Seasoned chef Robbie Tutlewski, who previously worked under James Beard Foundation Award-winner Chris Bianco in Phoenix, Arizona for several years, is in the early stages of opening a new restaurant in D.C. called Little Donna’s.
Tutlewski, whose most recent kitchen stint was a Tail Up Goat,
tells Eater his future Italian-meets-Southwestern eatery is at least a
year away. He just kicked off a search for a space, and so far he’s got
two priorities: He wants to be in a rowhouse, and there needs to be a
wood-fired brick pizza oven.
“What’s important to me is I am part of the
neighborhood,” he says, adding he’d like the spot to be where “industry
people like to eat.” He likes the “feel” of Brookland, so that’s a
possibility, as are Adams Morgan and Capitol Hill, where he lives.
For now, he’s hosting a series of pop-ups and catering gigs to get the word out. The first
will be held at District Space (3522 12th Street NE) on Friday, May 18
and Saturday, May 19, with a debut seven-course “Desert to District”
menu (view it here).
Tutlewski clocked nearly a decade of experience while
working with pizza maestro and cookbook author Bianco, helping run his
growing empire of award-winning Italian eateries in Phoenix like Pane Bianco and Pizzeria Bianco. He moved to D.C. last July, and soon snapped up a gig at the Michelin-starred Adams Morgan restaurant.
“I thought I was going to wait and take it easy because I
came from running six restaurants for nine years in Phoenix. It was a
ton of work,” he says.
He left Tail Up Goat two months ago and immediately
jump-started a business plan to bring Little Donna’s to D.C., fueled by
his desire to continue cooking over an open flame. “I’ve grown to know
and love wood-fired stoves and grills,” he says.
While there will be pizza on the menu, he’s not aiming to
be a pizzeria, per se. He wants to offer “reasonably priced food” and
make Little Donna’s — named after his mother — “something that feels
good to support.” While he waits for his brick-and-mortar restaurant,
he’s making the most of his roving lifestyle by testing out dishes from
coast to coast.
Last month he returned to Arizona to cook a scenic outdoor dinner
featuring smoked trout with pickled beets and green goddess dressing at
Sedona’s Slide Rock State Park, hosted by Cloth & Flame. And for Mother’s Day, he’s hosting a four-course dinner at Richmond’s rustic Sub Rosa Bakery.
The tentative menu calls for hand-pulled mozzarella, asparagus,
broccolini. spring onions and lemon gremolata and crispy potato gnocchi
with clam and mussel ragout, smoked blue fish, and ramps.
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