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    Restaurant in Washington DC, United States

    Chaplin's

    190pts

    Ramen-forward Shaw bar worth returning to.

    Chaplin's, Restaurant in Washington DC

    About Chaplin's

    Chaplin's in Shaw is a reliable, bar-forward Asian kitchen at the $$ price point with a ramen program and cocktail list that both outperform their tier. Chef Myo Htun's operation holds a 4.4 Google rating across 1,700-plus reviews. Easy to book, worth multiple visits, and one of the more complete casual dining options in Washington, D.C.

    Chaplin's Is Worth Booking — Especially If You Plan to Come Back More Than Once

    Chaplin's in Shaw earns a clear recommendation at the $$ price point: this is one of the more complete Asian kitchens in Washington, D.C., pairing a ramen program that genuinely competes with the city's leading with cocktails strong enough to anchor a full evening. Chef and partner Myo Htun's 9th Street NW operation holds a 4.4 Google rating across more than 1,700 reviews, which at this price tier signals consistent execution rather than occasional brilliance. If you are deciding between a single visit and building Chaplin's into a rotation, go with the rotation. The menu has enough range that two or three visits will cover meaningfully different ground.

    The Space and Who It Suits

    Chaplin's is a 21-plus venue, which shapes the room. Expect a bar-forward layout where cocktails are as central to the experience as the food — this is not a ramen counter you eat at quickly and leave. The atmosphere skews social and convivial, making it a practical choice for date nights, small group celebrations, or a lower-key special occasion where you want good food and drinks without the formality or price tag of a fine-dining room. The physical setup suits groups of two to four comfortably; if you are planning a larger gathering, check directly on current availability and seating configurations. For a celebration dinner where the bill matters as much as the experience, Chaplin's positioning at $$ makes it one of the more accessible options in the Shaw neighbourhood without feeling like a compromise.

    First Visit: Anchor on the Ramen and the Cocktails

    On your first visit, the ramen is the right place to focus. The hot version, the Chaplin A.S.S., is built around tender chicken and a broth described as deeply seasoned and warming , the kind of bowl that justifies the reputation. The cold ramen, with springy noodles, ginger, and cucumber, gives you a structural contrast worth ordering as a secondary option if your table is sharing. These are not generic interpretations; Myo Htun's approach to ramen is personal and wide-ranging, which is why this kitchen gets mentioned in conversations about D.C.'s stronger noodle programs alongside spots charging considerably more. Pair the ramen with one of the cocktails that the venue has built its reputation on. Chaplin's is known for conversation-worthy drinks, which in practical terms means you are not just ordering something to wash down food , the bar program has genuine intent behind it.

    Second Visit: Work Through the Bites

    If you return, shift your focus to the smaller plates. The kitchen produces gyoza, shumai, and chap ban ji alongside the "pay day injected dumplings" that have become a recognisable menu reference for regular visitors. These bites are described as intrinsic to the kitchen rather than supplementary, which means they deserve attention on their own terms rather than as filler before the main bowls arrive. Order two or three and treat the meal as a broader tour of what Myo Htun is doing beyond ramen. The chocolate lava cake with Cognac and ice cream appears consistently in descriptions of the menu and is worth ordering at least once, particularly if you are closing out a special occasion meal and want a dessert that fits the register of the evening.

    Third Visit: Cocktail-Led Evening

    By a third visit, the format that makes most sense is building the evening around the bar rather than arriving with a full ramen order as the goal. Chaplin's cocktail program is a defined part of its identity, and the 21-plus door policy underlines that this is a venue designed as much for drinking as for eating. Order the bites as accompaniments, revisit the cold ramen if the season suits it, and use the visit to settle into the space on its own terms rather than working through a checklist. This is also the format that suits a date night or low-key celebration where pacing matters: drinks, small plates, something sweet at the end.

    Practical Details

    Chaplin's sits at 1501 9th St NW in the Shaw neighbourhood, a walkable, transit-accessible part of D.C. with a concentration of independently operated restaurants and bars. Booking is rated easy, meaning you do not need to plan weeks ahead to secure a table the way you would at higher-demand venues in the city. Hours and phone contact are not published in our current data, so confirm current operating times directly before visiting. The $$ price range positions Chaplin's as an evening out that does not require significant budget planning, and at a 4.4 rating across a large review base, the consistency is reliable enough that a spontaneous booking carries low risk. For a broader picture of what to eat and drink in the area, see our full Washington, D.C. restaurants guide, our full Washington, D.C. bars guide, and our full Washington, D.C. hotels guide. If you are exploring the broader Asian dining scene in D.C., Maketto and Bar Chinois are worth comparing directly for format and price positioning. Astoria DC rounds out Shaw's more interesting independent options if you are planning a neighbourhood evening. Internationally, if you want to benchmark Chaplin's ramen and cocktail-led approach against strong Asian concepts in other cities, taku in Cologne and Jun's in Dubai offer useful reference points. For D.C. experiences and wineries beyond dining, see our full Washington, D.C. experiences guide and our full Washington, D.C. wineries guide.

