Bethesda Magazine: July/August 2024 Digital Edition

Page 140


THE BEACH GUIDE

The Best of Deep Creek Lake +

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Maryland Oncology Hematology Gives New Meaning to Personalized Cancer Care

Maryland Oncology Hematology believes in providing patients with advanced, comprehensive cancer therapies in a community setting that allows patients to receive care near their support systems. Our highly trained and experienced physicians work closely with a talented clinical team that is sensitive to the needs of cancer patients and their caregivers. Choosing an independent practice offers patients the chance to receive compassionate, affordable cancer care that utilizes the latest technologies provided by top physicians who are experts in their field. The best of care, close to home.

Maryland Oncology Hematology is a community-based practice, entirely owned and run by Maryland physicians. Our team is devoted to providing state-of-the-art patient care for hematology and oncology, working on behalf of our community for the benefit of patients. At Maryland Oncology Hematology, we believe that patients are more than a number. Each patient will have a dedicated care team by their side from diagnosis through treatment to recovery.

Phone: 301-424-6231

Fax: 301-929-0611

State-of-the-art hospital in Silver Spring, Maryland, specializing in:

• Heart care

• Maternal care and childbirth

• Stroke

• 24/7 Emergency care

• Cancer care

• Orthopedics

For more than 116 years, Adventist HealthCare has extended God’s care through the ministry of physical, mental and spiritual healing.

THE

The Best of the Beach

Our bucket hat list of all the food, drinks and more at the shore, from Lewes, Delaware, to Ocean City, Maryland BY

The Best of the Lake

Everything you need for a fabulous time at Deep Creek Lake BY

TOP PHOTO BY MARIA DEFORREST
It’s summertime, and the livin’ is easy at the beach.
COVER: ZEKE, 4, AND BLAKE, 1, ON THE BEACH IN LEWES, DELAWARE
PHOTO BY MARIA DEFORREST
BEACH + LAKE GUIDE

76 Bethesda Interview: David Leonhardt

The New York Times journalist on winning the Pulitzer Prize, playing Spelling Bee and his Rockville Chinese spot BY MIKE

82

The Write Stuff

The short stories and essays that took the top prizes in our annual writing competition, sponsored by Bethesda Magazine and the Bethesda Urban Partnership

93

Top Dentists

Our guide to 319 dentists in seven specialties in Montgomery County and Upper Northwest D.C.

PHOTO BY JOSEPH TRAN; ILLUSTRATION BY AMEENA FAREEDA
PAGE 76
David Leonhardt works for The New York Times from Bethesda.

Sweet screened porches you’ll want to

Real estate trends by ZIP code 157

158

Great

Dining

Java Nation, Tacos Don Perez and comings and goings

The Middle Eastern fare at ala is a mixed bag

Tea at Zinnia and chicken at Isaac’s Poultry Market 169 DINING

An editor-curated list of local restaurants

179 Good Life

180 SHOPPING

Hit the beach—even if just in your dreams—in these chic finds

182 MADE IN MOCO

Bags crafted locally (and sustainably) out of cork

184 TRAVELER’S NOTEBOOK

Bayside glamping, beachside bliss and railbiking

188 DRIVING RANGE

New boutique hotels in Avalon and Stone Harbor, New Jersey

203 CELEBRATIONS

A Silver Spring couple ties the knot in Rehoboth Beach

208 WHAT I KNOW

PBS exec Sylvia Bugg on four words that changed her life

Outfit

196

158 SMALL BITES
Java Nation brings its goodness to Silver Spring.
O.A.R. rocker Benj Gershman

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Summer Magic

IF THIS COULD BE A SCRATCH AND SNIFF ISSUE,

you would be able to smell the salty sea air, the boardwalk fries and caramel corn, and all of the delicious food found at the beaches in Delaware and Ocean City, Maryland. You’d also be picking up hints of fresh mountain air from Deep Creek Lake. Our writers have compiled a guide to the beaches and the lake to give you tips on the best things to see, do, eat and drink. It’s time for summer vacation—turn to page 56 to escape with refreshing waters, sunsets, good books, great trails, cute shops, local history and more.

We also have details for a beach vacation that might not be on your radar. Avalon and Stone Harbor, New Jersey, make up a 7-mile barrier island that’s only about 3½ hours from Bethesda. Three boutique hotels—one with a luxury spa—are among the options for a relaxing getaway. “Jersey’s Island Gem” starts on page 188.

This year’s winners of our annual Short Story & Essay Contest, which we sponsor with the Bethesda Urban Partnership, showcase the writing talent in our area. Kick back in a hammock or beach chair and enjoy their work, which begins on page 82. Or maybe the spot to read the winning words is on a next-level screened porch that feels like a mini vacation every time you’re out there. Check out the spaces homeowners in our area have transformed in the back of their houses for inspiration (“Alfresco Gets Amazing,” page 138).

There are so many cool things to do and interesting people to meet in Montgomery County and Upper Northwest D.C., and we want to make sure we’re keeping you in the know. We’ve added a few new departments to the magazine: “5 Things We Love Right Now” on page 24, “People Watching” on page 30, “Rooms We Love” on page 136, and a dining guide on page 169 that we will be expanding in upcoming issues.

I hope you’ll find a lot in this issue to fill up your summer—let me know what you think at kathleen.neary@MoCo360.media.

CONTRIBUTOR SPOTLIGHT

WENDY A. JORDAN CHEVY CHASE, D.C.

BACKGROUND: Jordan, who originally hails from suburban Chicago, is an editor and freelance writer who mostly covers home remodeling and design.

IN THIS ISSUE: Wrote the feature on screened-in porches around Montgomery County

FAVORITE MOCO HANGOUTS: “Walking on the Capital Crescent Trail is a weekend pleasure.”

WHAT SHE DOES FOR FUN: Art projects, reading and travel

CONTRIBUTOR SPOTLIGHT

BRENDAN MCCABE WASHINGTON, D.C.

BACKGROUND: McCabe grew up in Arlington, Virginia, and graduated from Georgetown University. He’s a freelance photographer specializing in beverages, food and still life.

IN THIS ISSUE: Photographed Zinnia in Silver Spring and Isaac’s Poultry Market in Gaithersburg for Table Talk

FAVORITE MOCO HANGOUTS: “Taking my kids to The Heights food hall or Fish Taco, and hiking or running along the Potomac River.”

WHAT HE DOES FOR FUN: “I love running in the woods with my chocolate Lab, Coco.”

PHOTO BY JIMELL GREENE; COURTESY PHOTOS

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At ANTHONY WILDER, we design and build spaces you can’t wait to come home to. Our in-house architects, interior designers, project managers and craftsmen work together to create custom design solutions just for you. We mind every detail, so you can simply live—and love—the life you’ve built.

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24

Dolled up: glorious girls’ clothes at Pink Chicken

WHAT PEOPLE ARE TALKING ABOUT

26 Dinosaur Babies and other upcoming events

Hazel, owned by Silver Spring resident Brianne Studer, runs through the agility course at Capital Dog Training Club in Silver Spring. PAGE 36
PHOTO BY HANNELE LAHTI

THINGS WE LOVE RIGHT NOW 5 1

A FOOD IDEA

Take a grassy patch of land, add a bunch of edible plants, herbs, flowers, vines, bushes and trees, and pretty soon it’s a “food forest” where people can harvest a free bite to eat. That’s the idea behind the appetizing new landscaping at Montgomery College’s Takoma Park/Silver Spring Campus. Student Tierney Acosta (pictured above) spearheaded the project and worked with volunteers to turn about 30,000 square feet of land into an eventual buffet of blueberries, apples, pawpaws, tomatoes, peas and more. Acosta’s hoping to help fellow students at Montgomery College who are facing food insecurity. It’ll take two years for the forest to reach its full potential. We can’t wait to see if other food forests sprout up.

Intersection of Chicago and Philadelphia avenues, Silver Spring

SUPER SCOOPS

There are “no angry people at an ice cream shop,” according to Germantown’s Bonnie Cosby, 65, and that’s why she has become a “chief ice cream artisan” in her retirement. Cosby (pictured left), who started Sunshine Creamery in 2022, says she uses milk from South Mountain Creamery in Frederick County and aims to make ice cream that tastes like her grandmother’s. She says she leaves out preservatives, additives, stabilizers and artificial flavors and colors. Pre-scooped cups (about 6 ounces) sell for $6 at farmers markets in the county, and flavors vary based on what her fellow vendors are selling (think cherries) as well as whatever strikes her fancy. Indulging your sweet tooth can also help others—Cosby says she donates 10% of her earnings from the Shady Grove Farmers Market to Rockville Help.

sunshinecreamerymd.com

BEACHY SWINGS

Montgomery County’s first outdoor beach tennis court debuted in April at the 18.3-acre Nike Missile Local Park in Gaithersburg. Combining elements of beach volleyball, badminton and traditional tennis, beach tennis just might be the next pickleball. Thanks to an adjustable net system, the sand court also can be used for volleyball matches.

Open sunrise to sunset. Free; first come, first served. 8500 Snouffer School Road, Gaithersburg, montgomeryparks.org/ parks-and-trails/nike-missile-local-park

PATIO UPGRADE

Summer is for eating outside, and we’re loving the updated patio at Founding Farmers in Park Potomac. Opened in March, the patio has been expanded from 80 seats to 135 and is accented with basil green pillars and beams and filled with plants. Fans, heaters, retractable sides and a louvered roof extend the outdoor season. Because, really, fall, winter and spring are for outdoor dining, too.

12505 Park Potomac Ave., Potomac, 301-340-8783, wearefoundingfarmers.com

PRINTS CHARMING

For the swellest children’s clothes in town, head to the new boutique Pink Chicken. The wee dresses, rompers, swimsuits and other pieces come in sweet patterns, including plenty of summery picks, such as lobsters and ice pops. Girls grab the spotlight here, but boys clothes are on the racks, too. Sizes range from newborn to 14Y. Grown-ups also will find a few options, such as flowy frocks just made for beach days and the occasional shirt for men, maybe adorned with mallards or grilling gear.

4925 Elm St., Bethesda, 240-967-1742, pinkchicken.com

JULY/AUGUST

MUSIC

July 10 through Aug. 21

Live from the Lawn

Pianist Mark G. Meadows and singer Rochelle Rice celebrate blues music in an all-ages version of the concert they present each year to Montgomery County Public Schools fifth graders. The show is the first of Strathmore’s outdoor summer concert series. The lineup also includes an Aug. 7 appearance of EU featuring Sugar Bear, which is expected to be one of Strathmore’s most popular shows of the season. strathmore.org

July 11 through Aug. 1

Cool Concerts for Kids  Strathmore’s outdoor summer children’s concert series begins with a performance by the Grammywinning bilingual duo 123 Andrés, which packs energy, education and positive vibes into its familyfriendly music.

Vocalist Jazzy Ash and the New Orleansstyle jazz band the Leaping Lizards, “kindie” rockers Marsha and the Positrons, and hip-hop artist Fyütch fill out the lineup of Thursday evening shows. strathmore.org

July 11 through Aug. 15

Montgomery Parks Summer Concert Series

The series kicks off with a concert by a local band, The Nighthawks, on July 11 at Black Hill Regional Park and continues through mid-August with a different band playing at a county park every Thursday. montgomeryparks.org

July

25

A Night With Norm Lewis

It’s a double celebration at Olney Theatre Center as film, television and Broadway actor Norm Lewis performs a concert to salute the Olney Outdoors season opening and the the ater’s 86th birthday. An Emmy, Tony and SAG Award nominee, Lewis made history as Broad way’s first African American phantom in tom of the Opera and has appeared in Broad way shows including Porgy & Bess, Chicago and Les Misérables. olneytheatre.org

Aug. 8

Straight No Chaser

Get a shot of nostalgia when the all-male a cappella group takes on the ’90s in a concert featuring pop hits from that decade at The Music Center at Strathmore strathmore.org

Aug. 15

The Righteous Brothers

Bobby Hatfield and Bill Medley formed the soulful rock ’n’ roll duo in the 1960s, but their songs have endured for decades. Some of their most famous hits were featured in blockbuster movies in the ’80s and ’90s—Tom Cruise’s rendition of “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’ ” in Top Gun and Demi Moore and Patrick Swayze’s pottery scene with “Unchained Melody” in Ghost—making the tunes iconic. After Hatfield’s death in 2003, Medley teamed with vocalist Bucky Heard to revive the group’s repertoire. They will stop by The Music Center at Strathmore on their farewell tour. strathmore.org

Miss Nelson is Missing!

Aug. 17

A BandHouse Gigs Tribute to DC Legends

An impressive number of musical superstars have called the D.C. area home. This show at The Music Center at Strathmore, featuring performances by current regional musicians and vocalists, pays homage to the area’s homegrown talent. Expect songs by Marvin Gaye, Roberta Flack, Patsy Cline, Joan Jett, Nils Lofgren, Emmylou Harris and Duke Ellington to name just a few. strathmore.org

Aug. 24

Santigold

Punk, hip-hop, pop and dub are just some of the influences for this genre-defying indie musician. Expect cuts from her 2022 album Spirituals and more from her oeuvre at The Fillmore Silver Spring livenation.com

Santigold

Aug. 24-25

War

The “Low Rider” band rolls into town for two shows at the Bethesda Theater

Formed in the 1960s, the group fuses funk, rock, soul and Latin music for a distinctive sound. Other hits include “Why Can’t We Be Friends?” and “Spill the Wine.” bethesdatheater.com

THEATER

Through Aug. 10

Miss Nelson is Missing!

Cowardly Lion in this musical production of the classic American fairy tale at The Puppet Co. in Glen Echo Park. The show, which runs about 55 minutes, is best for age 4 and older. thepuppetco.org

July 6 and 9

Shakespeare in the Parks Meadowside Nature Center and Brookside Gardens transform into open-air theaters for free performances of Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Bring a picnic or, at Brookside, pick up a bite from an onsite food truck. montgomeryparks.org

MEET MOCO’S

HOTY

The fifth graders at Smedley Elementary School are in for a surprise when their sweet teacher, Miss Nelson, disappears and is replaced by the dreaded substitute, Viola Swamp. The musical adaptation of the children’s book by Harry Allard is performed at Imagination Stage and recommended for children age 4 and older. imaginationstage.org

July 3 through Aug. 25

Beautiful: The Carole King Musical

This jukebox musical at Olney Theatre Center features hits such as “So Far Away,” “(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman” and “Will You Love Me Tomorrow” by the famous singersongwriter, and tells the story of her life from a hopeful 16-year-old trying to sell a song to music publishers, to one of the 20th century’s greatest tunesmiths. olneytheatre.org

July 6 through Aug. 4

The Wizard of Oz

Journey down the yellow brick road with Dorothy, the Scarecrow, the Tin Man and the

Aug. 15 through Sept. 8

DinoRock Productions: Dinosaur Babies

With prehistoric characters and original music, this show, which first graced The Puppet Co.’s stage in 1998, is for large reptile lovers. About 45 minutes long, it’s recommended for children age 5 and older. thepuppetco.org

FAIRS & FESTIVALS

July 14

International Food and Craft Festival

Experience flavors from around the world at this event at Veterans Plaza in Silver Spring. In addition to delicious things to eat, vendors will showcase handmade items and other wares for sale. chiceventsdc.com

A jar of dried habanero peppers, a fallthemed quilt and a multicolor baby’s cardigan made from scrap yarn are just three of the items Gaithersburg’s Karen Johnston entered in the 2023 Montgomery County Agricultural Fair (mcagfair. com). Johnston, 65, was crowned Homemaker of the Year (HOTY) after entering 157 items in 16 divisions and winning at least one blue ribbon in 14 of them— more than any other participant. This year’s fair is scheduled for Aug. 9-17 and will include the home arts competitions, carnival rides, farm animals and more. We caught up with Johnston to find out how she went from participant to royalty.

When did you get involved with the fair?

I started entering items around 2014/2015. My husband was a failed beekeeper, so I started taking over the bees. And then as a reason to use the honey, I started looking at recipes that used honey and of course I went to baklava. I made it and it was really good, and then a friend of mine said, ‘Oh, you should enter this in the fair; it’s really good!’ ... So I entered baklava, just on a hoot, and I got a first-place ribbon. ... And then I decided to add two things in the next fair. And then I started looking through the fair catalog. It became like a game.

What advice would you give people who are interested in entering a few contests?

If your friends and family tell you, ‘Oh, this coffee cake is really good,’ or ‘That sweater that you knit is charming,’ then usually people aren’t going to volunteer a nice comment if it wasn’t really good. So, if you have something that you know that people like, then make one. ... Look at it like you think a judge would. And enjoy it. You have to enjoy what you do.

July 21

Afro Latino Festival

Celebrate the culture of the community through more than 40 vendors, live music, food and crafts that represent Afro Latino heritage at this free festival at Silver Spring’s Veterans Plaza afrolatinofestival.net

July 27

Tastes of Calleva

At this progressive-style meal, guests tour Calleva Farm in Dickerson and stop at different stations, each featuring an artist or musician from the community along with small plates highlighting eggs and meat from the farm, produce and herbs grown there, and locally sourced beer, wine and cocktails. In addition, there will be zip lines, wagon rides, lawn games, garden tours, a campfire and a sing-along. calleva.org/farm/tastes-ofcalleva

Aug. 10

Montgomery County Children’s Business Fair

Up to 40 young entrepreneurs will be open for business at this one-day marketplace at Rockville Town Square designed to inspire businesspeople ages 6 to 15. Kids are invited to create a product or service (think baked goods or paintings), market it and then sell it at the fair. mocochildrensbusinessfair.org

Aug. 17-18

RisuCon

Comic, anime and cosplay fans can meet voice actors, artists and illustrators at this comic convention at the Bethesda North Marriott Hotel and Conference Center

The family-friendly event features Q&As, panel discussions and autograph signings. Attendees are encouraged to wear costumes. risucon.com

Aug. 24

Maker’s Market and Festival

Shop the wares of creative vendors and neighborhood businesses at the summer installment of this seasonal sidewalk festival in Friendship Heights. The free event, along Wisconsin Avenue from Jenifer to Garrison streets, also includes community hangout zones, oversize games, music and dancing. friendshipheights.com

Aug. 25

African + Caribbean Music & Arts Festival

Live music, including a steel orchestra and jazz ensemble, takes center stage at this free festival at Veterans Plaza in Silver Spring. Arts and crafts representing African and Caribbean culture are also featured. carnivalnation.com

FILM

July 26; Aug. 2, 9

Bethesda Outdoor Movies

Bethesda Urban Partnership presents free outdoor films at the corner of Auburn and Norfolk avenues in downtown Bethesda. First up? Men in Black. Dine at a nearby restaurant before the show and make it dinner and a movie. bethesda.org

July 31 through Aug. 21

Movies in the Parks

This free Wednesday evening film series features family-friendly movies in a different Rockville park each week. Bring your own chairs, blankets and picnics to Fallsgrove Park for The Emperor’s New Groove, the first of the set. The lineup also includes The Super Mario Bros. Movie, Encanto and Matilda rockvillemd.gov/1755/movies-in-the-parks

Aug. 2

James Baldwin: The Price of the Ticket  Marking the 100th birthday of the American writer and civil rights activist, Strathmore launches its series on James Baldwin with a screening of the documentary James Baldwin: The Price of the Ticket at the AFI Silver Theatre and Cultural Center in Silver Spring, followed by a conversation led by Keith Clark, a professor at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia. The series continues into October with concerts and lectures. strathmore.org

DANCE

July 6

Bumper Car Squares

Want to swing your partner or learn how to do-si-do? Check out this square dance event at Glen Echo Park’s Bumper Car Pavilion

After a lesson for dancers of all levels, a caller will lead a square dance with a live band. The event is for all ages; free for kids 12 and younger. Footwear with a back is suggested—wouldn’t want to lose a shoe while you promenade. glenechopark.org/eventscalendar/202407

FOURTH OF JULY

July 4

Germantown Glory

Head to South Germantown Recreation Park starting at 7 p.m. for music from a live band before the fireworks kick off. Bring chairs or a blanket and a picnic, or grab a bite from a food vendor on-site. montgomerycountymd.gov

July 4

Poolesville’s Annual 4th of July

Fireworks Celebration

The community celebrates with music, food and fireworks at the soccer fields off Hughes Road. Gates open at 5 p.m. poolesvillemd. gov/225/events

July 4

Rockville’s Independence Day Celebration

Uncle Jesse, a cover band playing hits from the ’90s and 2000s, provides the tunes at the city’s July Fourth event, which also includes a 20-minute fireworks display at Mattie J.T. Stepanek Park rockvillemd.gov/663/ independence-day

July 6

Mid-County Sparkles

Keep the celebration going into the weekend with a live band and fireworks at Albert Einstein High School in Kensington. The event begins at 6 p.m. montgomerycountymd.gov —Stephanie Siegel Burke

THE FUTURE OF HEALTHCARE IS NEAR

Our new six-floor hospital tower is coming soon and will transform care to our community in Montgomery County.

• Modernized emergency department with more treatment space for mental health crises

• State-of-the-art Intensive Care Unit

• New medical-surgical unit

• Private patient rooms

• Calm, healing design inspired by nature

• Latest technology, supporting services that have earned national recognition for quality

8 Questions for Benj Gershman

Benj Gershman says he wants to share with the world his conversations with people who have struggled with trauma and recovered—just like him. The graduate of Rockville’s Thomas S. Wootton High School and original member of the rock band O.A.R. was on tour in February 2020 when he was infected by COVID-19; for the next two years, he battled extreme fatigue from long COVID. Gershman says he was so focused on rebuilding his physical strength and identity as a musician that he overlooked the toll the ordeal took on his mental health.

With hard work and support from others, Gershman, 44, says he’s now in a good place. O.A.R., which formed in 1996 in Rockville, is recording a new album and touring this summer with a stop on July 27 at Merriweather Post Pavilion in Columbia.

In May, Gershman—who grew up in Gaithersburg and lives in Encinitas, California, with his wife and 5-year-old son—launched What Could Be Bad, a mental health and wellness podcast to discuss his journey and those of other performers and producers.

This interview has been lightly edited for clarity and length.

How do you stay grounded? Connecting with my family first and foremost. … I look at the ways I used to live before as very reactive. Now I look at living as preventive maintenance—a parttime job where I need to take care of myself. That means waking up before everyone else in the family [at 5 a.m.], stretching, exercising, doing breath work and meditation, taking a walk for 45 minutes to sometimes two hours. That’s my time.

Who did you listen to most growing up? Public Enemy, Beastie Boys, Aerosmith, Red Hot Chili Peppers. My first live concert was at Merriweather to see the Monkees with Weird Al Yankovich.

Do you have a favorite D.C.-area music club? The Anthem [in Southwest D.C.]. That place is glorious. I grew up loving the 9:30 Club, and the Anthem is the 9:30 Club magnified.

What influence do you think growing up in MoCo had on your music? There are so many cultures and there is so much music. You can pull up at a light and hear somebody listen to music from another part of the world. I remember that happening, loving it, and [being] like: What was that sound? I need to figure that out.

Where is your favorite place to be? Home. I spent so much time here that I thought when I got through all this stuff I’d take my wife and kid on a nationwide adventure. But my wife has a career. My kid really benefits from the things he has here. I live in a beautiful place, and I love being here to support them. Being of service as a father and as a husband is my greatest priority.

What’s the best advice someone has given you? Do the work.

What book have you read recently? This Is What It Sounds Like: A Legendary Producer Turned Neuroscientist on Finding Yourself Through Music by Susan Rogers. It’s an incredible book that analyzes what it is about music that we all appreciate and get attached to.

What’s one song you have on heavy rotation? “Welcome to Hard Times” by Charley Crockett. It’s country music. I feel like he’s one of the new outlaws like Johnny Cash, Willie Nelson or Merle Haggard. I just dig his low voice, and we share the same birthday, March 24.

COURTESY
Benj Gershman performs with O.A.R. Inset: Gershman

People Watching

Izzy Guimaraes says she and her husband, Sid Luthra, are “big nerds” who do the crossword every day in The New York Times. So when planning their spring 2023 wedding (featured in the January/February 2024 issue of Bethesda Magazine), it seemed fitting to create a large personalized crossword puzzle to entertain their guests. “It was a really fun thing for people to get to know each other as they discussed the clues,” says Guimaraes, 34, a University of Maryland alum who lives in North Potomac. Their photographer’s Instagram post of the puzzle has racked up 2.7 million views. Guimaraes launched WedWords (wed-words. com) in January. She designs and sells custom dry-erase crosswords, partnering with a commercial printer to produce and ship the large acrylic puzzles. “I’ve enjoyed seeing how much this resonated with other people,” says Guimaraes, whose day job is operating the test prep company Wheelhouse Learning.

After writing two books on relationships, Julie and David Bulitt now have a podcast called Conversations for Couples. David, 63, a divorce attorney, likes to be organized and serve as the moderator, says his wife, Julie, 59, a family therapist who describes herself as more off the cuff during the recording sessions in their Olney home. They offer professional advice and personal insights from their 37 years of marriage on topics from fighting fair to how to keep the spark going. The podcast, which also can be viewed on YouTube, first dropped in January, and episodes are released every other week.

As a reporter at The Washington Post, Craig Whitlock wrote more than 50 stories about a corruption scandal involving several U.S. Navy officers and Leonard Glenn Francis, a Malaysian defense contractor. The 56-year-old journalist, who lives in Silver Spring, expanded the investigation and says he exposes vulnerabilities the military has yet to come to grips with in his book Fat Leonard: How One Man Bribed, Bilked, and Seduced the U.S. Navy (Simon & Schuster, May 2024). “He was almost an evil genius in how he was able to cultivate Navy officers to be his moles, informants and give him classified information,” Whitlock says of Francis. “It’s a real gripping tale of espionage, of sex, of bribery and misconduct.”

A wedding guest works on a WedWords custom puzzle.

Brody and Luke Mullins are from Upper Northwest Washington, D.C., attended Gonzaga College High School, and still live near where they grew up. Both became journalists, and now the brothers are co-authors of The Wolves of K Street: The Secret History of How Big Money Took Over Big Government (Simon & Schuster, May 2024). Brody, 49, a reporter at The Wall Street Journal, came up with the idea and enlisted Luke, 46, a contribut ing writer at Politico. They devoted seven years to the project. The hope, Luke says, was to show how the lobbying industry has changed through examples and characters that make the book read more like a novel. “Our goal was to really explain how we got here, and how the lobbying indus try affects you as a consumer in ways you probably don’t always understand,” he says.

New parents sometimes struggle to know which toys to buy their baby—and many are short on time to figure it out. The answer, according to Bethesda mom Sarah Breitenother, is a toy subscription service. In April, she rolled out Little Bloomer (littlebloomer.com), a business that delivers boxes of age-appropriate toys to customers every three months. “We take the guesswork out of what toys to buy your baby,” says Breitenother, 38, who has a background in marketing and consulted with an early childhood education expert in selecting the toys. Subscriptions come with an app for parents to learn how to best play with their kids at different developmental stages.

Katie Ledecky, who was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in May, often is asked about the secret to being a world-class swimmer. Her book, Just Add Water (Simon & Schuster, June 2024), is an attempt to lay out the ingredients of her swimming life, crediting her family, coaches and beloved Palisades Swim & Tennis Club community in Cabin John for contributing to her success. “You are who you are in the moment only because of all the moments that came before it,” writes Ledecky, 27, who grew up in Bethesda and graduated from Stone Ridge School of the Sacred Heart. After her sixth consecutive women’s 800-meter freestyle win at the world championships in July 2023, Ledecky took a weeklong break and then began training for the Paris Olympics with a swim at Palisades. “It fills me with pride and emotion just thinking about it,” she writes about that early morning workout in the hometown pool where she learned to swim. Ledecky has 10 Olympic medals, including seven golds.

The filmmaking career of 26-year-old Natalie Jasmine Harris, who grew up in Silver Spring and now lives in New York, is taking off. Her short film, Grace, debuted at the 2024 Sundance Film Festival. The story is about a young Black queer girl coming of age in the 1950s in the South as she confronts issues of identity that conflict with her religious traditions. Harris, a graduate of the New York University Tisch School of the Arts with a BFA in film and television, wrote, directed and produced the film.

OLYMPIC HOPEFULS

Many athletes with Montgomery County roots are aiming to make it to the 2024 Paris Olympics. Decisions on who will go to the July/August Games run into the summer (check MoCo360.media for more athletes and how they’re all faring). In addition to Ledecky (on the previous page), here are a few vying for spots:

Kayla DiCello has been training at Hill’s Gymnastics in Gaithersburg since she was 2 years old. The elite gymnast took a gap year from the University of Florida for the 2023-2024 school year and returned to her home gym to prepare for her shot at the Olympics. She hopes to land one of five spots on the U.S. gymnastics team in late June. “I have been dreaming about making the Olympics, making the team and being able to compete,” says DiCello, 20, who placed third at the U.S. championships in early June.

DiCello is a six-time U.S. national team member. She won the all-around bronze at the 2021 world championships and all-around gold at the 2023 Pan American Games. After being named 2023 Southeastern Conference Freshman of the Year at the University of Florida, DiCello says she considered training on campus but decided she’d be able to focus most effectively from her home in Boyds. She’s living with her family and asked her longtime coach, Kelli Hill, to come out of retirement and work with her. “I’ve gotten so much support from Montgomery County—my family and friends in my neighborhood,” says DiCello, who attended Northwest High School in Germantown. “This probably wouldn’t be possible if it weren’t for my principal helping me come up with a schedule so I could balance practicing twice a day with also still going to public school.”

Track standout Quincy Wilson, who lives in Gaithersburg, qualified this spring for the Olympic trials in Eugene, Oregon. He beat the indoor national record with a time of 45.76 in the 400-meter dash in March at the New Balance Nationals Indoor in Boston. Quincy clocked

45.19 at the Florida Relays in late March and did even better at the East Coast International Showcase in May with a time of 45.17. The 16-year-old rising junior at Bullis School in Potomac will find out if he makes Team USA in June.

Helen Maroulis, a graduate of Col. Zadok Magruder High School in Rockville, has qualified for the Paris Games where she hopes to bring home more hardware. The two-time Olympic medalist won gold in women’s freestyle wrestling at the 2016 and 2020 Games. She qualified for the 2024 team in April. At 32, she will be the oldest U.S. woman to wrestle in the Games and the only American female wrestler to compete in three Olympics.

Alumni from Bethesda’s Stone Ridge School of the Sacred Heart Phoebe Bacon (class of 2020) and Erin Gemmell (class of 2023) will be competing for spots on the U.S. Olympic swimming team in mid-June. Bacon, 21, is a standout swimmer at the University of Wisconsin-Madison; Gemmell, 19, is on the team at University of Texas at Austin.

Kayla DiCello
Quincy Wilson

July 25

Daryl Hall + Elvis Costello & The Imposters with Charlie Sexton

August 15

The Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis

Cécile McLorin Salvant

Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony

National Symphony Orchestra

Wolf Trap Opera Artists

July 12

Wolf Trap Opera La bohème

National Symphony Orchestra

July 19 Beck with the National Symphony Orchestra July 27

Lyle Lovett and his Large Band

Preservation Hall Jazz Band

August 9

KIDZ BOP LIVE 2024

READING LIST

These were the best-selling books at Loyalty Bookstores in Silver Spring from February through May 2024:

FICTION

1 That Time I Got Drunk and Saved a Demon Kimberly Lemming

2 Memory Piece Lisa Ko

3 Sex, Lies and Sensibility Nikki Payne

4 Parable of the Sower Octavia E. Butler

5 The Ministry of Time Kaliane Bradley

6 How We Named the Stars Andrés N. Ordorica

7 The Partner Plot Kristina Forest

8 This Could Be Us Kennedy Ryan

9 You Know What You Did K.T. Nguyen

August 19 + 20

Jerry Seinfeld

August 24 + 25

Indigo Girls

Melissa Etheridge

August 10

Boyz II Men

Bell Biv DeVoe

August 17 + 18

Blues Traveler Big Head Todd and the Monsters August 23

10 Martyr! Kaveh Akbar

NONFICTION

1 Rebel Girl: My Life as a Feminist Punk Kathleen Hanna

2 1000 Words: A Writer’s Guide to Staying Creative, Focused, and Productive All Year Round Jami Attenberg

3 Be a Revolution: How Everyday People Are Fighting Oppression and Changing the World and How You Can, Too Ijeoma Oluo

4 HBCU Made: A Celebration of the Black College Experience Ayesha Rascoe

5 King: A Life Jonathan Eig

6 How the Word Is Passed: A Reckoning with the History of Slavery Across America Clint Smith

7 All About Love bell hooks

8 There’s Always This Year: On Basketball and Ascension Hanif Abdurraqib

9 This Bridge Called My Back: Writings by Radical Women of Color Cherríe Moraga and Gloria Anzaldúa

10 Black Liturgies: Prayers, Poems, and Meditations for Staying Human Cole Arthur Riley

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Go, Dog. Go!

Teaching dogs (and their owners) new tricks

At a typical practice, Liv jogs onto the green turf field inside a Silver Spring industrial park warehouse, finds her starting position and waits for the signal. A moment later she’s off, leaping over hurdles, navigating the weave poles, and crawling through a corrugated tunnel. Liv navigates the obstacles in this fast-paced gambol. All for cheers and treats.

Liv, a rescued street dog from Puerto Rico, competes as a member of the Capital Dog Training Club (CDTC) in dog agility, a team sport gaining participants across Montgomery County. The other half of her team is her owner and handler, Brian Rosen, 58, of Chevy Chase.

Though Liv lacks the pedigree for purebred competitions, such as the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show in New York City, agility contests are open to any canine, including mixed breeds and rescues, as well as spayed or neutered dogs.

“We can’t possibly take all the students who want to do agility,” says Shannon Hall, 50, president of CDTC, which has been based in Montgomery County for decades. “The sport was already growing, then COVID hit. Suddenly, people had a lot more time with their dogs.”

Since 2018, CDTC has doubled the number of weekly agility classes from five to 11 and divided into two tracks: competition and noncompetition, which is more laid-back and playful. Participation climbed from 50 to 140 teams with another 60 to 70 on waitlists, according to CDTC. Classes are small, each with several teachers. CDTC, which is affiliated with the American Kennel Club (AKC), also offers lessons in obedience and other dog sports, such as scent tracking.

For teams that pursue competition, it takes more than a year of training to enter the ring. In addition to mastering at least 14 obstacles, dogs must achieve behaviors such as sitting for long periods, performing off leash and coping with loud environments. Humans have a lot to learn, too.

“The core of agility is partnership and communicating with each other. Both members of the team are essential. You need a dog who is interested in you, not other dogs, and can go to strange places and ignore weird things,” says Jennie Larkin, 59, an agility instructor who lives in Bethesda. With Tali, her Canaan dog, she

PHOTO BY HANNELE
Chevy Chase resident Brian Rosen encourages his dog Liv on the agility course at Capital Dog Training Club.

won the breed championship at AKC’s prestigious Agility Invitational in Orlando in 2022.

The sport challenges dogs both physically and mentally. “Remember what your dog was bred to do. Some dogs need a job to channel their energy,” Hall says. She lives in Olney with her dogs, Michael, a herding mix, and Connor, a border collie, who are both rescues and AKC agility champions.

In addition to AKC, other national organizations host trials, including Canine Performance Events, The North American Dog Agility Council and the United States Dog Agility Association. Each group has its own rules and culture. Teams register with an organization, participate in their qualifying trials, accumulate points and move up in the rankings. Dogs compete by jump height, from 8 to 24 inches. Judges deduct for faults, such as refusing an obstacle. Teams reaching the highest levels can be invited to agility’s most prestigious national events.

Points are tracked in official national databases. As a result, teams can crisscross the region and even the country to progress in their rankings. “Agility is like travel sports. You’re up early, days are long, and you cart around lots of gear, trying to get the best performance out of your loved one,” says Julie Rovner, 65, of North Bethesda, a CDTC board member who competes with her corgis, Aspen and Wallace.

Unlike traditional sports, the goal isn’t necessarily to defeat

others—it’s to earn points. “You are competing against yourself. Ultimately, most people are trying to get their qualifying runs to move up. You don’t need someone else to lose to win,” says Janine Castorina, 50, CDTC’s assistant training director for agility and a resident of Northwest D.C. She competes with Horus and Odin, both Great Pyrenees mixes and rescues, about twice a month at events in the area, estimating she spends at least $25,000 a year on the sport.

CDTC’s space in Silver Spring is too small to host a full-length AKC agility course, Rovner says. Instead, the club holds its annual spring trial at a Carroll County sports complex. The club hopes one day to secure a larger venue in Montgomery County where the public can watch competitions.

Agility was created with spectators in mind. It was developed in 1978 at England’s fabled Crufts dog show to entertain audiences between obedience and conformation trials. Inspired by horse show jumping, agility was designed to highlight a dog’s athleticism, and it quickly became a fan favorite, reaching the U.S. in the ’90s.

Stephanie Singer, 56, of Bethesda, and Chester, her French bulldog, discovered agility about two years ago. This spring they joined their first CDTC novice class. “He loves it! When I look at videos, I see him coming over a jump, his head turns and he looks toward me as if to say, ‘Where are we going?’ ” Singer says. “We connect on another level.”

Cosmetic Surgery Associates

A. DEAN JABS, MD, PH.D., FACS; FRANKLIN D. RICHARDS, M.D., FACS & KESHAV MAGGE, M .D., FACS

Specialties & Qualifications

Board Certified, American Board of Plastic Surgery

Fellow, American College of Surgeons

Member, American Society of Plastic Surgeons

Member, American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery

Member, Southeastern Society of Plastic Surgeons

Certificate of Added Qualification in Cosmetic Surgery, American Society of Aesthetic Plastic Surgery

President, National Capital Society of Plastic Surgeons

6430 Rockledge Drive, Suite 100 Bethesda, MD 20817

301-493-4334

CosmeticPlastics.com

At Cosmetic Surgery Associates, a Forefront Practice, elective cosmetic surgery is all they do. Each surgeon is highly trained with extensive experience in plastic surgery and thousands of happy patients. The practice caters to patients to provide desired results in a safe, discrete and caring environment. Their certified operating rooms are staffed with the best nurses and technicians in the area and utilize only Board Certified anesthesiologists. Your safety is their primary concern.

Dr. Magge, Dr. Jabs and Dr. Richards are Board Certified plastic surgeons and Fellows of the American College of Surgeons. In addition, they are all members of the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery and the American Society of Plastic Surgery. All three physicians have years of experience and have performed thousands of successful procedures in their fully accredited surgery suite.

Dr. Magge, Dr. Jabs, and Dr. Richards are well known for their warm, caring personalities and commitment to excellence. They put their patients at ease and take time to listen to their goals. Their entire team treats each patient like family. Cosmetic Surgery Associates is at the forefront of the latest aesthetic surgery techniques and performs most of their procedures under twilight anesthesia, obviating the need for general anesthesia. Their patients know they can count on them to provide safe, effective procedures with outstanding results.

The Center for Cancer and Blood Disorders

RALPH V. BOCCIA, MD, FACP; BRUCE D. CHESON, MD, FACP, FAAAS, FASCO; MARK GOLDSTEIN, MD, FACP; VICTOR M. PRIEGO, MD

"I credit Dr. Victor M. Priego for thinking outside the box and pushing for the treatment I needed," says Andrea, a CCBD patient since 2018. "Because of my great team at CCBD, I can enjoy a better quality of life and more time with my family and wonderful grandson."

6410 Rockledge Drive, Suite 660 Bethesda, MD 20817

19735 Germantown Road, Suite 255

Germantown, MD 20874

301-571-0019

CCBDMD.com

The Center for Cancer and Blood Disorders (CCBD), an American Oncology Partner, offers patients access to a world-class team of oncologists and hematologists dedicated to revolutionizing cancer care through cutting-edge treatments, clinical trials and research—all under one roof. Led by nationally recognized, board-certified medical oncologists and hematologists Drs. Ralph V. Boccia, MD, FACP; Victor M. Priego, MD; Mark Goldstein, MD, FACP and Bruce D. Cheson, MD, FACP, FAAAS, FASCO, the team understands that cancer is unique. CCBD works tirelessly to provide personalized, compassionate, comprehensive care. Using molecular profiling, Drs. Boccia, Priego, Goldstein and Cheson customize treatment plans and therapies to match each patient's specific cancer and needs. By staying at the forefront of discoveries and collaborating with specialists from renowned institutions such as Johns Hopkins and Georgetown, CCBD ensures patients receive the

most advanced, multidisciplinary care available, including access to more than 65 clinical trials. Additionally, CCBD is proud to participate in new and exciting drug development and has helped bring many of the best drugs to market.

Committed to delivering leading-edge and innovative treatments, including chemotherapy, targeted therapy, immunotherapy and participation in clinical trials when appropriate, CCBD and its regarded team of expert specialists are constantly evolving to provide the best care possible for each of their patients. Beyond groundbreaking treatment, CCBD also offers extensive support services, including home delivery of oral cancer medications, in-house lab and pathology, onsite infusion therapy, nutrition guidance, financial counseling and more to help patients manage their physical, psychosocial and emotional needs throughout their cancer journey.

Dermatologic Surgery Center of Washington

MARAL KIBARIAN SKELSEY, MD

KOJI OTA, MD

The Dermatologic Surgery Center of Washington specializes in Mohs and dermatologic surgery, medical dermatology and the latest cosmetic treatments. Its board-certified dermatology providers are leaders in their areas of expertise in the region and around the world. The Center's director, Dr. Maral Skelsey, is a Clinical Professor of Dermatology at Georgetown University.

5530 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 820 Chevy Chase, MD 20815

301-652-8081 | front.desk@mohs-md.com MOHS-MD.com

Dr. Maral Kibarian Skelsey established the Dermatologic Surgery Center of Washington in 2003 as a regional referral center for advanced skin care, including complex skin cancers, medical dermatology and cosmetic procedures. Dr. Skelsey, a dermatologist and Mohs surgeon, has surrounded herself with leading dermatology providers, fostering a collaborative environment committed to medical excellence. Her newest colleague, Dr. Koji Ota, continues this tradition. "I met Dr. Ota when he was chief resident in Dermatology at [MedStar] Georgetown University Hospital," says Dr. Skelsey. "I knew his genuine interest in patients and effective communication style would resonate with our expanding practice."

After earning his Doctor of Medicine from SUNY Downstate Health Sciences University, Dr. Ota completed a unique Dermatology-Internal Medicine dual-

training residency at Georgetown, giving him a profound understanding of how skin is a reflection of overall health. This, coupled with his pediatric dermatology training at Children's National Hospital, enables him to offer comprehensive care to patients of all ages and skin types—especially those with complex dermatologic needs.

The patient-centric, integrative approach that attracted Dr. Skelsey to Dr. Ota is precisely why he jumped at the invitation to join her practice. The center's commitment to academic dermatology and the training of the next generation of providers was another major draw. "I admired how Dr. Skelsey took her time with patients, listening to their needs and concerns," says Dr. Ota. "I, too, emphasize being thorough with my consultations and exams. I want patients to leave their appointments confident and reassured about their treatment and next steps."

