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Assorted dishes at Sacrificial Lamb.
Sacrificial Lamb/Facebook

11 Essential Halal Restaurants Around D.C.

Where to find all the Middle Eastern favorites

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Assorted dishes at Sacrificial Lamb.
|Sacrificial Lamb/Facebook

The D.C. region has long been home to a variety of halal restaurants, which prepare food in accordance with dietary restrictions honored by Muslim diners. The ares is so welcoming of the cuisine that real estate search site西文tatelyranked D.C. as the top city for halal based on data it collected from Yelp.

While the area has lost a few contenders since this map debuted in 2016 — includingCafé Oléin Tenleytown — several standbys continue firing on all cylinders. Newcomers such as New York’s Halal Guys have also joined the dining scene.

Here are 11 halal eateries to dine at now.

The featured restaurants are not ranked. They are arranged geographically from north to south.

Don’t see a favorite halal eatery? Sound off in the comments or shoot us an email (dc@eater.com).

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Moby Dick (Multiple locations)

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Thishomegrown chain, which recently expanded to Baltimore, Maryland, serves assorted Persian-style kebabs, sandwiches, salads, and rice dishes. Management says its lamb offerings are always halal.

Lamb and chicken kebabs at Moby Dick.
Rey Lopez/Eater DC

Charcoal Kabob

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It’s been more than 20 years andCharcoal Kabobkeeps serving food that’s 100 percent halal. It’s two meal deals — chicken or lamb karahi— include choice of meat, plus tandoori bread, salad, and yogurt sauces for two people. Meanwhile, the neighborhood restaurant’s most popular kabob combinations are chicken and seasoned ground beef.

The super combo at Charcoal Kabob includes lamb, chicken, and beef kabobs.
Charcoal Kabob[Official photo]

Kazan Restaurant

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The orange baklava, doner kebab and moussaka a la Turk at Kazan are fit for a queen — literally. As a young chef in 1971 at Istanbul’s eponymous Topkapi Palace, Kazan owner and chef Zeynel Abdin Uzun made the dishes for Queen Elizabeth II during her state visit to Turkey. Aside from engaging in culinary diplomacy, Uzun’s halal restaurant has been a McLean mainstay since opening in 1980.

Doner kebab at Kazan.
Chantal E./Yelp

Aladdin's Kitchen

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ThisAdams Morgan eateryserves pizza, wings, gyros, and kebabs that are all halal. Although great for late-night dining, Aladdin’s does not serve any alcohol. It does offer online ordering for delivery or carry out.

A gyro at Aladdin’s Kitchen.
Aladdin’s Kitchen/Facebook

Sacrificial Lamb

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The biblical-sounding name is jarring. But with reasonable prices, speedy service, and late hours,Sacrificial Lambis a great takeout option. And 100 percent of its dishes are halal. Delivery is free after ordering $18 of food.

A kebab dish at Sacrificial Lamb.
Sacrificial Lamb/Facebook

The Halal Guys (Multiple locations)

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While the famous New York-based chain shuttered its struggling H Street location last year, one can still find its renowned falafel, gyros, and build-your-own-bowls at itsDupont Circleoutpost and Northern Virginia restaurants.

A custom bowl at Halal Guys.
The Halal Guys/Facebook

District Chicken & Gyro

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Thisfast-casual Georgetown restaurantserves halal offerings covered with white sauce or hot sauce, along with rice or salad. Customers can’t get enough of the chicken gyro combo served with rice, salad, anhouse seasonings.

Chicken and gyro combo
Courtesy of District Chicken & Gyro

Busboys and Poets (Multiple locations)

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All the chicken at thishomegrown chain of restaurantsis halal; management says the fried chicken is the most popular poultry on the menu. Restaurateur Andy Shallal brought halal chicken to all the Busboys locations in November 2010, five years after the first one opened. He’s working on expanding the brand by opening a new outpost in Anacostia.

Busboys and Poets’ halal fried chicken.
Busboys and Poets[Official photo]

Afghan Kabob House

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每個option on the menu at thisArlington eatery— including the popular chicken, beef, and lamb kebabs — is halal. The budget-friendly restaurant also bakes its Afghan bread on-site.

Grilled meats at Afghan Kabob House.
Afghan Kabob House/Facebook

Lebanese Taverna (Multiple locations)

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Thisfamily-run chainof Lebanese restaurants serves halal chicken, beef, and lamb presented in a variety of dishes. Featured offerings include meat-filled fritters, assorted shawarma, seasonal stews, grilled kebabs, and a specialty burger, among others.

