Friday, February 23, 2007
Thursday, February 08, 2007
The Lowdown: Crazy for Gelato

Gelato cafés have peppered the Los Angeles area over the years, but the fad-factor seems to have resurged as lines inside them have started snaking out the doors again. What makes gelato different from ice cream? many would ask.
Beats me. But trusted sources (namely the World Wide Web) have revealed that the difference between gelato and ice cream is that gelato has less fat and no air added, which accounts for its rich creamier taste and denser consistency.
For the moment, it seems ice cream aficionados are jumping ship and climbing on board the gelato craze, but whether it’s due to preferences in taste or the more colorful and sophisticated aesthetics of a gelato cafe as opposed to that of an ice cream parlor remains a mystery. What also remains to be seen is whether ice cream can reclaim its crown as the king of frozen desserts from the cold clutches of gelato.
You can see evidence of the phenomenon off the Third Street Promenade in Santa Monica. Brightly lit, colorful, and inviting stands Angelato Café. Through its glass face, you can see dozens and dozens of flavors neatly lying side by side in the long cooler that stretches across the entire café. There are over 100 flavors, and in the smorgasbord you’ll find everything from tequila lime to cola float and even buttered popcorn!
With the staggering options you’re faced with, you could spend a good half-hour alone balking at the glass case and deciding what to order. In fact, quite a few people do, which partly accounts for Angelato’s crowded storefront and long lines.
So if you have nothing to do for a good while, and especially if you haven’t had the pleasure of indulging in gelato yourself, stop into a gelato café and decide for yourself if it lives up to the hype.
To find out more about the history of gelato visit this site http://www.angelatocafe.com/history.htm
—Jane Rothstein
Angelato Café
301 Arizona Avenue
Santa Monica, 90401
Phone (310) 656 - 9999
Tuesday, January 30, 2007
Our Hungry? Hat Off To Accommodating Manager, Part I

In a town like LA where the reservation list at a restaurant can read like an A list for a movie premiere, how is a regular Angeleno supposed to get good service at a quality restaurant?
The answer lies in a not-so-little Italian restaurant in Pasadena—Il Fornaio. At Il Fornaio, the homemade pasta and innovative twists on classic Italian dishes, like Butternut Squash Ravioli and Gnocchi, in combination with a constantly changingregional menu and wines that pair perfectly means that most nights, especially the weekends, they are fully booked. But for being a busy and- dare I say it?—chain restaurant—the food and customer service is that of a family-owned restaurant.
This largely due to the he manager, Ricardo Capor, an attentive gentleman who learns his regular customers quickly and treats them accordingly. Just the other day, my parents went in for dinner. He greeted them with a kiss on each cheek and whisked them off to a table sans menus.
"Tonight," he said, "I will be serving you, so you won't be needing menus." Capor personally picked out each of the seven courses, cheese all the way through to dessert, paired them with wines, then delivered it to their table and chatted with them about each course as they tasted his chef's culinary creations. And the price of this personally guided tour through the culinary regions of Itay was no more than a regular dinner entree. They left more than satisfied, both with the food and the above par service, guaranteeing they'd be back soon.
It just goes to show that loyalty to a quality restaurant with a manager like Capor, who takes great pride in the food his restaurant serves and enjoys sharing his enthusiasm with his customers, makes for an amazing dining experience… and you won't even have to name drop!
—Kaelin Burns
Monday, January 08, 2007
Johnnie's Broiler Demolished!