Rockville Gynecology

CAROLYNN YOUNG, MD, OWNER

Named a Washingtonian "Top Doctor" annually since 2012, Dr. Young graduated with honors from the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine. A boardcertified gynecologist and a fellow of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, she is a leader in modern women's health solutions, a trusted physician for women of all ages and a highly regarded gynecologic surgeon. 15204 Omega Drive, Suite 200 Rockville, MD 20850

301-330-7007

office@rockvillegynecology.com RockvilleGynecology.com

Dr. Carolynn Young opened Rockville Gynecology in 2010 to advance innovative, comprehensive, patient-centered gynecologic care for women of all ages. Driven by her passion for educating and empowering patients, the state-ofthe-art, gyn-only practice specializes in groundbreaking, minimally invasive procedures and tailored, cutting-edge solutions that transform patients' lives.

"Many women accept daily pain and discomfort as 'normal' until they've found relief," says Dr. Young. "They don't even realize how miserable they've been until we treat them, and their lives have been restored."

An expert in treating uterine fibroids, Dr. Young recently opened the Uterine Fibroid Treatment Center and is the only surgeon in the area to perform Sonata, a minimally invasive outpatient treatment for heavy bleeding caused by fibroids.

"This is done vaginally with an

ultrasound probe to visualize the fibroids; a needle is inserted into each, delivering energy that targets and drastically shrinks and softens the fibroid tissue," says Dr. Young. "Patients typically manage any discomfort with ibuprofen and can return to work the next day."

The first female GYN surgeon in Maryland to perform surgery using the da Vinci robotic system and to incorporate the Mona Lisa Touch laser to treat symptoms of vaginal atrophy, Dr. Young also champions the power of prevention—Rockville Gynecology offers GeneType saliva testing for personalized breast cancer risk assessment, guiding targeted screenings and interventions.

With patients' well-being in mind, Dr. Young has expanded Rockville Gynecology to include five additional expert providers. "My colleagues are amazing,” she says. “I feel incredibly honored and privileged to work alongside them.

Capital Laser & Skin Care

ELIZABETH TANZI, MD

GEETA SHAH, MD

TANIA PETERS, MD

Voted the "Best Dermatology Practice" by Bethesda Magazine readers since 2018, Capital Laser & Skin Care specializes in cosmetic and non-invasive treatments to enhance and maintain skin health and beauty. Drs. Geeta Shah, Tania Peters and Elizabeth Tanzi have been named Bethesda Magazine "Top Doctors" since 2019.

5471 C2 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 200 Chevy Chase, MD 20815

301-798-9699

CapitalSkinLaser.com

Capital Laser & Skin Care is a worldrenown center of excellence dedicated to delivering the most advanced, effective dermatologic treatments in a warm and welcoming environment. Board-certified dermatologists, Drs. Geeta Shah, Tania Peters and Elizabeth Tanzi use stateof-the-art technology and innovative techniques to truly customize each treatment plan, maximizing outcomes and patient satisfaction. Each dermatologist is fellowship-trained in dermatologic laser surgery and aesthetic procedures with years of experience treating patients. As an aesthetic dermatology research clinic and beauty industry liaison, the Capital Laser & Skin Care team has access to the most sophisticated, cutting-edge tools and routinely evaluates novel technology. Drs. Shah, Peters and Tanzi focus on noninvasive treatments to deliver naturally radiant and elegant results that emphasize and enhance personal features without

creating an overdone look.

With a patient-centered approach, the entire Capital Laser & Skin Care team is dedicated to providing exceptional patient care. Through comprehensive consultations, transparent and reliable communication, customized skin care recommendations and individualized treatment plans, Drs. Shah, Peters and Tanzi exceed patient expectations at every turn, from their first phone call through treatment follow-ups and beyond.

With such exclusive patient benefits as complimentary skin cancer screenings, neurotoxin touch-ups and laser treatments for post-injectable bruising, Capital Laser & Skin Care goes the extra mile to ensure your experience with the practice is as pleasant as it is rewarding. Setting the bar for clinical excellence and attention to detail, Capital Laser & Skin Care stands out as the Washington metropolitan area’s premier aesthetic dermatology practice.

Somenek + Pittman MD

Dr. Michael Somenek is one of the nation’s leading rhinoplasty experts and also performs facial rejuvenation procedures including deep-plane facelifts and eyelid surgery. Dr. Troy Pittman is an international authority in aesthetic surgery of the breast and body. Both have been recognized by their peers as top doctors and leaders in their fields.

2440 M St. NW, Suite 507 Washington, D.C.

202-519-8345

Instagram: @somenekpittmanmd @somenekmd, @drtroypittman SomenekPittmanMD.com

Drs. Michael Somenek and Troy Pittman pride themselves on being Washington, D.C.'s premier one-stop shop for comprehensive beauty solutions. With expertise in aesthetic and complex revision surgeries, their team has tackled some of the area's most complex cases.

In addition to offering extensive surgical services, ranging from facelifts and rhinoplasties to breast augmentations and tummy tucks, Somenek + Pittman MD stands out as one of the few East Coast advanced plastic surgery practices offering combination surgeries. allowing both surgeons to work simultaneously, reducing operative time and streamlining recovery.

Drs. Somenek and Pittman understand that trust is the cornerstone of the patients' journey toward aesthetic enhancement and are committed to providing luxury concierge-level care through recovery. Every detail of their practice, including a

state-of-the-art on-site surgical suite, is designed with patients' comfort, safety and privacy in mind. On the surgery day, each patient is escorted through the process by their own surgical nurse and physician anesthesiologist.

Transparent communication is a priority and consultations are longer than most, ensuring they thoroughly understand each patient's goals and fully educate them on their options. Together with their patients, they strive to deliver an unforgettable experience that fosters long-term confidence in their new look.

S+P MedSpa, the District's only freestanding medical spa under the direction of plastic surgeons, offers a wide array of nonsurgical services, including laser skin resurfacing for all skin types, lymphatic and therapeutic massage therapy, IV hydration therapy and medical-grade skincare—something for patients of all ages.

MICHAEL VENTURA

Greater Washington Orthopaedic Group, PA

Recognized as "Top Doctors" by Washingtonian (2017-21, 2023) and Bethesda Magazine (2019, 2021, 2023), the board-certified orthopedic surgeons at Greater Washington Orthopaedic Group, PA, specialize in total joint replacements (hip, knee, shoulder), sports medicine, spine surgery, fracture care, hand/elbow surgery, arthroscopy, minimally invasive surgery, physical therapy and PRP injections.

Locations in Rockville, Silver Spring and Germantown 301-589-3324 | GWOG.com

The Greater Washington Orthopaedic Group (GWOG) has been serving Montgomery County for 40-plus years with offices in Rockville, Silver Spring and Germantown. Each office is staffed with experienced surgeons and physical therapists who offer a complete range of diagnostic, therapeutic and surgical services. The practice has 10 boardcertified/eligible, fellowship-trained orthopedic surgeons with a range of specialties providing patients with the highest quality of care. These specialties include sports medicine, joint replacements of the hip, knee and shoulder, spine surgery, hand/elbow surgery and fracture care. Our surgeons

are dedicated to treating orthopedic conditions with non-operative and operative measures tailored to our patients’ needs. Our sports medicinetrained doctors serve many of the area’s top high school sports programs, working closely with certified athletic trainers to ensure athletes a quick but safe return to their sport. Beyond orthopedic care, our very experienced physical therapists are passionate about giving their patients outstanding personal attention and interest. This multispecialty orthopedic practice is committed to providing excellent care to patients who wish to return from an injury to an active and healthy lifestyle.

Chevy Chase Facial Plastic Surgery

PARKER PORTER, MD, FACS & WILMINA LANDFORD, MD

Awards & Honors

Double board-certified; American Board of Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery & American Board of Otolaryngology— Head and Neck Surgery; Bethesda Magazine Winner, Best Cosmetic Surgeon 2021 and 2023; Top Doctor 2019 and 2021; Top Vote Getter, Best Aesthetic Practice 2020 and 2022; Top Vote Getter, Best Cosmetic Surgeon 2017

7201 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 515 Bethesda, MD 20814 301-652-8191

ChevyChaseFace.com

Cosmetic surgery can be transformative; even subtle changes can lead to profound, life-changing improvements in confidence and well-being. For nearly 25 years at Chevy Chase Facial Plastic Surgery (CCFPS), founder and double board-certified facial plastic surgeon Dr. Jennifer Parker Porter has consistently exceeded patients' expectations with aesthetic excellence. Dr. Porter is a global leader in facial cosmetic surgery. Her focused specialization in rhinoplasty, blepharoplasty, facelift, and non-surgical facial rejuvenation allows her to concentrate on the nuances and subtleties that lead to optimal results.

At CCFPS, patients can expect an individualized journey celebrating their uniqueness and enhancing their inherent beauty—what makes you, you! Prioritizing realistic expectations and natural-looking results, Dr. Porter leads a skilled team dedicated to delivering a comprehensive, personalized approach to care. "We individualize rather than standardize," says Dr. Porter. "Every treatment or surgery that I recommend is unique to that patient, taking into account their face shape, bone structure, age and various other factors that may influence the outcome of a surgery."

CCFPS offers an array of surgical procedures and a full spectrum of non-surgical facial procedures, including Botox, dermal fillers, Morpheus8 skin tightening, and laser resurfacing. Their aesthetic nurses also offer treatments such as Hydrafacial, microneedling, BBL, Aerolase Neo treatments and chemical peels. Patients love the convenience of booking Botox/Dysport appointments through Tox2GO, an app Dr. Porter developed.

In 2023, Dr. Porter was thrilled to welcome Dr. Wilmina Landford, expanding the practice's range by offering cosmetic breast and body plastic surgery. Her expertise includes deep plane facelifts, mommy makeovers, breast augmentation and body contouring.

Asante Dickson, MD, Chief of Radiology

“As a patient advocate, shaped by my upbringing and experiences in New York, I prioritize creating an environment of safety and equity within these medical walls that I cannot promise anyone outside these walls," says Dickson. "Everyone within our system deserves compassionate care and respect without compromise."

1500 Forest Glen Rd. Silver Spring, MD 20910

301-754-7000

HolyCrossHealth.org

As a young student at Georgetown University School of Medicine, Asante M. Dickson, MD, made a personal pledge early on that if he ever had the power to influence healthcare infrastructure, he would “use it to champion equity for all, transcending boundaries of race, ethnicity, gender and economic status.” Within a year, Dr. Dickson, Chief of Radiology at Holy Cross Health, has already made a significant impact by translating that promise into tangible improvements within the Holy Cross Health system, increasing accessibility and equitability in imaging services.

Despite its critical role in patient care and disease prevention, radiology has long been undervalued, notes Dr. Dickson. His mission is to transform the future of healthcare by educating the community about the importance of integrated access to advanced imaging and aligning radiology with primary care. Under his leadership, the radiology team is taking a collaborative approach, establishing outpatient centers within the community, and forging strategic partnerships with the Holy Cross Health primary care network. These efforts aim to foster strong relationships between outpatient physicians and radiologists, easing the increasing burden on primary care physicians and facilitating improved quality and continuity of care, particularly interventional radiology. By enhancing and streamlining access to imaging for both patients and providers, in-system radiology services will ultimately offer patients more options for testing and informed decision-making that could keep them out of the hospital.

Mark Richards, MD

AGELESS IMPRESSIONS PLASTIC SURGERY INSTITUTE

Nationally recognized, Dr. Richards’ expertise has been praised in U.S. News & World Report and other national media. He served as the plastic surgery consultant for The White House and recently authored a book, “Nobody Wants You Healthy: Achieving Better Health by Avoiding the Corruptions in Modern Medical Science,” to benefit both doctors and patients.

11300 Rockville Pike, Suite 912 North Bethesda, MD 20852

301-468-3458

DrMarkRichards.com

Patients describe Dr. Mark Richards as a caring, knowledgeable and skillful artist. “Supporting clients during recovery while exceeding their expectations is always the goal at the Ageless Impressions Plastic Surgery Institute,” says Dr. Richards.

Honest communication with patients is as important as the proper analysis of their appearance. Each individual has unique concerns. Dr. Richards’ professional joy comes from happy patients who love their natural looking enhanced appearance. This happens when skillful, creative solutions are used to achieve well defined goals.

While the latest technology may elevate the quality of obtainable results, technology alone is not the answer. For the best results, your doctor needs wisdom and experience combined with the appropriate technology and techniques. It is important to remember

that all treatments require some healing, and this healing process can vary greatly between patients.

In private practice for more than 30 years, Dr. Richards has been an innovator of new surgical techniques and new ways of thinking about the components that create a naturally attractive appearance. His improved surgical techniques have been published in plastic surgery journals and presented nationally and internationally at conferences. He doesn’t believe in patenting the techniques he developed and would rather all surgeons and patients benefit from improved methods without restriction.

His plastic surgery residency training in Boston took place at the Lahey Clinic and Harvard affiliated hospitals. In private practice, he has devoted time to training Georgetown and Johns Hopkins plastic surgery residents in aesthetic surgery and analysis.

Maryland Oncology Hematology

Maryland Oncology Hematology is Maryland’s largest independent oncology practice, with more than 52 practicing clinicians devoted to providing comprehensive, compassionate, high-quality cancer care. A part of The US Oncology Network, Maryland Oncology Hematology patients benefit from a community of 2,300-plus independent providers dedicated to advancing local cancer care and delivering better patient outcomes.

Aquilino Cancer Center – Rockville, Bethesda and Germantown

301-424-6231

MarylandOncology.com

For nearly 40 years, Maryland Oncology Hematology (MOH) has been a leading provider of community cancer care and treatment of blood disorders in suburban Maryland. The state's largest independent Medical Oncology and Hematology group with over 52 physicians across 15 locations in central Maryland, MOH's highly specialized team of board-certified physicians provides the highest level of expertise and cutting-edge treatment options for patients throughout the state.

At MOH, personalized treatment is paramount. The team of dedicated and compassionate award-winning physicians, nurses and staff are committed to guiding patients through every step of their cancer journey, using sophisticated technology and offering expertise in targeted agents, immunotherapies and other innovative

treatments. MOH’s state-of-the-art facilities deliver a comprehensive range of services, including oncological and nononcological infusions, laboratory testing, clinical trials with Sarah Cannon Research Institute, genetic counseling and patient support services.

MOH's commitment to excellence extends far beyond providing top-notch treatments. As part of the US Oncology Network, MOH actively participates in clinical trials that have contributed to FDA-approved therapies, ensuring patients have access to the most advanced and effective treatments available.

Combining leading-edge technology and expert, empathetic care, MOH delivers world-class treatment for cancer and blood disorders while keeping patients close to home.

Potomac Audiology

DR. GAIL LINN, AUD, CCC-A

DR. TRICIA TERLEP, AUD

Dr. Linn and her associates enjoy a good relationship with many of the most respected medical professionals in the area.

11300 Rockville Pike, Suite 105 Rockville, MD 20852

240-477-1010

PotomacAudiology.com

Something near and dear to Dr. Linn and her practice is called “Real Ear” or “Probe Microphone” Measures. “This procedure allows us to put a tiny tube that is attached to a microphone in a patient’s ear at the time of a hearing aid fitting,” Linn says. “We can then measure exactly what the hearing aid is delivering to the eardrum. This procedure is not widely done but we consider it a vital component of a good hearing aid fitting.”

Potomac Audiology recognizes RealEar Measurements as a gold-standard best practice in fitting hearing aids. Without performing this measurement, there’s no way to know whether a hearing aid is providing the correct amplification on the correct frequencies.

Over her 35 years in practice, Dr. Linn has become a leading voice in the

industry for Real Ear Measurements, a procedure that allows her to measure exactly what the hearing aid is delivering to the ear through a tiny tube attached to a microphone in a patient’s ear.

There is no reason to risk spending thousands of dollars on hearing aids that may not be programmed correctly. At Potomac Audiology, audiologists make sure that even hearing aids purchased elsewhere are performing optimally.

Since 1998, Dr. Gail Linn has been providing doctorate level hearing care people can trust. The practice added a pediatric specialist when Dr. Linn’s daughter, Dr. Tricia Terlep, joined in 2007. Together, they have mentored, trained and hired talented young audiologists, including from the University of Maryland and Gallaudet University.

Maragh Dermatology, Surgery & Vein Institute

SHERRY L.H. MARAGH, MD, FAAD, FACMS, FACS

Specializations, Honors & Affiliations

National Aesthetic Medical Director - Advanced Dermatology and Cosmetic Surgery (150-plus locations); Board Certified: General, Surgical, Cosmetic and Laser Dermatology; Fellow: American Academy of Cosmetic Surgery, American Academy of Dermatology, American Society of Dermatologic Surgery; "Top Doctor," Best Dermatologist – D.C. Suburbs, and Patient's Choice for Excellent, Compassionate Care.

Part of Advanced Dermatology and Cosmetic Surgery 14995 Shady Grove Road, Suite 150 Rockville, MD 20850

301-358-5919

AdvancedDerm.com

Dr. Maragh is recognized as a leader and expert by her peers, and as a physician making a profoundly positive impact on her patients.

After training at the prestigious Mayo Clinic Department of Dermatology and Dermatologic Surgery, she created a unique practice that offers the full landscape of medical, cosmetic and laser dermatology to patients wherever they are on their journey to healthy skin and hair. Treatments range from BOTOX Cosmetic, dermal fillers, laser and cosmetic surgical procedures to industry-leading skin cancer treatments, including highly effective Mohs surgery.

"It is essential for me to understand the treatment goals of my patients and help them navigate through the various treatment options available to find the best option for their specific needs," says Dr. Maragh. "Whether a patient is on an aesthetic journey to enhance their appearance or a patient is undergoing facial reconstruction after removal of a skin cancer, it is always my goal to hear and understand my patients' concerns."

"Patients wanting to maintain healthy skin need to protect it. Sunscreen is the most important ingredient in any good skincare regimen. Your regimen doesn't have to be fancy or expensive—you just need to be consistent."

"Annual total-body skin cancer exams save lives. They also help us understand what is concerning to you. As you mature, your skin changes—new spots, new growths. We help our patients understand the difference between what is normal and what is a cause for concern."

Love the skin you're in! Talk to Dr. Maragh today.

Chesapeake Hearing Centers

JULIE HUTTO PETRUZZI, CEO & DR. ROSE BUCHBINDER, AU.D

5952 Hubbard Drive | North Bethesda, MD 20852

Additional locations in Annapolis, Columbia, Easton, Kent Island, Ocean Pines, Salisbury and Severna Park 301-468-0551 | HelpYourHearing.com

Hearing loss affects people of all ages, and studies suggest early intervention can prevent social withdrawal and slow cognitive decline. Inspired by the transformative impact of hearing aids on her father's quality of life following misdiagnosed hearing loss, Dr. Rose Buchbinder and the Chesapeake Hearing Centers team are dedicated to enhancing patients' lives through better hearing. Using leading-edge technology, they offer personalized solutions to help reconnect patients with loved ones and enjoy their most cherished activities to the fullest.

"Our mission is to treat patients exactly as we would want to be treated, with courtesy, respect and professional expertise," says Dr. Buchbinder. "As the state's oldest private audiology practice, we take pride in continuing the legacy of our founder, Dr. Charles L. Hutto, in going above and beyond to offer our patients high-quality, compassionate care."

Wink Eyecare Boutique

RACHEL COHN, OPTOMETRIST

JENNIFER KARMIOL, OPTOMETRIST

1095 Seven Locks Road Potomac, MD 20854

301-545-1111 Wink.net

Stressed eyes need a caring touch. Amid the endless Zoom calls, screen strains, dryness and now summer allergies, too, award-winning Wink Eyecare Boutique in Potomac offers the relief you seek. With cutting-edge lens technology, unique eyewear and the latest dry eye and allergy treatments, Drs. Rachel Cohn and Jennifer Karmiol have helped hundreds of patients see, feel and look their best.

Founded by Dr. Cohn in 2006 to provide a patient-centered, personalized approach to eyecare, Wink blends innovation with fashion and premium customer service. From comprehensive eye exams to chic handpicked frames that perfectly fit your face and prescription and match your style, visit Wink Eyecare for the care you—and your stressed eyes—deserve.

Capitol Vein & Laser Centers

"Though we're not necessarily saving lives, we do feel like we're giving life back," says Dr. McNeill. "Hearing that a patient is back on the tennis court or golf course for the first time in 10 years because their legs feel so much better will never get old."

6410 Rockledge Drive, Suite 500 Bethesda, MD 20817

301-581-0170

MyCVL.com

Troubled by unsightly varicose or spider veins? Capitol Vein & Laser Centers' Dr. Paul McNeill, a board-certified vascular surgeon with three decades of experience, offers a simple and effective solution.

"Patients are often surprised how simple it is to rid their legs of ugly varicose and spider veins," he says. "Treatments are done in-office in 30 minutes, with no downtime and zero to minimal discomfort."

Dr. McNeill says the most common patient regret is that they wish they had sought treatment earlier. Venous disease causes problems ranging from leg discomfort and swelling to blood clots and skin breakdown. "Patients are always very appreciative of a dependable solution, usually covered by their insurance," says Dr. McNeill.

A Georgetown University School of Medicine graduate, Dr. McNeill is a leading expert and has become the Washington Metropolitan area's "go-to guy" for vein treatments. "Though we're not necessarily saving lives, we do feel like we're giving life back," says Dr. McNeill. "Hearing that a patient is back on the tennis court or golf course for the first time in 10 years because their legs feel so much better will never get old."

“I have also had the privilege to work with Jennifer Whitman, PA for nearly a decade” adds Dr. McNeill.

Jennifer’s talents never cease to amaze. She is the queen of facial injectables. Her vision, artistry and skills turn back the hands of time, while maintaining a natural 'nobody knows my secret' look. She also utilizes laser and light therapies to tackle facial veins, pigmentation, tone and texture.

Center for Cosmetic and Clinical Dermatology

18310 Montgomery Village Ave., Suite 700

Gaithersburg, MD 20879

301-977-2070

CCCDerm.com

The highly experienced board-certified specialists at the Center for Cosmetic and Clinical Dermatology (CCCD) are committed to finding the best treatment tailored to each patient. Through their personalized, patient-centric approach, they deliver the highest standard of dermatologic care.

"There are usually several options to treat a skin condition," says Dr. Andrea C. Steel, "but not every treatment is the right fit for every patient."

Prioritizing patient education and empowerment, the CCCD team "encourages patients to take an active role in choosing their treatment," says Dr. Anne E. Rothman. "It's important to us that they understand their conditions and feel comfortable with their treatment."

Dr. Roni W. Ford adds, "We schedule ample time per patient visit to explain diagnoses and treatment options clearly and address any questions or concerns."

Beach

The Best + of the

THE BEST OF THE LAKE

Our bucket hat list of all the food, drinks, family activities and more at the shore, from Lewes, Delaware, to Ocean City, Maryland, and all the dunes and boardwalks in between. PLUS: Everything you need for a fabulous time at Deep Creek Lake.

The surf at Cape Henlopen State Park in Lewes

Best of

LEWES

The first town in the first state is famous for its maritime history, state park and dining

the Zwaanendael Museum and the Cannonball House, hit by the British during the War of 1812.

LEWES

REHOBOTH BEACH

DEWEY BEACH

BETHANY BEACH

FENWICK ISLAND

BEST HISTORIC AREA

In 1631, the Dutch arrived in what is now Lewes to start a whaling colony, and fishing remained the leading industry for generations. In the 1950s, Lewes was a top fishery for menhaden, used to make fish meal and fish oil. Locals called the pungent aroma the “smell of money.” It kept developers from building motels downtown. When the fish factories closed, the old buildings were still standing. Thanks to the Lewes Historical Society, many were restored, and in 1977 the Lewes Historic District entered the National Register of Historic Places. Worth visiting: the society complex at Shipcarpenter Square (a collection of buildings representing Sussex County history), the Lewes History Museum,

Lewes Historical Society, 110 Shipcarpenter St., historiclewes. org; Lewes Chamber of Commerce, 120 Kings Highway, leweschamber.com

BEST PARK

Cape Henlopen State Park is a haven for swimmers, surfers, hikers, campers, bicyclists and birders. Back in the 1940s, it was home to Fort Miles, a World War II Army installation. The concrete fire towers used for target practice dot the sand from the cape to the Indian River Inlet. Battery 519, a bunker built into the Great Dune, is now the Fort Miles Museum. But most people come for the 6 miles of sparkling coastline and the fabulous trails. Seaside Nature Center boasts a touch tank and a borrow-a-bike program. The beach by the bathhouse has lifeguards. Entrance to the park is $10 for out-of-state vehicles.

15099 Cape Henlopen Drive, destateparks.com/beaches/ capehenlopen

BEST RAIL TRAILS

Former railroad tracks are becoming flat trails for runners, bicyclists and walkers. The Georgetown-Lewes Trail runs on the Delaware Coast Line Railroad’s old bed. When complete, the trail will be 17 miles and end in Georgetown. For now, it’s 10 miles with endpoints at Fisher Road and Gills Neck Road. The trail cuts through Lewes—and over some busy roads—and links to the Junction & Breakwater Trail, which runs to Rehoboth. At various

points along the trail there’s free parking, including a lot next to the trail at Old World Breads (32191 Nassau Road in Lewes).

delawaregreenways.org

BEST FARMERS MARKET

Savvy shoppers know to head to the Historic Lewes Farmers Market, open 8 a.m. to noon on Saturdays through Sept. 28. This is a producer-only market, meaning you won’t find third-party vendors, and all 35 of the Saturday morning participants must commit to every event but two. Along with produce, you’ll find mushrooms, eggs, chicken, dairy products and artisanal goods.

George H.P. Smith Park, Johnson and Dupont avenues, historiclewesfarmersmarket.org

BEST CHOCOLATE

Edie Bee’s is a Parisian-style boutique artfully packed with sweet delights. Individual chocolates seem almost too beautiful to eat— almost. In 2020, Michelle Teed purchased the shop from founder Leisa Berlin, and the quality remains. Along with exquisite chocolates, you’ll find hard candies, gummies, chocolate-covered pretzels and caramels.

115 Second St., ediebeeslewes.com

BEST DINING ATMOSPHERE

For a big serving of charm, head to the three Victorians lined up on Savannah Road. Heirloom is an acclaimed establishment in a circa1899 Victorian. Owner Meghan Lee outfitted the multiroom restaurant with vintage plates, mismatched silverware and botanical prints. The menu changes seasonally, and the cocktails are creative. At Raas, an Indian/pan-Asian restaurant with a wraparound porch and attached gazebo, the menu is an upscale approach to familiar dishes, including tandoori and crabcakes. Bramble & Brine at The Buttery serves breakfast, lunch and dinner, and has a lounge with craft cocktails. It occupies the mansion at the corner of Savannah Road and Second Street. The name pays tribute to owner Megan

Kee’s first restaurant, Bramble & Brine, in Rehoboth Beach, and The Buttery, a restaurant that once occupied the grande dame. Heirloom, 212 Savannah Road, heirloomdelaware.com; Raas, 210 Savannah Road, raaslewes.com; Bramble & Brine at The Buttery, 102 Second St., bramble-brine.com

BEST FAMILY-FRIENDLY BREWPUB

Backyard barbecues and lazy afternoons in a hammock inspired the beach-themed Crooked Hammock Brewery. The owners had small children when the brewpub opened in 2015, and the enclosed yard features cornhole games, a playground for kids and a firepit. In warm weather, garage-style doors open to the beer garden and backyard. The menu has such cookout favorites as grilled meats and refreshing salads, and there’s a kids menu. A huge pretzel—a brewery requisite—is a bestselling appetizer.

36707 Crooked Hammock Way, crookedhammockbrewery.com

BEST CRUISES

The Parsons family’s red-and-white boats are familiar sights on the Lewes and Rehoboth Canal; the family has been running fishing expeditions from Lewes Harbour since 1937 through its business, Fisherman’s Wharf. Over the years, sightseeing excursions and cruises have been added, including whale and dolphin watches, seal watches, and fireworks cruises. One of the most beautiful outings is a two-hour sunset cruise past the Harbor of Refuge and East End lighthouses.

107 Anglers Road, fishlewes.com

—Pam George

Paddleboarders at Cape Henlopen State Park

REHOBOTH BEACH Best of

A mile-long boardwalk anchors this town. Keep an eye out for President Biden, who has a home here.

BEST NON-BEACH OUTDOOR EXPERIENCE

The partly shaded Gordons Pond Trail is a welcome option for a scenic walk, run or bike ride in season, when Rehoboth’s beach and boardwalk are less accessible to dogs and cyclists. The 3.2-mile crushed-gravel course inside Cape Henlopen State Park skirts a 900-acre marsh surrounding a serene brackish-water lagoon and features a half-mile stretch of elevated boardwalk to protect the wetlands. Look for snowy egrets, willets, laughing gulls, ospreys and more at the three overlooks. The ocean beach here is less congested than Rehoboth’s. Free to walk or bike in; $10 per out-of-state car. Dogs on leashes no longer than 6 feet are allowed on the trail and beach.

North end of Ocean Drive, destateparks.com/wwwroot/maps/cape-henlopen/wolfe-neckgordons-pond.pdf

Funland keeps families entertained with 19 rides and 11 games on the boardwalk.
PHOTO BY MARIA D e FORREST

BEST PLACE TO BE INSPIRED

A pine-shaded, birdsong-filled historic site tucked away in upscale Henlopen Acres, the Rehoboth Art League provides a cool escape. Art lovers can wander several galleries offering rotating exhibitions and works by members, and stop by the creatively stocked gift shop. The docent-staffed, Colonialera Homestead is also free to visit. On the National Register of Historic Places for its architectural significance, it displays furniture, artifacts and decorative items of that time, and includes a historically accurate formal garden.

12 Dodds Lane, rehobothartleague.org

BEST TAKEOUT

It’s window service only at Frank & Louie’s Italian Specialties, a family-run eatery named after brothers Frank and Louie Bascio, who you’ll see on-site. The hearty sandwiches are made to order, with freshly sliced meats and cheeses served on crusty ciabatta rolls delivered daily from a New York bakery. You also can get cooked and chilled entrees such as eggplant Parmesan, mushroom-stuffed chicken and lasagna. The hand-baked desserts are mom Diane’s recipe; the cookies—pignoli and macaroons among them—are especially in demand. There’s no online ordering, so call in your request (302-227-5777).

58 Baltimore Ave., frankandlouies.com

BEST BREAKFAST/BRUNCH

A recent expansion has made it a bit easier to nab a table at Egg, open daily from 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the historic McQuay’s Market building. The charming whitewashed interior is warmed by wood accents and splashes of red—and images of chickens everywhere. The menu ranges freely from eggs (of course) with a variety of breakfast meats (including pecan wood-smoked bacon), to crab and avocado toast, to poblano stuffed with eggs, cheese and chorizo, to a wine and cocktail list. Can’t decide? You can order just one of an item that typically comes in twos; for example, half a serving of rich eggs Benedict or one lemony crepe.

510 Rehoboth Ave., eggrehoboth.com

BEST RAW BAR

Henlopen City Oyster House is a crowd-pleasing restaurant (the Bidens dined there in February) that doesn’t take reservations or offer a happy hour. Folks queue up for tables in the summer and arrive early to snag a spot in the offseason. What’s the hook? The vibe is friendly, the staff is knowledgeable, and the seafood, such as the crispy scallops appetizer and the meaty lobster roll, is top-notch. The ever-changing

raw bar menu reads like a sommelier’s pitch—an oyster might be described as having a “subtle salinity” and “hint of sweetness”—and your choices will arrive thoroughly cleaned, skillfully shucked and beautifully presented.

50 Wilmington Ave., hcoysterhouse.com

BEST FAMILY OUTING

Located on Rehoboth’s mile-long boardwalk, Funland, a pintsize, family-owned amusement park, is packed with 19 rides, 11 games and infinite nostalgia. Several antique attractions are only part of the retro charm that draws legions of returning families. Tots who wave with tentative pride from the 1940s-era boats (one ticket) grow into teens who shriek happily on the modern Superflip 360 (six tickets). Entry is free. The 75-cent ride tickets never expire. Save by purchasing 25-, 50- or 100-ticket books; you can also preorder online. Perpetually favorite games include SkeeBall (50 cents) and Derby ($2). New this year: a duck pond game.

6 Delaware Ave., funlandrehoboth.com

BEST BOOKSTORE

Established in 1975, when Jaws was this beach town’s top-selling book (check the outdoor mural for more), Browseabout Books is a singular survivor among independent bookstores. It has grown into a bustling 13,000-square-foot space offering 35,000 titles—bestsellers, staff picks, local interest, manga, romance, etc., plus a robust selection for kids. Summer events will include local authors Maribeth Fischer and Ethan Joella, and New York Times bestselling novelists Liz Moore and Mary Kubica. You’ll find a coffee bar, as well as an ample array of toys, puzzles, beachy gifts and decor, clothing, jewelry and greeting cards.

133 Rehoboth Ave., browseaboutbooks.com

BEST PICKLEBALL COURTS

The four free courts at Rehoboth Beach Elementary School are only a few years old—and still pristine. Plus, they’re dedicated pickleball courts, not tennis courts painted with pickleball lines. Play is limited to after 4:30 p.m. and weekends during the school year, but come summer vacation, picklers can start at 7 a.m. daily. The crowd is friendly, but waits are likely at this first-come, first-served facility. There are also two tennis courts and a basketball court in this complex. Bonus for parents: The school’s large playground is open to the public when school is out.

500 Stockley St.

—Elizabeth Chang

DEWEY BEACH Best of

Live music, cocktails and water sports draw fun-seekers to this happening town

In the summer, dogs are allowed on Dewey Beach before 8:30 a.m. and after 5:30 p.m.

BEST PLACE TO HEAR ROCK ’N’ ROLL

If you grew up in the D.C. area, chances are you found your way to Bottle & Cork at some point during your youth. The beloved dive bar has a slicker appearance these days, and it remains one of Delmarva’s top venues for curated music in an intimate open-air setting. The cash-only bar is for age 21 and older. Grab a cold beer, find a place to stand and get ready to shake it up with the likes of country artist Justin Moore or British rockers the Struts.

1807 Coastal Highway, bottleand cork.com

BEST BEACH TO BRING YOUR DOG

Furry friends are allowed on the beach year-round, making Dewey Beach a favorite vacation destination for dog lovers. You can take long walks along the shoreline and, during the offseason, they can play off-leash all day (but must be controllable by voice commands). From Saturday of Memorial Day weekend through Sunday following Labor Day your pooch is allowed on the beach before 8:30 a.m. and after 5:30 p.m. All owners must purchase a Dewey Beach license for their dog online or at the kiosk beside town hall. Many hotels are dog-friendly, too, and cleanup bags are available at each dune entrance. Dewey is the site of the Golden Jubilee in May and September, when hundreds of golden retrievers converge on the beach.

105 Rodney Ave., townofdewey beach.com

DELAWARE

LEWES

REHOBOTH BEACH

DEWEY BEACH

BETHANY BEACH

FENWICK ISLAND

BEST BREWERY

Within the tiny enclave of Dewey Beach is the mighty Dewey Beer Co. (DBC). Open since 2015, the brewery began producing pale ales and fruity sours, and rapidly gained a following. This year, the brewery was named best brewpub in the nation in USA Today’s 10Best Readers’ Choice Awards. Along with a rotation of about a dozen beers on tap, the gastropub serves a lineup of sandwiches and appetizers. DBC has opened new outposts in Denver and Harbeson, Delaware, but Dewey is where this party started.

2100 Coastal Highway, deweybeerco.com

BEST OUTFITTER

Dewey Beach Water Sports has everything you need for an unforgettable day on the water. Located on the northeast corner of Rehoboth Bay, the outfitter begins with safety instructions and demonstrations, and then it’s all aboard. Get the family together for an afternoon on a pontoon boat. Skim the surface on a guided personal watercraft tour. Choose a kayak or stand-up paddleboard to navigate the coves around Thompson Island. Families can ride on a Banana Boat.

113 Dickinson St., deweybeachwatersports.com

The Starboard’s bloody marys

BEST LOCAL PRODUCE

Frederick Fifer opened his first farm stand in 1919, and today, the family has an orchard and two markets, including a seasonal location in Dewey Beach. Fifer’s Farm Kitchen in Dewey sells produce from the family’s farm and orchards, along with ready-made products and grocery items. Fifer’s Farm Kitchen also has a small deli, where you can order breakfast, sandwiches and salads to-go. Feel like picking your own? Pluck strawberries, peaches and more at Fifer’s Orchard in Camden, Delaware. Open seasonally; call 302-227-8680 for hours.

200 Cullen St., fiferorchards.com

BEST BLOODY MARY

The Starboard opened for business around 65 years ago and quickly became a revered Dewey Beach destination. Why this spot? It’s a year-round bar that serves tasty food, hosts live music and is an overall friendly hangout. The menu is big, but the bloody marys are a standout—the perfect accompaniment to a Starboard breakfast. Choose to layer your vodka and tomato juice with olives, bacon, veggies and even crabmeat. Starboard leans into the iconic Delmarva crush cocktail—a combination of vodka, triple sec, soda and fresh squeezed juices over ice—and now serves nine variations.

2009 Coastal Highway, thestarboard.com

BEST TOURS

Flanked by the Atlantic Ocean, Rehoboth Bay and Indian River Bay, Delaware Seashore State Park is a public beach and home to Indian River Life-Saving Station. This building was constructed in 1876, when the United States Life-Saving Service was called upon to rescue victims of shipwrecks—these teams were the precursor to the U.S. Coast Guard. At the Life-Saving Station, you can listen to a self-guided tour of the small museum on your phone or sign up for a $10 guided or moonlight lantern tour that explains how shipwrecked sailors were saved.

25039 Coastal Highway, destateparks.com

BEST CRABCAKE

Critics often call the tender jumbo lump crabcake at Woody’s Dewey Beach “the best,” and we agree. There’s almost no filler and minimal seasoning, just a quick char on the baseball-size jumbo lump crabmeat, and voila. Try a crabcake on a platter, as a sandwich or on a salad. Add to the experience with a bowl of Maryland crab or cream of crab soup. Woody’s has a lively bar area, a 25-seat patio, and a late-night menu offered until 1 a.m. for revelers enjoying Dewey’s nightlife options.

1904 Coastal Highway, deweybeachbar.com

—Renee Sklarew

BETHANY BEACH Best of

BEST YOGA EXPERIENCE

The Bethany Beach Summer Exercise Classes are cherished by locals and visitors alike. Bright and early, people carrying yoga mats convene on the beach to salute the sun as it rises over the waves. Led by local instructors, Sunrise Yoga begins with traditional poses, while Vayu Yoga (a seated, gentle version of yoga) is the second practice. On some days, yoga classes are held in Bethany’s Central Park. Try sports performance, boot camp or Pilates classes, too, or the latest addition: Sunset Yoga with Sound Healing.

Classes ($10-$20 each) are held in Central Park, on the beach in front of Garfield Parkway, and on the beach in front of Ocean View Parkway. townofbethanybeach.com/383/ summer-exercise-classes

BEST SEAFOOD RESTAURANT

Bluecoast Seafood Grill and Raw Bar delivers an optimal waterfront dining experience thanks to stunning views of Salt Pond and a wide array of seafood. Founded by late James Beard Award-winning chef Matthew James Haley (of Matt’s Fish Camp), this destination restaurant serves classics such as crabcakes and shrimp and grits. Arrive between 4 and 6 p.m. for whatever oysters or clams are available that day for $1 each. Or try fried baby lobster tails and steamed shrimp dumplings to lead off your meal. Accompaniments include curated cocktails, sinful desserts and an overflowing wine list.

30904 Coastal Highway, bluecoastbethany.com

BEST SWEET TREATS

Check out the crowds strolling the Bethany boardwalk and chances are they’re sipping a coffee or slurping ice cream from Maureen’s Ice Cream and Desserts. It’s been a staple for 20 years and remains a beloved tradition. Begin your day with zesty coconut oatmeal, then stop by in the afternoon for a refreshing fruit smoothie or Oreo-topped doughnut. After dinner, choose gelato or a frosty milkshake.

99 Garfield Parkway, maureensicecream.com

BEST PREPARED FOODS AND CARRYOUT

in? Find Italian classics and an expansive wine list. Reservations are recommended.

789 Garfield Parkway, difebos.com/ bethany-beach

BEST VIEWS

Nestled beside the majestic Indian River Inlet Bridge, Big Chill Beach Club resembles a posh resort with multiple bars and a full restaurant. With panoramic views of the Atlantic Ocean, the elevated Sunset Lounge is protected from wind and rain by mobile garage doors. There’s also the fully open-air South Bar, where you can sip a cocktail while taking in the sounds of the surf or digging your toes into the sand by the firepits. Big Chill is within Delaware Seashore State Park ($10 parking for nonDelaware residents).

27099 Coastal Highway, bigchillbeachclub.com

BEST TRANSPORTATION

has you covered for a delicious night at home, whether you’re seeking a small carryout meal or require enough to fill a hungry group of 12. The market prepares trays of rigatoni and meatballs, spicy Firenze chicken with penne pasta, and heaping bowls of antipasto salad that will leave everyone grateful when you say, “Mangia!”

Prefer to dine

A fun sign in Bethany Beach points the way to towns near and far.

In much of Bethany, visitors can leave their car behind and ride the  Bethany Beach Trolley, an open-air bus that resembles a vintage railcar. Operational from the Friday before Memorial Day through mid-September, the free trolley runs from 9:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. with 17 regular stops (you also can flag down the driver). The trolley is convenient for getting to and from the beach without worrying about parking—and an easy way to entertain a toddler.

townofbethanybeach.com

BEST SURFING STORE

Since it opened in 1980,  Bethany Surf Shop has been regarded by many as Delaware’s most prestigious store for surfing wear. Kids hanker for that logo on their clothes, and surfers can find cutting-edge gear. But the shop goes beyond that with instruction and rentals, offering hourlong stand-up paddleboard excursions around the coves of the Assawoman Canal. You can rent surfboards, bodyboards and skim boards, and watch the shop’s pro skim riders on Mondays in the summer from 6 to 7 p.m. on the main beach.

99 Garfield Parkway, bethanysurfshop.net

—Renee Sklarew

FENWICK ISLAND

LEWES

REHOBOTH BEACH

DEWEY BEACH

BETHANY BEACH

Fenwick Island Lighthouse DELAWARE

FENWICK ISLAND

BEST LANDMARK

Drive over the causeway and you can imagine why the Fenwick Island Lighthouse played an outsize role in the town’s history. The 87-foot tower was operational from 1859 to 1978. Before it was moved inland, ships could see this beacon of light from 15 miles away and know they were approaching land. The keeper’s residence sits beside the tower, and both are maintained by the Friends of the Fenwick Island Lighthouse. While you can’t climb to the top, you can visit the small museum on Friday through Sunday in June, and Thursday through Sunday in July and August to soak up Fenwick’s maritime history.

103 146th St., fenwickislandlighthouse.org

BEST MUSEUM

Learn about a pirate’s life on a visit to the charming DiscoverSea Shipwreck Museum. Founded by historian Dale W. Clifton Jr., the free marine archaeology museum is home to an extensive array of treasures recovered from centuries-old, international shipwrecks. Clifton developed his passion for collecting when he uncovered his first treasure in 1979. His mission became researching and acquiring artifacts from the colonial seafaring era, then exhibiting them at this small museum. Among the relics is a Mayan statue, a FeeJee Mermaid and a gold chain designed for Spanish Queen Isabella. Open from late March until November, the museum is located above Sea Shell City, a souvenir shop.

