Restaurant in Washington, D.C.
Restaurant Nora
was a restaurant owned by chef
Nora Pouillon
in
Washington, D.C.
, and was America's first
certified organic
restaurant.
[1]
Opening and early years
[
edit
]
In 1979, chef
Nora Pouillon
opened Restaurant Nora on the corner of
Florida Avenue
and 21st in the
DuPont Circle
neighborhood.
[1]
Journalist
Sally Quinn
and her late husband,
Washington Post
executive editor,
Ben Bradlee
were early patrons and financial backers of the restaurant. Quinn offered a piece of advice: “Don’t mention anything about being healthy and natural. That sounds so unappetizing. That sounds like hippie food.” Pouillon ignored it, making her organic ingredients the focus of the restaurant.
[2]
The early reviews for Nora's were mixed, with Robert Shoffner of the
Washingtonian
less than enthusiastic about Pouillon's food.
[3]
[4]
In 1980,
The Washington Post
'
s Phyllis Richman noted that "the cooking has matured," calling Nora's "a sophisticated return to old-fashioned home cooking, with dishes from here and there but ingredients only from impeccable sources that raise their meats without chemicals."
[5]
By the early 1990s, Nora's became a destination for D.C’s media and political elite, particularly in the administration of President
Bill Clinton
.
[4]
In 1996, Chef Nora was named U.S.A. Chef of the Year by the American Tasting Institute, and she published a cookbook,
Cooking with Nora : seasonal menus from Restaurant Nora : healthy, light, balanced, and simple food with organic ingredients
.
[6]
Organic certification
[
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]
In the mid-1990s, Chef Nora began to investigate how Restaurant Nora could become an organic-certified restaurant and learned that no certification process existed. She decided to set about creating those standards.
[1]
She worked for two years with Oregon Tilth, a nonprofit membership organization dedicated to supporting and advocating organic food and farming. The
Oregon Tilth
Certified Organic
Program was established in 1982 and is an Accredited Certifying Agent for the USDA’s National Organic Program.
[7]
The resulting standard required that 95 percent of the food used, as a certified restaurant, must be obtained from USDA certified organic sources. “This meant obtaining proof of organic certification from all our suppliers,” she says. Chef Nora complied with the lengthy requirements, and in 1999 Nora's became the first certified organic restaurant in the country.
[7]
Later years and closure
[
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]
By the early 2000s, the restaurant had become a fixture in Washington's dining scene, and was named among
Washingtonian
magazine's "Very Best Restaurants."
[8]
In 2016, Nora's was one of the approximately 100 restaurants reviewed in the first
Michelin Guide
for Washington, D.C.
[1]
Upon Chef Nora's retirement in June 2017, Restaurant Nora closed its doors.
[9]
Prior to her retirement, Chef Nora received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the
James Beard Foundation
, celebrating her career at the restaurant.
[10]
Notable patrons and events
[
edit
]
Restaurant Nora has held lunches, dinners, and events for dignitaries, congressional members and
White House
administrations, and was a favorite of
Hillary Clinton
.
[11]
In 1993, President
Bill Clinton
held his first inaugural party at the restaurant.
[12]
Many of Clinton's cabinet members and staff ate at Nora's in the 1990s, and Vice President
Al Gore
and
Tipper Gore
celebrated her 45th birthday at the restaurant.
[4]
President
Jimmy Carter
and
Nancy Reagan
also ate at Nora's. When asked about her Presidential patrons by The
Washington
Post, Pouillon was reported to have said: “Neither of the Bush presidents ever set foot in Nora’s, but
Laura Bush
came, along with her two daughters, [...] Good food, it seems, is also bipartisan.”
[2]
In January 2010, President
Barack Obama
held a surprise birthday party for First Lady
Michelle Obama
at the restaurant.
[13]
[14]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
a
b
c
d
Judkis, Maura (October 18, 2016).
"Organic pioneer Nora Pouillon plans to retire, sell her eponymous restaurant"
.
The Washington Post
.
- ^
a
b
Reese, Jennifer (April 21, 2015).
"The story behind the woman who helped make healthy eating cool"
.
The Washington Post
.
- ^
Mundy, Liza (April 9, 2015).
"Nora Pouillon's Memoir Reminds Us How Rotten DC Food Used to Be"
.
Washingtonian Magazine
.
- ^
a
b
c
Sugarman, Carole (September 22, 1993).
"Nora's Moment"
.
The Washington Post
.
- ^
Richman, Phyllis (September 21, 1980).
"Dining 1980"
.
The Washington Post
Magazine
.
- ^
Slung, Michele (March 10, 1996).
"Book Report"
.
The Washington Post
.
- ^
a
b
"Organic Certification, Organic Farming -Oregon Tilth"
.
Oregon Tilth
.
- ^
Head, Thomas (September 7, 2006).
"Restaurant Nora: Nora Pouillon's all-organic fine dining room"
.
Washingtonian Magazine
.
- ^
Carman, Tim (April 20, 2017).
"The closure of Restaurant Nora, a trailblazer in natural cuisine, will reduce the number of certified organic restaurants by 14 percent"
.
The Washington Post
.
- ^
Koenig, Debbie (May 1, 2017).
"Nora Pouillon: 2017 Lifetime Achievement Award Winner"
.
James Beard Foundation
.
- ^
"The home of organic dining"
.
The Hill
. Retrieved
2013-12-05
.
- ^
Hodgson, Moira (April 10, 2015).
"Horrified by Wonder Bread"
.
The Wall Street Journal
.
- ^
Akers, Mary Ann (January 17, 2010).
"Michelle Obama's surprise birthday bash at Restaurant Nora"
.
The Washington Post
. Retrieved
2017-07-20
.
- ^
Belenky, Alexander (2010-01-17).
"Michelle Obama's Birthday Surprise Party At Restaurant Nora (PHOTOS)"
.
HuffPost
. Retrieved
2013-12-05
.
38°54′46.1″N
77°2′50.6″W
/
38.912806°N 77.047389°W
/
38.912806; -77.047389