Monthly Archives: August 2010

A Rundown of the Dining Deck at the New Santa Monica Place

Zengo's Tamarind Margarita by Caroline on Crack

Zengo's Tamarind-Togarashi Margarita, say that 3 times fast.

Earlier this week I was invited to check out the restaurants on the Dining Deck of the new, improved and now outdoor Santa Monica Place mall that opens today at 10am. When I arrived the security detail led me to the elevator that took me upstairs to one of the most beautiful mall food courts I’ve ever seen, The Dining Deck which houses six chef-driven restaurants plus an area for “fast-casual” eateries like Fatburger, Pinches Tacos and CrepeMaker.

Media folk were divided into groups and then taken on a tour of all six restaurants — Xino, Zengo, La Sandia, Pizza Antica, Sonoma Wine Garden and Ozumo — where they would sample the cuisine and booze as well as check out the new digs. It was such a whirlwind tour that it felt like the foodies’ edition of The Amazing Race as we basically had only 15 minutes to get the gist of each place. By the way, eating while running? Not a good idea. Erp!

All restaurants here are Vegas-huge and I couldn’t help but wonder if they’ll be able to fill all the seats. In any case the venues were airy with gorgeous and distinctive décor and it was hard to believe we were in a mall. The only real reminders are the beautiful views looking down Third Street Promenade. And sure, you may not know how to pronounce the names of some of the restaurants and may end up referring to them as “That [insert cuisine here] restaurant at the Santa Monica mall,” but you’ll remember the food and cocktails.

Here’s a rundown of the six new Santa Monica Place restaurants:

Xino, a Chinese restaurant that’s owned and operated by Chris Yeo, is a far cry from the Panda Express of yester-mall. Here, you’ll find a selection of starters like crispy chili calamari, Maine lobster and prawn potstickers as well as entrees like Mongolian cowboy rib eye, live crab and Chairman Yeo’s Crispy Chicken with kumquat compote and Fiji apples. No orange chicken here, sorry! On the dinner menu, prices range from $12 for a tureen of wonton soup to $38 for the classic Peking duck. As for the cocktail situation, the restaurant has a bar and lounge. At the preview I sampled their strawberry lemon drop cocktail which was this red, syrupy concoction rimmed with sugar. Suffice it to say, I couldn’t finish it. But at least the food was good and the space gorgeous. By the way, the Chinese beauty in that huge photo plastering the wall on the way to the outdoor patio is actually Mr. Yeo’s wife! If you want to get some air, there is an outdoor patio with dining banquettes and a full bar that overlooks the Promenade.

Zengo, a Latin-Asian restaurant owned by chef Richard Sandoval and my favorite tenor Placido Domingo, has an outdoor patio that also overlooks the Promenade as well as the Xino patio across the way. This venue offered a tamarind-togarashi margarita with a spicy salted rim which ended up being the fave of the bloggers in my group, myself included. The handcrafted beverage program here will have a range of tequilas, mescals, cachacas, sake and soju and cocktails like a Mekhong Pina Horchata, that’s a mouthful! They’ll have a happy hour Monday through Friday from 4 to 7pm. The food here promises to be a beautiful marriage of Latin and Asian cuisine as it uses ingredients shared by both cultures. Check out the Peking Duck Daikon tacos and the Apple-aji Amarillo Corvina Ceviche.

La Sandia Mexican Kitchen & Tequila Bar, Richard Sandoval’s second restaurant on the dining deck which is located right next door to Zengo, focuses on Mexican cuisine. That’s all well and good but I’m excited about the tequila library which will offer 250 tequilas and mescals! And they’ll have Latin-inspired cocktails like Horchata Blanco with tequila reposado, tropical fruit margaritas and mojitos. We had the Mescal con Pepino with cucumber, Serrano, lime and chile pequin. So spicy and refreshing. The food is your usual Mexican fare with even some combinations where you can get two tacos and an adobo shrimp quesadilla with refried beans and Mexican rice for $12.95. And here, their Chile Relleno is $12.95 compared to the $16.50 one at Border Grill around the corner on 4th Street. The space itself with its white stucco, azure wall of talavera tiles, and retractable glass sky light offers a nice respite from the bustling mall.