708 Coastal Highway, discoversea.com

Boaters and water sports enthusiasts at the marina near Harpoon Hanna’s, which is a great place to catch the sunset

BEST ENTERTAINMENT FOR YOUNGER KIDS

Enter the gates of Viking Golf and Thunder Lagoon Water Park and expect to keep cool and carry on (the fun). While this entertainment complex has activities geared for younger kids, adults and teens will love the options, too. Families can chip away at Viking-themed mini golf, launch themselves down a tubular waterslide, zoom around a go-kart track or bob along a lazy river. Viking also has concessions stocked with kidfriendly food, so no one gets cranky.

38960 Island St., fenwickfun.com

BEST VINTAGE CRAB RESTAURANT

The competition for best pick-and-eat crab spot in Delmarva is stiff, but Fenwick Crab House has attracted loyal crowds of crab lovers for 62 years. Served alongside the bushels of steaming hot crabs are bountiful seafood platters and entrees made with tried-and-true regional recipes. For sides and salads, owner Scott Fornwalt buys produce from nearby farms and purchases seafood directly from local watermen. While the vibe is vintage, the menu has such modern dishes as avocado shrimp ceviche and salmon tacos, along with a lineup of microbrews.

100 Coastal Highway, fenwickcrabhouse.com

BEST GIFT SHOP

Step inside the Seaside Country Store to find an eclectic collection of merchandise. The two-story red barn is packed with dishware, clothing, seasonal decor and nautical-themed items. Food gifts are the main attraction, and here you can

sample before you buy, including creamy fudge and houseblended cheeses. A family business for generations, Seaside opened in 1969 and has long been a Fenwick Island landmark.

1208 Coastal Highway, seasidecountrystore.com

BEST RESTAURANT TO WATCH THE SUNSET

As the sun sinks below the horizon, raise your glass to the waterfront views at Harpoon Hanna’s. This lively spot overlooking the Fenwick Island Bridge features a drink menu with eight types of crush cocktails (Delmarva’s classic vodka, soda, triple sec and juice concoction) and seven frozen drinks. At the tiki bar, there’s live music most evenings during the summer. The family-friendly restaurant is hailed for its hefty crabcakes delicately spiced with Old Bay seasoning and the baskets of complimentary corn muffins served with honey butter.

39064 Harpoon Road, harpoonhannasrestaurant.com

BEST SEAFOOD CLASSICS

Matt’s Fish Camp has earned a devoted following in Delmarva for more than a decade thanks to the staff’s attention to detail and commitment to quality. Part of the SoDel Concepts restaurant group, this menu skews Americana—think deviled eggs and mac and cheese. If you crave the seafood classics, this is your place. The raw bar showcases a variety of succulent clams, crab legs and oysters. The grits and catfish entree is stellar, and don’t miss the Maine-style lobster roll. Check out the daily specials, too, including half-price wine bottles on Friday nights and $12 lunch combos.

700 Coastal Highway, mattsfishcampfenwick.com —Renee Sklarew

Best of

OCEAN CITY

Water sports, dining and party places abound in the ‘White Marlin Capital of the World’

BEST ROOFTOP DINING

The menu at Spain Wine Bar features tapas, paella and other dishes from the Iberian Peninsula. The view, however, is decidedly local. Peter Elias’ beautiful restaurant is on the roof of the Cambria Hotel, enabling breathtaking views from indoor and outdoor dining areas. Guests can spot the Route 50 drawbridge, the Ocean City Inlet, West Ocean City and even Assateague. Get ready to post on Instagram, with photo ops including the Ocean City boardwalk’s amusement park and the yacht-filled White Marlin Marina, the headquarters for the annual billfish tournament. (In 1939, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt dubbed Ocean City the White Marlin Capital of the World.) While the vistas make an impression, people return for the exceptional food, bottomless brunch, Spanish wines and innovative cocktails.

13 St. Louis Ave., spainwinebar.com

BEST PLACE TO GET YOUR GROOVE ON

The Jamaica-themed Seacrets boasts resort-style amenities. If you like craft cocktails, you’ll appreciate the onsite distillery. Love oysters on the half shell? The raw bar has won awards. And if you like music, check out the summer concert series, the DJs and the lineup of musicians. To preview the action, go to the website, where you can view live cams of the venue, including a nightclub, pier stage on the bay, tiki stage and beach stage. (Minors accompanied by an adult are welcome in the dining areas until 10 p.m.)

117 49th St., seacrets.com

The 3-mile waterfront boardwalk includes Trimper Rides.

BEST BEACH BAR

Coconuts Beach Bar & Grill at the Castle in the Sand Hotel brings the tropics to the mid-Atlantic with frozen drinks, palm trees and fresh seafood. Beach servers bring rum punch and other libations to lazy sunbathers. Happy hour is just that: from 5 to 6 p.m. Order two for one. Try O.C.’s famous crushes made with vodka, triple sec, soda and juices over ice. During the summer, the establishment showcases two bands a day for afternoon and evening entertainment.

3701 Atlantic Ave., castleinthesand. com

BEST PLACE TO SEE A SHOW

At 10 years old, the Ocean City Performing Arts Center is a youngster on the city’s cultural landscape, but it’s made a lasting impact. A Jay Leno show in May was part of the 2024 lineup, and the venue hosts plays, musicals, tribute bands and symphony performances. It’s also an example of repurposing. Located inside the Roland E. Powell Convention Center, the space once was home to Exhibit Hall C and the ballroom above it. The two were transformed into a two-story auditorium with 1,216 seats, including a removable orchestra section that extends the stage. Parking is free.

4001 Coastal Highway, ococean.com/performing-arts-center

BEST SUNSETS

Ocean City is situated on a slender strip of land, which is a perk for those who enjoy sunrises and sunsets over water. Admittedly, many people prefer the latter, and locals say Northside Park provides the perfect sunset vantage point. The 58-acre park—Ocean City’s largest—has a long pier that juts into Assawoman Bay for uninterrupted views. 200 125th St., oceancitymd.gov/oc/departments/ recreation-parks/northside-park

OCEAN CITY

BEST BOARDWALK RIDES/GAMES

Ocean City is famous for its nearly 3-mile oceanfront boardwalk, and the games and rides sweeten the appeal for visitors of all ages. A stop at Trimper Rides is a tradition; it’s been a landmark since the early 20th century, when Margaret and Daniel Trimper created the oasis of fun. The rides range from the little tykes’ carousel to the Tilt-A-Whirl, a looping roller coaster. Trimper owns Marty’s Playland, a five-minute walk from the amusement park, which includes a vintage fortune teller, antique pinball machines and Skee-Ball alleys.

Trimper Rides 700 S. Atlantic Ave., trimperrides.com; Marty’s Playland, 5 Worcester St., martysplayland.com

BEST WATER SPORTS RENTALS

The Croker family opened Odyssea Watersports in 1997, and it’s still a family affair that consistently wins Best Jet Ski Rental in OceanCity.com’s Best of Ocean City contest. Customers praise the friendly service and state-of-the-art equipment. The company started with eight personal watercrafts. Not only have they expanded their fleet, but they also offer pontoon boats.

120 52nd St., odysseawatersports.com

BEST DINING EXPERIENCE

When Ocean City foodies mention L.A., they don’t mean Los Angeles. They’re singing the praises of Liquid Assets, which evolved from a beer-and-wine store to a liquor shop with a cocktail bar to a full-service restaurant that still sells packaged alcohol. At this acclaimed eatery, even familiar foods are finessed. Consider a French onion potpie made with short ribs, onion broth, Gruyere and an onion pastry. Don’t miss the Smith Island cake.

9301 Coastal Highway, la94.com

—Pam George
Mussels at the acclaimed eatery Liquid Assets
PHOTO BY SARAH DUCK
Deep Creek Lake is Maryland’s largest freshwater body.

The Best of

DEEP CREEK LAKE

Maryland’s largest lake is an aquatic playground , and the area is full of shops and eateries

BEST HIKE

More than 12 miles long, the Herrington Manor and Swallow Falls Trail is a sinuous out-and-back path that begins in Swallow Falls State Park before snaking into Garrett State Forest and ending at Herrington Manor State Park. Often following old logging roads and railroad grades with several hilly sections, the moderate trek takes most hikers a little more than four hours to complete. The walk is mostly shady since the pathway cuts through woodlands picturesquely punctuated with burbling creeks, though the best water feature is Swallow Falls, a majestic waterfall worth checking out before or after your walk. Keep an eye out for wildlife along the way, including white-tailed deer, turkeys, bobcats and black bears.

2470 Maple Glade Road, Oakland, dnr.maryland. gov/publiclands/pages/western/swallowfalls.aspx

BEST BOAT/SUP/KAYAK RENTAL

Spread across 3,900 acres and plunging down as far as 72 feet, Deep Creek Lake is Maryland’s largest freshwater body, essentially a giant

aquatic playground. To take full advantage, hit up Aquatic Center, a waterfront rental shop where you can gear up for the day or your entire vacation. Self-propelled options include single and double kayaks, as well as a rainbow of stand-up paddleboards. Those looking for a leisurely cruise can rent a pontoon boat. Speed demons can score a sport boat for zipping around.

634 Deep Creek Drive, McHenry, aquatic-center.com

BEST FARMERS MARKET

Rain or shine, the weekly Deep Creek Farmers Market showcases about two dozen of the region’s farms, crafters and food producers. Finds might include regeneratively farmed meats from Wildom Farm, fresh vegetables from Honey Moon Farm, coffees from The Travel Mug, scoops from Go Go Gelato, and just-baked loaves from Wild Ember Bread. The season is punctuated with concerts, artist demos and face painters, so check the events calendar. Open Fridays from 3 to 6 p.m. through Oct. 11.

Garrett College, Parking Lot A, 687 Mosser Road, McHenry, deepcreekfarmersmarket.com

BEST EDUTAINMENT FOR KIDS

Kids will go wild for the Deep Creek Lake Discovery Center, a 6,000-square-foot immersive educational facility on the shores of Deep Creek Lake. Learn about the migration of monarch butterflies, touch fossils and a black bear paw print, and find out about life underwater, along the shoreline and in the surrounding forests. As part of its Scales and Tales program, the center fosters injured birds of prey that aren’t able to survive in the wild—including an Eastern screech owl, a golden eagle and hawks, all on view. There are special programs on weekends, such as reptile encounters, crafting sessions and the chance to follow rangers as they feed animals at the center.

Free, but donation suggested. 898 State Park Road, Swanton, discoverycenterdcl.com

BEST RESTAURANT FOR A DATE NIGHT

Savage River Lodge is a backwoods

getaway with stylish yurts and luxury cabins in a 450-acre tract of the Savage River State Forest, roughly 30 miles from Deep Creek. You don’t have to be an overnight guest to treat yourself and your date to dinner at Catalpa, a 56-seat restaurant at the lodge that serves artful New American cuisine, such as creamy crab dip, pistachio-crusted halibut, and wild game Bolognese ladled over bucatini. The wine list emphasizes French and California varietals. After your meal, stretch out the romantic evening by sinking into one of the comfy chairs in the great room or heading out to the porch to stargaze. Reservations are required; call 301-689-3200.

1600 Mount Aetna Road, Frostburg, savageriverlodge.com

BEST SOUVENIRS

Bear Creek Traders is more than a little bit extra. The sprawling gift shop is packed from floor to

INSET PHOTO BY VERONICA VAROS; PHOTO BY ERIN DETTINBURN
Savage River Lodge’s restaurant Catalpa is a charming spot for a date night. Inset: The wine list focuses on French and California varietals.

ceiling, and back to front, with every kind of tchotchke and tourist bait bric-a-brac imaginable. In the market for a souvenir magnet that doubles as a bottle opener, log cabin-shaped piggy bank, or Deep Creek Lake emblazoned pottery coffee mug? They’ve got you covered. Take your time to wander the whole store, which features sections devoted to kitchenware, gourmet goodies, clothing, toys, pet accessories, jewelry, candy and country kitsch Christmas collectibles. As you might guess from the name, there is a bounty of bear paraphernalia. Does that make it bearaphernalia?

24586 Garrett Highway, McHenry, bearcreektraders.com

BEST HOSTESS GIFTS

You’ll be the best guest ever if you show up with a grazing board from FireFly Farms Market, a

charming boutique shop. Either buy a premade platter or custom build one yourself with cheeses made just down the road by FireFly—such as spruce bark-wrapped goat cheese, punchy blues, and the pyramid-shaped Mountain Top with a showstopping green-gray rind—as well as other cheeses sourced from around the globe, charcuterie, crackers and breads, sweet and savory spreadables, and other tasty snacks. Do not sleep on the cheese-centric sandwiches—perfect for a picnic or lunch on a hike— including a sweet-savory standout with goat cheese, prosciutto and fig jam, and an indulgent grilled cheese oozing smoked Gouda, bread-and-butter pickles and caramelized onions.

107 S. Main St., Accident, fireflyfarms.com

BEST PLAY SPACE FOR DOGS

Find paradise for your pooch at Garrett County Dog Park, a 40,000-square-foot off-leash outdoor facility with a doubledoor entry system to prevent runaways. There are two sections: one for petite pups (30 pounds or lighter), the other for big dogs. Adults can bring up to three canines, which must have up-to-date vaccinations and licenses. Dogs can run free from dawn until dusk while owners lounge in the shade or sit at one of the picnic tables. Food and alcoholic beverages aren’t allowed, but there’s running water so your canine companion never goes thirsty while frolicking with new friends.

1249 Bumble Bee Road, Accident, deepcreeklions.org/ park-projects/dog-park

BEST OUTDOOR DINING

With a patio elevated above the shoreline, Ace’s Run offers guests a wide-screen view of the lake below, perfect for watching boaters, water sports enthusiasts and the action at the dock. As you’re taking in the scene, dine on a family-friendly

PHOTO BY SARAH DUCK; PHOTO COURTESY GARRETT COUNTY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
FireFly Farms Market sells cheeses, snacks and more.
Kayaks are a popular way to spend time on the water at Deep Creek.

selection of well-crafted comfort food. Shareable starters include flash-fried local cheese curds with a spicy remoulade for dunking, and an oversize pretzel slathered with crab dip and melted cheese, while entrees span satiating salads, hefty burgers that require both hands, wild mushroom ravioli, and maple bourbon glazed scallops. Save room for dessert, including thick milkshakes, creamy New York cheesecake, and warm banana Nutella bread pudding doused in rum sauce.

20160 Garrett Highway, Oakland, acesrun.com

BEST ICE CREAM

For nearly three decades, beloved scoop shop Lakeside Creamery has served up housemade ice cream in just-griddled waffle cones that have rightfully earned a fervent following. There are always house favorite flavors on hand—such as mint chocolate chip, peanut butter fudge and maple walnut—as well as ever-rotating specials, such as dulce de leche, Butterfinger and tangy orange. Slurpable options include floats, shakes and smoothies. If you’re feeling ambitious, tackle a sundae, such as the intensely chocolatey Muddy Creek. Enjoy your treat at one of the sunny picnic tables overlooking the lake. If you want to extend the good times, grab pints of fave flavors to go.

20282 Garrett Highway, Oakland, lakesidecreamery.com

BEST COFFEE SHOP

You don’t even need to get out of your car to get caffeinated at Espresso Alley, a charming drivethru coffee shop housed in a converted shed. The espresso menu always features the classics, as well as sweet seasonal sips, such as blueberry cobbler macchiato, Oreo cold brew and iced lavender chai. For those eschewing java, there are boba teas, lemonades, smoothies, teas and Italian sodas. Don’t hit the accelerator before picking up some pastries, such as the gargantuan chocolate chip muffins, icing-slathered cinnamon rolls and fist-size apple fritters. For a savory nosh, opt for a pepperoni roll, avocado toast, or bacon, egg and cheese ciabatta sandwich.

25901 Garrett Highway, McHenry, espressoalleydeepcreeklake.com

BEST MINI GOLF

The 18-hole course at the jam-packed amusement center Funland is a rollicking good time for golfers of every age. (Bonus: Putters 3 years old and younger play for free.) With a massive waterfall at its center, the green challenges players to navigate slopes, twists, turns and rocky obstacles. Once the round is over, the fun continues with opportunities to drive bumper cars and go-karts, scale the climbing wall, take a spin on the carousel atop one of the pastel-hued ponies or play video games. If you’re feeling hungry, order a pizza, sub, salad or such kid-friendly apps as potato wedges, mozzarella sticks and nachos.

24450 Garrett Highway, McHenry, deepcreekfunland.com

BEST PIZZA

Enjoy a taste of the Bronx deep in northwestern Maryland at the always-bustling Brenda’s New York Style Pizzeria. Primo pies a New Yorker

could love come topped as you like, though specialty rounds—including one inspired by Buffalo chicken wings and the spicy Firecracker with jalapeños—are worth exploring. Those dining in with a crowd should consider a 26-inch Abbondanza (serves six to eight), which starts with red sauce or a three-cheese white base, then gets customized with toppings—from classic

Brenda’s New York Style Pizzeria

pepperoni and sausage to creative options, such as sundried tomatoes, feta and green olives. For a sweet finale, there are Italian classics, such as tiramisu, cannoli and New York-style cheesecake. 21311 Garrett Highway, Oakland, brendaspizzeria.com

BEST PHOTOGRAPHER FOR FAMILY PHOTOS

Longtime portrait photographer Kirsten Getz has a knack for capturing the spark of joy in families, so her warmhearted pictures practically pop off the screen and out of frames. She advises holding photo shoots at

one’s rental home, though Swallow Falls and Deep Creek Lake state parks are excellent alternatives. For the most candid results, she recommends against folks preparing much, though a couple of beloved activities should be lined up, whether that’s roasting marshmallows over the firepit or taking a boat out for a spin. After your 45- to 60-minute session, Getz will deliver 50 or more edited photos in an online gallery with free downloads and a discount on prints.

kirstengetzphotography.com

Boats dot the water at Deep Creek.
David Leonhardt at the Hyatt Regency in Bethesda

Bethesda Interview

A Conversation with DAVID LEONHARDT

The New York Times senior writer on winning the Pulitzer Prize, playing Spelling Bee and his favorite Chinese spot in Rockville

David Leonhardt is a morning person. He feels freshest writing when the sun is rising and often goes to a coffee shop in Bethesda, where he’s lived for more than 15 years, to work on The Morning, The New York Times’ flagship daily newsletter that he runs.

A prolific writer, avid reader and deep thinker, Leonhardt has a talent for deconstructing complicated—and occasionally dry—issues and turning them into digestible and entertaining stories for a wide audience.

“I love being a journalist, but I constantly try to put myself in readers’ shoes,” he says. “What I try to do is say, ‘What are the things that people find confusing in the news? What are things that are more important than the attention they’re receiving?’ I try to think of myself as a representative of readers.”

Leonhardt loves

using multiple methods to illustrate points in a story. Take, for example, his article on “How Peer Pressure Affects Voting” that ran in The Morning on March 22, one of two days Bethesda Magazine interviewed him that month. Typical of a piece in the newsletter, it is conversational in tone, uses infographics, and quotes an array of outside-the-Beltway sources rather than just the usual boldface names.

“Many Democrats have imagined people of color to be a uniform, loyal, progressive group, defined by their race,” Leonhardt wrote. “They are not. The party will have a better chance to win their votes if it spends more time listening to what these voters believe.”

It was simply put, with facts and stats to back up his take and a takeaway that leaves no ambiguity. That approach has worked for Leonhardt since he joined the Times a quarter-century ago.

His success was reinforced when he won the Pulitzer Prize for commentary in 2011. The committee cited “his graceful penetration of America’s complicated economic questions.” Yet Leonhardt is just as comfortable talking Walt Whitman High School sports (he’s a big fan of the Bethesda school’s teams) as he is stagflation or the gold standard. That lack of pretension shines through in his writing and has brought him to the loftiest heights in American journalism.

Bethesda Magazine spoke with Leonhardt via Zoom and phone in March. The interview has been lightly edited for clarity and length.

What’s the goal of The Morning?

I spend a lot of time thinking about that. I think we have a few goals, and they’re connected. The Morning is free. You don’t need to have a New York Times subscription to get it. Most of our readers do not have a subscription. There are two important things to know about people who don’t have a New York Times subscription: One, they can’t click a lot of the links that we put in, and two, on average they probably follow the news a little bit less closely than someone who does have a subscription. That actually fits quite nicely with another kind of theory that I have for the newsletter, which is I think there are a lot of readers out there who are really smart and really interested in the news but are frustrated that the journalism they read sometimes feels like it’s written for experts. It uses too much jargon. It assumes that you have background knowledge about a story. It places too much emphasis on whatever happened yesterday as opposed to trying to put things in a larger context. I think most readers want to have a sense of where the story is headed. So we really try to write for those kinds of readers. When I think about our audience, I think about a very smart person who has very little background knowledge on any given story.

Do you remember the biggest story that you covered as editorin-chief for the Yale Daily News?

There were two. We did a bunch of investigations about allegations of sexual harassment of students by professors. Those stories were really hard to do for obvious reasons. They involved trauma for people. … We also had a presidential search at Yale while I was there. They spent a whole year looking for a new president, and we thought we had gotten the scoop on who the new president was going to be. But the sources were anonymous. We were printed by the New Haven Register. Of course, their print run was a lot larger than ours, so it started well before ours. So when we got to the Register that night, we were able to get a copy coming off the presses.

Our first reaction was excitement because they didn’t have the story. And our second reaction was a low-level terror. What if we had it wrong? We didn’t have it wrong. We had it right. Getting it a day early isn’t important in some larger social sense, but it’s part of the thrill of journalism. You’re trying to get information that people don’t want you to have.

When you first came to Washington as a Post intern in 1994, what was the biggest adjustment for a kid from New York? I loved it from the get-go. I found Washington really exciting because I was, and am still, interested in politics. I also liked that Washington has an intimacy to it that New York doesn’t. It’s such a smaller city. In some ways, it’s so much more accessible. New York is maybe the most dynamic city in the world, but it’s not that livable. A lot of places are extremely livable, but they don’t have anywhere near the food—which is really important to me—or the culture that this area does.

How was being a reporter when you joined the Times in ’99 different than it is now? Or should I say, are there any similarities from back then to now?

It’s a great point. The basics of the job are the same. We try to figure out information and explain it. We’re basically the readers’ representative out there, right? That hasn’t changed. Obviously, the internet is the biggest difference. Now at the Times we don’t write things the way we used to, which [was] the sort of reverse pyramid style. We don’t write headlines that have to fit in particular [spaces]. We try to be much more conversational with people.

I do still love the similarities. One of the things I love about The Morning is that it comes out once a day. So like the newspaper, but unlike a lot of digital coverage, we’re not trying to publish 30 different stories on what happened in the stock market or in Gaza or Ukraine today. We’re trying to tell you the most important things that you need to know.

You won the Pulitzer Prize for commentary in 2011. How were you informed that you won?

The way it works is the ceremony is on a Monday, but they make the decision on [the previous] Friday. And I don’t know if this is just the big papers that have connections with Columbia University, but they figure out a way to give people a heads-up on Friday. I had known I was a finalist, and actually it was my second straight year of being a finalist. The previous year my direct boss, the business editor, had called me that Friday to say I hadn’t won.

I had gotten it in my mind this next year that I wasn’t going to win either. So I was expecting that call from my boss again. My cellphone rings and it’s Bill Keller, who [was] the top editor. He said, ‘Hi, David. It’s Bill.’ I got this sort of jolt of adrenaline hearing his voice because I knew that the boss called people [who won the Pulitzer]. Lots was going through my mind. This could be a pity call still. I walked into a hallway in the Washington bureau of the Times and I nervously said, ‘Oh, hi, Bill. How are you?’ He said, ‘I’m not as good as you are, because you just won the Pulitzer.’ And then [my family and I] celebrated by having pizza at Pete’s [New Haven Style Apizza] on Wisconsin Avenue.

In 2016 you were named to head an internal strategy group at the Times. Is it hard to implement change at the Times? From an outsider’s perspective, I imagine that there are a lot of egos and internal politics among the other business concerns that must be dealt with.

Yes. It is hard, but I’m confident that it is hard to implement change in almost any large, highly successful organization. Because it should be hard to implement change, in some ways, because there’s a reason why these organizations have been so successful, and you don’t want to be undermining them.

What I have found repeatedly in my career is the best way to make change happen here is to start something new and have it be different. I’ve now done that multiple times. When I became a business columnist in 2006, I wasn’t taking over a column from someone else. It was a brand-new column that the business editor started. He wanted more conversational, easy-to-follow coverage of economics. He didn’t go to the people who are already doing it and say, ‘You all need to change what you’re doing.’

And then in 2014, a team of people and I created The Upshot, where we found new ways to [tell stories]. You didn’t have to have a chart to go with an article; you could just make an article that was a chart. We wrote headlines in more conversational ways back when that was innovative. We published stories at 9 a.m. because that’s when most people are online, rather than at 6 p.m. because that allows them to go into the print newspaper.

The Morning is the third example. When you do new stuff, some of it works, some of it doesn’t. If you go back and look at

the early Mornings, a bunch of the stuff we did didn’t work, so we stopped doing it. But a lot does work. It actually can be easier to change the place in a bottom-up way rather than a top-down way.

We live in such a fractured country politically, and many people get their news from partisan sources. How does that impact your work at the Times, which traditionally has been seen—fair or not—as a liberal outlet?

I think it’s really vital for us to be independent—and not just in a partisan sense. I actually don’t think we struggle with that. The New York Times has broken more stories that have done career damage to Democrats, in part because most politicians around New York are Democrats. So whether it’s [former New York governors] Andrew Cuomo or Eliot Spitzer, I don’t think we have a problem covering tough news about Democrats. In fact, a lot of readers thought that we over-covered Hillary Clinton’s emails, for example.

I think where it can be harder, if you just think about our

Leonhardt, a native New Yorker, now lives in Bethesda.

About David Leonhardt

FROM: New York, New York

LIVES IN: Bethesda

AGE: 51

COLLEGE: Bachelor’s degree in applied mathematics from Yale University

OCCUPATION: A senior writer at The New York Times who runs The Morning, the paper’s flagship daily newsletter. Previously served as a columnist at the Times and as its Washington, D.C., bureau chief from 2011–13. Started his career at The Washington Post , and also wrote for Business Week.

FAMILY: Wife, Laura; two children in their early 20s and one teenager

demographics, most of us working at The New York Times are college graduates who live in the major metropolitan areas of New York, Washington or a handful of other cities. Those are people who are living in overwhelmingly liberal milieus. So I do think it’s really important that we be particularly rigorous about interrogating assumptions that might come from liberal America, given that many of us spend more time surrounded by liberal America than conservative America.

I view that as a crucial part of what The Morning does. We got a fair amount of attention for raising real questions about whether COVID precautions were going too far and whether it was harming kids to be out of school for so long. More recently, my colleague German Lopez wrote pieces saying crime is really rising. I think a lot of liberals were trying to claim, ‘No, no, it’s all just a Fox News claim.’ But no, crime was really rising. And so we wrote that. And I’ve written some pieces recently that have explained how the Biden administration’s policies have contributed to the surge in migration at the border.

We’ve also written tough pieces about conservatives. So we do it both ways, but I think it’s particularly important to make sure that we are asking tough questions about liberal assumptions.

The Times ended 2023 with 9.7 million digital-only subscribers. Based on my unscientific conversations with colleagues and friends, as many people get it for the recipes and the games as political coverage. Is that something you envisioned happening?

I think it’s great, and I actually think it is in keeping with newspapers’ histories. Journalists like to think that the heyday of local newspapers was about coverage of city hall, but really it was mostly about coverage of local sports teams, obituaries, comics and classified ads.

People want to be informed. If all they wanted was games, there are many places they could find games. But they also want to be delighted and entertained, and they want highly useful information, like the kind of information that our great cooking staff gives people. We actually think it is very much in keeping with The New York Times’ history, when you think about our crossword puzzle back in the print newspaper, when you think about how popular our print recipes were, when you think about how popular our bridge column used to be.

Are you a Wordle or Spelling Bee player?

I am a daily Spelling Bee player. Very, very satisfying to get the pangram. And I play most of the other games a little bit less regularly, including Wordle and Connections. My wife and I do Spelling Bee together, usually in the morning with a cup of coffee. I am satisfied when we get to genius, but she’s better at it than I am. On the rare day where we get to genius without the pangram, her attitude is we haven’t solved it.

Are you concerned with the state of journalism when it comes to local news?

I am concerned with the state of local news. I’m lucky that I live in the rare metropolitan area where a national news source is also a local news source, which is The Washington Post. One of the things I read every day is the Washington Post sports section. I read Bethesda Magazine. I read Washingtonian magazine.

The New York Times has a business model at this point that looks pretty solid. And even if we were to do a bad job over the next 20 years, the idea that there’s a national audience of people who want high-quality news, that’s now been proven.

There isn’t a model for local journalism at this point, and I am deeply worried about it because democracy functions much better when we have journalists covering local school boards and local government and local companies. Political scientists have shown that when local newspapers leave, corruption goes up, polarization goes up, voter turnout appears to go down.

I’m glad to see, though, that there seems to be a lot of energy around trying to find new models, like nonprofit news sources like The Baltimore Banner. So I’m a little bit hopeful, but it’s a huge problem.

You’ve worked for the Times for 25 years, and you’ve seen dramatic change at your publication and in the industry. Do you care to hazard a guess on what the state of journalism will be at the Times and elsewhere 25 years from now?

“A lot of places are extremely livable, but they don’t have anywhere near the food—which is really important to me—or the culture that this area does.”
—David Leonhardt

I would guess that 25 years from now The New York Times will be very strong. I would guess we would have substantially more digital subscribers than we now have. I would guess that the technology will make some leap that we can’t even fully fathom right now. So maybe it won’t be on our phone. Maybe it’ll be the kind of holograms people imagined where you’ll have a ring that basically projects something onto the table where you’re sitting. I have no idea. And although it’ll make me very sad because I love print, I would guess that there will not be a daily print newspaper in 25 years. As a journalist, actually, that doesn’t bother me because what I care about is that people are reading what I’m doing, not where they’re doing it. But as a reader, I still love print because print never runs out of battery. You can’t have alerts pop up and distract you with print.

You mentioned that restaurants were important to you. What are some of your favorites in our area?

Oh, I love this question. I love Vace for takeout pizza. We spend a lot of time eating Chinese food in Rockville. Sichuan Jin River in Rockville. We love Olazzo in Bethesda. We love food.

Mike Unger is a writer and editor who grew up in Montgomery County and lives in Baltimore.

2024 SHORT STORY & ESSAY CONTEST

The Write Stuff

THE SHORT STORIES AND ESSAYS THAT TOOK THE TOP PRIZES IN OUR ANNUAL WRITING COMPETITION

ILLUSTRATIONS BY JING LI

Bethesda Magazine and the Bethesda Urban Partnership sponsor an annual competition for local writers. This year, 150 adults and high school students entered the short story contest, and 178 adults and high school students entered the essay contest. The writers who placed in the contests were awarded cash prizes ranging from $50 to $500. The work of the first-place winners appears on the pages that follow.

Stories and essays, including the runners-up, can be read at MoCo360.media and bethesda.org.

ADULT ESSAY WINNER

LIVES IN: Bethesda

WHAT SHE DOES: A trained molecular biologist, O’Lone works in science.

FAVORITE PLACE TO WRITE: “Anywhere next to a pond, river, lake, the ocean. There’s a calmness near water that I often find propels my writing in new directions.”

FAVORITE AUTHORS: “I don’t think I could pick just one favorite, but when I think of books that I revisit long after I’ve read the last page, authors include Fatimah Asghar, Ernest J. Gaines, Roxane Gay and Jesmyn Ward.”

HOW SHE GOT THE IDEA FOR THIS ESSAY: “I realized I had adopted a number of my mother’s habits and started to ask myself about why they were so integral to the way I navigate through life.”

UP NEXT: She’s continuing to work on short fiction, nonfiction and poetry, and has almost finished a novel.

A Bold Lip • By Raegan O’Lone

Raspberry Glade. Bamboo Pink. A Different Grape. These were shades my mother pulled from her purse when I asked her what lipstick she wore. Mom never left the house without hued lips. Every trip in sweatpants from our trailer to the corner store warranted application of a shade of red. The lipstick itself had armor—a hard case with a narrow mirror affixed to the inner lid. Mom always checked proper lipstick placement before entering my grandmother’s home. Nan preferred things just so. Later, when Nan, whose memories were escaping her with greater frequency, moved in, to go out, she insisted on her wool coat, pillbox hat and a bold lip. I resisted wearing makeup, thinking it a diversion I couldn’t afford, separating myself from the lipstick-clad women who had made me.

When my brother suddenly fell ill, I flew home from Boston, where he had led the family caravan to take me to school a few years prior. The day of his funeral, I drove with Mom and Nan, both of their lips vivid when everything on my body was dark. We stepped out of the car in front of the funeral home, and as we trudged up the walk, Nan stopped, lines of worry deepening across her face. “Who died?”

My bare lips could find no words. My mother’s garnet mouth summoned the strength to tell Nan that her grandson had died. Nan’s lips twisted with the realization, again, but for the first time, that we were burying my brother. Mom held out her arm. Nan straightened, pressed her lips together in an impenetrable line and hooked her arm in Mom’s. I followed as they pushed the door open. We laid flowers in my brother’s casket, his lips rosier than I could accept for the coldness of his skin to my touch. Next to his grave among those gathered, the boldness of Mom’s words hovered, a beacon sheathed in red against the dense fog of my grief.

Avoiding colorless days that snowballed into a haze, nights became a haven, the flatness of the dark obscuring at least pieces of what was missing. Pawing through boxes of memories, I found a lipstick someone had given me that I’d tossed aside. I covered my lips in a vermilion glaze, preferring a small mirror to evade my own eyes. Then again and again, hoping the color might bleed into the day. To brave the convenience store, burgundy-stained lips complemented my sweats. I dared to venture on longer walks, the daylight buffered by my reflection in storefront windows, lips intense, leading. I poured myself into work, lips increasingly coated, wielding a deep brick to defend the thesis I dedicated to my brother.

My shade now is raisin. Another different kind of grape: one exposed to the elements, toughened, composition concentrated after what it has lost. Applied to my lips in layers and for every occasion. Pairs well with sweatpants and grit.

ADULT SHORT STORY WINNER

Bari Lynn Hein

LIVES IN: Germantown

WHAT SHE DOES: Hein writes novels and short stories; since 2017, she’s had more than 30 stories published in journals around the world. “When I was a bakery manager for Giant Food, I would wake up at 4 a.m. so I could write before heading off to work. Though I no longer have to set an alarm, I still wake up with words in my head.”

FAVORITE PLACE TO WRITE: “In the kitchen, before the day begins.”

FAVORITE AUTHORS: “Anne Tyler, for her memorable characters; Amor Towles, for his storytelling skills; and Anthony Marra, for his immersive scenes (and for being able to make me cry).”

HOW SHE GOT THE IDEA FOR THIS STORY: “[It] was inspired by something my husband said to me years ago, when I was questioning choices I had made: ‘But we had fun.’ Neil says this in the final scene of the short story. I still get a bit choked up when I read that.”

UP NEXT: Hein is working on the final draft of a novel version of “They Did(n’t) Dance.”

They Did(n’t) Dance • By

They Didn’t Dance

This is Neil’s bliss: this restaurant, these people—his hardworking staff who fill the kitchen with the aromas of garlic and tarragon and thyme, his guests who fill Beaumont’s with the sounds of clinking and laughter and cheers.

He walks past inverted glasses glistening beneath candle chandeliers, past four tables covered in white linen and fine silverware, past a serving tray from which his headwaiter, André, is extracting steaming plates of coq au vin and boeuf bourguignon.

Nine times out of 10, when a guest has asked to speak with Neil Beaumont, it’s to pay the restaurant owner a compliment; Neil has no reason to think this time will be any different. He approaches table seven expecting to find it occupied by smiling strangers sipping afterdinner aperitifs; instead, he sees his closest friends, Will and Julia.

Will stands and extends a hand. “Dude!” The men are 48, but when brought together they become schoolmates again. They grasp one another’s hands and clap each other’s backs. Julia rises and reaches for a hug.

Eighteen years is a long time for Neil to be in love with his best friend’s wife.

Her eyes are two shades of brown, like cloves. She lowers her lids as she always does when her gaze meets Neil’s. Recently, since reading Julia’s latest novel—Pendulum, about a woman who becomes obsessed with her husband’s brother—Neil has wondered if perhaps his feelings are reciprocated.

“We’re celebrating tonight, dude,” Will says. “Guess who made the bestseller list this week.”

“Pendulum?” Neil says.

Julia smiles. Her cheeks flush.

“This is huge!” Neil turns around and calls over to André. “Let’s get my friends a bottle of Champagne. On the house.” He holds out a hand like a game show host. “We have a bestselling author here.”

A few other patrons look over and make approving sounds. Neil didn’t mean to embarrass Julia. He knows how much her writing means to her. He knows more about her than just about anyone else, perhaps more than Will.

André arrives with two glasses and a bucket housing a bottle of Champagne. Will says, “Would you mind bringing a third glass?” He turns to Neil. “You have time to join us in a toast?”

“Of course.” While he waits on a glass, he wraps a napkin around the bottle and removes the foil seal. “So, any Hollywood buzz?”

What if Siobhan had never walked into his restaurant? Violet would not exist, so it’s hard to wrap his mind around that. What if Will hadn’t smiled at Julia first, hadn’t made the first move? What if, 18 years ago, when Neil Beaumont first laid eyes on Julia Manus, they had danced?

Julia laughs. “No talk of a movie yet. I’m No. 16 in hardcover fiction.”

Neil twists off the bottle’s cage and releases a satisfying pop. “I read a review last week: ‘Manus has given us the word mastery we’ve come to expect from her, along with some raw honesty we did not know about.’ ”

Julia is beaming. “Good job memorizing that.”

“Way to go, Manus. You’ve got the whole package: word mastery and raw honesty. Do you have any idea how proud I am of you?”

“Hear! Hear!” Will raises his glass. “To No. 16!”

The threesome tap glasses.

They talk about the book, Will dominating the conversation, as usual, but showing no real understanding of the characters Julia created. Neil wonders if Will has even read Pendulum. He once confessed he hadn’t read any of Julia’s first four published novels. Maybe he will now that a bestseller list has validated his wife’s work.

“Tell me about Violet,” Julia says after she and Will have placed dinner orders with André. “What’s she been up to?”

Neil pulls out his phone, finds a recent photo that Siobhan sent of their 7-year-old and passes it to Julia.

“Oh, Neil, she’s gorgeous.”

“Gotta agree with you on that,” Neil says. Violet’s first sentence was: “Pick me up, Daddy.” The last thing she said, before he boarded a recent flight back east, was: “Do you have to go, Daddy?”

Julia has shared with Neil her regrets at never having had children. He sensed her longing whenever she was around Violet, during those two brief years his daughter

lived under his roof, senses her sorrow now as she gazes at the little beauty on his cellphone screen.

When André arrives with dinner, Neil excuses himself. Later, he walks his friends out and lights a cigarette. Watching smoke curl toward the stars, his mind is consumed by a litany of what-ifs. What if Siobhan had never walked into his restaurant? Violet would not exist, so it’s hard to wrap his mind around that. What if Will hadn’t smiled at Julia first, hadn’t made the first move? What if, 18 years ago, when Neil Beaumont first laid eyes on Julia Manus, they had danced?

They Danced

Julia has always known she would end up here , on this section of sidewalk, standing in front of one of the biggest publishing houses in New York City, a tower so tall that the high-rises reflecting off its windows barely reach its midsection. She’s always imagined she would be preparing for an event like the one that awaits her tomorrow at noon, a reception honoring those who’ve received literary distinction in a national writing competition. What never occurred to her—at least not during the years of her youth, which seemed endless at the time but in retrospect passed far too quickly—was that the recipient of first prize in the category of original fiction would be someone who once fit into the crook of her arm. Julia is overwhelmingly proud of Katrina, who can put words together in ways that Julia has never been able to. She places an arm across her 16-year-old daughter’s shoulders.

Katrina wears a furtive smile; she already knows she’s headed for great

things. So does Ansel, who is by now a block ahead with Neil, waiting to cross Broadway. Yesterday, outside the fivestory brownstone that houses one of the country’s leading acting schools, Ansel stood with his head held high, his shoulders back, his eyes closed for a meditative moment.

When the family has cleared the crosswalk, Neil says to the kids, “You know where this pizza place is?”

They point down Broadway.

“And the theater?”

“We’ll be fine,” Ansel says, with ill-concealed impatience.

Neil kisses them on both cheeks, the way his own father used to kiss him. Julia hugs her kids and reminds them to send a text message when they’ve reached the theater.

Now it’s just the two of them. As Neil has reminded Julia recently, in a couple of years, both kids will be off at college and they’ll be alone all the time.

“So, what’re you hungry for?” Neil says.

“I’m not really hungry yet. Can we just walk a bit?”

They start to backtrack along Broadway. This time, as they walk in the shadow of the publishing behemoth, Julia is overcome by sadness. She sees her downturned lips reflected off the oversized sunglasses of a woman walking past. Car horns and a distant police siren play a suitable accompaniment to her melancholia.

“What’s on your mind?” Neil asks.

Julia tells him she’s fine and picks up her pace. Self-pity has no place here. She has no right to feel this way.

She and Neil are still in love, after 18 years. Their children are making imprints on the world. Their house is almost paid

off. The music store that Neil inherited from his father still stands, and groceries will always be in demand, so Julia’s job as a supermarket cashier is secure. She and Neil can afford to provide for their children’s dreams, can even spend a few nights in New York City to celebrate their children’s accomplishments.

They’ve reached Rockefeller Plaza. Traffic sounds are now muffled by flags flapping overhead and by the trickle of a fountain down below. Julia leans against the wall overlooking dozens of pink umbrellas and thousands of pink flowers.

She sat at one of those tables in the plaza with Neil 18 years ago, shortly after they met, to celebrate her 30th birthday. They’d allowed themselves to imagine what it would be like to live in New York City. Neil would soon start training at L’Ecole des Arts Culinaires and pick out a prime location for his restaurant. Julia would get her foot in the door of the publishing industry as an assistant to an acquiring editor, a position her grad school adviser had helped her to land. At night, she would write novels and eat gourmet meals that Neil had prepared. The last time they were here, 18 years ago, Neil’s father was still alive. They had no idea a child had been conceived.

Neil stands beside her now, stares at her, waits for an honest answer to his question. The sun makes his brown eyes look almost as golden as the statue of Prometheus just beyond Julia’s reach.

“You’ll think I’m the most selfish person in the world,” she finally says.

“Try me.”

The flags continue to flap. The fountain continues to cascade. Prometheus continues to shine. Julia cannot speak. Instead, she cries.

“Hey.” Neil wraps his arms around her and brings her head to his chest.

“In a year, Ansel will probably be going to school here,” she sputters.

“Right. I hope so.”

“And Katrina will be applying to colleges. She’ll probably be published by then, knowing her.”

Neil strokes Julia’s back. “I expect she will be.”

“And I’ll still be asking, ‘Paper or plastic?’ ”

A long pause follows, a long flag-flap-

ping, fountain-trickling pause.

“And I’ll still be telling kids not to smack the cymbals with their bare hands,” Neil says.

“So where did we go wrong?”

“I’m not sure that we did go wrong.”

“I had dreams, Neil. I mean—I didn’t necessarily think I’d be a bestselling author, but I thought people might enjoy my books, and maybe be affected by them for a little while. And you thought people would be flocking into your restaurant, in this very city.” The sky has turned from cerulean to indigo and long shadows stretch from the skyscrapers across the cab-dotted, bus-blocked street. The flags overhead whack the air with intensified energy from a gust. “I feel like we wasted a lot of years.”

