwork is all in. But UE isn't paying for another cab - this is just one cab. Nothing doing. A second gate agent comes up and asks me if I even know what a nonrev is; the first one shows her my boarding pass and mouths to her "one kay," so #2 says, you never know, and #1 says, oh, they know better than we do, and I have to interject some inane comment like "not all the time" (while filing the face of #1 in the file of "good gate agents" and #2 in the file of "bad gate agents." My seatmate (now here's something: two revenue passengers on a 19-seater, and they assign us to 4B and 4C, figure that out) and I hot-foot it to the cab stand; an uneventful ride follows, during which we see Laurel (his destination) and Columbia (mine) go past; but our rides are at BWI, so that's where we end up. Eventually, ual.com tells us, they did put the other plane in the air; but we beat it in. - - - Two meals with friends Dale and Gail. Kauffmann's Roadhouse, Gambrills Rd., Gambrills MD. Good standard prime rib, pretty nice draft beer, great steamed shrimp. What people go for is the crabs, which range from $39/doz for jumbos to $14/doz for females (which run small-to-medium). Impeccably fresh, steamed with Old Bay, served on butcher paper with a wooden crab hammer and a plastic knife to use as a pick. We had an order of females and a small order of larges (all male). The larges were very meaty and easy to eat. The females were sweeter and of better flavor but were quite a chore to pick. In addition, I split a large prime rib rare (it came erring a little on the medium rare side but was tasty and generous) with Dale, and Gail had a pound of steamed shrimp. We munched steadily for two hours and a half. Haandi, Rte. 7, West Falls Church. Regarded as one of the best Indian places around, this restaurant - http://www.haandi.com - never disappoints. My sister joined us. The mixed appie was enough for four - two big fat potato croquettes, a couple of lamb sausages, some tandoori chicken, an onion ring and a squash ring in chickpea batter. A spicy tamarind sauce and a suave coriander yogurt accompanied. Chicken with spinach was excellent if a bit overcreamy; coriander chicken (done in a tandoor but with a green herb coating rather than the lemony red tandoori stuff) was a generous serving of big chunks of white meat, moist and tasty and just spicy enough; chicken in garlic and ginger with onions was pretty nice as well, the spices quite subtle compared to what one might expect, the sauce smooth and suave. I had my usual baingan bharta, a very good but overcreamy and somewhat red version (quite different from what I've been led to expect here or elsewhere). Not enough rice, which was remedied by a simple request. Naan bread was nice, and pappadums for Dale and Gail were crunchy and salty and spicy as expected. The bill was an agreeable $50; but we hadn't drunk anything and didn't have coffee or dessert. |
Yum.
Re: Haandi. To anyone staying in the dc metro area: the Haandi in Bethesda is just as good. The food translates to carry out without losing taste or texture, too. |
Haandi is my favorite Indian restaurant in the DC area.
------------------ |
Originally posted by violist: We munched steadily for two hours and a half. Please no more torture about the delicious food (as I am waiting here at my computer for Mrs. Onedog to come home so we can go out for dinner). I love Indian food, but for the past seven months since Mrs. Onedog has been carrying the pupster, even just the thought of Indian food makes her a bit queasy. So no Indian food for me http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/frown.gif Great descriptions! [This message has been edited by onedog (edited 08-25-2000).] |
Today we were going to Mark's, the duck restaurant in Falls Church that was recently featured in the Post magazine, but my b-i-l came home from work early, so we decided to hit the ball a little (he's in good shape, I'm not; he can see, I can't; he has decent tennis togs, I stumble about in jeans and walking shoes (non-smearing)). So we hit the ball a little, and I was a little wild, and when he went back for a lob of mine, he fell over and turned his ankle pretty badly. Luckily my sister had wandered down to the park, and we got him home pretty quickly. Got him iced and bandaged, and he still wanted to go out for dinner; but then he stood up. So we stood up Mark's. Got a LaRue steak out of the freezer (sold at the Arlington Co. farmers' market) and cooked it in a sort of griglia mista ... I was a little suspicious of a sirloin certified to be 97% lean: pan-broiled part of it and stir-fried the rest with peppers. It is really a good brand of meat, quite beefy (although the grass-fed nature of it might be startling to those used to cornfed meat) and reasonably tender. I think the breed of cattle they use is the Italian Piemontese. A good alternative to steakhouse meat.
- - - The reason I haven't been in touch with DC FTers is that with family and old girlfriends and such, my short trips to the metro area have so far been jammed up. I'll have to remedy that sometime I guess. I will make a special trip to either Haandi just about any time! (Aside to joanek: I find the Bethesda one almost as good, and furthermore it has a lunch buffet, which Falls Church doesn't.) [This message has been edited by violist (edited 08-25-2000).] |
Violist, Marks's Duck House is even closer to home than Haandi. I hope you are enjoying our VA hospitality.
------------------ |
I really love your 'reporter-style:' A second gate agent comes up and asks me if I even know what a nonrev is; the first one shows her my boarding pass and mouths to her "one kay," so #2 says, you never know, and #1 says, oh, they know better than we do, and I have to interject some inane comment like "not all the time" (while filing the face of #1 in the file of "good gate agents" and #2 in the file of "bad gate agents." http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/biggrin.gif
and your Restaurant addresses went right away into my Palm III. Thank you. [This message has been edited by Rudi (edited 08-26-2000).] |
Yes I have learned my lesson from before - never read a violist "trip report" when hungry. http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/wink.gif
|
Rudi, I hope that when you visit those Virginia restaurants you allow Mr. Naxos and I to share the fun.
------------------ |
Originally posted by naxos: Marks's Duck House is even closer to home than Haandi. |
| All times are GMT -6. The time now is 5:08 am. |
This site is owned, operated, and maintained by MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Designated trademarks are the property of their respective owners.