Pizza Antica, a California-Italian restaurant which specializes in thin crust Roman-style pizza, was a favorite of the tour. Even though at this point I was stuffed, I couldn’t say no to the pizza with heirloom potatoes, caramelized onions and truffle oil. It actually made blogger Diane Takes a Bite cry, it was so good. Pizzas here are available in small ($9.50-$11.25) and large ($15.25-$17) sizes for their specialty pizzas or you can make your own pizza starting at $9.25 for the small and $14.75 with tomato sauce and mozzarella. Additional toppings like fennel sausage, roasted garlic paste and Portobello mushrooms are $1.25-$1.75 each. There are also pastas and entrees if you want some variety. But at least split a pizza first!

Sonoma Wine Garden may give Pourtal Wine Tasting Bar up the street on Santa Monica Boulevard a run for its money as here they, too, have enomatic machines where you can conduct your own tasting but their food menu is more extensive with small plates like Sonoma foie gras, Manila clams linguini and grilled salmon and bib lettuce as well as hearty Dungeness crab BLT, Snake River Farms Kobe Bavette steak sandwich and truffle fries with parmesan! They will have weekly specials, too. The space itself is beautiful with walls seemingly covered with panels from wine crates. By the way, they will offer Sonoma beach picnic baskets should you want to take a stroll down by the pier past all the hordes of tourist families and thrown down a blanket on the sand for a romantic picnic.

Ozumo, a Japanese cuisine restaurant and sake bar, is surprisingly run by gaijin. Its owner is Jeremy Umland, who also owns Sonoma Wine Garden, and its sake sommelier is a sushi chef-turned-sake sommelier named Jess. But Umland says that they make sure they stack up to anyone including the Japanese in terms of their knowledge and appreciation of the cuisine. When you walk into the restaurant you immediately step into a sake lounge with a bar in the center that’s surrounded by wooden stools and seating areas all around. Further in is the sushi bar where you’re greeted by friendly sushi chefs. At this point in the tour, unfortunately, I was too stuffed to eat the sashimi and sushi they were offering but the other bloggers there did seem to like the food.

The mall will be celebrating its grand opening all day today with retail-hosted evens, live music and a happy hour with KCRW DJ Jason Bentley spinning some tunes.

Santa Monica Place
1453 3rd Street Promenade
Santa Monica, California 90401 (map)
(310) 394-5451
Facebook: Santa Monica Place

This Weekend: 3-Story-High Hangover, Mall Hype, Free Cupcakes

I’m going up north for another edition of 24 Hours of Lemons but I’m not leaving you blind. In addition to Saturday’s KBBQ cook-off you’ve got these events.

Thursday, August 5

BreadBar Hatchi Mix: Comme Ca’s Cedilla — A Suite of Cocktails
Max Seaman and Jeff Knudsen, the mixology team at Comme Ca in West Hollywood, are featured in this month’s edition of Hatchi Mix. They’ll serve up eight cocktails for $8 each. Yummy-sounding concoctions like Hot Pepper Smash with rye, lemon, honey, Serrano chile and mint and Sergio Leone with tequila, Campari and Sweet Vermouth. Classics like Penicillin and Bloody Mary will also make an appearance.

  • 6-10pm. BreadBar Century City, 10250 Santa Monica Boulevard, Los Angeles (map).

Friday, August 6

Santa Monica Place’s Grand Opening Celebration
Finally! The Santa Monica mall is back. AND it’s so new and improved that it’s now an outdoor mall, complementing the 3rd Street Promenade nicely. Celebrate at this all-day party which kicks off with a morning ribbon-cutting ceremony and ends with happy hour on the gorgeous Dining Deck where KCRW music director Jason Bentley will be spinning a two-hour set! And throughout the day there will be live music and retailer-hosted events from the likes of Bloomingdales, Disney and Charlotte Russe.

  • Starts 10am. Santa Monica Place, 1453 3rd Street Promenade, Santa Monica (map).