Neil’s been staring at her for several seconds, waiting for her eyes to meet his. “But we had fun.”

“Yeah, but—”

“No. Think about it. We had fun. Camping out on the bed right after Ansel was born? Taking the kids out on my Radio Flyer? Those backyard barbecues when Will and Pat would bring their kids over and they’d all splash around in the wading pool?”

“You made the best burgers,” Julia says, drifting for a moment.

“How ’bout reading to the children at bedtime?” Neil takes Julia’s hands into his. “How about the bike rides? And fishing and flying kites by the lake? Seems we were always detangling fishing lines and kite strings from trees.”

She gazes at the pink umbrellas surrounding the fountain and remembers 10-year-old Ansel as Oliver Twist singing “I’d Do Anything” with the little girl who played Nancy. They’d spun a pair of umbrellas across the elementary school stage, and for the duration of the song, had made the audience believe they were riding in a carriage. “I keep coming back to the elementary school plays, for some reason. Reliving those years.”

“We still have another year of school plays. And then who knows what lies ahead for all of us once Ansel comes here.”

For a moment, Julia envisions her son performing on Broadway.

“It was all so much fun and it went by so unbelievably fast,” Neil says. “Last September, at Back-to-School Night, when I introduced myself to Katrina’s English teacher, you know what she said? She said, ‘Aren’t you lucky.’ ”

“We are lucky.”

On the corner, a musician has unpacked a saxophone from its case. He raises his instrument to his lips and plays the first few strains of “What a Wonderful World.”

“It wasn’t just the kids who made the last 18 years fun, you know,” Neil says when the song is finished. “It was you, too. Whenever I’m with you, I feel— how should I put this?—I just feel right. Even when we’re mad at each other, I feel right. Does that make sense?”

“Yes.” Julia watches the water incessantly flow off the sides of the fountain. “We could’ve ended up with different people. We would’ve missed out on everything.”

“I think we would’ve ended up together, sooner or later. I think that’s just the way it was meant to be.”

She considers that possibility for a moment. Her sadness is dissipating. It’s hovering over her now, rather than pressing down on her. “Maybe burgers.”

“Burgers?”

“You asked me what I’m hungry for. Ever since you brought up those backyard barbecues—”

“Burgers it is.” Neil drops a few bills into the musician’s case and reaches into his pocket. Julia knows what he’s going for: the app that found them their hotel rooms, directions to the acting school, the perfect place for breakfast this morning, the show the kids are about to see. She doesn’t want an app to pick the restaurant where she and Neil will eat their dinner tonight.

“Put it away,” she says.

Neil slips his phone away, and wordlessly, they head toward the intersection of 51st and Fifth Avenue. Prometheus is illuminated now, as are the streetlights. The traffic signal turns green. Hand in hand, Julia and Neil cross over.

HIGH SCHOOL ESSAY WINNER

Hannah Brunick

LIVES IN: North Potomac

SCHOOL: Rising junior at Quince Orchard High School. She hopes to major in journalism at Boston University or Syracuse University.

FAVORITE PLACE TO WRITE: Her bedroom.

FAVORITE AUTHOR: Sylvia Plath. “Her work encapsulates a lot of relatable feminine experiences in a writing style that was ahead of her time.”

HOW SHE GOT THE IDEA FOR THIS ESSAY: “It was really late at night, and the essay pretty much came to me naturally after reflecting on the double beauty standards of Western and Asian culture that apply to mixed women.”

UP NEXT: A student ambassador for County Sports Zone, Hannah hopes to continue writing articles for the organization. She’s also applying to write for her high school newspaper, The Prowler.

My Two Worlds • By Hannah Brunick

I stare blankly at the mirror as she smears charcoal eyeliner into a wing on my face. She says the shape, paired with her ridiculously placed smudges of highlighter, will bring out the Asian in my eyes. I am a confounding collage of features: a biological representation of two cultures intertwined, yet they have never felt anything but separate.

My Western traits are admired by Korean aunts and grandmothers. They praise my large eyes and double eyelids. They paint me in the light of coveted American beauty. I did not feel this American beauty when I opened my lunch box and the other kids covered their noses. I did not feel this American beauty when they pulled their eyes back with their fingers and sneered, “Ching chong.” In these instances, I feel only the burden of that foreignness inside me. I am other

I have my mother’s eyes when I smile; when my face is all scrunched with joy, people suddenly believe I hold some resemblance to every Korean relative I have. My sporadic moments of Korean beauty are hailed as a trend—an aesthetic. I do not feel this Korean beauty as I watch my culture become an internet fad, frequently fetishized to the point where I am disgusted to be myself. I do not feel this Korean beauty as I grapple with the ability to speak in the language of my family, nauseatingly conscious of the way I am allowing my heritage to slip between my fingers. Now, I fear myself in a different way. I am not foreign enough, just another uncultured girl amidst the ranks.

There is no question as to whether or not I have felt either side of this beauty. Undoubtedly, I have felt both, but I have yet to feel them on the same occasion. My two sides have always remained just that: distinct halves that cannot fuse.

I am a confounding collage of features: a biological representation of two cultures intertwined, yet they have never felt anything but separate.
COURTESY PHOTO

HIGH SCHOOL SHORT STORY WINNER

LIVES IN: Germantown

SCHOOL: Recently graduated from Northwest High School and Montgomery College as part of its Early College Program. She’s headed to Liberty University in Lynchburg, Virginia, in the fall.

FAVORITE PLACE TO WRITE: Her kitchen table. “I can spread out all my notes and resources around me.”

FAVORITE AUTHORS: “I love Dorothy Sayers because she has some of the best characterization and atmosphere creation I’ve ever read, and I love Brandon Sanderson because his world-building and plot construction are absolutely masterful.”

HOW SHE GOT THE IDEA FOR THIS STORY: It started several years ago as a school assignment. “I was asked to write a story about community, and this idea had been building in my head for a while. It’s a small piece of a much larger universe that I’ve formed in my imagination over the years, but it’s able to stand fairly well on its own.”

UP NEXT: “I hope to eventually be both a certified public accountant and a published novelist.”

The Coffee Shop • By Abigail Ott

Kendra checked her phone again. She had already been waiting 15 minutes for her date to show up, but he hadn’t even texted to say he was going to be late. She tried not to judge him. After all, he might have had an emergency at work and not had a chance to text her. She knew she dealt with emergencies often enough, though she always tried to text her dates when she was going to be late. She fiddled with her necklace. She had to remind herself why she was doing this. She needed to find someone who could support her as she fought for her people. She knew she needed someone ordinary to show people that Unalans could be loved and appreciated, not just feared and despised. She didn’t meet a lot of ordinary people in her day-to-day life, so she had gone on dating apps to find someone.

Kendra got up, restless, and went into the bathroom to check her makeup in the mirror. She looked pretty today. Her honey-colored skin glowed in the sunlight. Her glossy black hair was pulled back into a loose twist, but some shorter pieces had come out and framed her face nicely. Her eyes, which were naturally a red-orange color so bold they looked like they were aflame, were hidden under dark brown contact lenses, specially designed by a friend so that she could scan for U-rays, which were emitted by all Unalans, including herself. They weren’t always scanning, or she would be able to distinguish very little when she was with her friends, but by looking right at someone and doing a specific sequence of blinks, she could see whether or not they were Unalan. It was handy for days like today, when she wanted to get a read on someone without giving away her own position.

She tucked a strand of hair behind her ear and went back out. Sitting down again, she took another sip of her coffee and glanced out the window, then back down at her phone. Still nothing. One of the baristas came out to give her a refill. “He stand you up, Kendra?”

“I’m going to give him a bit longer. Maybe he had an emergency or something. Thanks, though, Annie.”

Annie shook her head. “Always wanting to believe the best of people. I like that about you. How ’bout this: Every cup of coffee from now until he shows up or you leave is free.”

“But then I’ll never want to leave.”

Annie put her hand on her hip and looked down at Kendra. “Well, we close at 10, as you know, so you’ll have to be gone by then.”

“If I’m right, he’ll have shown up or texted me long before then.”

“We’ll see.” Annie shook her head again and moved off to another table.

Kendra smiled. She had been coming here for years, so she knew all the baristas and many of the regulars personally. She had had almost all of her first dates here, from the ones who had never shown up to the ones who had broken up with her after a few months because she “just didn’t prioritize their relationship” or she “worked too much” or they “felt like she was holding part of herself back” or something like that. A small portion of the regulars were guys who had fallen in love with the coffee shop when she had introduced it to them and kept going there even after they had broken up with her. She didn’t hold a grudge; she knew her job was demanding and had known from the beginning how hard it would be to find someone willing to put up with it. So far, she hadn’t been able to find that person, but she just kept swiping right and trying again.

She had finished her coffee and gotten a third cup before the bell on top of the shop door rang to announce Jered’s entrance. He was rather handsome: a tall white man with dirty blond hair and pale green eyes. As he spotted her and strode over, she scanned him for U-rays, but with a negative result.

“Kendra Mayfire?” he asked.

“That’s me,” she replied. “Jered Peters?”

He nodded and sat down. She expected him to apologize for being so late, or at

ADULT ESSAY RUNNERS-UP

least offer an explanation, but he didn’t even mention it. Not a good sign.

As they started conversing, she fiddled with her necklace—apparently unconsciously—drawing his eyes down to the amethyst pendant, but he didn’t react to it. Not a Friend, then, either.

She slowly and expertly guided the conversation, as she had done so many times before, until she could work in how something “reminded her of Janet.”

He naturally asked who Janet was.

“Oh, just a girl I knew in middle school,” she replied casually. “She was actually Unalan.”

The effect was immediate. His face darkened. His mouth twisted up in disgust. “Unalans.” He said it like a curse word. “They’re evil. Demon spawn come to terrorize us with their twisted forms and unnatural powers.”

Kendra went still. “You think so?” she asked, her voice icy cold.

“You want to know what I think? I think they should all be hunted down and killed like the monsters they are.”

Kendra had heard enough. This privileged, bloated white man was condoning the centuries of torment and fear that her people had gone through, championing the Midnight Massacre that had decimated their numbers and traumatized so many, spitting on the graves of brave heroes like Amethyst, Malcolm, her father, and so many others who had sacrificed their lives for their fellow Unalans. It was disgusting.

The fire inside of her flared, tingling invisibly just beneath her skin, as she started in a falsely calm voice, “Did you know that most Unalans don’t look that different from ordinary people?”

SECOND PLACE: Kyra Swantkowski, Fairfax, Virginia

THIRD PLACE: Jonathan Kronstadt, Silver Spring

HONORABLE MENTION: Charlotte Clymer, Washington, D.C.

HONORABLE MENTION: Rachel Coonce, University Park, Maryland

HONORABLE MENTION: Hope Randall, Bethesda

HONORABLE MENTION: Dian Seidel, Chevy Chase

HIGH SCHOOL ESSAY RUNNERS-UP

SECOND PLACE: Sofia Guyer, Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School

THIRD PLACE: Ariana Miranda, Wheaton High School

“What do you mean?”

“Most Unalans just have tiny differences: an odd hair color, sparkling skin, something that can easily be disguised with cosmetics or another little fix. They’re all around us, just living their lives.”

He was silent: half-confused, halfstunned. She smirked.

“In fact, you probably know at least one already. And they’re not trying to— how did you put it—‘terrorize you with their unnatural powers.’ Most of them are just trying to survive. And hunting them down? That’s already been tried. Multiple times.” She was standing now. “But it’s never going to work. You know why? Because there’s always going to be someone willing to stand up for their people, to fight back against the murderers.” She leaned forward, blinking twice quickly to turn off the tinting on her contact lenses and allow the fire in her eyes to shine through. “Someday, we’re going to have our own haven, a safe place for anyone in danger, where we don’t have to hide who we are. But until then, I, Kendra Mayfire, chief of the Unalans, am responsible for keeping my people safe from idiots like you, Jered, who want to hurt them.” She held her fist up, the back of her hand facing him so he could see some of the scars on it, and shot a spurt of fire out of the knuckle on her middle finger, which formed into the shape of a bird as it flared up. Then, she turned and marched out of the coffee shop.

The next day, Kendra returned to the coffee shop, a hood pulled low over her face so she wouldn’t be recognized. She had been practically yelling by the end of

HONORABLE MENTION: Winnie Chen, Thomas S. Wootton High School

HONORABLE MENTION: Joanne Fan, Thomas S. Wootton High School

HONORABLE MENTION: Chelsea Zhu, Richard Montgomery High School

ADULT SHORT STORY RUNNERS-UP

SECOND PLACE: Naomi Louie, Bethesda

THIRD PLACE: J. Millard Simpson, Germantown

HONORABLE MENTION: Michael Norton, Silver Spring

HONORABLE MENTION: Karen Sandler, Washington, D.C.

HONORABLE MENTION: Silvia Spring, Washington, D.C.

her rant yesterday, and she knew every eye in the coffee shop had been on her when she had stormed out. She had no idea what the reaction had been, so she needed to test the waters to see if she could keep going there. She was especially nervous because this place was so close to her heart and she didn’t want to lose it.

She paused outside the shop. They had drawn some new art on the window, which wasn’t very unusual as they changed it up regularly, but this art was different. It was a coffee cup with steam rising out of it, which wasn’t unexpected, but the steam seemed to be in the form of a phoenix, like the one she had formed with her flame yesterday. It was a good sign, but even better was the chalkboard set up outside the shop. It was always there, but since yesterday, someone had added some stick-on rhinestones in a little pattern on the top. It wouldn’t have been significant, but all the jewels were purple, like the amethysts all Unalans and their supporters, known as “Friends,” wore. It made her slightly hopeful, but it wasn’t enough to keep her from covering her face as much as possible when she walked in.

The moment the bell on the door rang, everyone in the shop looked up. It was more crowded than usual, as if all the regulars had decided that particular day and time to stop by. Most were wearing something purple, some more subtle than others, but all purposeful. As she went to the counter, they all went back to what they had been doing, but a lot of them nodded and smiled at her as she passed.

When she got to the counter to order, she noticed that two of the drink names

had been changed. A cold drink made with blueberries that had been called the Ambrosia Berry Cooler Drink was now called the Amethyst Berry Cooler Drink, and a coffee drink with chile powder, the Warm Heart Spicy Latte, her personal favorite, was now the Phoenix Fire Latte.

“One of your usual?” the barista, Annie, asked, smiling.

“Yes, please.” Kendra got out her wallet to pay.

Annie shook her head. “It’s on us. Least we could do after your horrible date yesterday.”

Kendra noticed that her name tag was decorated with purple rhinestones. “Thank you,” she said sincerely. “It’s nice to see this much support.”

“Of course! Now go sit down, and we’ll bring your drink to you.” Annie nodded over to Kendra’s usual table, which, despite the unusual crowd of people, was free.

As she walked to her table, more people smiled and nodded at her. She was almost tearing up by now at the incredible show of support from this community. When the barista brought her coffee with a note of support signed by all the other employees of the shop, tears actually welled in her eyes. She had never expected this much solidarity from everyone. It was incredible.

A few months later, the coffee shop had changed even more. A lot of the decor was now in various shades of purple, and most of the drinks had been renamed things that had hidden meanings for Unalans. Even the coffee shop itself had gone through a rebranding. Where before it had been The Cozy Coffee Corner,

HIGH SCHOOL SHORT STORY RUNNERS-UP

SECOND PLACE: Sydney Tamashasky, Poolesville High School

THIRD PLACE: Noah Grosberg, Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School

HONORABLE MENTION: Naomi Bortnick, Walt Whitman High School

HONORABLE MENTION: Kalina Peterson, Thomas S. Wootton High School

HONORABLE MENTION: Juniper Sohn, Richard Montgomery High School

CONTEST INFORMATION

Bethesda Magazine and the Bethesda Urban Partnership work

it was now Rebirth Coffee, a change outsiders assumed was an effort to stay “cool” and “hip,” but was really an allusion to the phoenix rising from the ashes, which was how many Unalans viewed their people under Kendra’s leadership. The sign was even a phoenix made of steam rising out of a coffee cup.

The culture of the shop had changed as well. At Kendra’s suggestion, they had hired a new barista who could sense Unalans’ powers, and more Unalans felt safe coming to the shop because of her. Those regulars who didn’t approve of Unalans gradually came to feel that they were not wanted, so they found other shops to visit. The shop didn’t suffer from their loss, however, as many Unalans and Friends saw it on the internet, or just noticed it as they walked by, and, correctly interpreting the hints, realized that this shop was welcoming to those like them and started to visit regularly.

Kendra herself got coffee there every day, and the shop gave her hope. There would always be people like Jered in the world, people who hated and feared Unalans, but there would also be places like this, where Unalans could gather without fear, where they could come together in an actual community. She started to believe even more that her dream would one day come true. Maybe Unalans could get their own territory someday; maybe, eventually, people would stop hating them. But even if that didn’t happen in her lifetime, there would still be havens like this, where people could come together to love and support one another, and where Unalans could truly be free.

together to honor local writers through the short story and essay contests. Short stories are limited to 2,500 words, and authors must be residents of Montgomery County or Upper Northwest D.C. (20015 and 20016 ZIP codes). Essays are limited to 500 words and writers in the adult contest must live in Washington, D.C., or select counties of Maryland (Montgomery, Prince George’s, Howard and Frederick) or Virginia (Arlington, Fairfax, Loudoun and Prince William); high school writers must be residents of or attend a school in Montgomery County or Washington, D.C.

Keep an eye out this winter for next year’s contest details at MoCo360.media and at bethesda.org.

ORGANIZER OF THE SHORT

STORY CONTEST

Caroline Bock is the author of Carry Her Home, winner of the Fiction Award from the Washington Writers’ Publishing House, and Lie and Before My Eyes, young adult novels from St. Martin’s Press. She is the co-president/editor at the Washington Writers’ Publishing House, a nonprofit literary press that’s celebrating 50 years of publishing DMV writers. For the past several years, she’s been the organizer and a judge for the adult and high school short story contests, and loves reading the entries and meeting the winners. She lives with her family in Potomac.

Therese Doucet wrote The Prisoner of the Castle of Enlightenment, a historical novel with magical realist elements that was published by D.X. Varos in 2020. She is a former Fulbright fellow and fellow of the Virginia Center for Creative Arts. She lives in the Cathedral Heights neighborhood of Washington, D.C.

Lisa K. Friedman is an essayist, author and educator. Her titles include three novels and eight nonfiction books. Her latest novel, Hello Wife, will be released this year. She has judged the Washington Writers’ Publishing House writing contest and the Scholastic Art & Writing Awards. She lives in Washington, D.C.

Piérre Ramon Thomas is the author of creative work that can be seen in WWPH Writes, BlueInk and The Nomadic Poet: A Collection of Poetry & Prose. He’s simultaneously working on a memoir and his second collection of poetry and prose. Thomas resides in Northern Virginia.

CONTEST JUDGES

Amy Freeman, a resident of Montgomery County, has bylines and upcoming work in The Washington Post, Parents.com, HuffPost, Taco Bell Quarterly and many other publications and anthologies. She also serves as development director for The Writer’s Center in Bethesda. You can see her full portfolio at amylfreeman.com.

Julia Tagliere is a writer whose work has appeared in Gargoyle,  Washington Independent Review of Books and elsewhere. A past winner of the William Faulkner Literary Competition for Best Short Story and the Nancy Zafris Short Story Fellowship, Tagliere recently won the 2023 Alternating Current Press’ Electric Book Award for her forthcoming collection,  Reliance: Stories & Essays. She completed her M.A. in Writing at Johns Hopkins University and founded/hosts the MoCo Underground Writers Showcase. She serves as an editor with The Baltimore Review and won a 2022 Independent Artist Award from the Maryland State Arts Council. Find her at justscribbling.com.

Eric Weiner is a philosophical traveler, “recovering malcontent” and bestselling author. His books include The Geography of Bliss (now a docuseries on NBC/ Peacock) and The Geography of Genius, as well as Man Seeks God and The Socrates Express. His work has been translated into more than 24 languages. A former foreign correspondent for NPR, his writing has appeared in The Atlantic, National Geographic, The Wall Street Journal and the anthology The Best American Travel Writing. His new book, Ben & Me: In Search of a Founder’s Formula for a Long and Useful Life, will be published by Simon & Schuster in June. He lives in Silver Spring with his family and a menagerie of animals.

Kelsea Johnson is a co-founder of indie publishing house Stirred Stories, which has been recognized by the Children’s Book Council, Reading Is Fundamental and The Washington Post for its diverse collection of books and refreshing approach to publishing. A native and current resident of Washington, D.C., she is committed to using storytelling as a tool for positive social change.

Vonetta Young is a writer and strategy consultant based in Washington, D.C. Her essays and fiction have appeared in Indiana Review, Barrelhouse, Lunch Ticket, Catapult and Cosmonauts Avenue, among others. She is twice a graduate of Georgetown University. Follow her on Instagram @vonettawrites.

Claudia Wair is a writer and editor from Virginia. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in Pithead Chapel, Astrolabe, Tangled Locks Journal, JMWW and elsewhere. Her fiction has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize, Best Microfiction and Best of the Net. Read more at claudiawair.com.

ADULT SHORT STORY CONTEST JUDGES
HIGH SCHOOL SHORT STORY
ESSAY CONTEST JUDGES

This list is compiled and provided by topDentists (Copyright 20102024 by topDentists, Augusta, Georgia), a database of dental professionals who have been selected as “tops” by vote of their peers. The complete database is available at usatopdentists. com. For information email help@usatopdentists.com; or visit usatopdentists.com.

ENDODONTICS

Farah Assadipour

Advanced Endodontic Associates 5802 Hubbard Drive Rockville 301-984-3800 advancedendo.com

Ali Behnia

Fallsgrove Endodontics 9707 Key West Ave., Suite 130 Rockville 301-340-9494 fallsgroveendo.com

Luke A. Cantamessa Advanced Endodontic Associates

5802 Hubbard Drive Rockville 301-654-1818 advancedendo.com

Wing F. Chan 15200 Shady Grove Road, Suite 410 Rockville 301-963-6087 drwingfchan.com

Reza Farshey

Chevy Chase Endodontics 5530 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 1545 Chevy Chase 301-907-2931 ccendo.net

WHAT DO YOU LIKE MOST ABOUT BEING AN ENDODONTIST?

DR. ANA KIM, ENDODONTICS
“I like that I can instantly alleviate the pain. ... It’s almost like magic.”

Jason P. Fields 604 S. Frederick Ave., Suite 311 Gaithersburg 301-519-9555 fieldsendo.com

Edward Gamson 11510 Old Georgetown Road, Suite E North Bethesda 301-493-4496 gamsondds.com

Renie M. Gross

Endodontic Specialists 12520 Prosperity Drive, Suite 230 Silver Spring 301-593-4400 silverspringendo.com

Scott K. Hetz

Advanced Endodontic Associates 5454 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 1355 Chevy Chase 301-654-1818 advancedendo.com

Tony H. Hsu

Bethesda Endodontics 11300 Rockville Pike, Suite 1008 North Bethesda 301-881-6882 hsurootcanal.com

Christopher Jin Endodontic Associates of Greater Washington 11125 Rockville Pike, Suite 103 Rockville 301-231-0744 endogroup.com

George Jong

Bethesda-Chevy Chase Root Canal Specialists 5454 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 815 Chevy Chase 301-654-6077 endocc.com

Ana Kim Prostho Endo Dental Specialists 5904 Hubbard Drive North Bethesda 301-377-8306 prostho-dent.com

Naghmeh “Nina” Latifi D.C. Endodontics 5225 Wisconsin Ave. NW, Suite 303 Washington, D.C. 202-364-0234 dcendodontics.com

Young S. Lee

Endodontic Specialists 12520 Prosperity Drive, Suite 230 Silver Spring 301-593-4400 silverspringendo.com

Kim A. Menhinick Advanced Endodontic Associates

5802 Hubbard Drive Rockville 301-654-1818 advancedendo.com

Anastasia Mischenko Bethesda-Chevy Chase Root Canal Specialists 5454 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 815 Chevy Chase 301-654-6077 endocc.com

Sasan Moghaddame-Jafari North Bethesda Endodontics 11921 Rockville Pike, Suite 405 Rockville 301-984-3636 nbendo.com

Julian Moiseiwitsch D.C. Endodontics Specialists 5225 Wisconsin Ave. NW, Suite 303 Washington, D.C. 202-364-0234 dcendodontics.com

Adam W. Orgel RCT Endodontics 804 Pershing Drive, Suite 102 Silver Spring 240-696-7208 rctendo.com

Tu A. Phan Olney Endodontics, P.A. 18109 Prince Philip Drive, Suite 350 Olney 301-774-1181 olneyendodontics.com

Sumesh Potluri Silver Spring Endodontics 10750 Columbia Pike, Suite 210 Silver Spring 301-754-0500 silverspringendodontics.com

Michael J. Ribera Advanced Endodontic Associates 5454 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 1355 Chevy Chase 301-654-1818 advancedendo.com

Yaser Roumani Endodontic Associates of Greater Washington 11125 Rockville Pike, Suite 103 Rockville 301-231-0744 endogroup.com

Fredric H. Simon Advanced Endodontic Associates 5802 Hubbard Drive Rockville 301-984-3800 advancedendo.com

Joseph Son Capital Endodontics

Microsurgical Center 10401 Old Georgetown Road, Suite 303 Bethesda 301-530-1131 endocapital.com

Ronald C. Taylor

RCT Endodontics

804 Pershing Drive, Suite 102 Silver Spring 240-696-7208 rctendo.com

Ian K. Walker

Endodontic Associates of Greater Washington 11125 Rockville Pike, Suite 103 Rockville 301-231-0744 endogroup.com

Constance Wentworth

Capital Endodontics

Microsurgical Center 10401 Old Georgetown Road, Suite 303 Bethesda 301-530-1131 endocapital.com

Chetan Yelamanchi

Endodontic Associates of Greater Washington 9029 Shady Grove Court Gaithersburg 301-869-3900 endogroup.com

Pirooz A. Zia

Chevy Chase Endodontics 5530 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 1545 Chevy Chase 301-907-2931 ccendo.net

GENERAL DENTISTRY

Martin G. Abel

Smiles By Design 5812 Hubbard Drive Rockville 301-770-1447 smilesbydesign.com

Ali R. Aghaee

Montgomery Family & Cosmetic Dentistry 15245 Shady Grove Road, Suite 420 Rockville 301-417-6957 healthyteethandsmile.com

Corey B. Anolik

Totally Smiles Dental Group 1 Bank St., Suite 110 Gaithersburg 301-948-8838 totallysmiles.com

William J. August

Family Dental Associates 20680 Seneca Meadows Parkway,

Suite 212 Germantown 301-869-5090 familydentalassoc.net

Marie T. Banzon 9000 Old Georgetown Road Bethesda 301-581-9494

Alice Charland Bassford ASE Dental Group 10301 Georgia Ave., Suite 207 Silver Spring 301-593-5500 drbassford.com

Michael C. Bauer 5225 Wisconsin Ave. NW, Suite 309 Washington, D.C. 202-966-4050 chevychasedds.com

Jennifer M. Beitler 9601 Blackwell Road, Suite 240 Rockville 301-972-0260 jenniferbeitlerdds.com

David Black 903 Russell Ave., Suite 201-A Gaithersburg 301-740-8488

Carol A. Blake

Blake Dental Group 5225 Wisconsin Ave. NW, Suite 511 Washington, D.C. 202-966-0620 blakedentalgroup.com

Ellen Brodsky Art & Dentistry 6500 Rock Spring Drive, Suite 110 Bethesda 301-564-4991

Jane Brodsky 11404 Old Georgetown Road, Suite 204 North Bethesda 301-493-8333 drjanebrodsky.com

Charles L. Broring Jr. 8218 Wisconsin Ave., Suite P-17 Bethesda 301-652-1440

Sharon Brown

Washington Center For Cosmetic & Family Dentistry 4910 Massachusetts Ave. NW, Suite 204 Washington, D.C. 202-858-0498 amazingdentistry.com

David M. Bugden

David M. Bugden, D.D.S. 11259 Lockwood Drive, Suite B Silver Spring 301-681-4241

Usa Bunnag Bunnag Comprehensive Dentistry 6501 Democracy Blvd. Bethesda 301-896-0633 drbunnag.com

Cheryl F. Callahan Callahan Dental 15225 Shady Grove Road, Suite 301 Rockville 301-948-1212 cherylcallahandds.com

Joseph A. Catanzano III Foxhall Smiles

3301 New Mexico Ave. NW, Suite 230 Washington, D.C. 202-244-1601 foxhallsmiles.com

Eric Chai

Colesville Dentistry 724 Cloverly St. Silver Spring 301-384-6000 colesvilledentistry.com

Kevin Chai

Colesville Dentistry 724 Cloverly St. Silver Spring 301-384-6000 colesvilledentistry.com

Susan Chang Wild Wood/Wildwood Bethesda Family & Cosmetic Dental Care 10401 Old Georgetown Road, Suite 405 Bethesda 301-530-5909 wwbethesdadental.com

Arthur B. Choi 16001 Comprint Circle Gaithersburg 301-948-0404 achoidds.com

Shri Chopra Dental Design of Wheaton 11602 Georgia Ave. Wheaton 301-944-1001 shrichopradds.com

Andrew C. Cobb

Chevy Chase Digital Dentistry 4400 Jenifer St. NW, Suite 340 Washington, D.C. 202-686-9100 cobbdentistry.net

Jason A. Cohen

5530 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 560 Chevy Chase 301-656-1201 cosmeticdds.com

John F. Conaghan Capital Dental Bethesda

8218 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 317 Bethesda 301-654-1777 capitaldentaldds.com

John T. Corrigan Capital Dental Bethesda 8218 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 317 Bethesda 301-654-1777 capitaldentaldds.com

Ivelisse C. Cuevas Bethesda Family Dentistry 6000 Executive Blvd., Suite 505 North Bethesda 240-221-3602 bethesdafamilydentistry.com

Shoba Daney Care Soft Dental 15204 Omega Drive, Suite 140 Rockville 301-869-7733 caresoftdental.com

Zohra A. Darwish Dental Aesthetic Arts 3409 Wisconsin Ave. NW Washington, D.C. 202-506-1976

Alan L. Dechter Dechter & Moy Dentistry 12900 Georgia Ave. Silver Spring 301-949-5400 dechtermoy.com

Peter S. DeMizio DeMizio Dental Center 4400 East West Highway, Suite D Bethesda 301-652-3888 demiziodental.com

Charles D. Dietrich 5028 Wisconsin Ave. NW, Suite 102 Washington, D.C. 202-363-6177 nwwashingtondentist.com

Robert G. Donahue 5225 Wisconsin Ave. NW, Suite 309 Washington, D.C. 202-966-4050 chevychasedds.com

Charles A. Doring

North Bethesda Dental Associates 11400 Rockville Pike, Suite 509 Rockville 301-881-7646 nbda.dentist

Austin D. Drewyer Drewyer Dentistry 4009 Sandy Spring Road, Suite 201 Burtonsville 301-622-1717 drewyerdentistry.com

Douglas G. Drewyer Drewyer Dentistry

4009 Sandy Spring Road, Suite 201 Burtonsville 301-622-1717 drewyerdentistry.com

Dan Eisenberg 18111 Prince Philip Drive, Suite T-17 Olney 301-250-1057 olneydental.com

Ashley A. Emam

Rockville Family & Cosmetic Dentistry 10110 Molecular Drive, Suite 311 Rockville 301-424-8100 rockvilleemamdentistry.com

Emine Erkmen

Shady Grove Dental Center 14955 Shady Grove Road, Suite 360 Rockville 301-610-7724 drerkmen.com

David N. Eskow 18119 Cashell Road Olney 301-774-2000 myolneydentist.com

Christine M. Foster

Silver Spring Smile Designs 10313 Georgia Ave., Suite 103 Silver Spring 301-593-7500 silverspringsmiledesigns.com

H. Brandt Foster

Comprehensive Contemporary Dentistry 4702 Chevy Chase Drive Chevy Chase 301-986-8804 bethesdachevychasedentist.com

Norma E. Fox Gentle Dental-care Relaxation Clinique 1300 Spring St., Suite 215 Silver Spring 301-589-5644 visitdrfoxsmiles.com

Joseph E. Frew 9604 Colesville Road Silver Spring 301-585-3800 drfrew.com

Ronan J. Freyne

Ronan J. Freyne, DMD 5530 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 1030 Chevy Chase 301-986-0700 docronan.com

Stephen J. Friedman

Stephen J. Friedman DDS PA 1370 Lamberton Drive, Suite 18

Silver Spring 301-681-8200 go-smiles.net

Todd H. Galkin 9225 Colesville Road Silver Spring 301-588-8828 toddgalkin-dds.com

Jason George Perkins & George 13321 New Hampshire Ave., Suite 102 Silver Spring 301-989-3400 colesvilledentist.com

Eugene T. Giannini

Giannini & Gray Dental Partners 4801 Wisconsin Ave. NW, Suite 200 Washington, D.C. 202-244-4111 smiledc.com

Keith A. Gilbert North Potomac Dentistry 11906 Darnestown Road, Suite D North Potomac 301-527-0775 drkeithgilbert.com

Elizabeth Gladnick

Gladnick Family & Cosmetic Dentistry 14995 Shady Grove Road, Suite 450 Rockville 301-963-0800 gladnickdentistry.com

Thomas Gladnick

Gladnick Family & Cosmetic Dentistry 14995 Shady Grove Road, Suite 450 Rockville 301-963-0800 gladnickdentistry.com

Larry Goldbaum

Goldbaum & Rosenberg Family Dentistry 11921 Rockville Pike, Suite 101 Rockville 301-770-1555 golrosdds.com

Nahal Golpayegani

Smiles Elevated 5530 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 1535 Chevy Chase 301-913-0072 smileselevated.com

David C. Gordon

Gordon Center for General and Advanced Dentistry 656 Quince Orchard Road, Suite 104 Gaithersburg 301-258-1998 gordondentalcare.com

Leonard S. Gordon

Gordon Center for General and Advanced Dentistry 656 Quince Orchard Road, Suite 104

Gaithersburg 301-258-1998 gordondentalcare.com

George Gotsiridze

Bethesda Chevy Chase Advanced Dentistry 5454 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 1350 Chevy Chase 301-652-1545 bethesdachevychasedentistry.com

Brian J. Gray Giannini & Gray Dental Partners 4801 Wisconsin Ave. NW, Suite 200 Washington, D.C. 202-244-4111 smiledc.com

Bernard L. Greenbaum

Bethesda Center for Family & Cosmetic Dentistry 6410 Rockledge Drive, Suite 106 Bethesda 301-530-3600 greenbaumdds.com

Priya Grewal

Spring Valley Dental 4900 Massachusetts Ave. NW, Suite 200 Washington, D.C. 202-244-5900 springvalleydentaldc.com

Gary R. Griswold Griswold Dental Associates 19620 Clubhouse Road, Suite A Montgomery Village 301-926-1900 griswolddentistry.com

Scott Gritz 11906 Darnestown Road Gaithersburg 301-926-2700

Daniel Grosberg

Grosberg Family Dental Care 13034 Old Columbia Pike Silver Spring 301-384-8788 grosbergdental.com

Anne B. Gunn

Swedish-American Dental Concepts 5530 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 1210 Chevy Chase 301-652-8282 swedishamericandental.com

Brian M. Handelman

Silver Spring Smile Designs 10313 Georgia Ave., Suite 103 Silver Spring 301-593-7500 silverspringsmiledesigns.com

Robert S. Herman

Bethesda Dental Care 4425 Montgomery Ave. Bethesda

301-718-2929 bethesdadentalcare.com

Iris Hirschfeld

Bethesda Smiles 7700 Wisconsin Ave., Suite C Bethesda 301-656-6800 bethesdasmiles.com

Susan W. Ho

Kensington Natural Smiles 10405 Montgomery Ave. Kensington 301-933-3903 susanhodds.com

Erick A. Hosaka Hosaka Dental 5530 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 525 Chevy Chase 301-686-5255 hosakadental.com

Sandra Hsieh All Smiles Bethesda 11500 Old Georgetown Road North Bethesda 301-984-9646 allsmilesbethesda.com

Richard Hunsinger Jr. Hunsinger Dental 4825 Bethesda Ave., Suite 308 Bethesda 301-652-3997 richardhunsingerdds.com

Margaret H. Irvin PIA Dental 4530 Wisconsin Ave. NW, Suite 200 Washington, D.C. 202-244-6650 penski-irvin.com

Steven Joe

Steven Joe DDS 6124 River Road Bethesda 301-229-4333 stevenjoedds.com

George T. Joncas

Joncas Family and Cosmetic Dentistry 5840 MacArthur Blvd. NW Washington, D.C. 202-363-5840 joncasfamilydentistry.com

Glen Kan 10801 Lockwood Drive, Suite 390 Silver Spring 301-585-7766 drglenkandds.com

Srotalina Khanna

Bethesda Family Smiles 10401 Old Georgetown Road, Suite 310 Bethesda 301-530-0700 bethesdafamilysmiles.com

Christine Lee Kim

Silver Spring Family Dentistry 10313 Georgia Ave., Suite 205 Silver Spring 301-649-4197 silverspringfamilydentistry.com

Randolph Kim

Randolph Kim DDS Cosmetic & Family Dentistry 9901 River Road Potomac 301-299-5450 randolphkimdds.com

Nadim E. Kodsi

North Potomac Smiles 15200 Shady Grove Road, Suite 408 Rockville 301-926-4408 northpotomacsmiles.com

Stacia M. Krantz

Fallsgrove Center for Dentistry 14955 Shady Grove Road, Suite 200 Rockville 301-610-9909 fallsgrovedentistry.com

Peter S. Kwon

Complete Dental Care of Bethesda 8120 Woodmont Ave., Suite 110 Bethesda

301-657-9116 peterkwondds.com

Saba H. Lakhani

Bethesda-Chevy Chase Smiles 4416 East West Highway, Suite 202 Bethesda 301-652-5445 bccsmiles.com

Jason T. Lam

Three Creek Dentistry 7236 Muncaster Mill Road Derwood 240-207-4077 threecreekdentistry.com

Harold E. Landis Jr. 9801 Georgia Ave., Suite 228-A Silver Spring 301-681-7061

David B. Lee

Lee Dentistry 1111 University Blvd. W., Suite G-4 Silver Spring 301-605-1123 cosmeticdentistsilverspring.com

Kristy Lee

Modern Haus Dental 5530 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 710 Chevy Chase

301-986-4814 modernhausdental.com

Sunil A. Lengade 104 North Summit Ave. Gaithersburg 301-527-7710

Jonathan Leung

All Smiles Bethesda 11500 Old Georgetown Road North Bethesda 301-984-9646 allsmilesbethesda.com

Jacob Levine-Sisson 5415 W. Cedar Lane, Suite 108-B Bethesda 301-530-4502 jlevinedds.com

Philip Jay Magpantay

Dr. Robert Kelly & Associates 832 Quince Orchard Blvd. Gaithersburg 301-948-0058 kellydds.com

E. Denise Malcomson Malcomson Dentistry 8218 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 415 Bethesda

301-656-1588 malcomsondentistry.com

Despina M. Markogiannakis

Smiles of Chevy Chase 5454 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 835 Chevy Chase 301-652-0656 smilesofchevychase.com

John W. Martin III 4347 Nebraska Ave. NW Washington, D.C. 202-966-1900

Pamela R. Martin 6306 Democracy Blvd. Bethesda 301-530-2622

Jennifer B. Matelis

Drs. Ensor, Johnson & Lewis 11810 Parklawn Drive, Suite 101 Rockville 301-881-6170 ejldental.com

Robert Mazziotta

Bethesda Family Dental 5415 W. Cedar Lane, Suite 206-B Bethesda 301-530-2212 bethesdafamilydental.com

Matthew G. Moy

Dechter & Moy Dentistry

12900 Georgia Ave. Silver Spring 301-949-5400 dechtermoy.com

Adam Navabi

Bethesda Smiles 7700 Wisconsin Ave., Suite C

Bethesda 301-656-6800 bethesdasmiles.com

Anh Nguyen

Wheaton Dental Partners

2730 University Blvd., Suite 514 Wheaton 301-946-8444 wheatondentalpartners.com

Kim Nguyen

Wheaton Dental Partners 2730 University Blvd., Suite 514 Wheaton 301-946-8444 wheatondentalpartners.com

Aaron A. Nicholas

Endres Dental Care & Orthodontics 3905 National Drive, Suite 170

Burtonsville 301-989-0088 endresdentalcare.com

Jacob A. Nix Nix Dental 8607 2nd Ave., Suite 101 Silver Spring 301-588-3333 nixdental.com

Dennis S. Norkiewicz

Rockville Dental Arts 1403 Research Blvd., Suite A5 Rockville 301-424-2030 rockvilledentalarts.com

Maryam Norouzi 9045 Shady Grove Court Gaithersburg 301-990-0300

Bruce S. Nouri

Montgomery Family & Cosmetic Dentistry 15245 Shady Grove Road, Suite 420 Rockville 301-417-6957 healthyteethandsmile.com

DO YOU WISH YOUR PATIENTS KNEW?

“I’ve had a lot of traumatic dental work myself, due to sports activities. ... I’m able to empathize.”

