

Modern restaurant with tapas, a tasting menu, and other Spanish and Japanese fare, plus a sake menu.
Address and Contact Information
Address: 724 9th St NW, Washington, DC 20001
Phone: (202) 525-4900
Website: http://cranes-dc.com/
Menu Photos
Photo Gallery
Related Web Results
Cranes – Washington – a MICHELIN Guide Restaurant
A High-Profile Tapas Spot in Penn Quarter — And More … – Eater DC
Video – CRANES
Reviews
The oysters had pretty good ponzu so I had a good time tasting it. The miso glazed tofu had pretty good crispy texture on the tofu skin but the flavor was slightly lacking because it relied on the glaze for flavor. The curry udon was a combination that I didn’t think worked as well because the curry wasn’t staying on the noodles as easily as it would on rice. Finally, the karaage chicken tasted pretty regular, and the rayu aioli had predominantly mayo flavor, so I thought it was just mayo mixed with some other stuff instead.
Probably at some point I would return here again to try their food from other menus instead of just happy hour, like their omakase experience. I will say, though, that having 4-8pm as the happy hour time is a great move!
Cranes is Japanese omakase-style restaurant but with a supposed Spanish flair. I would say it is more Asian than Spanish. Not that this is a bad thing. Cranes also takes shape in form of fine dining. Each dish is a piece of art visually. Nothing is presented “as is”. Cranes is like a flavor lab. They are creative. They push the boundaries. In my long history of reviewing food, there are handful times where I’ve never tasted anything like it. But not always in a good way.
Cranes sources from both fresh seafood as well as veal for meat, mixing it with vegetables that are flagrant. And again, the quality of the food and the presentation absolutely deserves 5 stars. The problem though, is the balance and mix of flavors.
Creative chefs have always tried to mix flavors, either layering them, or mixing them, to create a new sensation. For example, the first dish with oysters, seaweed puff crisps and avocado cream, etc was absolutely delightful. It didn’t rely too much on soy sauce, brought out the umami of the seaweed, and accentuated the tried mushrooms. We were so impressed by this first course, but unfortunately, it only went downhill from there.
I cannot describe all the flavor profile anomalies but miso with some sort of musroom broth, fish with some dustry peppered cinammon, pandan cream, chili jelly, … the cacophony goes on and on. It almost feels like the chef is mixing random things, just enough so that you believe it could work, but ends up disappointing your palate. Your mind is confused. Your tongue is confused. You think it should delight but it doesn’t.
And the extreme flavors put on a single dish really begs the question why they came on the same plate. The extremes are too different. They don’t work together. Gochujang mochi balls with graham crackers just doesn’t to it.
I truly appreciate the boundaries the chef is pushing. They scream creativity. But creativity that doesn’t make sense is close to hallucination than art. And at this level of fine dining, it’s gone too far. There is too much experimentation going on.
The time clock on Cranes is ticking. At this price level, customers will never visit again after such an experience. They need to get back to the core fast. What makes fresh ingredients stand out. There’s plenty of Japanese and Spanish dishes to draw inspiration from. Respect the tradition. Create in ways that is not confusing.
The food was good but nothing mind blowing.
I enjoyed the wagyu dish and prawn dish the most.
$46 per person.
Food was good, my friends and I did restaurant week. The shrimp dish was most of our favourites, the steak main was ok but I wish I got the scallops instead.
All round, a nice meal but I wouldn’t rush back.