    FAQ

    What should I order at Chaplin's?

    • Start with the Chaplin A.S.S. hot ramen on a first visit , the chicken and broth are the kitchen's most-cited dish.
    • The cold ramen, gyoza, shumai, and "pay day injected dumplings" are strong secondary orders across a second or third visit.
    • End with the chocolate lava cake with Cognac and ice cream if you are celebrating or want a full-meal experience.

    Can I eat at the bar at Chaplin's?

    • Chaplin's is a bar-forward venue and eating at the bar fits naturally with the cocktail-led format.
    • For solo diners or couples, the bar is a practical and social option in a city where counter seating is not always available at this price tier.

    Is Chaplin's worth the price?

    • At $$, yes , the ramen program and cocktail quality both exceed what the price range typically delivers in D.C.
    • Compared to higher-priced Asian concepts in the city, Chaplin's offers more value per dish without a significant quality drop.

    Does Chaplin's handle dietary restrictions?

    • The menu includes noodle, dumpling, and small-plate categories, which typically accommodate some variation, but specific dietary restriction policies are not confirmed in our current data.
    • Contact the venue directly before visiting if restrictions are a deciding factor.

    Is Chaplin's good for a special occasion?

    • Yes, with the right expectations: this is a lively, bar-forward room rather than a formal dining environment.
    • At $$ it suits birthdays, low-key date anniversaries, or a celebration meal where atmosphere and food quality matter more than white-tablecloth service.
    • For a more formal special occasion in D.C., Albi or Causa at $$$$ provide a different register.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Chaplin's?

    • No tasting menu is confirmed in our current data for Chaplin's.
    • The format here is a la carte with an emphasis on ramen, bites, and cocktails , plan your visit around building your own progression across the menu rather than expecting a set tasting format.

    Compare Chaplin's

    Value at a Glance: Chaplin's
    VenuePriceValue
    Chaplin's$$
    Oyster Oyster$$$
    Albi$$$$
    Causa$$$$
    Rooster & Owl$$$
    Rose’s Luxury$$$$

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I order at Chaplin's?

    Start with the ramen — the Chaplin A.S.S. (hot version with chicken and a broth described as sweltering) is the anchor dish and the clearest reason to visit. On a second visit, work through the bites: gyoza, shumai, chap ban ji, and the pay day injected dumplings are all worth your time. Finish with the chocolate lava cake with Cognac and ice cream if you want dessert.

    Can I eat at the bar at Chaplin's?

    Yes, and for solo diners or pairs it's arguably the right call. Chaplin's is a 21-plus, bar-forward venue where the cocktail program is as central as the food, so the bar is a fully supported way to eat. It suits anyone who wants to order widely across the menu without committing to a table-service pace.

    Is Chaplin's worth the price?

    At $$, yes — this is one of the stronger value propositions among independently operated Asian kitchens in D.C. You get creative ramen, serious cocktails, and a kitchen that runs from dumplings to dessert under the same roof. Compared to Rooster & Owl or Rose's Luxury, Chaplin's costs less and fits a more casual, repeat-visit format.

    Does Chaplin's handle dietary restrictions?

    The venue data doesn't document specific dietary accommodation policies. Given the menu's focus on ramen, dumplings, and bar bites, diners with restrictions around gluten or shellfish should check the venue's official channels before booking to confirm options.

    Is Chaplin's good for a special occasion?

    It works well for low-key celebrations — birthdays, date nights, or group dinners where the mood matters as much as the food. The cocktail program and the 21-plus format give it a genuine bar-night energy, which suits relaxed occasions better than formal ones. For a more structured special-occasion dinner, Albi or Rose's Luxury would be stronger fits.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Chaplin's?

    No tasting menu is documented for Chaplin's. The format here is à la carte, with the ramen and bites designed for mix-and-match ordering rather than a fixed progression. If a set-menu format is what you're after, Rooster & Owl or Causa offer that structure at a comparable or higher price point in D.C.

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