Dmitry Nurminsky 8218 Wisconsin Ave., Suite P11 Bethesda 301-951-5244 dndentist.com

Fabiana Steren Offit Rockville Dental 9707 Key West Ave., Suite 140 Rockville 240-354-5445 rockvilledental.net

Dayo Ogunnaike Vive Dental Day Spa 4601 North Park Ave., Suite C7 Chevy Chase 301-664-9695 vivedentaldayspa.com

Yutaka Okamoto SmileWell 5230 Tuckerman Lane, Suite 105 North Bethesda 240-667-7705 smilewelldds.com

Catherine Palandjian

Bethesda Family Dentistry 10215 Fernwood Road, Suite 415 Bethesda 301-265-2400 bethesdafamilydentistry.com

Brian Park

Park Dental Office 8630 Fenton St., Suite 928 Silver Spring 301-587-2800 parkdentaloffice.com

Stephen Park Park Dental Office 8630 Fenton St., Suite 928 Silver Spring 301-587-2800 parkdentaloffice.com

Clementina M. Perez-West North Bethesda Dental Associates 11400 Rockville Pike, Suite 509 Rockville 301-881-7646 nbda.dentist

Jeffrey A. Perkins Perkins & George 13321 New Hampshire Ave., Suite 102 Silver Spring 301-989-3400 colesvilledentist.com

Michael S. Pollack 1401 Blair Mill Road, Suite 215 Silver Spring 301-587-1610 michaelpollackdds.com

Michael Pollowitz Washington Center for Cosmetic & Family Dentistry 4910 Massachusetts Ave. NW, Suite 204

Washington, D.C. 202-858-0498 amazingdentistry.com

Catherine D. Pulse 5028 Wisconsin Ave. NW, Suite 102 Washington, D.C. 202-363-6177 nwwashingtondentist.com

Ramy Radmanesh Radmanesh Dental 5650 Shields Drive Bethesda 301-493-6550 radmaneshdental.com

Antoinette Ramdath The Smile Atelier 10008 Colesville Road, Suite A Silver Spring 301-593-5211 thesmileatelier.com

Nima Raoufinia Silver Spring Cosmetic Dentistry 8726 Georgia Ave. Silver Spring 301-565-4555 silverspringcosmeticdentistry.com

Soheil Rashidchi Rockville Dental Care 50 W. Edmonston Drive, Suite 503 Rockville 301-545-0060 rockvilledentalcare.com

Venkat N. Reddy 6000 Executive Blvd., Suite 525 North Bethesda 301-530-4300 bethesdasmilecenter.com

Peter Rinaldi Rinaldi Dental Arts 5481 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 221 Chevy Chase 301-652-3355 rinaldidentalarts.com

Ronald Rosenberg Goldbaum & Rosenberg Family Dentistry 11921 Rockville Pike, Suite 101 Rockville 301-770-1555 golrosdds.com

Philippe Rouchon Rouchon Dental 3930 Knowles Ave., Suite 302 Kensington 240-669-4684 rouchondental.com

Marc N. Rubinstein Rubinstein Dentistry 2440 Research Blvd., Suite 120 Rockville 301-963-3333 rubinsteindentistry.com

Jay H. Samuels 11140 Rockville Pike, Suite 510 Rockville 301-881-4200 drjsamuels.com

Ali Sarkarzadeh

Congressional Dental Care 1750 Rockville Pike, Suite 10 Rockville 301-770-5400 congressionaldental.com

John Savukinas

John Savukinas DDS, FAGD 14812 Physicians Lane, Suite 262 Rockville 301-738-1155 johndds.net

David J. Schlactus

David J. Schlactus DMD 121 Congressional Lane, Suite 501 Rockville 301-881-9040 drschlactus.com

Adam T. Schneider

Schneider Family Dentistry 22 Montgomery Village Ave., Suite A

Gaithersburg 240-654-3555 schneiderdentists.com

Adam N. Sherman

Sherman Family Dentistry 15201 Shady Grove Road, Suite 101 Rockville 301-840-0600 dradamsherman.com

Jay Siddiqui

Radiant Dental Care 5454 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 1415 Chevy Chase 301-652-2222 radiant-dental.com

L. Daniella Perez Simon Dynamic Cosmetic Dentistry 11300 Rockville Pike, Suite 702 North Bethesda 301-770-2223 drdaniellaperezsimon.com

Paul N. Singh Promenade Dental Care 5225 Pooks Hill Road, Suite 4 Bethesda 301-530-7383 paulsinghdmd.com

John Slate

Slate Dental 3301 New Mexico Ave. NW, Suite 332 Washington, D.C. 202-686-5222 slatedentaldc.com

Michelle Snyder Fallsgrove Center for Dentistry 14955 Shady Grove Road, Suite 200 Rockville 301-610-9909 fallsgrovedentistry.com

Andrew J. Sorkin 1901 Research Blvd., Suite 200 Rockville 301-309-0707 andrewsorkindmd.com

Vadim L. Spivak

Executive Dental Arts 6251 Executive Blvd. Rockville 240-242-4737 executivedentalarts.com

Mark St. George 10128 Cedar Lane Kensington 301-530-2772 markstgeorgedds.com

Katie Staub

Schneider Family Dentistry 22 Montgomery Village Ave., Suite A Gaithersburg 240-654-3555 schneiderdentists.com

Chip R. Steel

Drs. Linda & Chip Steel 605 Olney Sandy Spring Road Sandy Spring 301-774-8555 smileking.com

Linda D. Steel

Drs. Linda & Chip Steel 605 Olney Sandy Spring Road Sandy Spring 301-774-8555 smileking.com

Dennis J. Stiles

Stiles Dentistry 333 Main St. Gaithersburg 301-947-6900 stilesdentistry.com

Christine K. Sullivan

Bethesda Family Dentistry 6000 Executive Blvd., Suite 505 North Bethesda

and

240-221-3602 bethesdafamilydentistry.com

Richard Y. Sun

Sun Dental Associates 9087 Shady Grove Court Gaithersburg 301-921-6338 sundentalcare.com

Marcus Tappan

Tappan Comprehensive Dentistry 8611 Second Ave. Silver Spring 301-565-8212 tappan-dentistry.com

Paymaan Christopher Tavakoli Fusion Dental 7425 Arlington Road Bethesda 301-652-2123 fdbethesda.com

Dorienne C. Taylor-Bishop Bishop & Bishop Dental 8757 Georgia Ave., Suite 810 Silver Spring 301-608-9270 bishopdental.com

Namita K. Thapar-Dua SENIOR Smile 20528 Boland Farm Road, Suite 215 Germantown 301-875-7477 ntcdental.com

Ted Thomas

White Oak Dental 11247-A Lockwood Drive Silver Spring 301-681-6306 whiteoakdentalllc.com

Helen Thomasian

Shady Grove Point Dental 15005 Shady Grove Road, Suite 230 Rockville 301-340-9550 shadygrovepointdental.net

Mellanie Thompson Silver Spring Dental Arts 12901 Tamarack Road Silver Spring 301-384-6776 silverspringdentalarts.com

Marie E. Tigani-Stiles Stiles Dentistry 333 Main St. Gaithersburg 301-947-6900 stilesdentistry.com

Robert B. Tilkin

North Bethesda Dental Associates 11400 Rockville Pike, Suite 509 Rockville

301-881-7646 nbda.dentist

Jennifer Tipograph

Natural Dentist Associates 5809 Nicholson Lane, T123 North Bethesda 301-770-2270 naturaldentistassociates.com

Lev Tomashevsky

Dr. Robert Kelly & Associates 220 Main St., Suite 100 Gaithersburg 301-948-0058 kellydds.com

Peter P. Tong

Rockville Smiles Family & Cosmetic Dentistry 20 Courthouse Square, Suite 105 Rockville 301-424-8888 rockvillesmiles.com

Vinh Trinh

Three Creek Dentistry 7236 Muncaster Mill Road Derwood 240-207-4077 threecreekdentistry.com

Mehr E. Tucker

Rockville Advanced Dentistry 2403 Research Blvd., Suite 202 Rockville 301-963-8900 rockvilleadvanceddentistry.com

Viviana P. Urban

StarBrite Dental 5930 Hubbard Drive Rockville 301-770-1070 StarBriteDentalRockville.com

Shakila B. Usman 108 Olde Towne Ave., Suite 8 Gaithersburg 301-519-8887 shakilausmandds.com

Stephen W. Varney

Capital Dental Bethesda 8218 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 317 Bethesda 301-654-1777 capitaldentaldds.com

Adam P. Vitelli

Vitelli Comprehensive Dentistry 19873 Century Blvd., Suite 230 Germantown 301-972-1400 vitellidentistry.com

Tamdan Vodinh

Utter Dental Care 23401 Frederick Road Clarksburg 240-261-4368 utterdentalcare.com

Pamela Vranis Vranis Dental 2 Wisconsin Circle, Floor 2L, Suite 220 Chevy Chase 301-771-5000 vranisdental.com

Ho Kai Wang

Woo Wang Dental 17 Firstfield Road, Suite 101 Gaithersburg 240-683-3833 woowangdental.com

Todd C. Wasserman

Fallsgrove Center for Dentistry 14955 Shady Grove Road, Suite 200 Rockville 301-610-9909 fallsgrovedentistry.com

Jess Weber

Kensington Family Dentistry 3720 Farragut Ave., Suite 101 Kensington 301-946-5600 kensingtonfamilydentistry.com

Treva Willis

Smile Design Studio of Bethesda 8201 Wisconsin Ave. Bethesda 301-907-8201 smiledesignstudioofbethesda.com

Edmond J. Woo

Woo Wang Dental 3704 Perry Ave. Kensington 301-933-1833 woowangdental.com

Kenneth Woo

Woo Wang Dental 3704 Perry Ave. Kensington 301-933-1833 woowangdental.com

Maria Wood

Smiles Elevated 5530 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 1535 Chevy Chase 301-913-0072 smileselevated.com

Jay Yi

Kensington & Columbia Dental Designs 10400 Connecticut Ave., Suite 506 Kensington 301-946-5464 jayyidds.com

Susanna Yoon

White Flint Family Dental 11125 Rockville Pike, Suite 205 Rockville 301-881-5233 whiteflintfamilydental.com

Annie S. Yu Avant Dentistry 5454 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 1035 Chevy Chase 240-743-4421 avantdentistry.com

ORAL AND MAXILLOFACIAL SURGERY

Jarred S. Abel

Bethesda Chevy Chase Oral Surgery 5530 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 930 Chevy Chase 301-656-9565 bccoralsurgery.com

Ralph W. Alman Jr. 11300 Rockville Pike, Suite 1011 Rockville 301-881-8803 dentalsurgerymd.com

I-Ling S. Chen

Affiliated Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons of Maryland 3401 Olandwood Court, Suite 104 Olney 301-774-6200 sfpcoms.com

Lisa S. Cohen

Maryland Oral Surgery Associates 1300 Spring St., Suite 350 Silver Spring 301-593-8077 mosa4os.com

William R. Dzyak 15130 Barnesville Road Boyds 301-916-8680 drdzyakomfs.com

Gary J. Funari

Affiliated Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons of Maryland 15200 Shady Grove Road, Suite 200 Rockville 301-990-8400 sfpcoms.com

Leonard J. Goldman 12510 Prosperity Drive, Suite 250 Silver Spring 301-622-2700 drlgoldman.com

Nicholas B. Hill

Chevy Chase Implant & Oral Surgery 5550 Friendship Blvd., Suite 250 Chevy Chase 301-652-8555 omsusa.com

Malini B. Iyer

Maryland Oral Surgery Associates 10401 Old Georgetown Road, Suite 206 Bethesda 301-984-9111 mosa4os.com

2024 | MOCO360.MEDIA

H. Ryan Kazemi

Kazemi Oral Surgery & Dental Implants

4825 Bethesda Ave., Suite 310 Bethesda 301-654-7070 facialart.com

Timothy C. Kunkle

Chevy Chase Implant & Oral Surgery 5550 Friendship Blvd., Suite 250 Chevy Chase 301-652-8555 omsusa.com

Leonard A. Merlo

Montgomery Oral & Facial Surgery 4701 Randolph Road, Suite G10 Rockville 301-468-0020 montgomeryoralsurgery.com

Jay S. Nokkeo

Integrative Oral & Facial Surgery

1 Bank St., Suite 240 Gaithersburg 301-926-4800 iofsurgery.com

Kristopher Paik

Integrative Oral & Facial Surgery 1 Bank St., Suite 240 Gaithersburg 301-926-4800 iofsurgery.com

Charlie Y. Park

Chevy Chase Implant & Oral Surgery

5550 Friendship Blvd., Suite 250 Chevy Chase 301-652-8555 omsusa.com

Neel Patel

Bethesda Chevy Chase Oral Surgery 5530 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 930 Chevy Chase 301-656-9565 bccoralsurgery.com

Kashif Poshni

Affiliated Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons of Maryland 3401 Olandwood Court, Suite 104 Olney 301-774-6200 sfpcoms.com

Brian T. Robinson

Maryland Oral Surgery Associates 14955 Shady Grove Road, Suite 330 Rockville 301-340-0101 mosa4os.com

Gregory C. Romanow

Greater Maryland Oral Surgery & Dental Implants 10313 Georgia Ave., Suite 102

Silver Spring 301-681-7500 gmoralsurgery.com

Surbhi Sehgal

Affiliated Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons of Maryland 15200 Shady Grove Road, Suite 200 Rockville 301-990-8400 sfpcoms.com

Mitchell A. Stark

Maryland Oral Surgery Associates 14955 Shady Grove Road, Suite 330 Rockville 301-340-0101 mosa4os.com

Niven T. Tien

DC Surgical Arts 4301 50th St. NW, Suite 200 Washington, D.C. 202-360-4032 dcsurgicalarts.com

Richard M. Williams

Georgetown and Maryland Oral Surgery 19531 Doctors Drive Germantown 301-540-8844 georgetownoralsurgery.com

Mathew Woodward

Germantown Oral & Facial Surgery Center 19717 Executive Park Circle Germantown 301-916-0486 germantownoralsurgery.com

Kenneth Wu

Germantown Oral & Facial Surgery Center 19717 Executive Park Circle Germantown 301-916-0486 germantownoralsurgery.com

ORTHODONTICS

Curtis L. Abigail Abigail Orthodontics 7700 Old Georgetown Road, Suite B Bethesda 301-907-2990 abigailorthodontics.com

Jill Bruno Dr. Jill Bruno Orthodontics 5454 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 1260 Chevy Chase 301-656-3310 brunosmiles.com

Robin Choi The Ortho Suite

5642 Shields Drive Bethesda 301-363-9026 theorthosuite.com

Kathryn J. Clark Bird Smiles Orthodontics 4110 River Road NW Washington, D.C. 202-686-2108 byrdsmiles.com

Lisa A. DeMarco Drs. DeMarco and Tilkin 11120 New Hampshire Ave., Suite 402 Silver Spring 301-593-6363 demarcotilkinortho.com

Frederick S. Fritz 15200 Shady Grove Road, Suite 201 Rockville 301-330-9550 fritzortho.com

Eduardo J. Gerlein Gerlein Orthodontics

5550 Friendship Blvd., Suite 320 Chevy Chase 301-951-4114 gerleinorthodontics.com

Madeleine Goodman Harmony Pediatric Dentistry & Orthodontics 4818 Del Ray Ave. Bethesda 301-664-4220 harmonybethesda.com

Gordon S. Groisser Village Orthodontics 555 Quince Orchard Road, Suite 230 Gaithersburg 301-515-4300 drgbraces.com

Linda A. Hallman FitBite Orthodontics 5530 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 1525 Chevy Chase 301-654-7910 fitbiteortho.com

WHAT DO YOU LIKE MOST ABOUT BEING AN ORTHODONTIST?

“When my patients look in the mirror, they love themselves and love their smiles, and that never grows old.”

Alan R. Heller

Heller Orthodontics

4350 East West Highway, Suite 120 Bethesda 301-654-5433 hellerorthodontics.com

Jean Hong

The Silver Spring Orthodontist 57 Randolph Road, Suite 101 Silver Spring 301-236-0600 thesilverspringorthodontist.com

Timothy Johnson

Drs. Ensor, Johnson & Lewis 11810 Parklawn Drive, Suite 101 Rockville 301-881-6170 ejldental.com

Edwin Lee

SMB Orthodontics

2403 Research Blvd., Suite 201 Rockville 301-977-4200 smilesmadebeautiful.com

Christopher G. Liang

Liang Orthodontics 10000 Falls Road, Suite 214 Potomac 301-983-3132 str8smile.com

Lara D. Minahan

Minahan Orthodontics 3423 Olney-Laytonsville Road, Suite 3A Olney 301-260-2030 minahanorthodontics.com

Chelsea M. Murphy

Friendship Heights Orthodontics 5301 Wisconsin Ave. NW, Suite 200 Washington, D.C. 202-883-4623 friendshipheightsortho.com

David Rad

RAD Orthodontics 7201 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 500

Bethesda 301-656-1600 radsmile.com

Mehdy Rad

RAD Orthodontics 10122 River Road, Suite 210 Potomac 301-299-3993 radsmile.com

Negaar Sagafi

Bethesda Orthodontics 4833 Bethesda Ave., Suite 202 Bethesda 301-656-0600 bethesdaorthodontics.com

Viney P. Saini

Viney P. Saini Orthodontics

23220 Brewers Tavern Way Clarksburg 301-540-0102 clarksburgortho.com

Andrew L. Schwartz

Capitol Orthodontics 14955 Shady Grove Road, Suite 200 Rockville 301-610-9909 capitolorthodontics.com

Stuart A. Scott

Scott Orthodontics 804 Pershing Drive, Suite 106 Silver Spring 301-589-8191 scottorthodontics.net

Debra Shin

Shin Orthodontics 4701 Randolph Road, Suite 108 Rockville 301-770-7770 shinorthodontics.com

Richard Shin

Shin Orthodontics 11325 Seven Locks Road, Suite 256 Potomac 301-770-7770 shinorthodontics.com

Dalia Shlash

Shlash Orthodontics 3412 N. High St. Olney 301-924-2405 shlashorthodontics.com

Sonia Talley

Bird Smiles Orthodontics 4110 River Road NW Washington, D.C. 202-686-2108 byrdsmiles.com

Nancy C. Tilkin

Drs. DeMarco and Tilkin 11120 New Hampshire Ave., Suite 402 Silver Spring 301-593-6363 demarcotilkinortho.com

Chris E. Tsintolas

Tsintolas Orthodontics 903 Russell Ave., Suite 101 Gaithersburg 301-948-7513 drtorthodontics.com

Robert Yu Yu Orthodontics 814 W. Diamond Ave., Suite 300 Gaithersburg 301-948-7660 dryuorthodontics.com

PEDIATRIC DENTISTRY

Melanie Acosta

Dr. Camps Pediatric Dental Center 12520 Prosperity Drive, Suite 300 Silver Spring 301-989-8994 funsmiles.com

Bana Ball

Shady Grove Pediatric Dentistry 15245 Shady Grove Road, Suite 260 Rockville 240-848-7074 shadygrovepediatricdentistry.com

Reza Beheshti

SmileLand Pediatric Dentistry 2730 University Blvd. W., Suite 1010 Silver Spring 240-752-8822 smilelandpd.com

Karen Benitez

Chevy Chase Pediatric Dentistry 8401 Connecticut Ave., Suite 650 Chevy Chase 301-272-1246 chevychasekids.dentist

Derek Blank

DC Pediatric Smiles 5640 Shields Drive Bethesda 301-363-9026 dcpediatricsmiles.com

Robert D. Camps

Dr. Camps Pediatric Dental Center 12520 Prosperity Drive, Suite 300 Silver Spring 301-989-8994 funsmiles.com

HOW DO YOU PUT YOUR SPECIAL-NEEDS PATIENTS AT EASE?

DR.

NAVEEN KWATRA, PEDIATRIC DENTISTRY

“We

actually just talk to the parents. They are with them all the time and know what things they love. ... The bottom line is putting them in a comfortable environment.”

COURTESY

Jessica Chorvinsky

Dr. Camps Pediatric Dental Center 12520 Prosperity Drive, Suite 300 Silver Spring 301-989-8994 funsmiles.com

Charlie O. Coulter

5225 Wisconsin Ave. NW, Suite 604 Washington, D.C. 202-915-4729 pediatricdentaldc.com

Liliana Cuervo

18538 Office Park Drive Montgomery Village 301-869-5437 montgomeryvillagekidsdentist.com

Jena Fields

Dr. Camps Pediatric Dental Center 12520 Prosperity Drive, Suite 300 Silver Spring 301-989-8994 funsmiles.com

Tiffany Gavin-Walker

Dr. Camps Pediatric Dental Center 12520 Prosperity Drive, Suite 300 Silver Spring 301-989-8994 funsmiles.com

Andrew I. Horng

Rockville Pediatric Dental 121 Congressional Lane, Suite 500 Rockville 301-881-0220 rockvillepediatricdental.com

Alan K. Kuwabara

5028 Wisconsin Ave. NW, Suite 200 Washington, D.C. 202-244-6111 drkuwabara.com

Naveen Kwatra

MVPsmiles 806 W. Diamond Ave., Suite 250 Gaithersburg 301-977-2200 mvpsmiles.com

Lauren Lewis

Drs. Ensor, Johnson & Lewis 11810 Parklawn Drive, Suite 101 Rockville 301-881-6170 ejldental.com

Thomas C. Orlando

Orlando Pediatric Dental Care 10401 Old Georgetown Road, Suite 403

Bethesda 301-581-1100 orlandopediatricdental.com

Ricardo A. Perez

Metropolitan Pediatric Dentistry 5530 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 1230 Chevy Chase 301-718-1012 drricardoperez.com

Roya Pilcher

Smile Valley Pediatric Dentistry 4910 Massachusetts Ave. NW, Suite 311 Washington, D.C. 202-237-2833 smilevalleypediatricdentistry.com

Tannaz Poursaeid Kids Smile 19735 Germantown Road, Suite 220 Germantown 301-972-4224 drpoursaeid.net

Jessica E. Rubin

Capital Kids Dentistry 4200 Wisconsin Ave. NW, Suite 240 Washington, D.C.

202-545-7200 capitalkidsdentistry.com

Elizabeth Shin

BCC Pediatric Dentistry 4825 Bethesda Ave., Suite 220 Bethesda 301-941-7374 bccpediatricdentistry.com

Heather Sholander

Harmony Pediatric Dentistry & Orthodontics 4818 Del Ray Ave. Bethesda 301-664-4220 harmonybethesda.com

Bob Testen 20500 Seneca Meadows Parkway, Suite 2300 Germantown 301-540-5757 drbobtesten.com

Claudia N. Williams-Conerly

Age One Pediatric Dentistry 10313 Georgia Ave., Suite 210 Silver Spring 301-565-3536 age1dentist.com

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PERIODONTICS

Duane Bennett II

Prestige Periodontics 10801 Lockwood Drive, Suite 240 Silver Spring 301-681-4812 prestige-perio.com

Gerard Boquel

903 Russell Ave., Suite 300 Gaithersburg 301-869-8884 drboquel.com

Elbert T. Chang

Rockville Perio 5830 Hubbard Drive Rockville 301-881-4867 rockvilleperio.com

Charles C. Chen

Zupnik, Chen, Yen & Wong

Periodontics and Implant Surgery 8218 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 401 Bethesda 301-656-0331 zcywperio.com

Khalid Choudhary

North Bethesda Periodontal Group 11921 Rockville Pike, Suite 407 Rockville 240-483-0775 northbethesdaperio.com

Roy Eskow

The Bethesda Dental Implant Center 5626 Shields Drive Bethesda 301-450-8577 bethesdadentalimplantcenter.com

Joan Howanitz

North Bethesda Periodontal Group 11921 Rockville Pike, Suite 407 Rockville 240-483-0775 northbethesdaperio.com

Lili A. Leon

11908 Darnestown Road, Suite F North Potomac 301-527-4343 leonperio.com

Madjid Matin

Matin Periodontics and Dental Implants

5530 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 1110 Chevy Chase 301-656-6424 chevychasedental.com

Eugenia Prokopets 5550 Friendship Blvd., Suite 330 Chevy Chase 301-941-0525 prokopetsperio.com

Israel Puterman

Implants DC

5454 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 1550

Chevy Chase 301-652-0939 implantsdc.com

David H. Schneider

Periodontal Partners

5454 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 1425

Chevy Chase 301-652-9295

Ashley Seals

Premium Periodontics 8455 Colesville Road, Suite 820 Silver Spring 301-375-0645 premiumperio.com

Tassos Sfondouris

Prestipino Dental Group 7830 Old Georgetown Road, Suite 260 Bethesda 301-652-2300 prestipinodentalgroup.com

Raymond B. van Gennip

Silver Spring Periodontics 8630 Fenton St., Suite 212 Silver Spring 301-565-8030 silverspringperiodontics.com

Cho Yi Wong

Zupnik, Chen, Yen & Wong

Periodontics and Implant Surgery 8218 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 401 Bethesda 301-656-0331 zcywperio.com

C. Alec Yen

Zupnik, Chen, Yen & Wong Periodontics and Implant Surgery 8218 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 401 Bethesda 301-656-0331 zcywperio.com

Raha Yousefi

The Bethesda Dental Implant Center 5626 Shields Drive Bethesda 301-450-8577 bethesdadentalimplantcenter.com

Edward A. Zupnik

Zupnik, Chen, Yen & Wong

Periodontics and Implant Surgery 8218 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 401 Bethesda 301-656-0331 zcywperio.com

PROSTHODONTICS

Lauren M. Bolding

Dental & TMJ Specialists of Greater DC

6720-B Rockledge Drive, Suite 125 Bethesda 301-493-9500 greaterdcspecialists.com

Monica P. Chandran

Olney Smiles Advanced Dentistry and Prosthodontics 17904 Georgia Ave., Suite 105-A Olney 240-454-5718 olneysmiles.com

Ngoc Q. Chu 6306 Democracy Blvd. Bethesda 301-530-2622

Carl F. Driscoll

Dental & TMJ Specialists of Greater DC 6720-B Rockledge Drive, Suite 125 Bethesda 301-493-9500 greaterdcspecialists.com

Kambiz “Kaz” Fotoohi Kaz Fotoohi DMD CAGS 5550 Friendship Blvd., Suite 230 Chevy Chase 301-652-5666 drkazfotoohi.com

Sarit Kaplan Dental & TMJ Specialists of Greater DC 6720-B Rockledge Drive, Suite 125 Bethesda 301-493-9500 greaterdcspecialists.com

Gerald M. Marlin

Elite Prosthetic Dentistry 4400 Jenifer St. NW, Suite 220 Washington, D.C. 202-244-2101 eliteprostheticdentistry.com

Vincent J. Prestipino Prestipino Dental Group 7830 Old Georgetown Road, Suite 260 Bethesda 301-652-2300 prestipinodentalgroup.com

Flavio H. Rasetto

Chevy Chase Cosmetic & Implant Dentistry 5454 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 1500 Chevy Chase 301-652-9717 cccid.net

Robert J. Sanker

Dr. Robert J. Sanker 12250 Rockville Pike, Suite 210 Rockville 301-468-5566 drsanker.com

Cord H. Schlobohm Schlobohm Dental 4830 Cordell Ave. Bethesda 301-656-8788 bestbethesdasmile.com

Dongjin Shin

Prostho Endo Dental Specialists 5904 Hubbard Drive North Bethesda 301-377-8306 prostho-dent.com

Michael T. Singer

Dental & TMJ Specialists of Greater DC 6720-B Rockledge Drive, Suite 125 Bethesda 301-493-9500 greaterdcspecialists.com

MICHAEL VENTURA

Ensor, Johnson & Lewis

DRS.

The multi-specialty practice of Drs. Ensor Johnson and Lewis delivers premier dental and orthodontic care in Rockville and beyond. With an unwavering commitment to excellence, their esteemed team, led by Drs. Shailja Ensor, Timothy Johnson, Lauren Lewis, Jennifer Matelis and Katie Staub, is dedicated to providing friendly and professional service.

11810 Parklawn Drive, Suite 101 Rockville, MD 20852

301-881-6170

EJLDental.com

Q What gives your team unexpected satisfaction?

A Because we’re a multi-specialty practice, we’re able to provide individualized and specialized dental and orthodontic care to every member of the family from infancy to our most distinguished seniors. Over the years, we have nurtured deep connections with multiple generations of patients, fostering genuine and lasting relationships. Nothing makes us more excited than being able to care for kids, parents and grandparents.

Q How do you all keep up with changes in dentistry?

A Our team constantly pursues ongoing education and skill enhancement. Armed with cutting edge technology and techniques, we are able to offer a comprehensive suite of dental and orthodontic services such as cosmetic enhancements, restorative procedures, digital imaging, laser soft tissue procedures and orthodontic alignment with Invisalign.

Q What do patients appreciate about your office atmosphere?

A We understand that a visit to the dentist can sometimes cause a fair amount of anxiety for some patients. We pride ourselves on being able to help patients overcome their dental fears. Every individual who walks through our door receives personal attention and care. By thoroughly addressing concerns with kindness and patience, we can achieve our goal of providing thoughtful and gentle care to everyone in a seamless manner.

Q What might be an unusual service that you provide?

A We understand that there’s no greater commodity than time in your busy lifestyle. Because we offer multiple services in the same location, we can combine dental and orthodontic appointments to save a bit of that precious time for you.

Maryland Oral Surgery Associates (MOSA) Bethesda

MALINI IYER, DMD, MD

MOSA’s award-winning doctors offer the full scope of oral and maxillofacial surgery and continually rank among the highest quality. With eight locations throughout Maryland, patients can schedule appointments at their convenience.

10401 Old Georgetown Road, Suite 206 Bethesda, MD 20814

Additional locations in Annapolis, College Park, Crofton, Frederick, Laurel, Rockville and Silver Spring 1-844-459-MOSA bethesda@mosa4os.com MOSA4OS.com

Q What brings you the most satisfaction in your work?

A My father taught me that it isn't work if you love what you do. The opportunity to use my skills and experience to help people every day is most rewarding; I can't imagine doing anything else. At MOSA Bethesda, I relish the entire process of meeting a patient, understanding their needs and concerns and addressing them. I enjoy getting to know my patients and connecting with them on a personal level, allowing me to provide a holistic experience and customized treatments that result in optimal outcomes.

Q What is an example of a time you helped a patient that you're particularly proud of?

A I remember taking care of a young child who was rushed to the emergency room with facial swelling due to an untreated dental abscess related to multiple carious teeth. Working closely with the pediatric anesthesia team to secure the airway, drain the abscess and treat the infection in an expedited manner made me truly appreciate the importance of the service we provide and the difference we can make in people's lives. I will never forget the look of gratitude in the parents’ eyes.

Q What is the one thing that your patients should know about you?

A Empathy was the driving force in my decision to become an oral and maxillofacial surgeon. I truly believe in treating every patient the same way I would treat one of my own family members.

Scott Orthodontics

STUART A. SCOTT, DDS

Dr. Scott earned his doctorate in dentistry from Howard University College of Dentistry, where he also completed his residency in orthodontics. He is a board-certified orthodontist and an Invisalign Platinum Provider. If outof-pocket expenses are a concern, Scott Orthodontics offers affordable, low-interest financing through CareCredit or in-house financing.

804 Pershing Drive, Suite 106 Silver Spring, MD 20910 301-589-8191

ScottOrthodontics.net

Q What makes Scott Orthodontics special and unique?

A As a long-time premiere provider in the Washington, D.C. area, our passionate and dedicated team provides personalized, state-of-the-art treatments for our family of patients. For more than 30 years, we have created a vast network of diverse, dynamic and unique smiles, and we are humbled to know that we have made our communities and the world a happier and healthier place.

Our goal is to achieve exceptional results and a more confident version of you. We have developed a high-touch practice that listens to our patients, designs a customized course of treatment with braces or Invisalign, and creates an experience that can deliver life-changing results for all ages. As an owner-operated practice, we prioritize individualized care and ensure the highest quality treatment, guaranteeing a superior experience. We care deeply about every patient and will do everything possible to achieve optimal results.

Q Why is orthodontics so important?

A Bite issues such as underbites, overbites, crossbites, gaps and crowded teeth affect more than just the appearance of your smile. They can also lead to unnecessary tooth wear and loss, difficulty maintaining oral hygiene and chewing problems. Not only is the oral cavity the gateway to your general health, but a healthy, attractive smile can boost self-esteem, social interactions and job opportunities. At Scott Orthodontics, we leverage cutting-edge diagnostics and treatments, decades of experience and ongoing education to enhance smiles, promoting better health and overall well-being. Recognize the value of self-care; schedule a complimentary consultation to get started on creating "the smile of your life."

Dr. Jill Bruno Orthodontics

DR. JILL BRUNO, DMD, MSED

Specializations, Affiliations & Awards

Customized Orthodontic treatment plans for all ages. Diamond+ Top one percent Invisalign Provider. Member, American Association of Orthodontists, American Dental Association, D.C. Dental Society; Top Dentist, Washingtonian magazine and Bethesda magazine; Director, Butterflies for Change nonprofit; Chair, the D.C. Dental Society Professional Standards Committee; Member, the D.C. Dental Society Public Policy Committee

5454 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 1260 Chevy Chase, MD 20815 301-656-3310 BrunoSmiles.com

We love our smiles and want you to love your smile, too!

From the ethereal quality of her office space to her personalized treatment plans, Dr. Bruno takes great pride in creating a calming, yet exciting orthodontic experience for all her patients.

Here’s what her team members, who are also her patients, say about their experiences:

Q What do you like about Dr. Bruno and her office?

A There’s a serene, bright quality to the space that is comforting and welcoming to patients of all ages. I love that there’s a space dedicated to adults. And Dr. Bruno was amazing with my son, who is very sensitive and had a bad cross bite.

—Liz (on the right)

Q Why did you choose Invisalign?

A My case was tricky because of my thin gums. I knew I needed an orthodontist who specializes in treating adults and who had experience treating conditions like mine. Dr. Bruno’s years of success with Invisalign made me confident in choosing an Invisalign treatment.

—Sylvia (on the left)

Q What did you want to improve in your smile?

A My front teeth used to stick out, making me uncomfortable with my smile. Dr. Bruno recommended Smile Express, which includes 20 Invisalign aligners with no attachments. Now, with my new straight teeth, I love to smile!

—Jackie (front)

Spring Valley Dental

"Our commitment to the families we treat goes way beyond dentistry. We take the time to get to know each individual, building personal connections with every patient—regardless of age. For 60 years, we have cared for multiple generations within a family—reflecting the trust they place in our care."

4900 Massachusetts Ave., Suite 200 Washington, D.C. 20016 202-244-5900 SpringValleyDentalDC.com

Q What makes Spring Valley Dental unique?

A We’re a boutique dental practice that combines cutting-edge technology with personalized care for children and adults. While our equipment is state-of-the-art, our office exudes the warmth of a close-knit neighborhood practice. We prioritize our patients' health and comfort above all else, taking the time to build personal connections and thoroughly educate patients about their conditions and treatment options. Our treatments meet the highest standards of care. And we’re committed to accessibility. We’re merely a phone call or text message away—including weekends—and every message is returned promptly.

Our services include general, restorative and cosmetic dentistry. We also offer specialized care for sleep apnea using custom oral appliances. Advanced technology, such as digital x-rays and 3-D

scanners, allows us to deliver the most precise, effective treatments available.

Q Tell us about your team.

A We’re a team of compassionate individuals dedicated to our craft and our community. Dr. Priya Grewal is passionate about access to top-notch dental care for everyone. She has advocated on Capitol Hill and volunteered at the Special Olympics and for Operation Smile missions in Vietnam. Dr. Steve Philips, a fellow in the Academy of General Dentistry, is in the top echelon of dentists nationwide. And Dr. Jacob Young’s skilled dentistry is matched only by his warmth and compassion. Together with our invaluable hygienists, assistants and administrative staff, we’re much more than a dental team—we're a family, dedicated to the highest quality of care and to making every visit feel like catching up with old friends.

DC Pediatric Smiles and The Ortho Suite

DEREK BLANK, DDS

ROMA GANDHI, DMD

ROBIN CHOI, DDS

5640 Shields Drive Bethesda, MD 20817

301-363-9026

DCPediatricSmiles.com TheOrthoSuite.com

Q What makes your pediatric dental practice unique?

A DC Pediatric Smiles was crafted with a vision to help kids love going to the dentist and look forward to their next visit. Our bright, coastal-inspired space is the perfect setting for a comfortable introduction to dentistry. Kids love to find their name on our chalkboard wall, pick out colorful sunglasses and begin their visit on a positive note.

Here, visiting the dentist is fun for kids of all ages. While providing a team approach to dental care, Dr. Derek Blank and Dr. Roma Gandhi channel an enthusiasm that puts children at ease and helps motivate them to establish healthy dental habits.

Our team provides positive, individualized solutions to each patient’s unique dental needs. We find it most rewarding when families who join our

practice recognize our attention to detail, clear communication and thoughtfulness throughout the new patient experience.

Q What is Ortho Suite?

A With the success of DC Pediatric Smiles, we wanted to create the same positive, relaxed experience to help our patients smoothly transition into the world of braces and Invisalign. With that purpose in mind, we recently added The Ortho Suite, a newly built space devoted to orthodontic care for kids and adults.

Our experienced orthodontist, Dr. Robin Choi, shares our passion for positive vibes and loves learning about each family’s goals. Parents particularly value Dr. Choi’s careful, conservative approach to dental care.

Prestige Periodontics

DUANE BENNETT, DDS MSD

ARJUN SAGGU, DMD, MMSC

KAREN JO, DDS, MS

The award-winning, board-certified doctors at Prestige Periodontics offer ethical, minimalistic treatments with maximum results and transparent communication. Their premier service is available to all, regardless of insurance status. And they collaborate closely with patients' general dentists to deliver comprehensive, expert care.

Locations in Rockville, Silver Spring and Bowie

Prestige-Perio.com

Q Why choose Prestige Periodontics?

A Dr. Bennett: Proudly serving our patients across three locations, we offer flexibility and convenience for both referring doctors and patients. As a fully digital practice, we use cutting-edge technology like 3D X-rays and lasers to provide conservative and effective treatments. We also prioritize clear communication, ensuring every new patient receives a comprehensive treatment plan outlining procedures and anticipated costs.

Dr. Saggu: We excel in personalized patient care, ensuring every individual feels heard, valued and empowered in their journey toward optimal oral health.

Dr. Jo: Our diverse backgrounds and experiences enable us to combine our expertise to deliver the best dental care tailored to each patient. We also treat our patients with the same kindness and commitment we would show our family members.

Q What is your educational background?

A Dr. Bennett: I earned my DDS degree from the University of Michigan and completed my post-doctoral training in Oral Biology, Periodontology and Implantology at Indiana University. Prior to living in D.C. I practiced in Seattle and taught at the University of Washington.

Dr. Saggu: After graduating from the University of Pennsylvania School of Dental Medicine, I completed three years of periodontics training at Harvard, serving as Chief Resident. While there, I also got my MMS in oral biology; I was a 2020 American Academy of Periodontology national clinical research finalist.

Dr. Jo: I received my DDS from the University of Maryland Baltimore School of Dentistry, followed by a general practice residency at UNC Chapel Hill and periodontal specialty training at UAB. I also completed a postbaccalaureate program in cancer research at the NIH.

Jason A. Cohen, DDS

In addition to a comprehensive dental hygiene program and oral cancer exams, patients come to Dr. Cohen’s practice for bonded fillings, porcelain crowns and veneers, teeth whitening and Invisalign clear braces.

5530 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 560 Chevy Chase, MD 20815 301-656-1201 drcohen@cosmeticdds.com CosmeticDDS.com

Q How would your patients describe you?

A Words and phrases we see about me and about the practice include knowledgeable, attentive, communicative, gentle, thorough and caring. Our favorite is when a patient writes “actually makes going to the dentist fun.”

Our practice mantra is “We Treat Your Family Like Family,” and we live by that philosophy every day. From the moment someone calls to schedule their first appointment, we start taking care of them as if they are a family member. This means ensuring they get the most efficient, comprehensive and outstanding personalized care.

From simple aesthetic bonding to complex implant dentistry, my goal is always to preserve, protect and enhance my patients’ long term dental health and beautiful smiles through the kind of care that meets their individual needs and desires.

Q How do you employ new technology to help your patients?

A Our modern office allows us to provide the safest, most relaxing dental experience using the latest tools and technology available. We use digital radiography, photography and scanning with computer-assisted technology that makes our process as comfortable and as accurate as possible. Additionally, my team and I are committed to continuing education, making sure we stay at the forefront of the latest developments in dentistry and make appropriate investments in equipment.

Q What is one thing your patients should know about you?

A I appreciate that modern dentistry combines art with science, and I truly embrace the creativity we can employ to assure that our patients get the most ideal aesthetic results from their time with us.

Elite Prosthetic Dentistry

GERALD M. MARLIN, DMD, MSD

Elite Prosthetic Dentistry delivers "Simply Radiant, Simply Natural" crowns, veneers, restorations and unmatched implant therapy. Dr. Marlin is a leading specialist in dental implants, cosmetic dentistry, sedation dentistry and restorative dentistry, consistently earning "Top Dentist" honors from Bethesda Magazine and Washingtonian.

4400 Jenifer St. NW, Suite 220 Washington, D.C. 20015

202-335-4929

concierge@EliteProstheticDentistry.com EliteProstheticDentistry.com

Q What is unique about your practice?

A We deliver a proven and highly successful treatment regimen in a caring environment, supported by an incredible team that averages 14 years with us. Working closely with our in-house lab technician, we use cutting-edge technology and expert craftsmanship to produce durable and beautiful dental implants, crowns and veneers that last more than 35 years, nearly four times the national average.

We provide comprehensive implant therapy—everything from extractions and bone grafting to surgical implant placement and final crown creation—all in one facility. With more than 3,700 implants and a 98 percent success rate, our results speak for themselves. Even after 20 years, our patients have minimal bone loss. For patient comfort, we offer oral and IV sedation for long procedures

and unique hygiene therapy through our Oral Health and Wellness Program.

Q How do you employ new technology to help your patients?

A We actively seek and adopt new technologies to enhance patient care. For example, we use cone beam and tooth scanning design software to create precise surgical guides for all our implant procedures, ensuring accurate implant placement.

Q What is one thing your patients should know about you?

A I take pride in the positive impact my expertise can have on patients' lives and am genuinely excited to problem-solve and find solutions for their cosmetic and implant needs. I appreciate our highly professional, dedicated team who work tirelessly within their specialties to optimize our results while maximizing patients' comfort.

Dental Aesthetic Arts

Dr. Zohra Darwish received her Doctor of Dental Surgery from the University of Maryland, where she also completed her Advanced Education in General Dentistry residency. She has been consistently recognized as a "Top Dentist" by Washingtonian and Bethesda Magazine and was named "Top Healthcare Professional" by DC Modern Luxury magazine.

3409 Wisconsin Ave., NW Washington, D.C. 20016

202-506-1976

DentalAestheticArts.com

Q What made you decide to become a dentist?

A I always knew I wanted to work in health care and be a mom one day. My love for art, harmony and aesthetics drew me to dentistry. This profession allows me to fulfill my creative interests while offering the flexibility to nurture and be present for my children.

Having my own dental practice enabled me to turn an extra room into a nursery for my babies, who are now 5 and 6 years old. My patients are like family to me. They are incredibly loyal and understanding, knowing how important it is for me to prioritize my role as a mother. There have been times when I've brought my baby to the office to care for a patient's dental emergency. The mutual respect, support and appreciation between my patients and me are invaluable.

Q What advice would you offer someone starting out in your profession?

A Always remember that you are treating a person—each with a unique story. Take the time to listen attentively to your patients and approach them with empathy and sincerity. Patients can sense genuine care; this is how you earn their trust.

Q What do you enjoy most about what you do?

A I love helping patients rediscover their smiles and transform their lives. It is incredibly rewarding to see patients who were once too self-conscious to smile openly do so with confidence. I also take pride in calming anxious patients and helping them overcome past traumatic dental experiences so that they feel comfortable in the dental chair.

Annie Yu, DDS, MAGD

AVANT DENTISTRY

5454 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 1035 Chevy Chase, MD 20815 240-332-1599

AvantDentistry.com

Q How would your patients describe you?

A Many patients describe me as super warm, knowledgeable, honest and caring. I take great pride in my extensive training, but my approach to treatment planning and patient care is rooted in education. My goal is not to convince anyone to undergo any particular treatment but to empower them with a clear understanding of their options, allowing them to make informed decisions and take control of their oral and overall health. For me, dentistry isn't just about aesthetics; it's about holistic well-being and ensuring a healthier future for my patients.

Q What is unique about your practice?

A The personalized attention. I never double-book, reserving each time slot for one patient. I also handle hygiene appointments, guaranteeing patients spend their entire visit with me, getting 100 percent of my focused attention.

Charlie O. Coulter

COULTER & CASPER PEDIATRIC DENTISTRY

5225 Wisconsin Ave. NW, Suite 604 Washington, D.C. 20015 202-966-0045

PediatricDentalDC.com

Q How would you describe your practice?

A It’s a happy place! We try to make dentistry fun and allow our patients and parents to relax. We provide a playful, kidfriendly environment to teach children oral hygiene habits in a positive way that produces lifelong benefits. Nervous little ones have nothing to fear—our gentle dentists know how to comfort even the most apprehensive patients.

