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Washingtonian Magazine
April 12, 2005
SOME ASSEMBLY REQUIRED
For those tired of fixing dinner, "meal assembly" is
the next big thing. Popular in Seattle, this do-it-yourself-with-a-little-help
approach has found an outlet in Gaithersburg at the Neighborhood
Kitchen.
The effort by the pizza/panini cafe doughboys (251 W. Market
St.) and the cooking school Ronaldo's of Potomac works like
this: You visit doughboyscafe.com, scan the menu, order a
minimum of four meals (each feeds two), and pick a night
to put them together. Each meal takes five minutes to assemble,
and you get instructions.
Recent meals-$17 to $19 for portions that feed two-have
included skirt steak with shallots, purple potatoes, and
chimichurri sauce; shrimp jambalaya and wild rice; and fontina-and-cheddar
macaroni and cheese with roasted vegetables.
All the components for a meal are there-steak, shallots,
potatoes, and sauce. Patrons can choose to omit some items
and double up on vegetables instead. Fixings are ordered
fresh and are partially cooked in Doughboys' wood-burning
oven, so heating time at home averages about 15 minutes-labels
include directions. In addition to main courses, there are
salads, pizzas, breads, and desserts.
Assembly nights-usually the second
and fourth Mondays of the month-can get lively, says Doughboys
co-owner Ali Bagheri. "Sometimes
friends come together and have a glass of wine while they
go from station to station."
If you plan to eat one of the meals that night, it can be
heated upstairs in Ronaldo's ovens. Feeling lazy? Doughboys
will do it all for you and deliver, too, for an extra charge.
Call 301-330-3212.
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