Elfegne Café will be closed for Labor day weekend - Saturday Sept, 5 until Sep 7, 2009 and we will open Tuesday Sep 8, 2009. We appreciate your understanding and apologize for any inconvenience.
Every Sunday from 12:oopm to 3:00pm Ethiopian Traditional Coffee Ceremony

- Ethiopia birthplace of Coffee
- Coffee called “Buna” in Ethiopia
- Roasted, grinded & served in front of you
- Ethiopian coffee ceremony is one of the most enjoyable event you can attend at an Ethiopian Restaurant. The coffee is taken through its full life cycle of preparation in front of you in a ceremonial manner. Coffee is called ‘Bunna’ (boo-na) by the Ethiopians.Named after Kaffa region.
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Delectable Ethiopian fare at Elfegne Café
Simple menu offers inexpensive feast at Pigtown cafe
- By Richard Gorelick |Special to The Baltimore Sun
- April 30, 2009

Owner Emu Kidanewolde displays some of the entrees on the menu. (Baltimore Sun photo by Barbara Haddock Taylor / April 22, 2009)
Elfegne Ethiopian Cafe is a peach. Owned and operated, pretty much single-handedly, by former mortgage broker Emu Kidanewolde, this small and tidy 20-seat storefront cafe is more than just a great place to feast on inexpensive home-cooked Ethiopian food. Elfegne also acts as a de facto community center for the residents of Washington Village (aka Pigtown). It opens at 7 in the morning for breakfast (Kidanewolde will have been there for hours already, making homemade injera, the fermented Ethiopian bread staple) and stays open through dinner. When we visited, a few neighbors had dropped in for a bite to eat but also to keep Kidanewolde company and even lend a hand. This was the day when the Susan Boyle video went viral, and all of us in the restaurant ended up watching it together on one of the neighbor’s laptops.
This was actually the second time we had tried to eat at Elfegne. The first time we came, the restaurant had been commandeered by a single group for a party. That was discouraging, but it suggested this scenario: A few people had fallen in love with Elfegne, had told a few other people about it, and then felt strongly enough about it to invite more people there for a celebratory dinner. It was worth coming back for.
The menu here is simple and streamlined, with only about a dozen or so entrees. The most familiar Ethiopian menu items here are beef and lamb tibs (sauteed cubed meat), wot (stew) and kitfo (raw or rare beef), but only in their most typical versions. So, where another restaurant might have five or six versions of tibs, Elfegne has two. This is actually a kind of relief. Ordering from an Ethiopian menu can be arduous, but here it was easy. It was even simpler because some items are only available on certain days. Kidanewolde only makes the elaborate dulet, with lamb tripe, on Saturday and doro wot, a chicken stew, on Monday. Lamb wasn’t being served on the Thursday when we visited. This system made sense to us – it both eases the burden on the kitchen and lets customers know that their food is being made from fresh meat and poultry.
The thing to get here is the half and half, which gives you a choice of two half-sized dishes, which will be presented together on a platter-sized sheet of injera. One of these choices could be the vegetable combination – gently spiced lentils, yellow peas, collard greens – and the other a meat-based dish. The beef tibs is a fine choice. This is a deceptively simple dish, just cubes of beef sauteed with onions and green pepper in an awaze, the paste made from the berbere pepper. But Elfegne’s version really looked and tasted fresh and homemade.
Kitfo is a little more challenging in that it’s made, usually, from raw beef. Blended with herbed butter and garnished with a dried red-pepper powder, this makes for a tremendously rich and satisfying meal. Kidanewolde also offers a cooked version of kitfo, but if you can handle raw food, order it that way.
We liked our other dishes, too; the bozena shiro, a nourishing and savory meat stew made typically from a powder made of chick peas, but at Elfegne with fava beans; and the quanta fitfit, which tosses dried, jerkylike strips of beef with strips of injera, vegetables and seasoned butter. We enjoyed a refreshing lettuce and tomato salad before the main meal but made the mistake of filling up on too much fermented bread. Elfegne also serves smoothies, homemade ginger iced tea and the best cup of coffee I’ve had in a restaurant in months.
We want to go back to Elfegne for breakfast someday, for an omelet or a bowl of steamed cracked wheat, or the bowl of mashed beans and vegetables that our friend with the laptop says sustains him throughout the day.
elfegne ethiopian cafe
Where: 821 Washington Blvd.