Q What brings you satisfaction in your work?

A I enjoy helping children get over the fear of going to the dentist—and even get excited to come and see us! Our highly trained staff teach children how to brush and properly care for their teeth. Every patient is important to me, and I truly love what I do.

TONY J. LEWIS

Harmony Pediatric Dentistry & Orthodontics

HEATHER SHOLANDER, DMD, MS

MADELEINE GOODMAN, DMD

Dr. Goodman is an orthodontist and president-elect of the Middle Atlantic Society of Orthodontists. Dr. Heather is a pediatric dentist and a Diplomat of the American Board of Pediatric Dentistry. They have been practicing together in the area for over 10 years.

4818 Del Ray Ave. Bethesda, MD 20814

301-664-4220

smile@harmonybethesda.com HarmonyBethesda.com

Q What makes you stand out as dentists?

A Teamwork: Over the years we’ve developed a shared philosophy that treating the patient as a whole is more beneficial than the traditional specialty approach. It takes a team to help a child grow to his or her full potential. This includes not only a collaborative ortho-pediatric approach but also working with other specialists like speech therapists and pediatricians and most importantly, the child’s family. We strive to create an environment where we get to know each family individually and focus on their specific needs

Q What is unique about your practice?

A Supporting others: Harmony has partnered with a wonderful non-profit called City Blossoms that develops kidfocused green spaces that supply food, community and the opportunity to learn

through creativity and play. For every new patient, we support this cause by donating plants to help these gardens grow because we believe that health starts from the ground up!

Q How do you employ new technology to help your patients?

A Innovative techniques: We are both board-certified specialists who strive to create a standard of care by integrating technology, research and experience. It is a running joke in Dr. Goodman’s house that Facebook is where you go to look at teeth and Dr. Heather’s kids think research articles are a normal Saturday morning read. We have incorporated state-of-the-art technology into our practice such as a digital scanner (no more yucky impressions) and a dental laser which allows us to fill most cavities without anesthesia!

Kelly Labs, DMD, MSD

KELLY ORTHODONTICS

10401 Old Georgetown Road, Suite 301 Bethesda, MD 20814

301-530-7718

BethesdaOrthodontists.com

Q Why choose Kelly Orthodontics?

A We are dedicated to more than just creating beautiful smiles; we are invested in every aspect of our patients' orthodontic journey. From the ease of their appointments to their comfort with orthodontic appliances and ultimate satisfaction with their enhanced smile, we strive to make our office feel like home.

My team—all moms who understand the importance of comfort and compassion—fosters a caring, comfortable and fun environment for patients of all ages. Whether it's taking extra time to explain procedures, making them less daunting for our youngest patients, or providing private rooms for adults who prefer a more discreet experience, we tailor our approach to each individual.

We are also mindful not to overbook our schedule, ensuring every patient receives our undivided attention and the personalized care they deserve.

Fallsgrove Center for Dentistry

MICHELLE L. SNYDER, DDS; STACIA M. KRANTZ, DDS, MAGD; TODD C. WASSERMAN, DDS, FAGD

14955 Shady Grove Road, Suite 200 301-610-9099 info@fallsgrovedentistry.com FallsgroveDentistry.com

Q What is unique about your practice?

A Fallsgrove Center for Dentistry has proudly provided our community with high-quality, personalized dental care for more than 30 years—many of our staff and patients have been with us for decades! Our practice stands out for its convenient and comprehensive multidisciplinary team approach. We pride ourselves on our commitment to warm, attentive, individualized care and keeping current on cuttingedge treatment utilizing modern technologies. Striving to exceed patients' expectations at every turn, we are honored to be recognized as "Best Dentist" by Bethesda Magazine Visit Fallsgrove Center for Dentistry and discover the impact of personalized, distinctive dental care.

MICHAEL VENTURA

Taff & Levine DDS, PA

FROM RIGHT: BRAD LEVINE, DDS; HILARI DUNN, DDS; MARK TAFF, DDS; JANICE GROSSMAN, DDS; MAZEN SAAD, DDS

Our goal is to provide state-of-the-art, first-class dental care that’s affordable to everyone. No insurance? No problem. Join our VIP dental plan for a low monthly fee and receive a discount on all our services.

7811 Montrose Road, #300 Potomac, MD 20854 301-530-3717

TaffandLevine.com

Q What makes your dental practice unique?

A We’re a multigenerational practice committed to full-service dental care in a relaxing atmosphere, surrounded by compassionate doctors and staff. We’re honored to have been named a Top Dentistry Practice in Bethesda Magazine and to be recognized consistently in the community. And we’re proud to be celebrating our 49th anniversary this year! Our modern, state-of-the-art Potomac office has HD TVs in every treatment room, allowing us to show patients oral issues that need attention right there on the television screen. With our in-house 3D CAT scan equipment, we can diagnose a multitude of conditions more accurately. Our intraoral digital scanner can take photo impressions of teeth, eliminating the need for messy and uncomfortable impression trays. We can also offer

crowns in a day with our “one-visit Cereccrown” treatment, making additional visits a thing of the past. While our goal is to deliver first-class dentistry, we’re conservative in our approach, offering traditional treatments that may be just as effective when more expensive, technologically advanced treatments are unnecessary.

Q What brings you the most satisfaction in your work?

A We always strive to make the patient experience in our office like no other––relaxing, affordable and with great results. It’s a wonderful feeling to see a patient who thought that quality dentistry was out of their reach transform into a person with a vibrant, healthy smile. That, more than anything, brings us tremendous gratification.

Shin Orthodontics

11325 Seven Locks Road, Suite 256

Potomac, MD 20854

4701 Randolph Road, Suite 108

Rockville, MD 20852

301-770-7770

ShinOrthodontics.com

Q How would you describe your practice?

A We are a husband-and-wife orthodontic practice with offices in North Bethesda and Potomac. Before opening our doors in 2014, we had more than 15 years of experience in private practice and academia. Using the latest dental technology with a conservative approach, we strive to provide the best orthodontic care in a warm and welcoming environment, treating every patient like family.

We offer traditional, clear, and lingual braces and clear aligners, guiding and supporting patients of all ages through their entire treatment journey. Although we pride ourselves on offering the latest technology and products in our state-ofthe-art office, we are most proud of the compassionate care provided by our kind and nurturing team. We are grateful to have earned the trust of our patients and referring dentists.

Chevy Chase Pediatric Dentistry

KAREN BENITEZ, DDS, QOM-D, CBS

8401 Connecticut Ave., Suite 650

Chevy Chase, MD 20815

301-272-1246

ChevyChaseKids.dentist

Q What brings you the most satisfaction in your work?

A Helping children grow healthy and happy. Pediatric dentistry offers a remarkable chance to nurture children during their pivotal growth years, laying the foundation for bright smiles and healthy futures. I started this practice when my kids were little, and the journey of motherhood has profoundly shaped my holistic approach to dental care. My upbeat, caring, experienced team and I go far beyond routine check-ups and traditional dental services to offer comprehensive care that encompasses children's overall health and development, including sleep issues, facial growth and orofacial muscle dysfunctions affecting speech, chewing, swallowing and breathing.

I also love keeping up with the latest research and innovation. Taking every opportunity to learn from experts outside dentistry has only made me even better at what I do.

Eugenia Prokopets, DDS MSD

ESTHETIC PERIODONTAL & IMPLANT MICROSURGERY

Dr. Prokopets, originally from Poltava, Ukraine, earned her Doctor of Dental Surgery degree from Marquette University. She completed her General Practice Residency at New YorkPresbyterian Hospital, where she received training in general anesthesia, emergency medicine, and oral surgery. She then pursued a residency in Periodontics and Implant Dentistry, along with a Master's degree, at Louisiana State University.

5550 Friendship Blvd, Suite 330 Chevy Chase, MD 20815

301-941-0525 ProkopetsPerio.com

Q What brings you the most satisfaction in your work?

A I've always dreamed of continuing my family's legacy as a fourth-generation female dentist. I love the challenges it presents, and the satisfaction of knowing my work enhances patients' quality of life and boosts their confidence. I'm passionate about treating patients with high aesthetic demands and addressing issues related to gums, teeth, and bone, focusing on achieving the most natural outcomes. Building personal connections with my patients allows me to provide the best care. I strive to understand what brought each individual to this point and how I can help solve their problems.

Q What makes you different from other periodontists?

A As a board-certified expert in esthetic periodontal and implant microsurgery, I specialize in minimally invasive implant and gum grafting procedures, utilizing high magnification to ensure precision. Many patients seek my expertise after experiencing failed or poorly placed implants that have left them feeling hopeless about regaining their smiles. I offer them effective solutions, restoring both their confidence and their smiles.

Q How do you employ new technology to help your patients?

A We routinely use platelet-rich fibrin (L-PRF) to enhance recovery by utilizing the patient’s own growth factors to accelerate healing. Our Zeiss surgical microscope ensures optimal visibility and clarity. Additionally, we implement an intraoral scanner for precise digital planning of all implant cases, ensuring the highest accuracy and detail. Every patient also receives a 3D Cone Beam scan, enabling meticulous surgical planning and visualization of crucial anatomical structures.

David J. Schlactus, DMD

DR. DAVID J. SCHLACTUS & DR. STEVEN HOFFER

121 Congressional Ln., Suite 501 Rockville, MD 20852

301-881-9040 drschlactus@drschlactus.com DrSchlactus.com

Q What makes your practice unique?

A We prioritize overall health through a patient-centered, comprehensive approach, preserving natural tooth structure and minimizing invasive procedures using preventive measures whenever possible. My associate since 2022, Dr. Steven Hoffer, and I are committed to delivering smiles that are not only beautiful but also healthy. Recognizing the mouth as a gateway to overall health, we consider the bigger picture, addressing underlying issues to promote long-term well-being. Our wide range of services, including implants, veneers, sleep appliances, periodontics, endodontics and orthodontics, is complemented by collaboration with top specialists, ensuring patients receive the best, personalized treatments tailored to their needs. I deeply value the trust patients instill in me and am incredibly proud of the community practice I've built over 25 years, treating multiple generations of the same families.

ImplantsDC

ISRAEL PUTERMAN, DMD, MSD CHRISTOPHER BARTH, DMD, MS 5454 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 1550 Chevy Chase, MD 20815 info@implantsdc.com ImplantsDC.com

Q What is unique about your practice?

A We recognize that we’re lucky to practice in the Washington, D.C., area, where many offices have lots of technology and a high standard of care. While we’re happy to boast about our cutting-edge technology with 3D microscopes, digital scanners, 3D printer, Periolase and X-Guide, all designed to provide you with the greatest precision and minimal invasiveness, what truly separates us from other offices is our people. Drs. Israel Puterman and Christopher Barth, as well as our entire team, truly believe that treating you with the highest level of care in an easy and relaxing atmosphere is the greatest way that we can give back to our community. Read our online reviews to see what others say about us!

Modern Haus Dental

Dr. Kristy Lee, voted Top Dentist, Bethesda Magazine 2024, graduated from NYU College of Dentistry in 2011 and served five years in the U.S. Air Force. After completing her military service and an Advanced Education in General Dentistry Residency, she has been in private practice in the Washington, D.C. area.

5530 Wisconsin Ave., Suite 710 Chevy Chase, MD 20815 301-986-4814

hello@modernhausdental.com ModernHausDental.com

Q How would your patients describe you?

A Patients describe me as being comprehensive, compassionate and calming. They also say that I am always going the extra mile for them to give them the best and most efficient treatment outcome. Patients have said I am friendly, fun and have an esthetic eye. They say that I help ease their anxiety about going to the dentist and that their fear decreases with each visit.

Q What brings you the most satisfaction in your work?

A I constantly take continuing education courses to stay on top of the latest advancements, but the most satisfying part of being a dentist and practice-owner is the impact I have and the bonds I build with each patient. It’s great to treat the whole family from grandparents to grandchildren. Relationships with patients keep me going. Dentistry can be life changing by changing and restoring confidence to the person by changing their smile and restoring function and eliminating pain.

Q What services and treatments do you provide?

A Modern Haus Dental provides comprehensive general dentistry and emergency care. With the new digital technology, the iTero scanner, we can avoid doing impressions for bite assessment, crowns, nightguards and Invisalign. We offer porcelain crowns and veneers, in-office teeth whitening and treat gum disease. Our other procedures include implant restorations, root canals, extractions and—for people who clench and grind their teeth, Botox. We offer air polishing, a revolutionary Swiss technology that can remove stubborn staining. Many patients appreciate that we have nitrous sedation available.

Kraja + Sidhu Dental

EMONA KRAJA, DDS & RANDEEP SIDHU, DDS

12510 Prosperity Drive, Suite 220 Silver Spring, MD 20904

301-495-9222

info@ksdental.com KSDental.com

Q What makes your practice unique?

A What truly distinguishes our practice is our commitment to relationship building. Having worked for larger corporate dental practices, we have countered their impersonal nature by crafting a cozy space centered on delivering personalized, empathetic care that fosters lifelong dental health and wellbeing. We value quality over quantity, and our reliance on personal referrals is a testament to the trust we build with our patients. Our appointments are longer than most dentists allow to ensure our patients feel comfortable, heard and understood.

Q What do you enjoy most about what you do?

A Building meaningful connections with our patients brings immense joy and fulfillment to our work. We feel privileged to use our skills and knowledge to create a positive, lasting impact on the quality of their lives.

Jay Samuels, DDS, PA

COSMETIC IMPLANT FAMILY DENTISTRY

11140 Rockville Pike, Suite 510 North Bethesda, MD 20852

301-881-4200

DrJSamuels.com

Q What makes you different from other dentists?

A Not your average dentist, patients have trusted Dr. Samuels to create healthy, beautiful, functional smiles for more than 25 years. With a reputation for combining cutting-edge technology with a focus on personal care and attention to detail, we use digital x-rays, intraoral cameras, 3-D imaging and Dental AI to provide accurate diagnoses and customized treatment plans. This lets patients see their dental issues in detail and fully understand their treatment options. We also understand the oral-systemic connection and will help you see how oral health is critical to your overall well-being. Our approach is one-on-one, personalized and compassionate, all in a comfortable and relaxing environment. Recently recognized in Washingtonian's inaugural "Top Dentist" Hall of Fame, Dr. Samuels is also consistently named a "Top Dentist" by Bethesda Magazine

TONY J. LEWIS
MICHAEL VENTURA

Prostho Endo Dental Specialists

DR. DJ SHIN, PROSTHODONTIST

DR. ANA KIM, ENDODONTIST

Our office features cutting-edge technology, including digital scanners, virtual smile design, a 3D printer, Cone Beam CT, Zeiss Extaro 300 microscope and Gentlewave. These tools enable us to provide precise, minimally invasive, predictable treatment outcomes.

5904 Hubbard Drive North Bethesda, MD 20852

311 Maple Ave. W, Suite J Vienna, VA 22180

301-377-8306

hello@prostho-dent.com Prostho-Dent.com

Q What’s unique about your practice?

A What truly sets us apart is our team. We, along with our entire staff, are dedicated to treating patients with the highest level of care in a painless, stressfree and relaxing atmosphere.

While we address all dental needs, our specialists focus on restoring occlusion, full mouth rehabilitation, dentures, cosmetic dentistry, dental veneers, replacement of missing teeth and root canal procedures.

Q What is the most rewarding aspect of your work?

A Definitely making a life-changing impact, one smile at a time. We also feel fortunate to practice in the DMV, where dental colleagues maintain a high standard of care.

Q Outside of your practice, how do you contribute to your profession?

A We both give lectures in our local

community, as well as internationally, to share our expertise and advance the field of dentistry. It is rewarding to share and also to learn from others.

Q What is your professional/ educational background?

A Dr. Shin earned his BA with a major in economics at Brandeis University, then his DMD and MA at Boston University School of Dental Medicine. He did a prosthodontics residency at Columbia University School of Dental Medicine and was on the clinical faculty at Columbia University School of Dental Medicine.

With a full scholarship, Dr. Kim got her BSA at Carnegie Mellon University majoring in biological science and fine arts and minoring in biomedical engineering. She earned her DMD at the University of Pennsylvania School of Dental Medicine and then had an endodontic residency at Rutgers School of Dental Medicine.

Washington Oral & Facial Surgery

LEONARD A. MERLO, DMD FACS

Offices in Rockville, MD and Washington, D.C. 301-468-0029 | 202-223-3391 info@montgomeryoralsurgery.com MontgomeryOralSurgery.com

Q What makes you different from other dentists?

A My extensive training and expertise in oral surgery enables me to handle the most complex cases with precision and nuance. As a proud fellow of the American College of Surgeons, holding board certifications in oral and maxillofacial surgery and dental anesthesiology, I bring highly specialized care to my patients, particularly for intricate procedures requiring advanced surgical skills.

For nearly 30 years, my practice has provided patients with state-of-the-art surgical services—from wisdom tooth removal to complex bone grafting/jaw reconstruction. With “All-on-X,” we can completely rebuild your mouth and smile in one day. If you have multiple missing teeth, an unsatisfactory smile, or no teeth at all, we can remove and rebuild everything in the office in several hours under IV anesthesia.

John Savukinas, DDS, FAGD

14812 Physicians Lane, Suite 262 | Rockville, MD 20850 301-738-1155 | johnddsdentist@facebook.com johnddsdentist1@instagram.com JohnSavukinasDDS.com

Q Why is humanitarian work so important to you?

A I believe in giving back because it enhances global well-being. From 2008 to 2019, I provided dental services to underserved Thai communities through Smiles on Wings. Recently, I've volunteered with Global Dental Relief, bringing humanitarian efforts to Jenkins, Ky. (2021-23) and Antigua, Guatemala (April 2024).

Q What makes you different from other dentists?

A I've been practicing for more than 30 years, including 25 years as a former University of Maryland School of Dentistry faculty member. Named a top-rated practitioner by Washington Consumers' Checkbook three times, I've also consistently earned "Top Dentist" recognition from Washingtonian and Bethesda magazines. Our iTero digital practice uses advanced intraoral scanners, enhancing patient care and delivering predictable visual outcomes. Sharika, our PPO insurance expert, helps patients keep costs at a minimum. TONY J. LEWIS

Elizabeth Andie Shin, DDS

BCC PEDIATRIC DENTISTRY

4825 Bethesda Ave. Suite 220 Bethesda, MD 20814

301-941-7374

BCCPediatricDentistry.com

Q What made you decide to become a pediatric dentist?

A After several bad experiences, I grew up fearful of the dentist, which inspired me to change how kids feel about dental visits. Using the latest technology and focusing on their individual needs, we make every visit positive and memorable.

Q Can you describe the technology and environment at your practice?

A Our modern facility features the latest dental technology, including pain-free lasers and a portable digital X-ray for quick, safe imaging. Advanced materials ensure durable results, while our office design creates a soothing atmosphere and adventure-like experience for children.

Q What makes your approach to treating children unique?

A With over 20 years of experience, I've developed a unique way of engaging children — turning potential anxiety into a positive, enjoyable discovery —that sets our practice apart. For example, I helped Mia, a young patient who was previously too frightened to cooperate with other dentists. We transformed her fear into enthusiasm by sitting with her on the floor and introducing her to our tools playfully. By the end of her visit, she was not only smiling but had excitedly declared her ambition to become a "stuffed animal dentist."

Q How do you ensure that children leave your practice happier and healthier?

A We don't just care for smiles—we create them. Our commitment to excellence and innovation in pediatric dental care ensures every child leaves happier and healthier. But don't just take my word for it—our patients will tell you that we deliver the best care.

Srotalina Khanna, DDS

BETHESDA FAMILY SMILES

10401 Old Georgetown Road, Suite 310 Bethesda, MD 20814

301-530-0700

info@bethesdafamilysmiles.com BethesdaFamilySmiles.com

Q What is unique about your practice?

A At Bethesda Family Smiles, our patients are at the heart of everything we do. We are committed to creating personalized treatment plans tailored to each individual's needs, ensuring that every patient receives the highest level of care. Treating our patients like family, we take the time to understand their oral health needs and goals, leading to optimal outcomes and unparalleled satisfaction.

Q How would your patients describe you?

A My patients often tell me they appreciate my gentle, caring and compassionate demeanor. We pride ourselves on cultivating a warm office environment where even the most nervous patients find comfort. With years of experience, our team effortlessly combines empathy and expertise to help patients seamlessly navigate even the most complex dental challenges, delivering exceptional results.

North Bethesda

Periodontal Group

KHALID CHOUDHARY, DDS, MS & JOAN HOWANITZ, DDS, MS

11921 Rockville Pike, Suite 407

Rockville, MD 20852

240-483-0775 contact@northbethesdaperio.com NorthBethesdaPerio.com

Q Why choose North Bethesda Periodontal Group?

A We strongly believe in a team approach to care for our patients. Our husband-wife team of surgeons has been practicing together for 15+ years, working closely with referring restorative doctors and dental specialists to provide optimal treatment and results. Utilizing the latest technologies, including periodontal lasers and 3D imaging, we perform minimally invasive procedures whenever possible. Everything we do is guided by accuracy, safety, comfort and recovery. At North Bethesda Periodontal Group, we understand that visiting the periodontist’s office can be stressful. We do our best to foster a pleasant, relaxing environment to help patients stay calm. We are always respectful of every patient’s unique situation and like to include them in the process of customizing a treatment plan to fit their wants and needs.

MICHAEL VENTURA

134

Earthy pieces for communing with nature

138 Fab screened-in porches

EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO CREATE A BEAUTIFUL SPACE

A Rockville formal dining room becomes a glorious new pantry. PAGE 136

PHOTO BY RYAN SHAPIRO
BY GREG HADLEY

BOB GRAVES

301.538.9337 | o 301.975.9500

Bob.Graves@LNF.com

Bethesda Top Producer 2020-2024

Bob has been working in the Maryland real estate industry for 35 years. Having lived most of his life in Montgomery County, he has developed a deep understanding of the local real estate market and has helped numerous clients make life-changing moves. With a wealth of experience and knowledge, Bob has successfully helped buyers and sellers navigate the constantly changing market. Whether you are interested in a starter house or a luxury estate, he has the expertise to guide you through every step of the buying or selling process. He is committed to providing his clients with top-notch service and personal attention, ensuring that their unique needs and goals are met.

Bob is a Gold Team member of Long & Foster Real Estate, a liated with North Potomac O ce in Maryland. Najam, a long time Realtor®, is an experienced decorator, stager and creator of special deals for her clients.

BEN FAZELI

m 202.253.2269 | o 240.497.1700 Ben.Fazeli@LNF.com | www.BenFazeli.com

A graduate of a boarding school in Geneva, Switzerland and further earning a masters degree in international law at American University, Ben has a deep-rooted appreciation for many cultures and enjoys the diversity of Washington, D.C.‘s international market. Ben spent over 20 years in the banking industry, where he managed multiple departments and over 70 employees. This experience awarded him a discipline that he now brings to his real estate business for over 15 years at the award-winning One Bethesda o ce.

His trademark wit brings levity to even the most stressful contract negotiations. “In any business, you need to be passionate, a great listener, and always maintain your sense of humor.” His numerous satis ed clients can attest to his exceptional service as noted below.

“Ben understood our needs. His knowledge of the market, grasp of property values, and what constitutes a good investment have always been spot on. His relaxed demeanor makes the entire real estate process fun, yet his professional integrity never waivers. His expertise in the eld is commendable, his patience is outstanding, and his honesty is reassuring.”

Realtor®

• Over 12+ years in Real Estate

• Licensed in Maryland and Ohio

• Speaks: Urdu, Punjabi, Hindi, English

• Specializes in interior design and nding economical deal for clients

301.537.3328

Najam.Chaudhry@LNF.com

AWARDS AND HONORS

Over $157 Million Sold & Settled, 2023 • Top Producers, Long & Foster One Bethesda, 2023 • Washingtonian Top Producer Awards 2023 • Real Trends America’s Best Real Estate Professionals 2023 • Top Vote Getter, Best of Bethesda Real Estate Team, 2023 • Best Real Estate Teams in Maryland Realtrends.com 2023 • Donated More Than $158,500 to Local Charities, Pay it Forward Program, 2017-2023

Front Row: Gail Gordon, Julia Fortin, Wendy Banner, Michelle Teichberg, Ilene Gordon Back Row: Ashley Vonada, Pat Karta, Emily Moritt, Mireille Pioppo, Jody Aucamp
CUSTOM PRIVATE OASIS

3

2 1

DOWN TO EARTH

Outfit your courtyard, patio or porch with natural (or nature-inspired) materials for easy outdoor living this summer

1 Floor Decor An outdoor rug that looks like jute, but even easier to maintain, is good thing. With textures that resemble natural fibers, this handwoven polyester piece is durable and UV-resistant. The Mischa indoor/outdoor rug comes in green, blue and neutral (shown) and six sizes. $68 to $998 at Anthropologie, 4801 Bethesda Ave., Bethesda; 240-345-9413; anthropologie.com

2 Stow It These braided containers look like traditional coiled rope baskets and have a nautical vibe. The Courtyard bins are constructed of fade- and stain-resistant polypropylene, which won’t absorb moisture and can be hosed off to clean. Choose from white, taupe, charcoal or navy in three sizes. $59, $89 and $119 at Room & Board, 7236 Woodmont Ave., Bethesda; 866-407-6252; roomandboard.com

3 Garden Glow Add some ambience to your next alfresco fete without having to search for an electrical outlet. These natural rattan solar LED floor lanterns charge in the sunshine so they can light up the night. They’re available in round and tapered shapes and can rest on the ground or hang on a hook. $39.99 (round) and $29.99 (tapered) at World Market, 12266 Rockville Pike, Rockville; 301-816-2480; worldmarket.com

4 Lotsa Pots The Tula collection of textured planters adds rustic elegance to outdoor living spaces. Each pot is handmade of terra cotta with a smooth glazed finish and has an opening for drainage. The small (7¼ inches high), medium (10¼ inches high) and large vessels (12¼ inches high) are sold separately. $49.50, $179 and $269 at Pottery Barn, 4750 Bethesda Ave., Bethesda; 301-654-1598; potterybarn.com

5 Rock Steady A sculptural coffee table that looks like a massive river rock is bound to be a conversation piece, as well as a place to perch your lemonade. Crafted of smooth rounded cement, it has mold impressions, water spots and pinholes for organic appeal. The Pebble concrete coffee table comes in white or charcoal and measures 59 inches wide. $1,099 at Crate & Barrel, 4820 Massachusetts Ave. NW, Washington, D.C.; 202-364-6100; crateandbarrel.com

6 Artisanal Apps Display small bites in style on this eye-catching petrified wood charcuterie board at your next outdoor party. Cut and polished by hand, each serving piece is distinctive, measuring approximately 13¾ inches by 10½ inches. $79.50 at West Elm, 951 Rose Ave. (Pike & Rose), North Bethesda; 301-230-7630; westelm.com

COURTESY PHOTOS

One Pretty Pantry

SHOSHANNA SHAPIRO, OWNER OF FREDERICK, MARYLANDBASED LUXURY INTERIOR DESIGN STUDIO SHO AND CO., transformed a formal dining room in Rockville into a multifunctional pantry because, she says, client Beth Higgins “loves to feed the world.” Beth and her husband, Tim, have four kids— two in their teens, two in their early 20s—and they’d been using the dining room as a catchall for shelf-stable goods for school snacks and lunches. The kitchen, slightly wider than a galley but not large enough for an island, was out of the question for food prep and storage, so Shapiro suggested putting the dining room to better use.

“I call it a pantry room ,” Shapiro says of the redesigned space that was completed in December. The room has hit all the right notes for Beth. “I love the cohesiveness from the kitchen to the pantry,” she says. “It helps keep everything neat and organized for a busy family.”

Shapiro took into consideration the Higgins’ desire for a traditional-meets-modern look. The room feels intentional and timeless but with up-to-date touches. Because Beth likes to organize and display her pretty jars, Shapiro tapped Brass Hardware, an online business, to build an open-shelving structure, and Frederick-based Hoth Design to craft the whiteoak shelves. Those have an oil-based stain and finish from

A Rockville dining room undergoes a functionally chic makeover BY

Rubio Monocoat that also was used on the kitchen’s other white oak elements to give the wood a raw feel.

The wall behind the shelving features nickel-gap siding. A fresh layer of Benjamin Moore’s Chantilly Lace (OC-65), a silky shade of classic white, coats the walls and cabinets.

The clean design and neutral color scheme allow The Tile Shop’s checkerboard flooring to shine.

Arabescato Vagli Extra marble tops the counters and island. To make the island feel like a heritage piece, Hoth Design made the legs from reclaimed wood. Hardware on the island and throughout the pantry room were sourced for visual interest from various collections at RH and Rejuvenation.

The pantry room is separated into zones, including lunchmaking and baking, for functionality. There’s ample storage— including side-by-side countertop appliance garages—for hiding things, such as the juicer. A Sub-Zero mini fridge holds water and refreshments, and a bottle-filling station in the wall is a clever addition: The kids can top off their drinks on their way to sports and other activities. (The family eats at a large table just outside the kitchen area.)

As a final touch, Hoth Design custom built a pair of glasspaned arched wooden doors to close off the kitchen from the pantry room, offering a peek into where the magic happens.

VJ Derbarghamian REALTOR®, SRES®, SFR®

For VJ Derbarghamian, every real estate journey is like a blank canvas. His job? To fill each one with possibilities that help his clients find their way home. With over a decade of industry experience, VJ has earned his reputation as a dynamic, insightful agent on the DMV scene.

Fusing his vast financial background with an enduring eye for design, he arms his clients with a balanced knowledge base that ensures they will always be one step ahead. His penchant for balance extends to his work as Principal of a design-build company, a role which magnifies his ability to identify quality spaces for his buyers. Whether it’s uncovering the ideal lot for a new project or reimagining an existing home to match your discerning needs, VJ is the strategic visionary you want on your side. Since he knows what buyers want, he also knows which renovations, improvements, and staging schemes will yield the greatest ROI when it’s time to sell.

PHOTO BY GREG HADLEY
A roomy screened porch serves as a lounge area for the Rissmiller family of Chevy Chase.

alfresco gets AMAZING

Today’s screened porches are fully equipped for multiseason use

After finding refuge on their elevated rear deck in Chevy Chase during the COVID-19 lockdowns, Meghan and Scott Rissmiller decided to maximize their main outdoor living area. During the renovation, they paid attention to every detail, from the blue cathedral ceiling to the flooring of the storage space underneath. In the process, they became part of a post-pandemic trend of homeowners splurging on screened porches designed to fit their needs perfectly.

“It gives me joy on a day-to-day basis,” Meghan says of the new porch, which was completed last fall.

The Rissmillers bought their house in 2020, and living with the original deck for a few years clarified their thinking about how they wanted the porch to function. “The benefit of waiting to replace the deck was that we found we were not having full meals out there,” Meghan says. “It was too far from the kitchen.”

New furniture, including a sofa suitable for napping, was among the Rissmillers’ upgrades. Below: The Rissmillers made the most of the space under the deck, turning it into a storage area.

So they planned the porch as an unheated lounge area. Washington, D.C.-based designer Kate Ballou of Hendrick Interiors helped the Rissmillers select proportional furniture for the space: a coffee table, two side tables, a lounge chair, an accent chair, a two-seater sofa, and a three-seater sofa large enough for Scott to stretch out and nap on. The teak furniture has weatherready Sunbrella upholstery.

The cathedral ceiling is painted a haint blue, which Ballou says is often used for porch ceilings in the Southeast—a Gullah culture tradition meant to ward off evil spirits by mimicking the appearance of sky or water.

Size-wise, the Rissmillers hoped to strike the right balance with the porch. It was

important to have a backyard play space for their 4- and 6-year-old daughters. “We wanted to make the porch big enough to function well but not take too much of the yard,” Scott says.

David Merrick, senior designer and founder of Merrick Design and Build of Kensington, removed the 150-square-foot deck and built a 236-square-foot porch (about 14 by 16 feet) in its place. “Decks and porches are structurally very different,” Merrick says. “It is important to have an engineer” design the support system when building a porch rather than reuse the post-and-beam deck structure.

Merrick leveled the yard to accommodate the porch, the spacious lattice-enclosed storage area below it, and an adjacent patio.

A sliding barn door offers egress with minimal footprint.

compares to what’s next.

The Banks family of Rockville went for a lodge vibe when they turned their deck into a screened porch.

With water-absorbent compacted stone dust flooring and a ceiling that ranges from 6 to 7 feet high, the storage space is a repository for bikes, a lawn mower and backyard toys. The porch stairway nestles against the house. A small landing for the grill at the side of the house was already there, but now has new finishes to match the porch. Most important: It’s just outside the kitchen, where the grill is handy.

Merrick used hardy materials for the porch, including Azek polymer railings, wood-look composite flooring, and PVC

ceiling and exterior components. Large screened areas all but erase the visual barrier between porch and outdoors. For the railings, he chose black vertical balusters that wouldn’t block outside views and paired them with white handrails. “The screen system meets safety requirements,” he says, but with an above-ground porch, the more visible white railings provide “a feeling of protection from falling.”

Merrick is especially proud of two features of the porch. One is the 6-foot-wide screened barn door he built that smoothly

glides open at the top of the stairs. Another is the cove lighting that rings the room and provides steady illumination without the strobe effect that can occur when fan blades pass in front of light sources.

YEARS AGO, JEFF BANKS BUILT AN UNCOVERED OCTAGONAL DECK AND ADJACENT STEP-DOWN rectangular deck onto the house he lives in with his wife, Barbara, in the Brooke Manor Estates neighborhood of Rockville. Problem was, “we seldom used it because of the bugs,” he says.

To enjoy views of the woods and pond out back, “my wife really wanted a screened porch,” Jeff says. In 2021, Case Architects & Remodelers of Bethesda replaced the octagonal deck with a 400-square-foot screened porch and upgraded the 200-square-foot rectangular deck.

Zahra Keihani, a Case designer, planned the structure. Like the Rissmillers, the Bankses chose a cathedral ceiling, but instead of an airy paint color, they opted for a stained beadboard ceiling with exposed rafters that “makes the room feel warm, like a lodge,” Barbara says.

Another lodgelike detail: a fireplace that the Bankses say was a must have. Keihani made a fireplace wall the focal point. The stone-wrapped wall at the far end of the room houses both the gas fireplace and the television. (Whether to watch sports or Jeopardy!, Jeff says they likely wouldn’t have used the porch much without a TV.) Flanked by large screened areas and transom windows, the wall stretches to the peak of the cathedral ceiling.

“With the fireplace,” Jeff says, “we can use the room almost all year. It radiates quite a bit of heat.” Extending usability even further is a Sunspace window system featuring four transparent UV-protected vinyl glazing units that slide up to protect openings and collapse into horizontal rails when they aren’t needed.

The rectangular deck, now composed of smooth, weather-resistant Trex composite planks instead of pressure-treated wood,

was raised to be flush with the porch. The porch flooring is matching Trex. A surrounding band of darker strips lends a finished look. The black metal rails also are Trex. Crisp white posts and beams are wrapped in PVC for durability.

Life at the house has become pretty porch-centric. It’s attached to the kitchen, so “we eat lunch out there most days,” Barbara says. “Lots of times we’ll leave the door open so the dog can go in and out. It’s truly an extension of the house.”

IN CHEVY CHASE, LAUREN ARONSON AND ROB HENDIN ADDED A RAISED SCREENED porch at the back of their house in May 2022, with an unenclosed outdoor living space below. When they built the house

A spiral staircase (left) takes up less space than its predecessor and links the screened porch (opposite) to an open living area (below) at the Chevy Chase home of Lauren Aronson and Rob Hendin.

almost 100 square feet larger than what was there before.

Screens fill three sides of the porch for virtually uninterrupted views. Secured in a framework attached to the columns, the screens can be removed for repair if needed. Ceiling fans help cool the space.

in 2016 they considered a porch but opted for a deck. They regretted it. The deck “was not serving our family,” Hendin says. Bugs, hot sun and exposure to bad weather added up, and “we didn’t use the deck much at all.” Aronson would sit beneath the deck, but that space was confined by a large stairway.

The Levine Group Architects & Builders of Silver Spring built the new twostory structure, and Cindy McClure of Grossmueller’s Design of Washington, D.C., developed the design. Replacing the bulky switchback stairs with a wide spiral metal staircase made a big difference, adding space and light above and below. The 307-square-foot porch and 280-square-foot area underneath are each

A gable roof provides volume over the seating area in half of the new porch. The other half is a dining area; it has a shed roof with a flat ceiling and skylights near the family room to bring sunlight indoors.

With an eye for elegance as well as durability, McClure chose white beaded Azek ceiling panels, along with white posts, columns and door trim boasting matching details. The Wolf flooring is silver teak-look PVC. Porch features include integrated speakers, recessed ceiling lights, and outlets for more intimate lamp lighting. Slim heating elements by Innova tuck into headers above the screens.

“The lower level [under the porch] feels like an outdoor living room now,” McClure says. It’s unscreened and unheated, but has ceiling fans for air flow and to repel bugs. The stained wood ceiling, recessed

lights, white trim and stamped brick pattern on the concrete wall complete the roomlike area. A Trex under-deck drainage system waterproofs the space.

Aronson enjoys that open-air retreat more than ever. And the porch has been a life-changer for the whole family. “Before, we ate on the deck one or two times a year,” Hendin says. “Now we have dinner on the porch from April through November. ... We can leave the door open to bring in fresh air. The porch lifts the whole house.”

Writer Wendy A. Jordan lives in Upper Northwest D.C. The author of 12 books, she has written about home remodeling and design for decades.

Nothing compares to expertise in action.

With over 50 years of combined expertise in luxury real estate, we have established ourselves as a trusted leader in the industry. Our primary focus is always on our clients, ensuring that their needs and interests are our top priority. We pride ourselves on providing unparalleled service and expertise, striving to always exceed expectations and deliver exceptional results for our clients. When you choose us as your real estate partner, you can trust that you are in capable hands with professionals who are dedicated to representing your best interests at the highest level.

The Burr Group

With unparalleled market expertise and a commitment to rock-solid representation, our real estate team is dedicated to earning your trust and exceeding your expectations. Whether you’re buying or selling, we provide insightful guidance and steadfast support at every step of your real estate journey. Call Corey Burr for a confidential discussion about your real estate plan.

HOME SALES

A peek at one of the area’s most expensive recently sold houses

SALE PRICE:

$5.88 million

LIST PRICE: $5.88 MILLION

Address: 7428 Hampden Lane, Bethesda 20814

Days on Market: 0

Listing Agency: None listed

Bedrooms: 7

Full/Half Baths: 7/2

SALE PRICE:

$5.3 million

LIST PRICE: $5.5 MILLION

Address: 3024 44th St. NW, Washington, D.C. 20016

Days on Market: 48

Listing Agency: Washington Fine Properties

Bedrooms: 6

Full/Half Baths: 5/1

SALE PRICE:

$4.53 million

LIST PRICE: $4.25 MILLION

Address: 3512 Rittenhouse St. NW, Washington, D.C. 20015

Days on Market: 7

Listing Agency: McEnearney Associates

Bedrooms: 7

Full/Half Baths: 4/2

SALE PRICE: $5.69 million

LIST PRICE: $6 MILLION

Address: 9837 Avenel Farm Drive, Potomac 20854

Days on Market: 9

Listing Agency: Washington Fine Properties

Bedrooms: 6

Full/Half Baths: 6/3

SALE PRICE: $3.92 million

LIST PRICE: $4 MILLION

Address: 3326 Quesada St. NW, Washington, D.C. 20015

Days on Market: 204

Listing Agency: Compass Bedrooms: 7

Full/Half Baths: 7/2

SALE PRICE: $3.9 million

LIST PRICE: $3.65 MILLION

Address: 5603 Surrey St., Chevy Chase 20815

Days on Market: 5

Listing Agency: TTR Sotheby’s International Realty

Bedrooms: 5

Full/Half Baths: 5/1

SALE PRICE: $3.5 million

LIST PRICE: $3.8 MILLION

Address: 11622 Highland Farm Road, Potomac 20854

Days on Market: 66

Listing Agency: Washington Fine Properties

Bedrooms: 6

Full/Half Baths: 5/4

SALE PRICE: $3.49 million

LIST PRICE: $3.6 MILLION

Address: 7010 Exfair Road, Bethesda 20814

Days on Market: 132

Listing Agency: Long & Foster Real Estate Bedrooms: 6

Full/Half Baths: 5/1

SALE PRICE: $3.3 million

LIST PRICE: $2.5 MILLION

Address: 6208 Highland Drive, Chevy Chase 20815

Days on Market: 4

Listing Agency: Long & Foster Real Estate

Bedrooms: 5

Full/Half Baths: 4/0

SALE PRICE: $3.23 million

LIST PRICE: $3.13 MILLION

Address: 30 Grafton St., Chevy Chase 20815 Days on Market: 8

Listing Agency: Compass Bedrooms: 5

Full/Half Baths: 5/1

SALE PRICE: $3.21 million

LIST PRICE: $3.2 MILLION

Address: 7112 Amy Lane, Bethesda 20817

Days on Market: 32

Listing Agency: RLAH @properties Bedrooms: 6

Full/Half Baths: 6/2

SALE PRICE: $3 million

LIST PRICE: $3 MILLION

Address: 9200 Beech Hill Drive, Bethesda 20817

Days on Market: 10

Listing Agency: TTR Sotheby’s International Realty

Bedrooms: 7

Full/Half Baths: 5/3

SALE PRICE:

$2.95 million

LIST PRICE: $2.95 MILLION

Address: 5206 Elm St., Bethesda 20814

Days on Market: 0

Listing Agency: None listed Bedrooms: 7

Full/Half Baths: 6/1

SALE PRICE:

$2.9 million

LIST PRICE: $3.1 MILLION

Address: 5304 Dorsett Place NW, Washington, D.C. 20016

Days on Market: 60

Listing Agency: Redfin Bedrooms: 5

Full/Half Baths: 5/1

SALE PRICE:

$2.6 million

LIST PRICE: $2.7 MILLION

Address: 7705 Whittier Blvd., Bethesda 20817

Days on Market: 64

Listing Agency: TTR Sotheby’s International Realty Bedrooms: 6

Full/Half Baths: 6/1

SALE PRICE:

$2.6 million

LIST PRICE: $2.6 MILLION

Address: 3900 Ingomar St. NW, Washington, D.C. 20015

Days on Market: 9

Listing Agency: Washington Fine Properties Bedrooms: 7

Full/Half Baths: 4/1

SALE PRICE:

$2.57 million

LIST PRICE: $2.55 MILLION

Address: 5516 McKinley St., Bethesda 20817 Days on Market: 0

Listing Agency: TTR Sotheby’s International Realty Bedrooms: 6

Full/Half Baths: 5/1

SALE PRICE: $2.54 million

LIST PRICE: $2.55 MILLION

Address: 8911 Ewing Drive, Bethesda 20817 Days on Market: 26

Listing Agency: Compass Bedrooms: 6

Full/Half Baths: 5/1

Building a Strong Foundation: Legal Considerations for Health Care Practices

Building and growing a successful health care practice requires more than just medical expertise. It demands careful attention to legal matters from the outset to ensure long-term success and protection. Many physicians overlook the importance of developing essential legal agreements, which can lead to complications down the line. Here are key considerations for starting and expanding a health care practice:

• Choosing the right business entity is critical. Structuring your practice with the appropriate legal entity—whether a professional corporation, Limited Liability Company (LLC), or Professional Limited Liability Company (PLLC) provides flexibility in ownership and management while offering liability protection. However, members remain liable for their professional actions.