Another one of LA's historic buildings--one of the last Googie-style diners we had left--bit the dust this weekend--and apparently without a permit.
Is it time for mandatory jail sentences for those who tear these irreplaceable buildings down before they can be saved? You drive by and decide. Then take a detour to the historic McDonalds's, also in Downey, and see what a little bit of smart preservation can do.
Johnnie's Broiler
7447 Firestone Blvd.
Downey, 90240
McDonald's
10207 Lakewood Blvd. (at Florence)
Downey, 90240
(562) 622-9248
Saturday, December 30, 2006
The Lowdown: Spitz
Bryce Rademan, co-founder of Spitz, ate his first Doner Kebab in 2005 on a study abroad trip to Madrid and immediately knew he had discovered something amazing. He quickly became friends with the restaurant’s owner who taught him how to make the Kebab. Taking these lessons back with him to the States, Bryce teamed up with fellow student Robert Wicklund and introduced the Doner Kebab to Eagle Rock. As an Oxy student, I am forever thankful, and pretty sure you will be too after trying just one bite.
A Doner Kebab might be thought of as a fusion of a gyro with a panini, though that description doesn’t come close to capturing the essence of this unique sandwich. The meat, whether lamb and beef or ground chicken, is slow roasted in vertical broilers to retain its savory juices and then cut off in thin strips. Stuffed into toasted focaccia bread, it is then topped with fresh veggies, hummus, cool tzaziki sauce and spicy chili sauce for added flavor.
Still hungry? Spitz also offers a number of delicious sides to compliment its Doner Kebabs. Sweet potato fries tend to be the favorite, but their regular French fries and fried pita strips are certainly not bad choices either. Salads are a tasty alternative for the health conscious.
But be sure to leave a little room for dessert (really, who could resist anyway?!). The gelato served at Spitz has been called “the absolute best ice cream in the universe” by Time Magazine-and, apparently they know what they’re talking about. With flavors including everything from Pistachio to Pomegranate and from Tiramisu to Burgundy Cherry, I can’t seem to get enough. And, since the gelato is lower in fat than regular ice-cream, I don’t have to feel guilty for ordering seconds.
The atmosphere at Spitz keeps you lingering long after the last bite of gelato is gone: The constant flow of customers, ranging from Occidental College students to young families, makes for excellent people watching from any of the restaurant’s outdoor or indoor table. So, stop by and stay a while. Both you and your stomach will leave happy.
2506 Colorado Blvd., LA 90041 (parking in lot and on street)
(323) 257-5600
Tues-Sat: 11 am-10 pm
Sun: 11 am-8 pm
Saturday, December 16, 2006
RIP: Netty's
doors on December 16, 2006.
This treasured eatery was founded in 1987, before Silver Lake was a
hip happening place. Netty and her former partner Luis Moreno
followed their dream to serve interesting comfort food in a gracious
but casual California patio setting. Stopping by for the Blackened
Chicken sandwich with the creamy cucumber salad on the side, or the
Drunken Shrimp became a part of local life. What comes next? After a
breather, Netty will begin renovation of an old market in Joshua Tree
and in a few years open it as Sun Fair Market and Cafe. Supporting
sustainable agriculture will be the focus. For those of us who can't imagine life without her delicious eggplant sandwich, she is also planning a
cookbook of Netty's memorable dishes so fans can continue to savor
these good eats at home. Netty says Silver Lake will be left in good
hands with Chefs Gloria Felix and Elizabeth Belkind when they open
their own restaurant, Reservoir, in the spring, where Netty's used to
be.
Thursday, November 30, 2006
The Lowdown: Pinkberry Demystified
It ain’t pink, and it ain’t made of berries… but somehow, you want it—even though they’ve lied to you.

If you don’t know what I’m talking about, you haven’t been on the stretch of Huntley Drive just south of Santa Monica Boulevard in West Hollywood, where parking has become impossible due to people swarming over in crazed droves to Pinkberry Yogurt—purveyor of “all natural frozen yogurt.” Sherry Hwang, owner of the explosively popular yogurt shop has recently expanded her business, opening 30 new branches in the last few months. All this is astounding when you realize that their entire product line consists of yogurt in 2 flavors: Original, and Green Tea.
I had my first taste of Pinkberry’s a month ago when a one of the shops opened in Westwood. As I eagerly watched them dispense the yogurt into a Styrofoam cup, I found myself wondering in anticipation what exotic and mind-blowing flavor Mrs. Hwang had stumbled upon.
Imagine my disappointment when my first spoonful failed to produce instant euphoria! Instead, the tangy lactose flavor struck me as instantly familiar.
A popular type of drink in all East Asian countries is the plain yogurt-based beverage. How else do you think whole nations of lactose-intolerant Asian people get their drinkable calcium (yogurt is generally easier to digest than milk)? It comes in bottles, in cartons, as concentrates, in powder form…. and it’s terribly commonplace. To me, it tasted as if Ms. Hwang had poured a batch of this into a frozen yogurt maker, and I couldn’t see how anyone of an Asian background wouldn’t figure this out this instantly.