Saturday, August 7

OC Foodie Fest’s Pub & Grub
I know this is a bit beyond my jurisdiction but the OC is having its own “Foodie Fest” on August 28. And in anticipation of that, it’s throwing a special preview party this Saturday at Proof Bar in Santa Ana where presale OC Foodie Fest ticket holders will get a sneak peek of the OC food trucks attending the food fest as well as get to enjoy an Azunia Tequila tasting, giveaways and music. If you haven’t bought your tickets yet, you can do so at this event for a discounted price!

  • 7-10:30pm. Free. Proof Bar’s parking lot, 215 N Broadway, Santa Ana (map).

Win $500 at Westfield Culver City for Being the Most Stylish Shopper
Yeah, I thought this sounded weird and am not really sure how a “stylish shopper” would dress. But maybe just show up like you’re dressed for the Oscars and strut your stuff on the red carpet at the mall while the hosts of weekly entertainment show, On the Red Carpet, provide the running commentary, and you can’t lose. Participant photos will be posted on the mall’s Facebook page. The winner, who will be chosen by a panel of judges, gets a $500 gift card for the Culver City mall. Easy peasy.

  • 12-4pm. Westfield Culver City, 6000 Sepulveda Boulevard, Culver City (map).

SusieCakes Celebrates Its 4th Birthday
To celebrate its 4th birthday, SusieCakes will be giving out a free box of four mini cupcakes to the first 100 customers to show up between 1 and 4pm. If you miss your chance for the freebie treat, the cupcakery will offer retro-priced goodies like 40-cent cookies!

Outdoor Cinema Food Fest Presents: The Hangover
OMG my fave Vegas movie EVER! I can’t imagine how much more awesome it’s going to be on a three-story-tall outdoor movie screen! Couple that with food trucks like Fishlips Sushi, Nana Queens and Don Chow Tacos, and you have one swinging good time.

  • 6-11pm. $8. Exposition Park, 700 Exposition Park Boulevard, Los Angeles (map).

2nd Annual Korean Barbecue Cook-off and Soju Mix-Off

LA Korean Barbecue Cook-Off by Caroline on Crack

Plates of fun at Korean Barbecue Cook-Off

Of course you want to go to the Korean American Coalition’s 2nd Annual Korean Barbecue Cook-Off this Saturday, August 7 in Koreatown. Come on, it’ll feature the top KBBQ restaurants in LA, like Park’s BBQ, Soowan Galbi and Ham Ji Park and sexy Chef Ludo and not-so-sexy Jonathan Gold will be among the judges who crown the best LA galbi (marinated bone-in beef ribs), galbi (marinated boned-out beef ribs), pork ribs and bulgogi (marinated sliced sirloin).

And, no, you’re not just going to stand there watching Ludo and JGold lick the barbecue sauce off their fingers. You, too, will get to try out the grilled offerings at $5 a plate (vouchers must be purchased at the event with cash only). Plus there will also be an eating contest (secret ingredient to be announced), a beer garden, and thankfully vendors to cool you down like Scoops ice cream, Coolhaus ice cream truck and Sprinkles Cupcakes.

For cocktail fans, the special bonus is that this year will feature a soju cocktail competition where L.A. bartenders will compete to make the best Koreatown-inspired drink. Hmm, what might those taste like? I’d tell you but the cocktail recipes are kept confidential until the event.

However, I will tell you that the competitors include Fred Warner of La Buca (formerly of The Association), Josh Goldman (formerly of the The Dining Room), Daniel Eun of The Varnish, Joel Black (formerly of Comme Ca) and Jameson Rhyme of Bottega Louie. Who will you root for?

The guy with the best KTown cocktail-making skills will win $300 and a $100 kbbq gift card and their cocktail will be featured at the KBBQ after party at Cafe Bleu for you to enjoy from 8pm to close.

In any case, this is definitely a summer event not to be missed. What could be better than ‘cue on a hot day? Just make sure to pack lots of Wet Naps.