• Purchase Agreements/Lease Agreements. Acquiring medical space involves careful evaluation of factors such as finances, growth potential, and lease terms. Negotiating lease agreements requires attention to provisions that can significantly impact your practice. Frequently, common issues arise from provisions that are not included in the lease agreement but should be.

• Employment Agreements for Health Care Professionals. If you are hiring additional health care professionals and staff, the employment agreements should cover compensation, termination rights, duties and responsibilities, and restrictive covenants including confidentiality, non-solicitation and possibly non-competition clauses.

• Partnership Agreement/Stockholders’ Agreement/Operating Agreement. Bringing on a partner requires a detailed agreement covering governance, transfer of ownership interests, decision making, management, exit strategies, and dispute resolution. Tax considerations also play a crucial role in such arrangements.

• Employment Laws. Hiring employees and staff necessitates compliance with all applicable federal, state, and local employment and tax laws. Remaining aware of these regulations is essential for a smooth operation.

These legal documents serve as a blueprint for handling disputes among owners and addressing legal matters with employees and patients. Investing in them upfront can save time and expenses in the long run, ensuring the sustainability of the practice.

Andrew Schwartz is a business, employment and real estate law attorney. He focuses his practice on commercial transactions, employment law, real estate, and successful business growth, management, operation, and succession. 301-340-2020 www.steinsperling.com

ZIP CODE

REAL ESTATE TRENDS

20015

20832 (Olney)

20855

20016

20850 (Rockville)

20877

20814

20851 (Rockville)

20878

20815 (Chevy Chase)

20852 (North

20879 (Gaithersburg)

20853 (Rockville)

20882 (Gaithersburg)

20854 (Potomac)

20895 (Kensington)

20901

20902

20903

20910

20912

Information courtesy of Bright MLS, as of May 16, 2024. The Bright MLS real estate service area spans 40,000 square miles throughout the mid-Atlantic region, including Delaware, Maryland, Washington, D.C., and parts of New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia. As a leading Multiple Listing Service (MLS), Bright serves approximately 85,000 real estate professionals who in turn serve more than 20 million consumers. For more information, visit brightmls. com. Note: This information includes single-family homes sold from April 1, 2024, to April 30, 2024, as of May 16, 2024, excluding sales where sellers have withheld permission to advertise or promote. Information should be independently verified. Reports reference data provided by ShowingTime, a showing management and market stats technology provider to the residential real estate industry. Some sale and list prices have been rounded.

Luxury Apartments, Condos & Townhomes

Ravel & Royale

10511 Strathmore Hall St. | North Bethesda, MD 20852

240-453-4233 | victoria.douglas@aircommunities.com RavelAndRoyale.com

BIO

Discover Strathmore Square, a one-of-a-kind, 8-acre luxury community that introduces a new national model for wellness and quality of life. Surrounded by The Music Center at Strathmore, Rock Creek Park and steps from the Metro, Strathmore Square is the perfect fusion of culture, convenience and outdoor allure.

THE PROPERTY

Introducing Ravel & Royale, where luxury living meets art and culture at Strathmore Square. These naturally inspired apartment homes offer a balanced lifestyle with expansive views, spacious residences featuring European finishes, generous terraces and light-filled rooms. As a resident, you’ll enjoy the beautifully landscaped 1.25-acre park, the tranquility of Rock Creek Park, and a serene neighborhood to call your own. Located moments from the Grosvenor-Strathmore Metro Station, Ravel & Royale provide unparalleled connectivity. Experience the perfect blend of style, nature and cultural richness at Ravel & Royale, where your dream lifestyle takes form.

The Ritz-Carlton Residences, Chevy Chase

8551 Connecticut Ave. | Chevy Chase, MD 20815 301-264-8806 | RCResidences@ChevyChaseLake.com TheResidencesChevyChase.com

BIO

Bozzuto is an award-winning, experience-focused real estate company distinguished by their innovative developments and dedicated customer service, devoted to delivering extraordinary experiences. Celebrating 35 years of creating sanctuary, Bozzuto currently manages 90,000 apartments, with 7 million square feet currently under construction.

THE PROPERTY

With limited availability, now is the time to experience the unmatched elegance of The Ritz-Carlton Residences, Chevy Chase. We invite you to discover this exceptional community, offering spacious residence interiors by the award-winning Akseizer Design Group, blending timeless elegance and contemporary aesthetics.

Residents enjoy an unmatched level of amenities, including a piano lounge, state-of-the-art fitness facility, yoga terrace. Unwind in the private dining room and rooftop areas adorned with fire pits, perfect for hosting. Experience the legendary Ritz-Carlton services with 24-hour concierge, doorman, valet services and more.

The Astrid

5159 Pooks Hill Road | Bethesda, MD 20814

855-642-1735 | LiveTheAstrid.com

BIO

EQT Exeter develops, leases and manages logistics/industrial, residential and office/life science properties. With regional offices globally, we offer hands-on operation, combining local expertise with global reach while delivering superior real estate solutions to tenants and consistent value-add, core-plus and core returns for investment partners.

THE PROPERTY

Elevate your everyday living with tranquility and elegance at The Astrid, where balance, beauty and boundless adventure await. Nestled in the heart of Bethesda, The Astrid offers a serene retreat just a short drive from Washington, D.C. Its Scandinavian-inspired design seamlessly integrates with the surrounding nature preserve, providing a haven from city life without sacrificing convenience. The Astrid's light-filled spaces with modern amenities such as the Eco Courtyard, Great Lawn and rooftop lounge create a soothing backdrop for relaxation and connection. Inviting communal spaces for balance, strength, focus and relaxation, include fitness and yoga studios, coworking areas and lounges. Meanwhile, Bethesda's vibrant scene offers dining, shopping and cultural experiences just moments away. Come discover the extraordinary life awaiting you.

COURTESY
PHOTOS

Palisades Apartments & Penthouses

4835 Cordell Ave. | Bethesda, MD 20814 | 301-725-4723 palisades@smcmail.com | PalisadesBethesda.com

BIO

Come, elevate your urban living and reside at the Palisades of Bethesda! Its spacious apartments and premier penthouses are charming, sophisticated and a great value. Each apartment features granite countertops, washer/dryer and large closets.

THE PROPERTY

The community has spectacular amenities including indoor parking with EV charging stations, 24-hour concierge, lounges, pet washing station, fitness center and pool available.

The community is centrally located close to Metro, shops, restaurants and all the entertainment Bethesda has to offer. The Palisades is the perfect blend of great amenities and service in the convenience of a vibrant downtown area. That is why we were named Best Luxury Apartments by Bethesda Magazine in 2023!

Southern Management Companies, one of the largest privatelyowned residential property managers in the United States, owns 77 apartment communities with about 25,000 homes. Our mission is to create apartment communities where residents can fully enjoy life, helping everyone live a little better.

158

Tres leches cake, one of the treats at Java Nation

164

Tea is served in style at Zinnia in Silver Spring.

YOUR GUIDE TO EATING AND DRINKING WELL

The spring fattoush salad with a Levant signature cocktail at the new ala in Bethesda PAGE 160
PHOTO BY DEB LINDSEY

NEW IN TOWN

The beloved Glenmont food truck Tacos Don Perez, which began as a casual catering service, established a brick-andmortar location on Kensington’s Antique Row in March. It is owned and run by Mexico City-born Wheaton residents Salvador and Norma Perez and their children Brenda, David, Destiny, Andrea and Emely. The authentic fastcasual taqueria offers counter service in a colorful space with wooden tables and a row of stools at a high-top overlooking Howard Avenue. Sip the agua de sandia, a refreshing watermelon drink offered seasonally, before diving into tacos de birria, a cult favorite comprised of freshly made corn tortillas wrapped around tender braised beef, which customers can order as a single taco or in sets of three, six or 12. The birria broth, a separate menu item, is a must for dipping. Other specialties include the chicken tinga tacos served with a smoky chipotletomato sauce and the open-faced birria tostadas layered with refried beans, lettuce, a drizzle of crema, cotija cheese and a slice of avocado. The Kensington location is open for lunch and dinner Tues day through Sunday. You can also order online for pick up—or hire the food truck to come to you.

3784 Howard Ave., Kensington, tacosdonperez.com

A Latte More

RESTAURANT DISCOVERY

Java Nation, a combination coffee bar and restaurant, opened its fourth location in Montgomery County in March. The new Silver Spring locale features two distinct concepts, each with its own hours and offerings:

Java Restobar is a full-service restaurant and bar with outdoor seating, and Java Market offers an espresso bar with grab-and-go food options. The vibe at Restobar is contemporary with mid-century modern wooden furniture and glass pendant lighting, making it ideal for breakfast, lunch or dinner, all of which are served daily. You’ll also find live music from local artists on the expansive 80-seat patio (check the website for the schedule). At both Restobar and Java Market, customers will find house-roasted coffee drinks (try the honey lavender latte), Instagrammable pastries and locally sourced products. Standout dishes at the full-service restau rant include the savory leek-and-Gruyère quiche, the huevos rancheros on crunchy corn tacos with avocado, and the linguine tossed with sauteed spinach, shrimp, garlic, butter and parmesan. For dessert, you can’t go wrong with any of the housemade treats, including tres leches cake and expertly crafted espresso martinis.

COMINGS & GOINGS

Potomac native Richard Weiner opened No Regrets Pizza Co. in North Bethesda in May.

Mussel Bar & Grille, a Robert Wiedmaier eatery that closed in April 2022, was slated to reopen on Cordell Avenue in Bethesda in June.

Laurel, Marylandbased Chido’s Tex-Mex Grill, which boasts specialty margarita towers, is set to open in Silver Spring this summer.

Charbel Abrache, the head pastry chef at D.C.-based Seylou Bakery, plans to open Red Hound Pizza with partner Andrea Alvarez in Takoma Park this summer.

1010 Wayne Ave., Silver Spring, java-nation.com

Pinch

of Wisdom

MOD Pizza, a fastcasual chain based out of Seattle, closed its Gaithersburg location in March.

“When making a sandwich, don’t spread the ingredients all the way to the sides because it will spill out. Leave a finger or two on the edge, and when you press down to cut, it will naturally even out.”

—DANIELA MOREIRA, CHEF AND CO-OWNER OF CALL YOUR MOTHER IN BETHESDA AND AT PIKE & ROSE IN NORTH BETHESDA

FROM LEFT: BY DESTINY PEPPERMAN; SIMONA CABANA; TIM CASEY
Huevos rancheros at Java Nation
Agua de sandia

Bringing Comprehensive Cancer Care Close to Home

Holy Cross Health is recognized as a market leader in inpatient cancer care. Our commitment to providing comprehensive cancer services is propelling us toward becoming one of the top health systems in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area.

The new center, located in Wheaton, offers the most advanced radiation delivery system in the region including the Varian Edge radiosurgery system — which can target multiple tumors simultaneously with remarkable precision.

Call to speak with an expert or schedule your appointment.

From top: Hummus (charred green chickpeas and paprika), za’atar pita, baba ghanouj (charred eggplant, piquillo peppers and pomegranate) and a Daphne Tree signature cocktail at ala in Bethesda

LEVANTINE LETDOWN

The Middle Eastern fare at ala, the Bethesda restaurant that replaced Positano, is a mixed bag BY

It’s a pretty safe bet that if there’s an assortment of spreads offered on a menu, I’ll be schmearing and dipping with abandon in short order. Such is the case at ala, the Levantine restaurant that opened in the space occupied by the beloved Italian mainstay Positano for 44 years. I happily tear apart pieces of warm pita bread encrusted with za’atar seasoning and lap up silken hummus topped with dried figs and apricots; labneh topped with za’atar and olive oil; baba ghanouj adorned with dill pesto, pumpkin seeds and pomegranate seeds; and a puree of roasted butternut squash, tahini and harissa (spicy red chile paste) with a sprinkle of chopped pistachios. The dried fruits’ sweetness, the eggplant’s char, the harissa’s piquancy and the crunch of the nuts detonate bursts of flavor and texture, delightful accompaniments to a tart martini made with pickle juice and dill-infused gin.

This is the second location of ala for Cabin John residents Deniz and Celal Gulluoglu. An architect job for Celal with a Fairfax, Virginia, firm brought the Gulluoglus to the U.S. from their native Istanbul in 2016. (Deniz is a writer.) They fell into the restaurant business when friends of theirs wanted out of it, asking

ALA BETHESDA

4948 Fairmont Ave., Bethesda; ala-dc.com

FAVORITE DISHES

Mixed spread assortment (hummus, baba ghanouj, labneh, squash); fattoush salad; branzino with grape vinegar; chicken kebab; kunafa (baked shredded phyllo and cheese pastry)

PRICES

Mezze: $12 to $22; Entrees: $22 to $36; Desserts: $12 to $14

LIBATIONS

The beverage list includes 10 craft cocktails ($16), three zero-proof ($10), five bottled beers from Turkey, Palestine and Armenia ($12), seven draft beers ($10) and four aniseflavored Levantine libations (raki, ouzo and arak) for $14. The 15-bottle wine list features vintages from Palestine, Persia, Turkey, Lebanon and Israel: one sparkling ($105); two rosé/orange ($90); six white ($60 to $90) and six red ($70 to $100). Twenty-six wines are offered by the glass for $14: four sparkling; nine white; five rosé and eight red. There are also four wines by the glass infused with such flavors as mint and cucumber, pomegranate and elderflower ($12).

SERVICE

Attentive but needs polish

The lokum kebab features lightly seasoned lamb tenderloin, shishito pepper, blistered pearl onions, sauteed peas and herb salad.

the Gulluoglus to take over their restaurant Ankara in Washington’s Dupont Circle neighborhood, which they did in 2021. They added dishes to the Turkish menu to reflect the wider Levantine region (Israel, Syria, Palestine, Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt and others) and changed the name to ala, which means “mixed colors” in Turkish, reflecting the melting pot nature of the cuisine.

Celal, who owns the D.C.-based architecture and design firm AAG Interiors and Design, is largely responsible for ala Bethesda’s look. Its exterior—bright white stucco accented with Mediterranean blue wooden shutters and doors and a charming patio that seats 30—brings to mind houses found

on Greek islands. The interior of the 4,000-square-foot restaurant, which seats 110, including 12 at the bar, recalls its predecessor. “We originally intended to demo it completely and start over,” Celal says, “but every time we went to the space, people would stop us outside, ask what we were going to do to it and tell us stories about graduations, kids’ marriages and baby showers there. We realized we should keep the decor and modernize it a little.” So Positano’s terra cotta floors and faux balcony with a clay-tiled roof remain. So do its grotto-like walls—now white stucco instead of amber colored—with built-in shelving to store and display wine

Kunafa is a dessert made with sweet cheese, shredded phyllo dough, strawberry rose syrup, pistachios and dried rose petals.
Server Kimverly Ramirez chats with a diner in the main dining room.
Topkapi tawook, a grilled chicken specialty

bottles. Bric-a-brac abounds—enormous glass jars filled with faux produce (lemons, pomegranates, garlic heads); an old cash register; amphoras filled with wine corks. Murals of the Amalfi coast are out; faux columns and olives trees with artificial birds wired onto branches are in. Swags of green, gold and burgundy fabric hang from the exposed ceiling, draped from its black metal infrastructure. Midcentury modern upholstered side chairs in turquoise and mustard add flair.

Zack Baker, whose resume includes stints at Xiquet, Del Mar and Zaytinya in Washington, is the corporate chef for both ala locations, splitting his time between them, which could explain some inconsistencies in the food. Whereas I enthusiastically enjoy the spreads and a generously portioned appetizer of large sauteed shrimp in a tangy, smoky, mildly piquant tomato sauce redolent of Turkish urfa pepper, the tiny manti (Turkish dumplings) are disappointing. They’re supposedly filled with white beans, roasted mushrooms, horseradish and truffles—promising distinctive flavors. All I can discern is dough. Dense disks of chickpea falafel attractively presented on a swath of tahini and topped with pickled vegetables and sprigs of fresh mint and dill are lackluster. A better option is fattoush salad, a pretty gathering of radicchio, pumpkin seeds, roasted butternut squash, red onions, sliced pears and radishes in a Dijon mustard and sumac dressing. (Note: ala’s menu alters according to the season. On the menu that went in after my meals there, strawberries, asparagus and peas replaced butternut squash on the fattoush, for example.)

Sumac ice cream for dessert—one of three offered— intrigues me but is 86ed on my visits. Pistachio baklava, brought in from Turkey weekly, is mercifully not drenched in syrup and has a slight but pleasant tang to it. “They use sheep milk ghee instead of cow butter. That’s the difference with Turkish baklava,” Celal says. Another winner is kunafa, a log of chewy, briny Egyptian akawi cheese (similar in texture to mozzarella) rolled in kataifi (shredded phyllo dough) and grilled like a kebab. It’s garnished with rose petals, chopped pistachios and drizzles of cherry sauce.

For entrees, kebabs are a good option. The server is quick to explain that the one made with lamb tenderloin (lokum kebab), which comes with herb salad and braised cabbage, is seasoned only with salt and pepper, not herbs, per the Turkish fashion. It is tender and flavorful, but I’m glad I hedge the bet by asking for sides of toum (whipped garlic fluff) and harissa as flavor boosters. Tawook (chicken) shish kebab is moist and flavorful even if it’s made with chicken breast instead of thigh meat, as the menu states. This sort of change happens frequently. Delicious and beautifully cooked branzino (flown in from Turkey) with parsnip puree arrives pan-seared, not grilled as billed. A braised short rib that’s mostly fat is supposed to feature ras el hanout, but that bold North African spice mix made with coriander, cumin, ginger, cinnamon and other spices seems a noshow to me. The grilled eggplant puree that accompanies it is quite tasty, though. (No matter, the menu posted online as of this writing has switched in spice-rubbed rib-eye steak with bulgur salad for the short rib.)

Service at ala is earnest but not polished. Items I order aren’t coursed on one occasion, with a food runner showing up at the table bearing entrees and a plaintive look for me to make room by shuffling around the appetizers that had arrived only moments before. I don’t notice a manager touching the tables to ask diners how things are going, kind of surprising at a restaurant new to the scene. Celal tells me that he and Deniz manage from the outside and go to the restaurant as customers, a strategy they might consider revisiting. Let me add—because it’s such a peeve—that the flimsy paper napkins offered at ala really downgrade the dining experience.

During the summer, the Gulluoglus plan to start building out a fast-casual Tex-Mex joint, a sports bar and possibly a rooftop dining area in the remaining 6,000 square feet of the building ala occupies. Hopefully, they will have ironed out the kinks at ala by then.

David Hagedorn is the restaurant critic for Bethesda Magazine

Owners Celal (left) and Deniz Gulluoglu

The Tea on Zinnia

“MY FATHER-IN-LAW ACCUMULATED TEA SETS FROM ESTATE SALES, AND GUESTS CALLED OFFERING FAMILY HEIRLOOM TEA SETS BECAUSE THEIR KIDS WEREN’T INTERESTED IN THEM.”
—CHRIS BROWN OF ZINNIA

For Chris Brown, taking one of his two young daughters to the Willard Hotel in Washington, D.C., for high tea soon after opening Zinnia in September 2022 inspired a profitable idea. It was so delightful an experience that he test-ran weekend tea at the Silver Spring restaurant this past holiday season, intending to end it after the new year. It was such a huge hit that he kept it going; now it runs on Saturdays and Sundays, with 90minute 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. seatings in two rooms near the restaurant’s entrance.

The charming low-ceilinged parlor room original to the 1850 house that once served as Mrs. K’s Toll House restaurant features a white brick fireplace and glass cases filled with myriad china tea sets. Patterned wallpaper brings to mind a country estate’s library. Tables are set genteelly with white tablecloths, forest green cloth napkins, porcelain sugar bowls with tongs, cups and saucers and tea strainers. “My father-inlaw accumulated tea sets from estate sales, and guests called offering fam-

ily heirloom tea sets because their kids weren’t interested in them,” Brown says. The 12 Harney & Sons tea offerings (four black, two green, two white and four herbal) include traditional varieties such as Earl Grey, Darjeeling and Japanese Sencha and flavored offerings, among them Royal Wedding (Chinese Mutan white tea with rosebuds, vanilla and coconut) and black tea enhanced

with chocolate and peppermint leaves. The teapot is brought with a three-minute hourglass timer to take the guesswork out of steeping.

A triple-tiered serving plate teems with treats, including tea sandwiches (ham; smoked salmon; mango chutney chicken salad; egg and cress; cucumber; brie and fig), pastries (croissants, cheddar scallion biscuits, cranberry scones and pistachio madeleines) and desserts (lemon meringue tart and chocolate mousse). Accompaniments include Chantilly cream, jams and honey butter. Tea costs $60 per adult ($70 with a glass of sparkling wine) and $40 per child. Reservations require a $25 deposit per person.

ZINNIA, 9201 Colesville Road, Silver Spring, 301-704-6653, eatzinnia.com

The weekend tea service at Zinnia in Silver Spring features a tower of treats along with individual teapots.

Chickening In

For Darnestown resident Rob Gresham, a teachable moment during the pandemic led to Isaac’s Poultry Market, a Gaithersburg fast-casual restaurant specializing in chicken, sold roasted, fried (tenders, wings and sandwiches) and in chicken salad. Sides, salads and frozen custard round out the fare.

Explaining to his sons Robbie and Jackson (now 17 and 16) four years ago that the world has faced pandemics before and prevailed, Gresham relayed that Isaac Newton discovered the law of gravity and invented calculus while quarantined for the plague in 1665. As a learning opportunity to go along with virtual schooling, he had Jackson help write a business plan for an imaginary restaurant; his son suggested they name it after Newton, and Isaac’s Poultry Market was born. Gresham says he focused on chicken because from his first-hand experience running and consulting for fast-casual brands, the protein accounts for more than 50% of their sales.

Gresham’s no stranger to the restaurant business. His first job while growing up in Montgomery County was at Chesapeake Bay Seafood House in Burtonsville, where he started as a dishwasher and became a cook at 16 while attending Paint

Branch High School. “I’ve been in restaurants and kitchens ever since,” he says.

His resume includes many now-closed Montgomery County establishments, among them Eatzi’s Market & Bakery in Rockville, Cafe Deluxe in Bethesda and Harry’s Cafe in Silver Spring, where he met his wife, Christine, who was bartending there while attending law school. From there, he climbed the corporate ladder, working for successful powerhouses including Founding Farmers, Chipotle and Cava, which he joined in 2010. He says he helped develop the Cava Mezze Grill brand (now known as Cava) as the business grew to 80 restaurants, with 20 in the pipeline. “My job was morphing into an office guy, but I like building and creating,” Gresham says. He left in 2019 and started a restaurant consulting business.

When the pandemic hit, Gresham says, restaurants didn’t need consultants, and he found himself at home baking bread like everyone else. He moved forward with Isaac’s, and the 2,400-square-foot space opened in February 2023. (It’s called a market because the plan is to offer retail items in the future, such as baked goods and olive oil.)

PHOTOS BY BRENDAN M C CABE
A whole roast chicken family meal at Isaac’s Poultry Market includes sides of mac and cheese, street corn salad and slaw.

It took two years to develop the recipes. The roast chicken is dryrubbed for 24 hours with a blend of za’atar, cumin, smoked paprika, garlic and other spices and roasted in a combi oven (a combination convection and steam injection oven) to keep it moist. In August, the fried chicken breast Isaac sandwich (toasted potato bun, broccoli slaw, dill pickles and a mustard honey barbecue sauce) won the 2023 Restaurant Association of Maryland’s Best Sandwich competition. “I put a giant banner on the store about it, and sales skyrocketed,” Gresham says. The win qualified him to enter the World Food Championship in Dallas in November, where he finished in the top 10 and was invited to compete in next year’s competition.

A second location of Isaac’s is slated to open in the Burtonsville Crossing development in Burtonsville at the end of the year.

POULTRY MARKET, 12163 Darnestown Road, Gaithersburg, 240-477-5037, isaacs.market

Readers’ Pick, Best Restaurant in Potomac & Italian Restaurant
ISAAC’S
Rob Gresham, owner of Isaac’s Poultry Market

Dining Guide

KEY

Best of Bethesda Readers’ Pick 2024

Editors’ Choice

Outdoor Dining

Reservations Accepted Breakfast Brunch Lunch Dinner

$ $$ $$$ $$$$

most entrees under $15

most entrees $15–$20

most entrees $21–$30

most entrees $31 and up

AJI-NIPPON

6937 Arlington Road, 301-654-0213

A no-frills Japanese restaurant serving reasonably priced sushi, teriyaki, sukiyaki, tempura and udon. Lunch specials include a sushi and sashimi combo with miso soup and a house salad. ✓LD$$

ALA BETHESDA

4948 Fairmont Ave., ala-dc.com

This outpost of the D.C.-based Michelinrated restaurant offers colorful Levantine fare and a curated cocktail program. A bottomless brunch is offered on weekends; at dinner, try the six-course tasting menu. See our review on page 160. b✓RD$$$

ALATRI BROS.

4926 Cordell Ave., 301-718-6427, alatribros.com The owners of Olazzo and Gringos & Mariachis run this Italian-inspired eatery serving small plates, salads and wood-fired pizzas. Don’t miss the whipped feta with honey. Gluten-free pizza crust available upon request. bBD$$

ANDY’S PIZZA (Editors’ Choice)

Choosing a restaurant in Montgomery County and Upper NW D.C. can be daunting, so we’re putting together an editor-curated guide to the area. In this issue, we’re rolling out the restaurants in Bethesda. We’ll be adding more towns in future issues and online.

4600 East West Highway, 240-204-6883, eatandyspizza.com This branch of a local chain offers New York-style slices and pies in addition to wings, fries and salads. Build your own pie or try the Pepperoni Special topped with burrata, basil and Mike’s Hot Honey. bLD$$

ANTHONY’S COAL FIRED PIZZA & WINGS

7776 Norfolk Ave., 240-781-6943, acfp.com

A casual national eatery featuring salads, appetizers, sandwiches served on homemade focaccia bread, and pizzas made to order in a 900-degree coal-fired oven. Gluten-free options are available, as are happy hour and lunch specials.

b✓LD$$

AVENTINO (Editors’ Choice)

4747 Bethesda Ave., 301-961-6450, aventinocucina.com Lauded local chef Mike Friedman brings Roman-Jewish-inspired Italian cuisine to Bethesda with an elegant restaurant boasting aperitivi, antipasti, handmade pastas, protein-rich mains and shareable sides, plus sophisticated wine offerings that emphasize Italian vintages.

✓RLD$$$$

BACCHUS OF LEBANON

7945 Norfolk Ave., 301-657-1722, bacchusoflebanon.com A Bethesda stalwart with authentic Lebanese cuisine and a year-round outdoor patio. Try the hummus, lamb chops and fried cauliflower with tahini. A weekend belly dancer elevates the experience. Voted “Best Middle Eastern/ Mediterranean Restaurant” by the readers of Bethesda Magazine in 2024.

b✓LD$$$

THE BARKING DOG

4723 Elm St., 301-654-0022, barkingdogbar.com

This multilevel neighborhood watering hole serves traditional pub fare and more than 20 beers on tap, many of them local. Happy hour specials offered on weekdays from 3 to 7 p.m. bLD$$

BARREL & CROW (Editors’ Choice)

4867 Cordell Ave., 240-800-3253, barrelandcrow.com A Woodmont Triangle neighborhood eatery serving contemporary mid-Atlantic cuisine in a nice casual setting with windows that slide

open to a patio. Highlights include fried green tomatoes with pimento cheese and seasonal soft-shell crabs. b ✓ RD $$$

BETHESDA CRAB HOUSE

4958 Bethesda Ave., 301-652-3382, bethesdacrabhouse.com A no-frills institution since the 1960s offering steamed blue crabs, oysters and the like. Call in advance to reserve your crabs; picnic table seating is first-come, first-served.

bLD$$$$

BETHESDA CURRY KITCHEN

4860 Cordell Ave., 301-656-0062, bethesdacurrykitchen.com Traditional Southern and Northern Indian cuisine by chef Anil Kumar. For lunch or dinner, try the masala dosa, a lentil- and ricefilled crepe, or aviyal, a vegetable-heavy coconut milk curry. ✓LD$$

BISTRO PROVENCE

4933 Fairmont Ave., 301-656-7373, bistroprovence.org Ideal for date night or a special occasion, serving flawlessly executed French fare by renowned chef Yannick Cam. Standout dishes include the lobster purse appetizer and the rack of lamb. The green-fringed patio is a plus. b✓LD$$$$

BLACK’S BAR & KITCHEN (Editors’ Choice) 7750 Woodmont Ave., 301-652-5525, blacksbarandkitchen.com A New American restaurant that emphasizes seafood dishes, wood-grilled meats and cocktails, it’s part of the Black Restaurant Group. Stop in for happy hour or dinner on the outdoor patio.

b✓LD$$$$

CADDIES ON CORDELL

4922 Cordell Ave., 301-215-7730, caddiesoncordell.com This dual-level sports bar has a large covered patio and TVs for game day. Pop by for happy hour, trivia night, live music or the rotating weekly specials featuring half-price pizzas and handhelds. Voted “Best Outdoor Dining” and “Best Bar Scene” by the readers of Bethesda Magazine in 2024. b✓RLD$$

CASA OAXACA

4905 Fairmont Ave., 240-858-6181, casaoaxacamd.com Enjoy Mexican cuisine at this casual, family-friendly Woodmont Triangle eatery with outdoor picnic tables

and string lights. Standout plates include the braised short rib tacos, quesadillas and sugar-encrusted churros. b✓RLD$$$

CHEF TONY’S

5225 Pooks Hill Road, 240-858-6735, cheftonysseafood.com Milan-born chef Tony Marciante plates Italian-inspired dishes alongside desserts prepared by his wife, pastry chef Sonia Marciante. Seasonal menus may include soft-shell crab and tomato mozzarella salad with watermelon.

b✓RD$$$

CHERCHER RESTAURANT

4921 Bethesda Ave., 301-652-6500, chercherrestaurant.com D.C.-based cult favorite Chercher showcases traditional Ethiopian specialties such as beef tibs, kitfo and doro wot. Try the crowd-pleasing vegan combo platter served over injera, a slightly sour pancake-like flatbread.

b✓LD$$

CHIKO

7280 Woodmont Ave., 301-968-0053, mychiko.com The fast-casual Chinese and Korean brainchild of chefs Danny Lee and Scott Drewno delights with dishes such as an orange-ish chicken with candied mandarins and peppers, wok-blistered green beans and loaded vegetable fried rice. bLD$$

CITY LIGHTS OF CHINA

4953 Bethesda Ave., 301-913-9501, bethesdacitylights.com Classic Chinese with an emphasis on Sichuan-inspired dishes such as kung pao chicken and panfried green beans. Saddle up to a leatherbacked booth in the casual restaurant or order takeout. LD$$

CORELLA CAFÉ & LOUNGE

4646 Montgomery Ave., 301-656-2260, corellabethesda.com A chic cafe at the AC Hotel with housemade pastries, hearty salads and sandwiches, plus a variety of small plates and locally sourced entrees in the evening. Try the espresso martini on tap.

b✓BLD$$$

CUBANO’S (Editors’ Choice)

4907 Cordell Ave., 301-347-7952, cubanosrestaurant.com A traditional Cuban restaurant serving popular dishes such as Cuban sandwiches and croquetas in addition to tender meats such as ropa vieja and lechon asado; order yours with a round of mojitos ✓LD$$

DALIA’S FALAFEL

7750 Old Georgetown Road, 240-8586918, dalias-falafel.square.site This falafelfocused pint-sized hut is best for take-out or delivery. Order your housemade chickpea patties wrapped up in a pita or in a rice bowl topped with tahini and spicy green schug.

bLD$

EDITH’S PIZZA

6910 Arlington Road, 301-686-3224, edithspizzas.com The owner of neighboring Breads Unlimited brings his dough-making expertise to a casual eatery offering all-day breakfast burritos and omelets as well as sandwiches and pizza until 7 p.m. daily.

bBLD$$

FISH TACO

7251 Woodmont Ave., 301-652-0010; 10305 Old Georgetown Road (Wildwood Shopping Center), 301-564-6000; fishtacoonline.com

A fast-casual eatery with sustainably sourced Baja-inspired fare in the form of salads, bowls, tacos and burritos plus a selection of draft beers and margaritas. Don’t miss the housemade guacamole with fresh corn chips. Voted “Best Tacos” by the readers of Bethesda Magazine in 2024.

bLD$

FLOWER CHILD

10205 Old Georgetown Road (Wildwood Shopping Center), 301-664-4971, iamaflowerchild.com This Arizona-based chain serves good-for-the-soul food with an emphasis on ethically sourced proteins as well as seasonal vegetable sides and salads. Bundles serving four to six are ideal for families and groups. bLD$$

FRANK PEPE PIZZERIA NAPOLETANA

7101 Democracy Blvd. (Westfield Montgomery mall), 301-304-7373, pepespizzeria.com

New Haven-style pizzeria serving coalfired slices and pies with a thin and chewy crust. Try the famous white clam pizza with garlic, oregano and freshly grated pecorino Romano cheese. b✓LD$$

GREGORIO’S TRATTORIA

4611-A Sangamore Road (The Shops at Sumner Place), 301-347-6830, gregoriostrattoria.com A family-friendly trattoria with exceptionally accommodating staff serving large portions of Italian classics in addition to an extensive kids menu and a selection of gluten-free pizzas and pastas. b✓LD$$$

GRINGOS & MARIACHIS (Editors’ Choice)

4928 Cordell Ave., 240-800-4266, gringosandmariachis.com Authentic Mexican street fare served in an edgy setting with brick walls, roped chandeliers and tattoo art-style murals. Grab a seat at the bar for happy hour drink and food specials. bRLD$

GUAPO’S

8130 Wisconsin Ave., 301-656-0888, guaposrestaurant.com This family-owned and -operated Tex-Mex restaurant gives greenhouse vibes with a glass ceiling and a plethora of plants. Groups will appreciate the enchilada, taco and fajita party packs to go that serve four, six or eight.

b✓RLD$$$

GUARDADO’S

4918 Del Ray Ave., 301-986-4920, guardados.com Savory Spanish and Latin American cuisine by Salvadoran chef Nicolas Guardado, formerly of Jaleo. The paellas and extensive tapas, such as gambas al ajillo and papas fritas, are best for sharing. b✓LD$$$

HAWKERS

7117 Bethesda Lane, 240-203-8135, eathawkers.com Bold Asian small plates including dumplings, spring rolls, wings, curries, noodles, soups and the like are served inside or on the covered, heated patio. Weekday happy hour features discounted beers, spirits and select dishes. bLD$

HOUSE OF FOONG LIN

4613 Willow Lane, 301-657-3740 Chinese cuisine served in a dining room anchored by a U-shaped thatched bar known for specialty tiki cocktails. Standout dishes include the crispy fried whole fish and Peking duck ✓LD$$

HOUSE OF MILAE

4932 St Elmo Ave., 301-654-1997, houseofmilae.com Authentic Korean comfort food in a modest, family-friendly setting. Try the hot stone bibimbap, short rib bulgogi, and kimchi fried rice topped with shrimp and mushrooms.

b✓D$$$

KADHAI (Editors’ Choice)

7905 Norfolk Ave., 301-215-7189, kadhai.com This beloved neighborhood restaurant excels at traditional Indian cuisine. Try the potato and pea samosas, palak chaat

WHY WE GIVE

“… the more we have learned about Montgomery College and the students it serves … the more we are drawn to the College’s mission.’’

Our family’s adage upward mobility through education serves as a guiding principle for our philanthropy and volunteer engagement. We believe that supporting education creates a lasting impact on our community and the world around us. And the more we have learned about Montgomery College and the students it serves during our nearly 12 years of board-level involvement, the more we are drawn to the College’s mission.

We both became involved with the College as volunteers Morgan joined the Montgomery College Foundation Board of Directors and Holly joined the Pinkney Innovation Complex for Science and Technology Foundation Board of Directors. Many years later, our commitment to the College and its students continues to grow and flourish.

As parents, we are fully aware of how closely our children are observing us, which is why we seek opportunities that serve as powerful examples, teaching them what we value, the importance of giving back, empathy, and social responsibility. Our actions make a difference in the lives of our community members, while shaping the values and priorities of the next generation our children.

Knowing that our children look to us for guidance to help them understand the world around them and to show them how they can make a positive difference is why we give to Montgomery College of our time, talent, and treasure.

We hope you will join us.

HOLLY AND MORGAN SULLIVAN
The Sullivan Family

and any of the vegetarian or meat entrees served with Kadhai’s signature saffron and cardamom-studded rice. Voted “Best Indian Restaurant” by the readers of Bethesda Magazine in 2024.

b✓LD$$

KUSSHI SUSHI

7820 Norfolk Ave., 301-654-7851, kusshisushi.com Formerly Hanaro, this rebranded spot continues to delight after a renovation. The menu boasts Izakaya street food, tempura, teriyaki and noodles, but sushi remains the focus. Come with a group for the epic 76-piece sushi boat.

b✓LD$$$

LA CATRINA LOUNGE

4935 Cordell Ave., 240-204-8460, lacatrinalounge.com A two-story venue featuring a first-floor Mexican restaurant below a cocktail lounge with DJs and live music. Try the Santa Diabla cocktail blended with tequila, prickly pear, coconut and lime. ✓RD$$$

LA PANETTERIA

4921 Cordell Ave., 301-951-6433, lapanetteria.com This Italian restaurant stands out with a menu section devoted to Argentinian fare, courtesy of its Bueno Aires-born co-owner, as well as a sunlit atrium graced by hanging baskets, period paintings and white tablecloths. b ✓ D $$$

LILIT CAFÉ BEER & WINE

7921 Old Georgetown Road, 301-654-5454, lilitcafe.com A low-key cafe and gourmet grocery with an all-day menu featuring omelets, soups, salads, sandwiches and pizza as well as dinner items such as lamb chops and crabcakes, plus an extensive gluten-free menu BLD$$

MAMAN

7140 Bethesda Lane, 301-656-1526, mamannyc.com This French-inspired cafe boasts rustic farm tables, antique decor and botanical accents to complement delectable pastries, breakfast dishes and tartines as well as coffee, tea and cocktails. The outdoor patio is a plus. bBL$$

MAMMA LUCIA

4916 Elm St., 301-907-3399, mammaluciarestaurants.com This familyfriendly local chain is known for its New York-style pizzas and oversize portions of

Italian mains, such as penne alla vodka and chicken marsala, which serve two. b✓LD$$$

MATCHBOX

7278 Woodmont Ave., 240-465-0500, matchboxrestaurants.com Specializing in bistro-style fare and wood-fired pizzas, this local chain features a large patio. Make sure to order the crowd-pleasing mini burgers on brioche buns served atop a pile of crispy onion straws. b✓RLD$$

MEDIUM RARE

4904 Fairmont Ave., 301-215-8379, mediumrarerestaurant.com This D.C.-based chain delights meat lovers with a single prix-fixe dinner menu comprised of rustic bread, a green salad and culotte steak with hand-cut fries. Eggs and French toast are available at brunch. b✓RD$$$

MON AMI GABI

7239 Woodmont Ave., 301-654-1234, monamigabi.com [Temporarily closed] A traditional French bistro offering a threecourse prix-fixe lunch, an extensive steak frites menu and rotating evening specials, plus a robust menu for tiny gourmands. Patio seating is first-come, first-served. Voted “Best Brunch” by the readers of Bethesda Magazine in 2024. b✓RLD$$$

MORTON’S THE STEAKHOUSE

7400 Wisconsin Ave., 301-657-2650, mortons.com An upscale steakhouse specializing in prime-aged steaks and chops, fresh seafood and timeless desserts such as key lime pie and crème brûlée. The dining room, with white tablecloths and leather-backed chairs, is ideal for business dinners.