And I was right! Pinkberry’s wild popularity, paired with its easily replicable yogurt recipe, immediately spawned many imitators—many of them Asian. As an aside: Rumors also began circulating on the internet that the Pinkberry proprietor had stolen the recipe from a hard-working Korean family that owned a shop called Red Mango. In most places, you’ll see it advertised as “natural yogurt” or “Italian yogurt.”
So now, when you have a hankering for “Original” flavored frozen yogurt, you have the option of visiting Fiore Yogurt in Little Tokyo, Kiwiberri (multiple locations), or a dozen other imitators all over Koreatown who have cracked the Pinkberry code with no effort at all.
But for my money, the place that finishes what Pinkberry started is Beach Berries on the corner of Main and Walnut in Downtown Huntington Beach. The yogurt is the same flavor (of course), but the texture is noticeably smoother. Also, although Pinkberry offers sugary cereals and candy as toppings in addition to canned and fresh fruit pieces, Beach Berries stays true to the “natural” theme by only offering granola and fresh fruit – lovingly diced into darling little cubes—as yogurt toppings.
Time will tell if “natural” frozen yogurt is a passing fad, but you can bet there are about a hundred Asian yogurt-shop owners out there who are banking on the hope that it isn’t!
www.pinkberry.com
Pinkberry
868 Huntley Dr., WEHO, (310) 659-8285
3300 W. Sixth St., Koreatown, (323) 730-9889
7123 Melrose Ave., Los Angeles, (323) 935-2958
10911 Lindbrook Dr., Westwood, (310) 208-3620
236 N. Larchmont Blvd., Midtown
Kiwiberri
8474 W. Third St., Los Angeles, (323) 951-0675.
Fiore
134 Japanese Village Plaza, Little Tokyo, (213) 626-0806.
Beach Berries
300 Pacific Coast Highway
Huntington Beach, CA
(714) 960-7988
Ewwww. Tell Us It's Not So!


YUCK.
In checking out one of our favorite city sites, LA Observed, we came across a link regarding one woman's lawsuit against Kraft for selling guacamole that has less than 2% avocado content. "What else could it be," you ask?
According to a piece in today's Times business section, "Like much of the prepared guacamole sold in supermarkets, Kraft guacamole is essentially a whipped paste made from partially hydrogenated soybean and coconut oils, corn syrup, whey and food starch. Yellow and blue dyes give it the green color."
Send your favorite guacamole recipe to editor@hungrycity.com, along with your mailing address and the first 5 recipes we get will get a free copy of our new edition of Hungry? Los Angeles. While there may be some lousy guacamole in LA, at least we know it's made from avocados!
Wednesday, November 22, 2006
Be Cool, Give Thanks

If you're reading this post, you're probably looking for a great place to eat. We've got lots of suggestions and hope you find exactly what you're looking for, but please remember (and not only at Thanksgiving) the people who don't have enough to eat.
Check out the Second Harvest website to search for a foodbank in your area and give a little. You'll be glad you did.
—Your friends at the Hungry City Guides
Monday, November 20, 2006
The Lowdown: Pizza Next Door in Downtown

With Lamonica’s gone from Downtown and me not being impressed yet with its replacement Los Angeles New York Pizza, I am glad that just about a half a block away is some of the yummiest pizza for miles around, yes, right in Downtown. What am I talking about is Pizza Next Door on 8th right smack between Flower and Figueroa (Fig. for those of us down here).
It’s a small walk-in shop owned and operated by the same guys at Nazo’s Bakery just two doors down. When you go into Pizza Next Door, make sure you get one of the most popular items on the menu, the eggplant pizza. I know, some of you are thinking, eggplant, ugh. I’m the same way, eggplant is not my favorite vegetable, not by a long shot, but this concoction they’ve come up with is absolutely awesome, along with the eggplant it is blessed with fresh tomatoes, garlic, parmesan and mozzarella cheese. Unfortunately, due to the giant blowup of their write-up in the new edition of Hungry? Los Angeles in their window, others are on to the eggplant secret and they're often out (which is why you're looking at a photo of their pepperoni and sausage slice--also good). But if you can wait a few minutes, they'll make the eggplant pie--special for you.
Suffice to say, drop in and get one of their lunch specials, either 2 slices and a drink or a slice, small salad (decent size) and a drink for $5.75 (at the time of this printing). Try and beat that anywhere downtown.
Before I sign off, I want to thank the HungryCity crew for letting me contribute to this blog on some of the great eats I come across. I’m, by trade a bean counter, who loves cheap eats and consequently love Hungry City. Thanks guys and thank YOU Pizza Next Door.
New York Pizza Next Door
806 W. 8th St. #B, Los Angeles 90017
(213) 622-6595
Mon-Sat.: 11 am-9 pm
Sunday, November 05, 2006
The Lowdown: The Oinkster in Eagle Rock