A lamb dish at Lebanese Taverna.
Lebanese Taverna/Facebook

Kabob Palace

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This perennial favorite among bargain diners has kept D.C. in all the curry chicken, grilled lamb, and stewed goat it could eat for decades. Not satisfied with serving over a dozen specialty kebabs plus daily vegetarian platters,Kabob Palacegoes the extra mile by staying open 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

Chicken kabob with basmati rice in the middle of the plate and a salad in the background
Grilled offerings at Kabob Palace.
Kabob Palace/Facebook

Moby Dick (Multiple locations)

Thishomegrown chain, which recently expanded to Baltimore, Maryland, serves assorted Persian-style kebabs, sandwiches, salads, and rice dishes. Management says its lamb offerings are always halal.

Lamb and chicken kebabs at Moby Dick.
Rey Lopez/Eater DC

Charcoal Kabob

It’s been more than 20 years andCharcoal Kabobkeeps serving food that’s 100 percent halal. It’s two meal deals — chicken or lamb karahi— include choice of meat, plus tandoori bread, salad, and yogurt sauces for two people. Meanwhile, the neighborhood restaurant’s most popular kabob combinations are chicken and seasoned ground beef.

The super combo at Charcoal Kabob includes lamb, chicken, and beef kabobs.
Charcoal Kabob[Official photo]

Kazan Restaurant

The orange baklava, doner kebab and moussaka a la Turk at Kazan are fit for a queen — literally. As a young chef in 1971 at Istanbul’s eponymous Topkapi Palace, Kazan owner and chef Zeynel Abdin Uzun made the dishes for Queen Elizabeth II during her state visit to Turkey. Aside from engaging in culinary diplomacy, Uzun’s halal restaurant has been a McLean mainstay since opening in 1980.

Doner kebab at Kazan.
Chantal E./Yelp

Aladdin's Kitchen

ThisAdams Morgan eateryserves pizza, wings, gyros, and kebabs that are all halal. Although great for late-night dining, Aladdin’s does not serve any alcohol. It does offer online ordering for delivery or carry out.

A gyro at Aladdin’s Kitchen.
Aladdin’s Kitchen/Facebook

Sacrificial Lamb

The biblical-sounding name is jarring. But with reasonable prices, speedy service, and late hours,Sacrificial Lambis a great takeout option. And 100 percent of its dishes are halal. Delivery is free after ordering $18 of food.

A kebab dish at Sacrificial Lamb.
Sacrificial Lamb/Facebook

The Halal Guys (Multiple locations)

While the famous New York-based chain shuttered its struggling H Street location last year, one can still find its renowned falafel, gyros, and build-your-own-bowls at itsDupont Circleoutpost and Northern Virginia restaurants.

A custom bowl at Halal Guys.
The Halal Guys/Facebook

District Chicken & Gyro

Thisfast-casual Georgetown restaurantserves halal offerings covered with white sauce or hot sauce, along with rice or salad. Customers can’t get enough of the chicken gyro combo served with rice, salad, anhouse seasonings.

Chicken and gyro combo
Courtesy of District Chicken & Gyro

Busboys and Poets (Multiple locations)

All the chicken at thishomegrown chain of restaurantsis halal; management says the fried chicken is the most popular poultry on the menu. Restaurateur Andy Shallal brought halal chicken to all the Busboys locations in November 2010, five years after the first one opened. He’s working on expanding the brand by opening a new outpost in Anacostia.

Busboys and Poets’ halal fried chicken.
Busboys and Poets[Official photo]

Afghan Kabob House

每個option on the menu at thisArlington eatery— including the popular chicken, beef, and lamb kebabs — is halal. The budget-friendly restaurant also bakes its Afghan bread on-site.

Grilled meats at Afghan Kabob House.
Afghan Kabob House/Facebook

Lebanese Taverna (Multiple locations)

Thisfamily-run chainof Lebanese restaurants serves halal chicken, beef, and lamb presented in a variety of dishes. Featured offerings include meat-filled fritters, assorted shawarma, seasonal stews, grilled kebabs, and a specialty burger, among others.

A lamb dish at Lebanese Taverna.
Lebanese Taverna/Facebook

Kabob Palace

This perennial favorite among bargain diners has kept D.C. in all the curry chicken, grilled lamb, and stewed goat it could eat for decades. Not satisfied with serving over a dozen specialty kebabs plus daily vegetarian platters,Kabob Palacegoes the extra mile by staying open 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

Chicken kabob with basmati rice in the middle of the plate and a salad in the background
Grilled offerings at Kabob Palace.
Kabob Palace/Facebook

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