Love Story Reels in a Winning Cafe
- Share via
A smiling waitress and a good bowl of soup can lead to true love. It happened to Phillip Dang in 1977, when he wandered into a Vietnamese restaurant in Los Angeles and floated out in love with Tiem, the waitress who had served him beef noodle soup. A short while later the two were married. And when Phillip’s employer moved to Dallas in 1991, the married couple also became a business couple, opening the Hermosa Fishmarket Cafe (despite the name, it’s a cafe, not a market).
The Fishmarket Cafe is a relaxing outpost with some seafaring decorations: life preservers, oars, a mounted swordfish. Since it’s a mere 100 feet from the Hermosa Pier, you can expect a casually dressed crowd.
A highlight of the menu is the raw oysters ($5.50), a molluscan half-dozen from Wallapa Bay in Washington. They are served with lemon wedges and a cocktail sauce with a dab of horseradish.
Fish is charcoal-grilled and very simply served, with no seasonings at all, unless you care to put on some tartar or teriyaki sauce. Alaskan king salmon ($9.95) comes with a salad and garlic bread. Monkfish ($8.95), known as “poor man’s lobster,” is often available, as are sea bass, swordfish and fresh tuna.
One of the most popular items here is the seafood paella ($6.25 at lunch, $8.95 at dinner), the classic Spanish dish of saffron-flavored rice and seafood. It’s made with shrimp, mussels, clams, crab, squid and whitefish, not to mention garlic, onions, peas, mushrooms, tomatoes, carrots and bell peppers.
Fish tacos ($4.95 for two), those old beach favorites, are filled with shrimp and mahi mahi.
The Hermosa Fishmarket Cafe is at 20 Pier Ave., Hermosa Beach. (310) 372-1488. Open Sunday through Thursday, 11 a.m. to 10 p.m., Friday and Saturday, 11 a.m. to 10:30 p.m.
More to Read
Sign up for The Wild
We’ll help you find the best places to hike, bike and run, as well as the perfect silent spots for meditation and yoga.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.