Turn up those Golden Oldies, hop into your T-bird, and head over to The Oinkster. Just opened on hip Colorado Boulevard in Eagle Rock, the 1950s-inspired restaurant is sure to be your new favorite--especially if you're an Oxy student living right down the street.
While Eagle Rock is now home to lots of great restaurants, The Oinkster is unique in that it manages to combine many of their best qualities under one A-line roof. A fusion of retro and modern cuisine, of fast food and gourmet dining, and of hipster and family-friendly clientele, The Oinkster has it all.
The Oinkster’s $10-and-under menu offers 1950s diner-style seasoned burgers, tasty fries, thick milkshakes, and delicious ice-cream sundaes served up in a fun, retro atmosphere. Though specializing in the era of poodle-skirts and letter-jackets, The Oinkster also manages to do credit to the tastes of the new millennium. The restaurant’s surprisingly extensive menu offers numerous alternatives to the traditional burger and fries combo, with options including Thai chicken salads, veggie burgers, and variety of bakery delights. While reviews have been mixed so far, the food quality is getting more consistent and the service is also better. But forgot the reviews: I can’t get enough of the peanut butter and jelly cupcakes!
The Oinkster also provides the option to dine in or to take that meal to-go. If you do decide to eat at The Oinkster, you’ll be more than comfortable. Red booths and glossy tables allow for 50 to eat comfortably inside, and a cute outdoor patio provides space for 50 more. Sit down and enjoy the people watching (everyone from fashionistas to school kids) or grab lunch for the office.
2005 Colorado Blvd., Eagle Rock, 90041
(323-255-oink)
for fax orders: (323) 255-6464
Saturday, October 07, 2006
The Lowdown: Welcome to Azami

A bit of web surfing one day led me to this outstanding sushi cafe on Melrose. Although Citysearch.com (ahem) may not be the most reliable source for restaurant recommendations, its audience voted Azami the best sushi in LA. So I figured a turn of the tide couldn’t hurt, and neither could a 10-minute drive from my apartment.
Entering Azami is tantamount to opening the door to your grandmother’s home on Christmas morning. The sushi chefs are two adorable women who could not be happier that you came over for dinner. They beam broad smiles while carefully and tenderly executing their art. Sitting at the sushi bar gives you a one-on-one repertoire with the chefs and great suggestions, while the ten tables offer a slower-paced meal. Take your pick, or just switch it up every time you return. Azami is small enough that it's impossible to miss any of the action, no matter where you sit.
Azami is not about the show or spectacle. The fish isn’t drowning in avocado or some gooey sauce. There are no mounts of rice hiding your dinner. There are no accompanying radishes in the shape of an extinct amphibian. The fish is pure. Simple. Elegant. Start off slow, and work your way through the intensifying silkiness of the sushi. If you do not know where to begin, the omakase, or chef’s choice, for $35-$45 is never a bad choice. Sit back with a nice cup of hot sake and peruse the menu. Label the number of pieces, kind of fish, and desired preparation (sushi, cut roll, or hand roll) on an inconspicuous white sheet and the journey begins.
Plates of spicy tuna crispies swim to every table. Azami kicks up the tuna sashimi, avocado, and lemon with jalapeno. Yet this version does not singe your taste buds. Two generous bites of silken tuna are balanced with lightly fried soy crisps. Orders of sushi (2 pieces in each order) are a reasonable $3-$5 and cut rolls are $4-$9. Specials on the board the other night were Tasmanian sea trout, Spanish mackerel, sweet shrimp, and more. When we ordered the toro, or fatty tuna belly, from the waitress, the chef herself came by only moments later to ask us which toro we preferred. Would we like the more marbled, or the leaner, subtler cut? She told us the price as well, for the difference was about $4. Is that OK with you? she asked. Her recommendation was wonderful, and her attention was sincere.
Fresh water and salt water eel are both on the menu. The fresh water has a more robust taste and hearty texture. Served warm with a touch of sauce, it is the quintessence of fine sushi.
Tasmanian sea trout has the color of light tuna, but a taste similar to that of salmon. The fish rests on the rice like a butterfly on a flower, amazingly light and gravity defying. Its lemon undertones hit your mouth first, while the texture brings your taste buds to the brink of ecstasy.
The fact that Azami’s sushi is not dressed up for a night on the town means that you can savor the freshness, the impossible lightness of the fish without the bombardment of additional flavors. The embellishments that define so many of LA’s sushi restaurants detract from the taste of the fish. Azami is different. It has a simple philosophy about sushi.
End the meal with a small bowl of green tea or red bean ice cream, and a soothing cup of tea. Now that you do not have to get in your car for eternity, perhaps walk along quirky Melrose for a bit. But before you do, flash a smile behind the sushi bar to the chefs. The smiles you’ll get in return convey their genuine happiness at having satisfied each and every customer. Not even grandma’s Christmas grin is that big.
Azami Sushi Café
7160 Melrose Ave. (cross street Formosa Ave.)
323 939-3816
Metered street parking available
Thursday, October 05, 2006
RIP: More LA Restaurant Changes/Closures

