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Southern-Styled Mallard Lands in a Familiar Logan Circle Space This Summer

D.C. chef Hamilton Johnson finds a home for his duck dishes and much more in the soon-to-close Birch & Barley space

Mallard’s spiced half-duck breast with chicken fried leg confit, summer squash, turnips, and foie gras jus.
John Rorapaugh for LeadingDC
Tierney Plumb is the editor of Eater DC, covering all things food and drink around the nation's capital.

Logan Circle’s modern American pioneer Birch & Barley — one of the only dining options on the now-booming nightlife corridor when it opened in 2009 — will close for good on Saturday, July 13. A few weeks later, Neighborhood Restaurant Group (NRG) will reboot the first-floor space as a fresh new Southern spot called Mallard (1337 14th Street NW).

Mallard’s executive chef Hamilton Johnson.
John Rorapaugh for LeadingDC

Mallard, the brainchild of South Carolina native and vet D.C. chef Hamilton Johnson, is scheduled to start flapping for dinner service on Tuesday, August 6. Johnson is already cooking on-site: ChurchKey, NRG’s beer-fueled sibling up top that also turns 15 this year, unveiled a refreshed menu under his watch this week.

Johnson got his start at renowned Charleston restaurants and went on to become a well-known D.C. dining fixture — recognized for both his all-tattooed look and culinary talent — that dates back to his downtown days at Southern showpiece Vidalia under James Beard Award-winning chef Jeff Buben. Johnson went on to open edgy, Southern-accented Nordic kitchen Honeysuckle in the same space, which closed in 2019, and subsequently cooked at places like American Son and Michele’s in the Eaton hotel.

While searching for a permanent D.C. space for his new passion project to nest, Johnson teased the Mallard menu over the past year with pop-up dinners at Michelin-starred Gravitas and a long-term residency at Adams Morgan’s disco ball-dripping Le Mont Royal.

A cheffed-up heirloom beet salad with melon, mint, and North Carolina Camembert cheese plays well with a bourbon peach smash.
John Rorapaugh for LeadingDC

At Mallard, Johnson turns to global techniques and local purveyors to produce remixed mashups of Southern comfort foods. Opening items include an elegant plate of shrimp and grits topped with smoked pork, piquillo peppers, and shellfish broth; wild-caught blue catfish with poached oysters, corn, and smoked trout roe; seared sea scallops surrounded in summer delights like charred peaches and dandelion greens; and Berkshire pork trotters. Duck dishes and foie gras will naturally make lots of appearances at Mallard; Johnson sources the namesake ingredient from family-run La Belle Farms in the foothills of the Catskill Mountains.

Mallard fills a carnivorous void on the strip after all-American standby the Pig closed in fall 2022.

Shrimp and Edisto Island, S.C. grits with smoked pork, scallions, and shellfish nage.
Mack Ordaya for LeadingDC

Mallard’s bar will be manned by the beverage team at NRG, the prolific local group behind the Roost food hall, Bluejacket brewery, Iron Gate, Owen’s Ordinary, and others.

Beverage director Greg Engert will pull draft, canned, and bottled beers from ChurchKey’s impressive collection up top; spirits director Nick Farrell plans to supply spiked lemonades, iced teas, smashes, and a long list of 150 whiskeys; and wine director Erin Dudley will focus on pours from small and sustainable vineyards.

Pimento cheese pairs well with Ritz crackers, Southern pecans and chowchow (relish).
Mack Ordaya for LeadingDC
Flatbread next to a glass of wine and fake duck
Country ham-topped flatbread features mozzarella, pistachio, and a hot honey drizzle.
John Rorapaugh for LeadingDC
A bowl of fried oysters dressed with deviled egg aioli and chiles.
John Rorapaugh for LeadingDC

The cute name pays homage to Johnson’s father’s favorite hobby of carving wooden decoy ducks. NRG founder Michael Babin bonded with Johnson over their shared Southern upbringing, “where wildlife, hunting, and fishing traditions connect tightly with cooking, eating, drinking, and socializing,” says Babin. Mallard is going for “unpretentious and fun,” he adds, as seen in Johnson’s playful banana pudding full of nostalgic Cracker Jacks and Nilla wafers. Another dessert idea: buttermilk panna cotta with rhubarb and almond shortbread.

Up top at ChurchKey, Johnson retains favorites like homemade tots and buttermilk-brined fried chicken sandwich and introduces duck frites slathered in green peppercorn gravy and a fried catfish sandwich with homemade gribiche sauce.

After closing, Birch & Barley’s space will get a light makeover as a chic, rustic hangout dressed with lots of duck-themed decor and artwork. Mallard will open for 5 p.m. dinner to start, with weekend brunch joining the fold in early September.

Mallard’s double smash burger with American cheese, iceberg lettuce, and pepperoncini mayo on a sesame Martin’s bun.
John Rorapaugh for LeadingDC