Call: 410-637-3207
Open: 7 a.m.-9 p.m. Monday-Saturday
Credit cards: MasterCard, Visa, AMEX, Discover
Entrees: $7-$12
Appetizers/sides: $1.75-$5
Alcohol: BYOB
Food: ***
Ambience: ** 1/2
Service: **
on the menu
•Half and half – $11.50
•Beef tibs – $10.50
•Kitfo – $11
•Doro wot – $12
•Vegetarian platter – $10.50
•Tuna firfir – $10
•Elfegne Bozena Shiro – $8.00
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Elfegne Cafe: Ethiopian in Baltimore
In the spirit of Tony Bourdain, food as adventure. Try everything twice in case it was made wrong the first time. Eat without fear or prejudice.
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
This is Gonna Be Good 
This past weekend,
I met up with some
local Chowhounds
at Elfegne Cafe, a
small Ethiopian
place in the Pigtown neighborhood
of Baltimore.
Once I saw the specials board, I
knew what I wanted to try.
We decided to try several of the half & half options to try more of the items available on the menu. The Dulet, lamb tripe, liver and meat, was nice and spicy, and was ground up fine enough that you probably could not tell it was tripe. We got the Kitfo, beef tartare, which was served with a nice light housemade cheese, and the Tibs beef. We were nicely surprised by the Doro Wot, the chicken stew cooked in a red pepper (berbere) sauce and onions.
We also tried the vegetarian platter, which included lentils, spicy lentils, yelllow split peas, greens, and tofu.
To drink, I liked my ginger iced tea.
I am planning on heading back to Elfegne because they also have breakfast dishes that look really interesting.
821 Washington Blvd.
Baltimore, MD 21230
(410) 637-3207
05/23/2009 at 13:43
ELFEGNE ETHIOPIAN RESTAURANT
Absolutely over the top fantastic! I’ve eaten Ethiopian food in many restaurants in many cities and this was the best. For that matter I’ve eaten in a dozen of the top restaurants in this country and never left as ecstatic as I did this evening. For better or worse, the complex intriguing flavors compel you to eat more and more.
The owner, chef, waitress one woman show, Emu Kidanewolde, helped us a little with the menu. The instant you meet her you can tell she’s just one of the sweetest people on the planet. We chose a raw beef & herb dish which was so viscerally good we just rolled our eyes. And we asked for veggies as well for which she just ended up bringing us a little bit of everything in the kitchen plus some mild goat cheese. I’m telling you, it was orgasmic.
The place is tiny and is on the border of a sketchy part of town. What I was so thrilled to see was while we were eating a group of 20 somethings came in. There was a black guy, 2 white guys, 2 Asian guys and 2 Asian girls. It exemplified what I like most about Baltimore. I call it the “mixing of the deck”. Everyone living in harmony – what a concept!
So go. Please go. Support Emu and have a phenomenal meal. By the way. I left a tip larger than the cost of the entire meal (including their great coffee) and still felt we got away cheep.
http://elfegnecafe.wordpress.com/
05/25/2009 at 15:13
“A gem in Pigtown”
Elfegne Cafe
magus4u 1 contribution
WDC
Oct 18, 2008
1/1 found this review helpful
Elfegne Café is delightful coffee shop and Ethiopian diner in the heart of Pigtown.
Pigtown, named as such due to the pigs that used to be brought in on the B&O Railroad and then run through the streets to the slaughter houses. Pigtown Historic District was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in December 2006. This neighborhood is undergoing revitalization. The result of this evolutionary process has been one of the few communities in Baltimore that is completely mixed racially, culturally and economically.
As with all revitalization, a few brave souls make a beachhead and create a business that will act a model for future establishments. We had been directed to the Mount Clare Mansion (1760) and the B&O Railroad Museum and started looking for a lunch place. Our guide had directed us to one that had closed. Checking with the local Stop and Shop, we were referred to a coffee shop in a renovated row house.
We were greatly surprise to step into a well-lit room with gleaming wood floors and Ethiopian music playing in the background. At the only occupied table, all four men turn and greeted us as we came in. at the back of the café the proprietor waved at us and brought menu and we were graciously seated. All the food was authentic Ethiopian dishes. As we studied our choices two groups came into the café, each person as they passed our table called a greeting and smiled. All were conversing in Ethiopian language. I felt I had been transported to another world.
We finally chose a lamb dish and a vegetarian sampler and two types of coffee.
The food was served piping hot atop injera a large sourdough flatbread, which is about 20 inches in diameter and made out of fermented teff flour. One using pieces of injera to pick up bites of entrées and side dishes. No utensils are used.
Our food was excellent and not too spicy. We had a leisurely lunch listening to the wonderful music and watching the diverse member of the community pass our window.
I am always happy to recommend a rare find, but especially in this case since the café recently opened and is providing a unique oasis in a changing neighborhood.