✓ D$$$$

NOT YOUR AVERAGE JOE’S

10400 Old Georgetown Road, 240-3164555, notyouraveragejoes.com Madefrom-scratch comfort food and cocktails in an industrial-inspired environment. The wide-ranging menu offers soups, salads, handhelds, pizza and mains to satisfy every craving. Family-style meals, serving four to six, are available for takeout.

b✓RLD$$

OISHII RAMEN CAFÉ

4901 Fairmont Ave., 240-956-4156, oishiibethesda.com Fresh, authentic ramen and bubble tea in a pint-size shop with first-

come, first-served high-top seating that’s open daily for lunch and dinner. Try the classic Tonkotsu made with pork and a softboiled egg. LD$$

OLAZZO (Editors’ Choice)

7921 Norfolk Ave., 301-654-9496, olazzo.com Italian fare in a relaxed setting with exposed brick walls, wooden tables and votive candles. Try the chicken cardinale tossed with sundried tomatoes in a tomato-cream sauce over penne. Happy hour at the bar on weekdays. Voted “Best Italian Restaurant” by the readers of Bethesda Magazine in 2024.

bRLD$$

THE ORIGINAL PANCAKE HOUSE

7700 Wisconsin Ave., 301-986-0285, ophrestaurants.com An all-day breakfast chain serving everything from egg dishes and sweet crepes to pancakes and waffles in a casual setting. Try the Dutch baby dusted in powdered sugar, a house special. b BLD $$

PASSAGE TO INDIA

4931 Cordell Ave., 301-656-3373, passagetoindia.info British Colonial decor feels fitting at this traditional Indian restaurant. Weekday lunch specials include a main, such as palak paneer or chicken tikka, accompanied by saffron rice pilaf, lentils and salad. ✓RLD$$

PASSION FIN

4611 Sangamore Road (The Shops at Sumner Place), 301-229-2848, passionfinmd.com

A conveniently located Asian bistro and sushi bar inside the Shops at Sumner Place with an expansive menu ranging from sushi and hibachi to teriyaki and fried rice dishes plus a handful of Thai curries. ✓LD$$$

PERSIMMON (Editors’ Choice)

7003 Wisconsin Ave., 301-654-9860, persimmonrestaurant.com Couples love this cozy American bistro. You can’t go wrong with the wasabi-crusted oysters or the daily fresh catch topped with a lemon butter sauce. Pop in on Tuesdays for halfpriced wine. b✓LD$$$

PHO VIET

4917 Cordell Ave. , 301-652-0834, phovietus.com One of four locations around the D.C. area, Pho Viet offers authentic Vietnamese food in a comfortable setting with Asian artwork and

a four-seat bar. Regulars praise the shrimp summer rolls and nourishing bowls of pho. b✓LD$

PICCOLI PIATTI PIZZERIA

10257 Old Georgetown Road (Wildwood Shopping Center), 240-858-6099, piccolipiattipizzeria.com Kid-friendly Neapolitan-style pizzeria with wooden tables and bench seating serving everything from antipasti and salads to sandwiches and pizza made with imported ingredients plus homemade Italian desserts. Gluten-free options available. b LD $$

PINES OF ROME

4918 Cordell Ave., 301-657-8775, pinesofrometogo.com Authentic Italian fare, such as veal Milanese and meatballs with spaghetti, served in a casual, familyfriendly environment. Large trays serving eight or more are available for takeout. LD$$$

PIZZERIA DA MARCO (Editors’ Choice)

8008 Woodmont Ave., 301-654-6083, pizzeriadamarco.net A family-friendly eatery featuring Italian antipasti, bruschettas and Neapolitan-style pizza. Try one of the freshly made salads (large enough for two), the burrata con pesto pizza and half-priced wine on Wednesdays. b LD $$

PLANTA

4910 Elm St., 301-407-2447, plantarestaurants.com Serving 100% plant-based food, with offerings such as vegan sushi, brick oven pizzas and mushroom-based “chicken and waffles” that taste just as delicious as they look. Try the weekday happy hour for discounted sips and snacks. Voted “Best Vegetarian Dishes” by the readers of Bethesda Magazine in 2024. b✓RLD$$$

PRALINE BAKERY & BISTRO

4611 Sangamore Road (The Shops at Sumner Place), 301-229-8180, pralinebistro.com A charming French bistro serving well-

Congratulations to the 2024 Winners of the Bethesda Urban Partnership and Bethesda Magazine

ESSAY AND SHORT STORY CONTEST

executed classics such as steak frites and salmon paillard plus a first-floor bakery with artisanal housemade pastries. The secondfloor patio is a hidden gem for lunch. b✓RLD$$$

Q BY PETER CHANG (Editors’ Choice)

4500 East West Highway, #100, 240-800-3722, qbypeterchang.com Modern Szechuan cuisine by renowned chef Peter Chang in a contemporary 8,000-square-foot space. Don’t miss the Peking duck served with housemade pancakes, scallions and sweet bean sauce. b ✓ RLD $$$

RAKU (Editors’ Choice)

7240 Woodmont Ave., 301-718-8680, rakuasiandining.com [Temporarily closed] Find modern Asian fare with Chinese, Japanese and Thai flavors. The deluxe bento box offers a sampling of fresh sushi and warm tempura. Voted “Best Sushi” by the readers of Bethesda Magazine in 2024. b✓LD$$$

Essay Contest

1st Place Raegan O’Lone, Bethesda, MD

2nd Place Kyra Swantkowski, Fairfax, VA

3rd Place Jonathan Kronstadt, Silver Spring, MD

Essay Contest – High School

1st Place Hannah Brunick, Quince Orchard HS

2nd Place Sofia Guyer, Bethesda-Chevy Chase HS

3rd Place Ariana Miranda, Wheaton HS

Short Story Contest

1st Place Bari Lynn Hein, Germantown, MD

2nd Place Naomi Louie, Bethesda, MD

3rd Place J. Millard Simpson, Germantown, MD

Short Story Contest – High School

1st Place Abigail Ott, Northwest HS

2nd Place Sydney Tamashasky, Poolesville HS

3rd Place Noah Grosberg, Bethesda-Chevy Chase HS

Essay & Short Story Honorable Mentions

Naomi Bortnick, Winnie Chen, Charlotte Clymer, Rachel Coonce, Joanne Fan, Michael Norton, Kalina Peterson, Hope Randall, Karen Sandler, Dian Seidel, Juniper Sohn, Silvia Spring, Chelsea Zhu

RAKUGAKI

10223 Old Georgetown Road (Wildwood Shopping Center), 240-858-4856, rakugaki.com A stylish Japanese restaurant offering colorful sushi platters, homemade noodle dishes, Asian small plates and more. Try the Teishoku set comprised of a proteinrich main such as tonkatsu or black cod, a side dish, miso soup and rice. b✓LD$$$

ROCK BOTTOM RESTAURANT & BREWERY

7900 Norfolk Ave., 240-465-0777, rockbottom.com A Denver-based brewpub chain offering casual fare such as pizza, sliders and handhelds to complement a wide selection of brewed beers and seltzers made in house. Copious seating makes this large space ideal for groups. b✓LD$$

ROOTED3

4916 Cordell Ave., 240-206-1265, rooted3.com Fast-casual beachy, botanical-inspired cafe serving plantbased food free of the top nine allergens.

Try the umami shroom bowl, buffalo cauliflower bites and an organic cocktail, best enjoyed in the outdoor courtyard. b LD $

SALA THAI

4828 Cordell Ave., 301-654-4676, salathaibethesda.com Thai cuisine served in a nice casual setting with wood tables. Loyal locals praise the well-executed pad thai, served with a choice of protein, as well as the mango with sweet sticky rice. ✓LD$$

THE SALT LINE

(Editors’ Choice)

7284 Woodmont Ave., 240-534-2894, thesaltline.com Part of a D.C.-area chain, this coastal-themed restaurant offers an extensive raw bar with Chesapeake Bay oysters, clams and lobster rolls, plus locally sourced seafood entrees such as pan-roasted rockfish. b ✓ RLD $$$$

SEVENTH STATE RESTAURANT & LOUNGE

7707 Woodmont Ave., 240-539-3410, seventhstaterestaurant.com In the lobby of the Marriott Bethesda Downtown sits a business-friendly all-day eatery featuring modern American cuisine with a mid-Atlantic twist and locally sourced ingredients served in a light-filled space.

b✓BRLD$$$

SILVER

7150 Woodmont Ave., 301-652-9780, eatatsilver.com A New American brasserie serving upscale comfort food in an art deco-inspired space with cozy red booths. Kids love the breakfast menu, served all day, plus the hand-spun milkshakes.

b✓BRLD$$$

SMOKE BBQ

4858 Cordell Ave., 301-656-2011, mysmokebbq.com A casual barbecue joint serving spice-rubbed smoked meats and craft beers with outdoor seating in the

alley. Weekday happy hour and game day specials, such as wing trays and sliders, available. b LD $$

SPANISH DINER

7271 Woodmont Ave., 301-284-3700, spanishdiner.com Famed SpanishAmerican chef José Andrés offers homestyle tapas-style dishes in a vibrant and airy space well suited to groups. Stop by for weekday sangria hour at the bar and don’t miss the patatas bravas.

b ✓ RLD$$$

TACOMBI

4749 Bethesda Ave. , 877-632-7610, tacombi.com This New York-based restaurant brings Mexican street fare to Bethesda with an emphasis on tacos. Colorful, spacious interiors and reasonably priced dishes make Tacombi ideal for a casual meal. Giant doors open in nice weather for a seamless indoor-outdoor experience. b✓LD$

TAKO GRILL

4914 Hampden Lane (The Shoppes of Bethesda), 301-652-7030, takogrill.com This contemporary Japanese grill serves a variety of Asian dishes, including noodles, teriyaki, donburi and tempura in addition to sushi and sashimi. Platters, available for takeout, are great for a crowd.

LD$$$

TASTEE DINER

7731 Woodmont Ave., 301-652-3970, tasteediner.com This local diner has retro vibes and serves old-school American diner classics such as all-day breakfast, handhelds and daily specials such as country fried steak and meatloaf.

BLD$

TATTE BAKERY & CAFÉ

7276 Wisconsin Ave., 240-534-2115, tattebakery.com A Boston-based cafe with a cult following, Tatte features tantalizing pastries, espresso drinks and a variety of North African-inspired fare in an airy

space with leather banquettes and bistro tables. b BRLD $

TIA QUETA

4839 Del Ray Ave. , 301-654-4443, tiaqueta.com A casual Mexican cafe with a rooftop bar where you can enjoy pitchers of margaritas and tacos. Weekday happy hour offers discounted quesadillas and nachos plus drink specials b✓LD$$$

TIKKA MASALA

4929 Elm St., 301-312-8191, tikkamasala.us Traditional Indian cuisine plus a handful of Indo-Chinese wok dishes served in a contemporary setting. The lunch buffet offers a variety of classics such as tikka masala and biryani plus appetizers and dessert. ✓ LD $$

TOMMY JOE’S

7940 Norfolk Ave., 301-312-8282, tommy-joes.com A casual dual-level sports bar and American grill with more than

40 TVs, daily specials and a year-round rooftop. Try the “POHO style” chicken wings glazed in a blend of hot and peanut sauces. b✓LD$$

TRATTORIA SORRENTO

(Editors’ Choice)

4930 Cordell Ave., 301-718-0344, trattoriasorrento.com A family owned and operated trattoria serving traditional Italian fare. Order the Italian Martini, made with limoncello, and the homemade spinach and ricotta ravioli baked with mozzarella in tomato sauce. ✓ D $$$

TRUE FOOD KITCHEN

7100 Wisconsin Ave., 240-200-1257, truefoodkitchen.com Health-driven dishes comprised of seasonal ingredients served in a bright, airy setting that’s suitable for adults and children alike. Outstanding plates include the charred cauliflower, ancient grain bowl and smoked Gouda turkey burger. b✓RLD$$$

UNCLE JULIO’S

4870 Bethesda Ave., 301-656-2981, unclejulios.com It’s always a party at the Bethesda outpost of this national Tex-Mex chain where groups flock for celebrations. Expect hacienda-style interiors, mesquitegrilled fare and an extensive margarita menu. Voted “Best Mexican Restaurant” by the readers of Bethesda Magazine in 2024. b✓LD$$$

VIRRAAJ

4914 Cordell Ave., 301-847-7225, virraaj.com Authentic Indian cuisine served in an upscale setting with black and gold decor. The wide-ranging menu boasts multiple biryanis , more than a dozen vegetarian entrees and several chaats. b ✓ LD $$$

WOODMONT GRILL

(Editors’ Choice)

7715 Woodmont Ave., 301-656-9755, woodmontgrill.com Modern American comfort food, hand-crafted cocktails and sushi served in clubby interiors with tufted

red booths. Order the Crisp Martini made with gin and sauvignon blanc and leave the kids at home. Voted “Best Special Occasion Restaurant” and “Best Restaurant in Bethesda” by the readers of Bethesda Magazine in 2024. ✓ LD $$$$

WORLD OF BEER

7200 Wisconsin Ave., 240-389-9317, worldofbeer.com This national brewpub features hundreds of global beers and classic American fare in a brick-walled space with high-top tables and a large outdoor patio. Try a curated beer flight or design your own. bLD$$

ZAO STAMINA RAMEN

7345 Wisconsin Ave., Unit B, 301-3128399, zaostaminaramen.com This spacious restaurant run by a Tokyo-born chef offers comforting bowls of ramen made with homemade noodles. Try the Stamina Ramen prepared with spiced chicken broth, curly noodles, pork belly and a poached egg. bLD$$

ANIMAL LIBERATION

Every day, monkeys are cut open, starved, restrained, and traumatized in taxpayer-funded experiments—including many at the National Institutes of Health. The monkeys are injected with toxic chemicals and sickened with deadly diseases. Their clinging infants are pried away from them. And at the end of it all, almost all of them are killed.

This is a perversion of science, a betrayal of both animals and human patients. And you can help end it.

Scan the QR code or visit PETA.org/Primate to learn more.

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Fashionable finds for the beach-bound

SHOPPING, TRAVEL, LOCAL LORE AND MORE

182

Kristina Huddle crafts bags out of cork.

PHOTO COURTESY THE REEDS AT SHELTER HAVEN
Water Star Grille beckons at The Reeds at Shelter Haven in Stone Harbor, New Jersey. PAGE 188

COASTAL CHIC

Hit the beach (even if just in your daydreams) in these elegant finds

UNDER THE SEA

Kendra Scott “Shea” statement earrings, $198 at Kendra Scott, 4835 Bethesda Ave., Bethesda, 240-743-2428, kendrascott.com

WOVEN WONDER

Odna Italian raffia bucket tote, $428 at Johnny Was, 4867 Bethesda Ave., Bethesda, 301-263-3505, johnnywas.com

TWICE AS NICE

Grace linen two-piece set, $248 at Reformation, 4823 Bethesda Ave., Bethesda, 240-551-5125, thereformation.com

LILAC LUXURY

Bond-Eye “Blake” bikini, $115 (bandeau top) and $90 (hipster bottom) at South Moon Under, 10247 Old Georgetown Road (Wildwood Shopping Center), Bethesda, 301-564-0995, southmoonunder.com

HATS ON

Embellish Your Life bucket hat, $36 at Jurisdiction, 7937A Tuckerman Lane (Cabin John Village), Potomac, 301-250-6987, jurisdictionclothing.com

BEACHY BLUE

Shoshanna tiered midi dress, $395 at Sassanova, 7134 Bethesda Lane, Bethesda, 301-654-7402, sassanova.com

IBIZA INSPIRED

Stuart Weitzman “Ibiza” slide sandal, $225 at Nordstrom, 7111 Democracy Blvd. (Westfield Montgomery mall), Bethesda, 301-365-4111, nordstrom.com

SHELL GAME

Lizzie Fortunato cowrie shell necklace, $395 at Morley, 7112 Bethesda Lane, Bethesda, 301-664-6440, shopmorley.com

SLEEK SUNNIES

Warby Parker “Aubrey” sunglasses, $95 at Warby Parker, 4821 Bethesda Ave., Bethesda, 240-614-4317, warbyparker.com

It’s in the Bag

Kristina Huddle fashions distinctive handbags from cork

For Silver Spring’s Kristina Huddle, cork is useful for more than wine stoppers and bulletin boards—it’s a sustainable material for handbags and accessories.

“About eight years ago I got a small piece of cork fabric and was so intrigued by it—the feel of it,” says Huddle, who describes the texture as slightly squishy, bouncy and buttery. “Everybody that I showed it to was just loving it.”

Huddle’s home-based business, Bozie’s Bags (a nod to her childhood nickname), combines her lifelong love of sewing with providing a sophisticated, environmentally safe alternative to vinyl and leather. Cork fabric is a vegan product, is water-, scratch-, mildew- and bacteria-resistant, and can be spot cleaned. Although Huddle, 54, is not a vegan, she is an animal lover who prefers an eco-friendlier material for her products.

“I like the sustainability,” she says, “but the light weight and the fact that it’s washable are very practical.”

Huddle discovered cork fabric through a Google search for environmentally friendly materials. Since Portugal is the world’s largest cork producer, she says she began importing ethically sourced Portuguese cork fabric made from the cork oak tree, which can be shaved every nine years without causing harm.

Huddle is so enthusiastic about cork products that she and the assistant to the ambassador of Portugal connected on their mutual love of all things Portuguese when she visited Huddle’s booth at the Olney Farmers and Artists Market. From there, the Portuguese Embassy in Washington, D.C. invited her to present cork

products at a 2023 European Union Open House event in the District and again this past May. To highlight aspects of the Portuguese culture and economy, Huddle gave a cork presentation, sold her products, and donated goods for gift bags.

Customers appreciate Huddle’s variety of sizes, shapes and colors, and often field questions from curious friends. “The cork is so unusual—it’s a conversation piece,” says Silver Spring customer Michelle Bouchard. “The quality of her work is amazing; I have purses that I use daily, and they last for years.”

Longtime customer Suzie Friedman met Huddle seven years ago, when their kids attended James Hubert Blake High School in Silver Spring. Over the years, her purse purchases have expanded.

At a wedding in Tampa last year, Friedman’s cork handbags turned heads. She

brought a roomy, cranberry-hued satchel and a minimalist hunter green “Abigail” crossbody purse. One for lots of items; one for essentials.

“One of the women that I knew was like, ‘Tell me about these bags,’ ” the Silver Spring resident says. “I told her about the bags and she ordered a few—she was able to design and choose her own pattern.” Customization is a feature of Bozie’s Bags, with clients able to select a particular color of cork fabric for their order.

Huddle, a mother of three and now an empty nester, worked as a social worker for 20 years and enjoyed sewing cotton bags for her daughters’ American Girl dolls as a creative outlet. She started Bozie’s Bags in 2014, but kept her day job until 2016, when she went all in with her small business.

Huddle’s most popular items are the Abigail crossbody bag ($45) and the Jackie

Kristina Huddle displays some of her cork bags at her home in Silver Spring.

wristlets, which sell for $35. (She names bags after people in her life; Abigail is one of her daughters’ names.) Products are sold on Bozie’s Bags’ website, at the Olney Farmers and Artists Market, Locally Crafted in Gaithersburg, and area festivals and craft shows. Prices range from $15 for a simple card wallet to $150 for larger bags and backpacks.

“They’re beautiful bags, and they aren’t expensive, or I don’t think I’d own five of them,” Friedman says.

Huddle says she sells about 1,750 bags and accessories annually, personally sewing each one. When it comes time to make new inventory, she whips up a variety of bags in batches of 40 or 50.

“It’s definitely my go-to for a gift,” Bouchard says. “There can be anything from a small gift for under $20 or a large bag like the one I got for my sister—a new bag for her laptop.”

Working from a studio in her basement, Huddle creates bags with either of two industrial sewing machines. Two part-time employees help cut fabric for purse liners a few hours a week. The small business has grown exponentially over the past five years, and Huddle says she’ll need to make adjustments.

“I can’t keep being the only person who sews these bags—it’s not sustainable,” she says. In order to expand her business, she is considering becoming a distributor of Portuguese cork fabric in America, selling it online to fellow artisans in addition to creating her unique bags.

“I believe cork is something that should be more readily available here because of its wonderful properties,” Huddle says. “I’ve loved bringing it to the States.”

Bay Stays

Opened in June 2023 with a half-mile bayfront promenade, Sun Outdoors Chincoteague Bay is a family-friendly haven of outdoor fun complete with a pool, a playground, pickleball courts and a private fishing pier (no fishing license needed). Choose a glamping tent, cottage or RV site to set up your home away from home.

Each of the 28 khaki-colored, wood-framed glamping tents has air conditioning and heating, a full bathroom, kitchenette (with mini-fridge, microwave and stovetop), bunk beds sleeping area, private bedroom with a queen bed, and covered porch with a picnic table. Community firepits with Adirondack chairs are scattered around the tent area. All glamping tents are nonsmoking and inaccessible by car; however, golf cart rentals are available. There are no locks on the tents, and pets are not permitted.

The 24 waterfront and 16 waterview cottages, painted sailor blue, are pet-friendly. Each has a kitchen, full bathroom, set of bunk beds and separate queen-bed bedroom, plus a screened porch, patio and picnic table. Waterview cottage bonus: a rooftop sundeck.

Sun Outdoors’ 149 pet-friendly RV sites are closest to the bathhouses, pool and camp store. Full hookup back-in RV sites offer 20-, 30- and 50-amp electric service. Site amenities include Wi-Fi, a picnic table and a fire ring.

Check the events schedule for live music on the pool deck and wine tasting nights. Off property, explore nearby Assateague Island National Seashore, Assateague Lighthouse and Maui Jack’s Waterpark (discounted tickets are available at Sun Outdoors’ welcome center). Rent an open-air “Moke” road vehicle—they look like a cross between a jeep and a golf cart—to make cruising the attractions part of your fun; rentals are available on-site for $195 per day.

Nightly rates begin at $80 for an RV site, $300 for a cottage, and $200 for a glamping tent. —Christine Koubek Flynn

Sun Outdoors Chincoteague Bay, 2272 Main St., Chincoteague, Virginia, 855-462-3423, sunoutdoors.com/virginia/ sun-outdoors-chincoteague-bay

Sun Outdoors offers three accommodation options, including waterfront RV sites (above) and cottages (below).
“Moke” road vehicle rentals (bottom right) and a food truck (below left) are on-site.

Beachside Bliss

Located a short walk from Bethany Beach’s oceanfront shops and bandstand, the Bethany Beach Ocean Suites Residence Inn by Marriott is not your average chain. Fully renovated in 2023, the Delaware hotel is akin to a coastal inn, boasting 112 spacious suites (each with a private balcony or terrace to enjoy the sound of the sea), a heated indoor/outdoor saltwater pool, and Via Sophia by the Sea, a restaurant and bar that’s a sibling of D.C.’s Via Sophia. The menu features pasta specialties and seafood dishes, including a delicious salmon entree with wild mushrooms and walnut gremolata. Dine indoors, at the bar, or alfresco on the ocean-facing covered porch. The hotel’s living room-style lobby, adjacent to Via Sophia, is dotted with several cozy seating areas where you can relax, dine with your dog on food ordered at Via Sophia’s bar, or chat with fellow guests.

Hints of balsam and juniper berry waft through guest suite hallways (thanks to scent dispensers). The one-bedroom and studio suites include a king or two queen beds—each with a comfortable mattress and duvet—sofa bed, bathroom with a walk-in shower (some rooms have tubs), and kitchenette with a full-size refrigerator, small cooktop, microwave and dishwasher (note there is no oven). A handful of first-floor suites have walk-out terraces just a few steps above Bethany’s boardwalk, making it easy to dash past the dunes to catch the sunrise from the beach.

Summer activities for kids include a mermaid swim, face painting, a magician and movies. Bike rentals are available on-site. Suite rates begin at $709 per night and include coffee and tea all day and a full breakfast buffet. —C.K.F.

Bethany Beach Ocean Suites Residence Inn by Marriott, 99 Hollywood St., Bethany Beach, Delaware, 302-539-3200, marriott.com/en-us/hotels/ rehri-bethany-beach-ocean-suites-residence-inn/overview

PHOTOS
COURTESY BETHANY BEACH OCEAN SUITES
Bethany Beach Ocean Suites (above); the hotel’s saltwater pool, cocktails at Via Sophia and a king-bed suite (below)

Yak It Up on the Tracks

Chat up friends, family or your date as you pedal alongside the Great Allegheny Passage on a tandem or quad railbike from Tracks and Yaks. Opened in Frostburg, Maryland, in May 2021, Tracks and Yaks tours depart from the historic Frostburg Depot and run along Western Maryland Scenic Railroad’s smooth steel tracks, offering gorgeous mountain views and a fun pedal through the 914-foot Brush Tunnel. The rides, which are all guided, are leisurely paced and the bikes are easy to handle, making the tours accessible for people of all ages. A variety of tours are available, including the popular Helmstetter Hotshot, a 10-mile, two-hour pedal through the most scenic part of the railway, with a shuttle bus return (from $99 for a tandem bike). Or try the Track and Yak Express, a three-hour tour that pairs a 10-mile railbike ride with a shuttle bus to the North Branch of the Potomac River for a 3-mile kayak or tube float (from $139). Additional tours are available, including one that combines railbiking with a return trip aboard the Western Maryland Scenic Railroad’s Frostburg Flyer.

A second Tracks and Yaks location in Berlin, Maryland, about a 30-minute drive from Bethany Beach, opened in July 2023 and offers a 6-mile, 1½-hour tour, or a 13-mile, 2½-hour tour on straight and level tracks. Both traverse farmland, wetland and coastal forests of pine. The longer excursion includes a stop at the historic Queponco train depot, which now serves as a museum dedicated to the history of the railroad and its importance on the Eastern Shore. Be sure to pack water, sunscreen, snacks and closed-toe shoes. Open six days a week (closed on Tuesdays) throughout the summer. Visit the website for tour schedules and prices. —C.K.F.

Tracks and Yaks, 19 Depot St., Frostburg, Maryland, 301-349-3699; 115 Broad St., Berlin, Maryland, 443-856-3309, tracksandyaks.com

In Frostburg, Tracks and Yaks tours run on the Western Maryland Scenic Railraod tracks (above). One of the tours ends with tubing on the Potomac River.
PHOTO BY THE CAPE MAY COUNTY, NEW JERSEY, DEPARTMENT

Jersey’s

Island Gem

The 7-mile barrier island that is Avalon and Stone Harbor, New Jersey, is a beach, birding—and now boutique hotel—paradise

Be warned, at the end you’ll hear bird sounds, and cool water will rain down,” said Stephanie Vanwold, a Salt Spa staffer, as she prepared to leave me to the steamy, dimly lighted, shimmering, private Turkish bath. I was visiting the Salt Spa at The Reeds at Shelter Haven in Stone Harbor, New Jersey, curious to try something new.

Step one of the 45-minute experience was to exfoliate my arms and legs with spoonfuls of Himalayan salt, then rinse with warm water from one of the handheld showers that dot the room. Next: mud, which was beautifully displayed in chunky smudges alongside flowers on a tray with golden cursive lettering that instructed you where to put each one—face, chest, stomach, back, and arms and legs.

Once finished, I likely looked like an earth-toned striped zebra wandering the mist-filled room to the sound of soft piano music. As the medicinal muds worked their magic to purportedly boost my immune system and relieve muscle tension and remove toxins from my body, I grabbed a towel and lay back on a bench to watch the twinkling Swarovski crystal night “sky” dance with color. I’ll admit that after about 30 minutes of relaxed listening and lightgazing, I multitasked with a few Pilates stretches.

And then the birds sounded as cool water rained from the ceiling to rinse me of the muds. By the time I reached the locker room to get dressed, I realized: one, my skin felt smooth as butter, and two, this is not your average midAtlantic beach vacation experience. Then again, this 7-mile barrier island off New Jersey’s southern coast is full of unique experiences.

Beach catamarans at Stone Harbor

Quieter and smaller than Ocean City, New Jersey, their well-known neighbor to the north, and Cape May, their famous neighbor to the south, the towns of Avalon and Stone Harbor are known for surfable waves and wellgroomed sand, ballfields and court-filled recreation areas. The island also boasts the 21½-acre Stone Harbor Bird Sanctuary, a popular spot for herons and a National Park Service national landmark..

Of the two towns, Avalon’s buildings are designed in a more modern style. Stone Harbor’s vibe is more

BEACHSIDE SUNRISE

SIPPING A MORNING COFFEE FROM A BALCONY AT SUNRISE AND TAKING A DECADENT MIDDAY NAP while a salty beach breeze wafts through the room is my definition of a dream beach getaway. You can have that and more at the oceanfront ICONA Avalon, a 159-room hotel that opened in 2016 as a partial rebuild. The decor feels like a cross between a Cape Cod inn and a high-end Nantucket beach home done up in sea blues and white with classic nautical touches throughout.

“quintessential shore town”; a very young Taylor Swift occasionally played the guitar at Coffee Talk (see photos on its wall) when her family summered in the town.

In recent years, a trio of boutique hotels debuted in an accommodation landscape once dominated by lovely rental homes, condos and a smattering of mom-and-pop motels. The new options—two oceanfront, one bayside— broadened the opportunities to vacation here. When there’s no traffic, the towns are an easy drive, about 3½ hours from Bethesda.

The hotel offers more than a dozen room types, from suites and studios to rooms that accommodate two to eight people. Every guest room features custom furniture pieces, Carrara marble in the bathroom, pillowtop mattresses, a flatscreen television, a compact refrigerator, a microwave, a Keurig coffeemaker and a balcony or a terrace. Depending on the type of accommodation, you might find custom headboards, sofa sleepers, glass showers, a galley kitchen, and various balcony and terrace configurations. Some East Wing rooms and suites have balconies close to the ocean and dunes but visible to one another, while the West Wing’s ocean-facing rooms are set farther back with balconies angled toward the ocean that are a bit more private.

Outdoor perks include umbrellas and lounge chairs set up on the beach, a large heated pool and spa pool, and a sundeck with luxury cabana rentals, plus an alfresco bar that is often the site of live music. Complimentary Starbucks coffee and a selection of teas are set out each morning at Shimmers Bistro near a cozy sitting area. On-site Avalon Brew

Pub serves up craft beers, including their namesake IPAs, Belgian-style beers and a pale lager, all brewed in-house to go along with the pub-style menu.

Sister-property ICONA Windrift, opened next door in 2021 (after a change in ownership and a renovation) with a dozen more room types, plus three- and four-bedroom condos. It’s also done up in crisp nautical decor. Behind Windrift’s all-glass, ocean-facing facade, there are many ways to dine with an ocean view. Avalon Prime, a high-end steakhouse, is a Wine Spectator Award winner. Among the building’s three floors, you’ll find

a signature lounge with its piano barinspired ambience and live music, as well as eateries offering brick oven pizza, fresh sushi, a wide selection of beers, live sports on the flat-screens, and sweeping ocean views (on levels two and three). Outdoors, enjoy a drink on a poolside lounger near the Tiki Bar.

The two ICONAs are Avalon’s only beachfront hotels and are on the town’s southern end, which is just about a mile stroll to Stone Harbor’s town center. Leave the car and take the complimentary shuttle throughout the 7-mile island between 9 a.m. and 10 p.m.

PHOTOS
Clockwise from top left: An oceanfront luxury king studio balcony at ICONA Avalon; the hotel’s exterior; sunrise at the boardwalk

Summer Rocks at

LIVE LAWN fromthe

Free outdoor concert series, Wednesdays at 7:30pm GUDELSKY GAZEBO

THE BLUES! FEATURING

MARK G. MEADOWS & ROCHELLE RICE

July 10

THE SOUL CRACKERS

July 17

AMERICAN PATCHWORK QUARTET

July 24

PLENA LIBRE

July 31

EU FEATURING SUGAR BEAR

Aug 7

UKEFEST FINALE Aug 14

LIAM PURCELL & CANE MILL ROAD Aug 21

Thursdays at 7pm 123 ANDRÉS

July 11

JAZZY ASH

July 18

MARSHA AND THE POSITRONS

July 25

DANCE PARTY WITH FYÜTCH

Aug 1

MUSIC CENTER

THE STARS OF THE PEKING ACROBATS

STRAIGHT NO CHASER SUMMER: THE 90S

THE RIGHTEOUS BROTHERS LOVIN’ FEELIN’ FAREWELL TOUR Thu, Aug 15

A BANDHOUSE GIGS TRIBUTE TO DC LEGENDS Sat, Aug 17

L–R: Live from the Lawn by David Stuck, Sugar Bear by VS Davis Photography, 123 Andrés by Marcelo Quiñonesm, Jazzy Ash, Fyütch by Sam Popp
Straight No Chaser, The Righteous Brothers, Peking Acrobats by Tom Meinhold

BAYSIDE SUNSET

ON THE BAY SIDE, THE REEDS AT SHELTER HAVEN IN STONE HARBOR MANAGES TO CATER TO SERENITY SEEKERS AND FAMILIES thanks to a good list of activities to help occupy kids and the decision not to book weddings in the summer months. Voted New Jersey’s Best Hotel in 2019 by Condé Nast Traveler readers, the 58-room boutique hotel opened in 2013 with 37 rooms, then added the two-story Salt Spa wellness center, and 21 additional coastal chic rooms in 2019.

“We have many guests who book a week here instead of their former rental home,” says Diane Wade, The Reeds’ guest services manager. “They like the ease of all the activities and not having to pack linens.” The hotel’s lineup of things to do includes complimentary yoga in its roof garden, paddleboarding and kayaking on the bay, live music, and trivia nights in the nautical-themed Crew Room.

The hotel’s beach concierge service drives guests the couple-blocks walk it would be to the beach, then sets up chairs, towels and umbrellas. Beach butlers serve a complimentary sweet treat (such as frozen pops or ice cream) in the afternoon, and deliver other sustenance ordered from The Reeds’ beach menu.

Get out on the water in The Reeds at Sea boat, which is available to rent by the hour and comes complete with a captain to navigate around the back bays while passengers nibble on snacks. Or play at Island Water Sports, an aqua park next door to The Reeds with floating inflatables ready for climbing, WaveRunner rentals and tubing parties for kids.

Indoors, the Salt Spa, with its treatment rooms, Turkish bath and “brine lounge” (a light-therapy room with a waterfall), makes for a peaceful escape.

A partnership with Stone Harbor Recreation offers kids an opportunity to play baseball, soccer, T-ball, flag football and peewee soccer, or go crabbing and fishing. Willow Creek Winery and Avalon Golf Club packages round out The Reeds’ offerings.

After an active (or not) day, catch the sunset with a cocktail at The Reeds’ open-air Water Star Grille, then have a date night at the elegant SAX restaurant and its convivial lounge. Order the mezze plate to start, then try the pan-roasted Scottish salmon filet with beluga black lentils, white asparagus, and sauteed kale and spinach. Leave room for the delicious chocolate brownie bites left on the nightstand during turndown service.

Rooms and suites feature white oak floors, Egyptian cotton linens, wonderfully smooshy pillows (plus firmer options) and Frette bathrobes. The two-bedroom, two-bathroom Salt Suite, located in the newer building’s third-floor turret, has a living room with a fireplace.

Christine Koubek Flynn reports on what is new and notable in mid-Atlantic travel in the magazine’s Traveler’s Notebook column. Her travel stories have also appeared in The Washington Post and Coastal Living among others, and she teaches writing workshops at The Writer’s Center in Bethesda.

From top: Water Star Grille at The Reeds; Mexican food at Buckets Margarita Bar & Cantina, also at The Reeds; kayaking at Stone Harbor

WHERE TO EAT

Fred’s Tavern & Liquor Store (fredstavern.net) is a favorite with locals and regular visitors for its friendly bartenders and an eclectic menu that features Asian lettuce wraps and a great selection of salads and burgers, including a delicious patty melt with sweet potato fries. The liquor store is next door to the tavern. Date night haunts include seafood-focused The Diving Horse (thedivinghorseavalon.com), and Spiaggetta (spiaggettanj.com) for Roman-inspired cuisine.

For a light breakfast with your morning brew, grab coffee, tea and a bagel (baked, not broiled) at Café Noir (cafenoirsh.com), or pop in to Pure Juice + Kitchen (purejuiceandkitchen.com) for an all organic and mostly locally sourced menu of teas, superfood lattes and smoothies, handcrafted toasts and warm bowls. Try the Apple Spice Oatmeal Bowl, made with oats, almond butter, apples, maple syrup, and pumpkin and hemp seeds. Browse the Sunday morning Stone Harbor Farmers Market at Water Tower Plaza for fresh seafood, flowers, produce, baked goods and specialty spices.

A trip to Stone Harbor would not be complete without at least one treat from Springer’s Homemade Ice Cream

(springersicecream.com). Its abundant list of flavors includes chocolate- and vanilla-based choices along with a few twists. Butter almond, anyone? Or try the banana peanut butter and, when available, the Christmas in July “Buddy’s Breakfast” of cookie dough ice cream with marshmallows, rainbow jimmies, fudge swirl and mini Pop-Tarts pieces (maple syrup optional).

WHERE TO SHOP

While there are a handful of popular brand stores— Vineyard Vines in Avalon, Anthropologie and Life is Good in Stone Harbor—many shops are independently owned and reflective of their owners’ talents and tastes. Blue Eden’s side-by-side Sea Foam Soap Co. and Just BE Candle Co. stores (seafoamsoapcompany.com) are perfect examples. The intoxicatingly scented soy candles, and soaps and lotions made from goat milk and honey, are crafted in Stone Harbor. This summer you can make a candle in Blue Eden workshops at The Reeds at Shelter Haven hotel.

Move on from olfactory-oriented shopping to tastetesting premium extra virgin olive oils and aged balsamic vinegars sourced from countries around the globe at The Well

POURING BACK INTO THE COMMUNITY

Just BE Candle Co.
Wayward Gardner

Dressed Olive (thewelldressedolive.com). Then “think outside the pot,” as Wayward Gardener (wayward-gardener.com) describes its wares— plants plus eclectic Zen-themed gifts, beautiful multicolored capiz strands and more. Head to Hoys 5 & 10 (hoys510.com) for beach gear, toys, surf apparel and souvenirs. And find a good beach read at Avalon’s indie bookstore Beach Bound Books (facebook.com/stoneharborbookshop) or Stone Harbor’s Barrier Island Books & Art (facebook.com/barrierislandbooksart)

WHERE TO ROOT YOURSELF IN NATURE

Pick your pleasure from the many offerings at The Wetlands Institute (wetlandsinstitute.org), whether it’s one of their Salt Marsh Safari tours led by a naturalist, attending a “creature feature” to learn about turtles and horseshoe crabs up close, or donning waders and helping drag a seine through the water to find shrimp, fish and more. Be sure to chat up one of the warm and welcoming staff members to learn about the osprey nests, and don’t miss the walking bridge over the marsh, rooftop tower overlook, or the gift shop full of clever nature-themed items.

Before European settlement and development, mid-Atlantic barrier islands were largely covered with maritime forests that gradually gave way to shrub forests, then meadows, grasses, dunes and finally the beach. Walk the Avalon Dune and Beach Trail (avalonduneandbeachtrail.com) to explore one of the few remaining forests of this kind.

WHERE TO STAY

ICONA Avalon, 7849 Dune Drive, Avalon, New Jersey, 609-551-0101, icona.com/avalon Rates begin at $529.

ICONA Windrift , 105 80th St., Avalon, New Jersey, 609-368-5175, icona.com/windrift Rates begin at $529.

The Reeds at Shelter Haven , 9601 Third Ave., Stone Harbor, New Jersey, 609-368-0100, reeds atshelterhaven.com. Rates begin at $524.

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A Shore THING

This Silver Spring couple’s 140-guest Rehoboth Beach wedding came with bayside views

THE COUPLE: Laura Doherty Miller, 33, grew up in Laytonsville and graduated from Our Lady of Good Counsel High School in Olney. She is a sales director for Scout Bags. Robert Miller, 32, grew up in Scaggsville, Maryland, and graduated from Reservoir High School in Howard County. He is

an accountant for United Therapeutics Corporation. They live in Silver Spring with their dog, a pit bull mix named Millie.

HOW THEY MET: Laura was introduced to Robert by her old high school friends, who attended the

University of Maryland with him. But their romance took several years—and a little friendly intervention—to develop. “Our friends probably had a bigger role in it than we would admit,” says Laura, recalling how one of her pals (and eventual bridesmaids) told Robert to

take her on a date to the Sauf Haus Bier Hall & Garten in Washington, D.C., in 2016. “That’s how we ended up actually dating,” she says. “That kicked it off.”

THE PROPOSAL: On a hot August day in 2022, Robert brought a ring along on a hike the couple took at Virginia’s Turkey Run Park. As they came across a picturesque spot along the Potomac River, Laura suggested they prop her phone up and take a video of themselves. “Totally not what I had anticipated” while preparing to pop the question, recalls Robert. But he embraced the moment. “He turns and says, ‘Are you ready?’ And I said, ‘Ready for what?’ ” Laura says. “And then he proposes and I’m, like, fullblown meltdown status.”

THE CEREMONY: The pair tied the knot at St. Edmond Roman Catholic Church in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware, on June 23, 2023. “It felt full,” says the bride of the intimate venue, the perfect size for their 140 guests. Deciding to get married in a beach town, the newlyweds say, was a no-brainer—it resembled a “destination wedding,” Robert says, without being too much of a trek for their local guests.

THE RECEPTION: After the ceremony, guests took buses to the reception at Rehoboth Beach Country Club, where oversized windows bathed the ballroom in natural light and offered exquisite bay views. But one of the bride’s favorite memories came en route to the venue. “Being on that bus for a moment of just,

PHOTOS

Holy crap, we just did that, was really just so fun,” she recalls.

THE DECOR: To help achieve the vision of a “French whimsy garden party at the beach,” Laura says, a green-andpink color scheme dominated the decor, from the napkins to the table signage to the matchbooks that guests took home as party favors. The table-scapes featured understated bouquets of buds such as anemones and baby’s breath, and above the dance floor hung a cluster of disco balls strewn with greenery.

Rather than signing a guest book, guests inscribed notes on a framed print depicting a kitchen table—a peaceful scene that the bride envisions “hanging in our house forever.”

THE DRESS: The Alena Leena gown that Laura discovered at Garnish Boutique in Towson, Maryland, was picked out with the June date in mind. “It was really nice to wear during the summer, and it just felt really lightweight and fun to dance in,” she says. She paired the dress with Loeffler

Randall heels, completing the ensemble with her sister’s veil and a pearl bracelet that belonged to her late mother. “Basically, everything was something borrowed or sentimental,” says the bride. Millie, the couple’s dog, looked on as Laura got ready the

morning of the wedding, but the pup did not attend the ceremony. “She can’t be trusted,” Robert says.

THE MUSIC: After a first dance to a recording of the Schitt’s Creek cover of “Simply the Best,” Robert and his mom took to the dance floor for “You’ll Be in My Heart” by Phil Collins. “She’s bawling her eyes out,” recalls Robert. “Her favorite song is ‘Shut Up and Dance,’ and I was like, ‘It’s the first song. Just keep it together and we’ll have a good time.’ ” Indeed, they did, with the music

makers, 76 Degrees West Band, playing that tune and other favorites. “They were outrageous,” Robert says, recalling the group’s jazzy vibe. Donning heart-shaped sunglasses— another party favor—guests boogied to crowd-pleasers such as “Don’t Stop Believin’ ” and “September.” “Honestly, everyone was out there, like, the whole night,” says Robert.

THE FOOD: The country club catered the feast, starting with his-and-hers signature cocktails (an Orange Crush for Robert and an Aperol spritz for Laura). For the main dish, guests chose from miso-glazed salmon, beef short rib or a stuffed poblano pepper over rice. After the cutting of the cake—a small white buttercream—

guests chowed down on a spread of cannoli, chocolate chip cookies and vanilla ice cream.

THE AFTERPARTY: Guests headed to the Summer House restaurant after the reception, but the merrymaking didn’t stop there: The next day, the newlyweds invited people to join them for a beach excursion. “It was

nice to see everybody with no pressure to get dressed up for a dinner or a breakfast,” the bride says.

THE HONEYMOON: Later in the summer, the newlyweds spent nearly two weeks traveling through Portugal: They took an electric bike tour through Lisbon, lounged on a boat in Lagos, and “sat in the resort for four

days” on the Azores, Laura says.

VENDORS: Band, 76 Degrees West Band; catering and venue, Rehoboth Beach Country Club; church, St. Edmond Roman Catholic Church; dress, Garnish Boutique; florist, Innerbloom Floral; hair, East Coast Bridal; photography, Lily Morgan Photography; videography, Fordham Films

The Four Words That Propelled My Career

Sylvia Bugg, 53, describes her job at PBS as “the chief question asker.” Officially she’s the network’s chief programming executive and general manager for general audience programming, a major position that puts her in charge of “any content that’s on PBS that’s not kids’ content,” she says. Shows she’s brought to air include fan favorites The Great American Recipe, Next at the Kennedy Center and Southern Storytellers. The Clarksburg resident spent several years at Silver Spring’s Discovery Communications before returning to her second employer out of college, PBS, where she has been since October 2020. We asked the chief question asker about what she’s learned along the way.

I had a former boss who oversaw production programming [at Discovery] who was also a mentor. He said something in front of me to someone else: ‘Sylvia can do anything.’ I was really just starting out in the cable world and beginning to understand how it all worked and where I would fit in that experience. And just hearing that really stayed with me.

“I TRY TO THINK ABOUT WAYS TO BE INFLUENTIAL AND BE A GOOD CONTRIBUTOR AND BE COLLABORATIVE—AND THAT WILL REALLY TAKE YOU FAR.”
—SYLVIA BUGG

What he meant was that I could grow into doing many things as it related to my career. At that stage of my career and my life I don’t think I had quite fully realized what my potential was, so when he said that, it meant so much to me. People will often comment on your abilities or your skill, especially early in your career, when you are not in the room, but to hear someone say that when you are in the room—well, it has stayed with me for 20 or 25 years. It instilled in me the confidence to know that if I really put my head down, worked really hard, kept being a really good listener, and surrounded myself with positive people, that I could do anything.

There has always been this idea in leadership that you have to do it all. At some point in my career I felt I could do it all. I can do anything, right? But maybe not all of it. So in some ways those two ideas combined: Doing it all and doing everything. But that was not quite right.

The signs of a good leader are those who surround themselves with other great leaders and great teams. Early on, I probably did not fully understand that. I may have had situations where I was trying to juggle too much and really needed to think about what it meant to be a good leader. It really is a 360-degree experience. So often we have to manage up, we manage across, we manage down. But the whole idea is 360-degrees leadership, and for me, that’s been a valuable lesson.

I try to think about ways to be influential and be a good contributor and be collaborative—and that will really take you far. That’s one of the principles I’ve tried to live by and lead by— through example.

—As

told to Buzz McClain

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