The times, they are a-changin’
As you know, Los Angeles is a fast city. Stores spring up and shut down, people move away and decide they miss the SoCal sun too much and come on back. And traffic, well, maybe that could go a little bit faster. The restaurant scene is no exception. A couple of your favorite places have recently closed, and the people behind Hungry? Los Angeles thought you should know! Of course, there are others that have quickly taken their place.
Banyan Water Garden Café on 1140 Highland Ave., Manhattan Beach has merged with another restaurant to become Chakra Restaurant and Lounge. The food is “Euro Pan Asian fusion,” with dishes including satays, lemongrass ceviche, guava sake mahi mahi, and killer mojitos. No lunch. Dinner Mon-Sat, 6-10pm. Friday and Saturday, resident DJ spins until 1:30 am. Accepts all major credit cards. Parking structure close by. Chakra Restaurant and Lounge: 304 12th St., Manhattan Beach; (310) 545-1881.
Posh on Pico has ended its reign over Latin-American cuisine at 5542 W Pico Blvd., but thankfully, the restaurant is relocating (we imagine somewhere on Pico, unless a name-change is in store). Check online for opening updates, or email for information to mc@poshonpico.com
Atwater Village’s Osteria Nonni (3219 Glendale Blvd.) has closed, and has become Canele. Owners are Corina Weibel and Jane Choi of Corina’s Kitchen Inc. Check it out. Canale: 3219 Glendale Blvd., Atwater Village; (323) 666-7133.

And lastly, Madame Matisse is no longer serving dinner, sigh, but they're still open for breakfast and lunch 7:30 a.m.-3:15 p.m; 3536 W. Sunset Blvd., Silver Lake 90026 (323) 662-4862.
We hate to be the bearer of bad news, but we wouldn’t want you making the drive to find a Rite Aid in place of your favorite eatery!
Wednesday, September 27, 2006
The Lowdown: Osteria La Buca
Perhaps the reason why La Buca feels just like home is that you are dining in Mamma's kitchen. No, really. The kitchen is in full view to most, glowing behind a small bar towards the back of the restaurant. La Buca is so small, that it is impossible to tune out the melodious, fast-paced Italian spoken at a table nearby, or the encouragement from the waiters as they say, "Oh, very good choice!" to a diner only an arm's reach away. But why would you want to ignore it all? Everyone is having a great time enjoying an interesting conversation over a bottle
of wine (that they brought themselves. It's BYOB). There is the sense that everyone in the room is taking part in a truly unique L.A. experience, and that they are lucky to be lounging in Mamma's domain. It is a little bit of Padua in our very own Los Angeles.
La Buca boasts a menu that takes longer to choose from than it does to go from the Westside to the Eastside during rush hour. Oooohs and aaaaahs of "that sounds good" and "I'm getting that. Final decision. Wait, no. This?" are inevitable. Everything sounds good, because everything is good. The specials change daily, but it would be a crime to leave without trying the burrata antipasto. Creamy does not do this homemade mozzarella justice. The cheese has a texture that will make your eyes roll to the back of your head. So perfectly seasoned with salt, pepper, and olive oil, and accompanied with Italian meats and arugula, the antipasto is not to be missed. Le insalate, or salads, are supremely simple and fresh. The tricolore arrives with radicchio, endive, arugula, and generous shavings of parmesan.

