theBEAT
theBEAT/The Edit/GLP-1-Friendly · DC

GLP-1-friendly dishes in DC.

Filtered for plate sizes that work with how you eat now — high-protein plates, smaller portions, and rooms that pace well. Ranked dish by dish across the District, Maryland, and Northern Virginia.

For iPhone · 1 June 2026 · Filter is free on every tier
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One note when the GLP-1 list opens on launch day. No spam, no list-sharing, ever.

Held. We'll write you at when the list opens.

What we look for

Four readings, per plate.

No medical claims, no diet advice — just how the dish actually sits on the table when your appetite has changed.

N° 001 · Portion

Sensible by design.

Plates that finish at a half-portion without looking picked-at. Tasting menus that pace in courses you can stop. Small-plate kitchens that read this room well.

N° 002 · Protein

Front of the plate.

Dishes built around fish, lamb, chicken, beef, beans, eggs, tofu — protein you can taste before the starch arrives. The starch is welcome; it just isn't the lead.

N° 003 · Pacing

A room that waits.

Kitchens that fire courses on a long beat, servers who read the table, rooms quiet enough that putting the fork down for a minute reads like enjoyment, not a problem.

N° 004 · Take-home

Half tonight, half tomorrow.

Plates that reheat with dignity — braises, roasted vegetables, grain bowls, certain pastas. Boxed without fuss, eaten at your kitchen at the hour you mean to.


A first look

Three to start.

Three plates that respect the pace — high-protein, smaller-portion, kitchens that know. Full ranked list opens with the app.

I
Charred branzino, fennelThe Pass · Shaw · half-portion available
II
Yellowtail crudo, citrusTatsu · Penn Quarter · pacing-friendly
III
Lamb meatballs, yogurtCedar · Navy Yard · protein-forward

Listings populate at launch with verified open status, last-visited dates, and the masthead's note per dish. No paid placements, ever.


Common questions

Asked, answered.

01

What does "GLP-1-friendly" mean on theBEAT?

An editorial filter for dishes that suit a smaller appetite — sensible portions, protein-forward plates, and rooms where pacing the meal feels normal. It is not medical guidance.

02

Which neighborhoods are covered?

All seven DC quadrants plus Bethesda, Silver Spring, Rockville, Arlington, Alexandria, and Baltimore. The list grows weekly as the masthead eats.

03

Is the filter free to use?

Yes. Every dietary, religious, and medical filter on theBEAT is free for everyone, on every tier. No upgrade required.

04

Does theBEAT make health claims?

No. The filter describes plate size, protein density, and pacing — not medical outcomes. Speak with a clinician about your medication and diet.

05

Can I save dishes for later?

Yes. On Deck is a private folder system inside the app. Save a dish, sort by neighborhood or appetite, share with one person or keep it closed.

06

When does the app launch?

iPhone, 1 June 2026. Reserve a seat on the list above and we'll write you when the doors open.


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First write when launch lands.

One note on 1 June. No list-sharing, ever.

Held. We'll write you at .

Coverage
Washington Bethesda Silver Spring Rockville Arlington Alexandria Baltimore
DMV · 2026