The Adobe Flash Player is required to view this multimedia interactive. Get it here.

Web Search by YAHOO!

Home > The M.O. > Archives > 2009 > October > 08 > Entry

Ben Ali of Ben’s Chili Bowl dies

benchili.jpg

This may not have much of a local angle, but being a former resident of Washington, D.C., it saddened me to hear of the passing of Ben Ali, owner of Ben’s Chili Bowl. He was 82.

I used to make a trip to the crowded joint over by the U Street/Cardozo metro stop at least once every couple of months. The restaurant, made famous by Bill Cosby (the only man who eats for free) and Oprah, and even more so by President Barack Obama (the lines outside the week of the inauguration were insane), was full of the kind of grit and charm you can only find in big cities and was a melting pot of DC demographics. It was also a landmark for an earlier era in D.C., before the riots of 1968.

From the Washington Post:


A fixture of U Street since 1958, the cramped restaurant has outlasted the changing fortunes of its neighborhood and supplied hungry Washingtonians with heaping bowls of chili, hot dogs and its trademark chili-topped half-smokes. Photos of visiting celebrities — including Denzel Washington, Danny Glover and Bill Cosby — lined the walls, and in January the restaurant received its best publicity boost ever when president-elect Obama dropped by for a half-smoke (a smoked sausage).

Near a sign that warned, “Who eats free at Ben’s: Bill Cosby. No one else,” Obama paid for his $12 tab with a $20 bill, leaving the change as a tip.

Mr. Ali, a Trinidadian immigrant who had studied at Howard University, opened the eatery with his wife, Virginia, and ran the popular but eccentric carryout restaurant with two of his three sons. The place was known as a gathering spot for Washingtonians of all classes and races, who were united by their love of chili and the restaurant’s excellent jukebox and quirky customs. It was open as long as 22 hours a day and survived several urban renewal efforts on a street once known as Washington’s “Black Broadway” but later hit by severe blight before a recent renaissance.

Through the decades, the sights, sounds and smells of Ben’s Chili Bowl endured as a place of comfort and warmth amid a world of change. It was featured in documentaries and in the 2008 Russell Crowe political thriller, “State of Play.”

A full story is forthcoming, but share your memories of the man, not just the restaurant, in our comments section below or in our discussion area. We also have a huge photo gallery online of Mr. Ali and his restaurant.

Here’s a piece that we ran on the 50th anniversary of the founding of the restaurant and the 45th anniversary. It was one of the few businesses to remain open on U Street during the 1968 riots.

Photo from Associated Press.

Permalink | Comments (0) | Post your comment Categories: Food

Comments

Austinites love to be heard, and we're giving you a bullhorn. We just ask that you keep things civil. Leave out the personal attacks. Do not use profanity, ethnic or racial slurs, or take shots at anyone's sexual orientation or religion. If you can't be nice, we reserve the right to remove your material and ban users who violate our Visitor's agreement. Click here to report comment abuse.

Commenting is open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. M-F

Post a comment

Commenting guidelines



Remember me?




*HTML not allowed in comments. Your e-mail address is required. Visitor's agreement

 

Copyright © Sat May 26 02:14:33 EDT 2012 All rights reserved. By using Austin360.com, you accept the terms of our visitor agreement. Please read it.
Contact Austin360.com | Privacy Policy | AdChoices