Non ci sono le parole per la tiramisù. There are no words for the tiramisu. Served in a rustic wooden bowl, the dessert elevates Mamma to culinary goddess status: She'd knock any Iron Chef to the curb. A thick layer of crème covers her version of this traditional dessert. The sponge cake absorbs the espresso without making it soggy, or overly Starbuck-ified. It is the velvety creme that steals the show. Again, Mamma's simple, yet unparalleled techniques shine through. A thin layer of cocoa is the little black dress to seal the deal. Revel in the relaxed, comfortable atmosphere that has everyone at La Buca smiling. It's like going home for a hearty meal, without having to wash any dishes.
Grazie Mamma. Grazie mille.
Hollywood, CA 90038
(323) 462-1900
62.1992
Monday, September 18, 2006
Chains We Like (especially when it's hot!) : 21 Choices

I'm that person at McDonald’s who orders a greasy hamburger, large fries, and Diet Coke—yeah, Diet Coke. Somehow, through my own twisted logic, I am able to use the Diet Coke to exculpate me from the guilt of clogging up my arteries on fast food. It is not surprising, therefore, that I became hooked on 21 Choices frozen yogurt.
21 Choices is a dessert-lover’s guiltless pleasure. Located in the heart of Old Town Pasadena, the place might best be described as a Coldstone’s Creamery that dishes up frozen yogurt rather than ice-cream. 21 Choices’ delicious, fat-free frozen yogurt serves the same purpose as a Diet Coke at McDonald’s, allowing me to justify all of the caloric toppings that I mix in. Oreo’s, Reese’s, frosted animal crackers, and brownie batter don’t seem quite so sinful when swirled through non-fat yogurt. But they do seem just as tasty.
Maybe one day I’ll actually take the healthy route at 21 Choices and order vanilla frozen yogurt with fresh strawberries and granola. For now, though, I’m more than happy sticking with my regular favorite—snickerdoodle cookie dough. You have to try it.
85 W. Colorado Blvd.
Pasadena, CA 91103
(626) 304-9521
Monday, August 28, 2006
The Lowdown: Cassell's Hamburger's

Because I work as an editor at Hungry?, people somehow expect that I go out constantly and know the name about Wolfgang Puck’s new sous chef. I suppose people sort of imagine us carrying some sort of a badge/card that identifies us as food critics. The truth is, I go out often enough, but most of the time eating out means walking over to the taco truck (thanks, Carmen) and getting a burrito. It’s not that I don’t like going out, but at four bucks per stellar burrito it’s hard to justify driving across town for a questionable one. While I try to hit all of the best spots in the book and discover new ones for upcoming editions, ultimately Carmen is just too good to me.
So, it’s a credit to the pull of a tasty burger that I finally managed to find my way to Cassell’s Hamburger’s (Hungry? Los Angeles p. 87). Located towards the northern edge of Koreatown at 6th and New Hampshire, Cassell’s is the sort of old-fashioned burger joint that you might expect to find in Pasadena, El Segundo, or the 1950s. I was hoping it would be the perfect spot to have a mellow burger and read a book before I went home and watch the Dodgers.

