Newsletter: Counter: Modernist cooking and time capsule cuisine
Chicharron, elephant garlic mojo, radish sprout and pickled herbs at Broken Spanish.
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Let's not talk about the Dodgers, please, but instead about the downtown Los Angeles dining scene. Because the number of restaurants keeps growing: The second outpost of Little Sister is opening almost as we speak, across the street from B.S. Taqueria, whose chef, Ray Garcia, just won a swell award and whose more recent restaurant, Broken Spanish, is the subject of Jonathan Gold's review.
And next door to the new Little Sister is Q, the Edomae sushi restaurant whose chef we consider. It's a beautiful time machine of a place, a restaurant that's a lot more expensive than Mas Malo or Chipotle — also on Seventh Street — but that you'll remember for years longer.
Away from downtown, Jonathan checks out Hainan chicken in Old Town Pasadena, Jenn Harris gives a new Beverly Hills restaurant a first look and John Verive considers the corporate universe of beer, which is expanding like something you'd see through a JPL telescope rather than suds in a glass.
And be on the lookout for Wednesday's In the Kitchen newsletter, with cooking tips and news, including new recipes from the L.A. Times Test Kitchen.
Snouts for dinner
This week, Jonathan has a snout for dinner: specifically, chopped snout in sweet potato, with a little pigtail, at Broken Spanish, the latest restaurant from chef Ray Garcia and prolific restaurateur Bill Chait. Broken Spanish "is a kind of Guillermo del Toro movie of a restaurant," he says — and it's difficult not to conjure up the ghost of John Sedlar (who is currently alive and well and cooking in New Mexico), whose Rivera restaurant previously occupied the space. Still, there is the lamb's head, and tamales if that's too much for you.
(Anne Cusack / Los Angeles Times)
Ramen prison hacks
Ramen goulash? Jailhouse Hole Burritos? Check out a new cookbook called "Prison Ramen: Recipes and Stories from Behind Bars." Recipes and stories from ex-cons are included in the book. Former star inmates Shia LaBeouf, Taryn Manning and Danny Trejo all contributed. Presumably somebody is already working on the ramen-ya chain.
(Richard Shotwell / Invision / Associated Press)
The fish museum
The world of traditional Edomae sushi, as practiced by chef Hiroyuki Naruke at Q, a newish restaurant in downtown L.A., is a rarefied one. Naruke practices his craft as if not much has happened since the 19th century. It's a gorgeous time machine, a museum that has a pretty hefty admission price but is well worth it.
(Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times)
Green Zone
Jonathan has lunch at Green Zone, a new Hainan chicken place in Old Town (in Pasadena, where most of us here in the Food section live and where there are bafflingly few good restaurants), and finds it more than acceptable. In fact, the chicken rice, he finds "almost shockingly good." Guess it's time to go find something at the Sur la Table and get hungry.
Big beer gets bigger
Our beer writer, John Verive, reports that beer goliath AB InBev (Budweiser, Corona and Stella Artois) and SABMiller (Miller, Coors, Molson and Peroni) are merging into one super-giant conglomerate that will brew nearly one-third of the world’s beer. What this means for the market, the materials and the rest of us probably requires more than a few beers to comprehend.
(Scott Olson / Getty Images)
Fashion forward food
Food inspired by designer Kelly Wearstler's style? We do live in L.A., in case you somehow forgot. Jenn Harris checks out Viviane, the new restaurant by Stephane Bombet of Bombet Hospitality Group and chef Michael Hung at the Avalon Hotel in Beverly Hills. Expect shellfish boudin blanc, chicken and dumplings — and a pool.
(Jenn Harris / Los Angeles Times)
Jonathan Gold's 101
The 101 is coming! The Los Angeles Times will publish Jonathan Gold’s 101 Best Restaurants, the authoritative annual guide to local dining, on Nov. 4 at latimes.com/jgold101. The print edition will be delivered to Times’ Saturday subscribers on Nov. 7. And in honor of this year’s best, Mr. Gold will host a 101 launch party at Union Station on Nov. 4. For more information, go to latimes.com/getgold. Official hashtag #JGOLD101.
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