The only real surprise was the toilet seat/bidet in the bathroom. Yes, a bidet. I’m sure someone far more sophisticated than myself thinks this a godsend, but, man, it just makes me nervous. So if you’re looking for a restaurant with By the way some of the best beef in town and a bidet, Cassell’s is your place.
By the way, if there are any graphic designers in the house, it’d be pretty sweet if you could get on those badges.
Cassell's
3266 W. 6th St.
Los Angeles 90020
(323) 480-8668
Our Shameless Self-Promotion
Tuesday, August 22, 2006
Our Bad: Correx for the new edition of Hungry? Los Angeles
1. The address for Nicolosi (Encino, CA) is 17540 Ventura Blvd., not 17450.
2. Miceli's has two locations: 1646 Las Palmas Ave. in Hollywood and 3655 W. Cahuenga Ave. in Universal City. The index for the third edition Hungry? also spells Miceli’s with an 'h', a common mistake for American's doing Italian (for the record, 'ch' in Italian is pronounced with a 'k' sound; it's broos-k-etta, not broo-sh-etta).
3. The index page listing for La Luz del Dia says page eleven but check page fifteen for the actual listing.
4. Yai Restaurant is located at 5757 Hollywood Blvd., not 5751 Hollywood Blvd.
5. Le Petit Café is located at 2842 Colorado Ave., not 2482 Colorado Ave.
6. Taste of Texas, or more accurately Nick's Taste of Texas, is not listed in the index, but it’s in the book—check out page 263.
7. Stevie's on the Strip has closed, sadly. However, you can cruise on over to the Stevie's creole place over in Encino, see page 165 of Hungry? Los Angeles (16911 Ventura Blvd.).
8. Pizzarito, located in Marina del Rey, has also closed its doors. Its traditional oven baked pizzas by the slice will be missed.
9. Although two locations still hustle and bustle (Burbank and La Crescenta), one of the three Yaki's closed its doors (Glendale).
10. Once again, three proves to be a crowd. Tarzana Armenian Grocery and Deli in Woodland Hills closed shop. Fear not, there are still two locations for those looking to get their Armenian food fix (Studio City and Tarzana).
11. If you're in Koreatown and looking for Manila pork barbecue or baby coconut milk, Jeepney Grill no longer serves your needs—we heard the took the trek to Vegas.
12. Papa Jake's Sub Shop in Brentwood has folded. To get the best Philly cheesesteak sandwich in Los Angeles, cruise on over to their Manhattan Beach and Beverly Hills locations.
We apologize for any food mishaps as a result of these errors. If you know of any other closures or details that need to be shared, please let us know.
Tuesday, August 15, 2006
Our Bad: Correx to Stuffed Sandwich.
Also, we’ve been made aware that, in compliance with new health department ordinances, Stuffed Sandwich no longer has sawdust on their floor. We’ve also been told that they still have a tremendous beer selection, which, in our book, is pretty cool.
When our new website comes online you can expect to see a (hopefully very small) section for these kind of flub ups, address changes, and closures. For now: courage.
In the Neighborhood: Tamales and Ice Cream

My block seems to be a haven for meals on wheels. Lunch trucks are dispatched from a huge lot down the street—did you ever wonder where those things go at night? The tamale lady comes by every morning. Ahhh, the tamale lady. Nothing jolts you out of a nice deep sleep like a shrill “TAMALEEEEEEEES” at 8 a.m.. I have always been curious as to what the infamous tamale Lady is capable of, however I’m never quite ready for tamales that early (shocker). Why doesn’t she ever come at lunchtime? Plus, my roommates have forbidden me from purchasing any of said tamales in fear of her targeting our house in the future. As of now she merely passes by every morning.
Who really wants hot tamale though, anyway, when it’s reaching upwards of ninety degrees? Over these past few weeks there has been only one mobile delicacy on my mind: ice cream. I’ve grown to love my neighborhood ice cream truck. When I hear that electronic/jingly/slightly-disturbing version of ‘we wish you a merry Christmas’, I know it's summer in L.A. The ice cream man has everything you could possibly want on a hot summer day, from your classic chipwich to a chili-dusted mango pop. Of course, if you’re not into cold at the moment, my friendly neighborhood ice cream truck can offer you chips, Cheetos, and even nachos (complete with fresh jalapenos). I tend to stick with the classic chocolate chip ice cream cone, and no, I don’t worry about how long it’s been stored with the nacho cheese. Nothing satisfies more for fifty cents.