EVENT: SATURDAY, AUGUST 7 from 12 to 8pm

3600 Wilshire Boulevard
Los Angeles, California 90010 (map)
Facebook: KBBQ Cook-Off
Twitter: @kbbqcookoff
Admission: Free

10 Things I Learned About Caviar From Petrossian West Hollywood

Trio of Caviar at Petrossian by Caroline on Crack

Trio of Caviar at Petrossian

Check me out eating caviar at my desk this morning. That’s right, me, Ms. Foodie on a Budget. True, these three tins of caviar were left over from my tres fancy and comped Caviar 101 dinner which was created by chef Ben Bailly at Petrossian in West Hollywood last night but still! Who would have thought I’d suddenly be savvy in caviar? Not me.

Before the dinner, my only encounters with caviar had been few and far between. After all, it is a luxury I cannot afford. Besides, meh, fancy fish eggs. But after getting schooled on how to enjoy the fish eggs, let alone the different farms and even history of them, I’ve come away from my dinner an appreciator of the salty pearls.

Petrossian had invited me as well as media types like Javier of Teenage Glutster and Pat of Eating LA to partake of this educational supper as a way to show that caviar is more accessible and affordable than we all thought.

Sure, we started out with a trio of tins each containing 30 grams of caviar ranging in price from $63 to $170 and the restaurant’s monthly Monday Caviar 101 tasting session is $100 a person but there are also more “affordable” and approachable options on the Petrossian menu, like the $26 smoked salmon pizzette with caviar or the $18 blinis with caviar, trout roe and salmon roe should you feel like treating yourself without putting your rent check at risk.

And if you ever want to treat that special someone, i.e. Mom, to a decadent brunch, check out the champagne and caviar brunch which is $69 for champagne and three courses such as an egg salad caviar sandwich, caviar pizza and crème brulee.

So during this special tasting, which Petrossian admits is above and beyond what they usually do for their monthly tastings — i.e. they flew out caviar from New York just for us — I learned 10 things about caviar and Petrossian that I’d like to share with you should you ever want to give caviar here a go.

  1. Do not eat caviar with metal as it will transfer a metallic taste to the eggs. The tins Petrossian uses are actually coated with a nonreactive metal. Their boutique also sells a special caviar paddle, the cheapest one is $65.
  2. Champagne actually isn’t the drink of choice to go with caviar. Traditionally it’s vodka but Petrossian doesn’t currently have a full liquor license so, alas, champagne will have to do. Aw.
  3. Petrossian has their own smoke house outside of Paris where they smoke their own salmon.
  4. Once you open a jar/tin of caviar you only have a day to eat it before it goes bad.
  5. At $170/30 grams, the Tsar Imperial Ossetra is the most expensive caviar the Petrossian boutique carries.
  6. Petrossian doesn’t serve their caviar with red chopped onions which is how some places mask the taste of inferior caviar.
  7. The nicer the caviar the less “bells and whistles” you need, like having it on toast with crème fraiche. Premium caviar can be enjoyed on its own.
  8. The way to eat caviar is 1) get a scoop and put it on your tongue to “feel the earthiness” of the caviar, 2) breathe it in before crushing it against the roof of your mouth, 3) let it sit on your tongue for a moment or two to give your tastebuds time to react to it. Mmmmm!
  9. For the month of August, if you “Like” Petrossian West Hollywood’s Facebook page and tell them at the restaurant, you can get a free order of caviar blini with your meal.
  10. I can actually get full by eating three tins of caviar with toast.

Petrossian
321 North Robertson Boulevard
West Hollywood, California 90048 (map)
(310) 271-6300
Facebook: Petrossian West Hollywood
Twitter: @PetrossianWeHo

Happy 5th Blogiversary to Me!

Manhattan by Caroline on Crack

Cheers to 5 years!

I’m going to sound like an old fogey for saying this but the older you get the faster time flies. And it seems like it was just yesterday when my friend, Michael Talarczyk, who happens to be a Web designer, made me start a blog. He thought that my hobby of researching fun things to do in L.A. would be of interest to someone out there. It’s good to know that five years later he was right.

In this half decade (eesh!), I enjoyed accolades and criticism. Sure, I was banned from a certain downtown whiskey bar and Schmink Schmeat Schmlay events but received two LA Weekly Web awards, got some cool writing gigs, made LOTS of new blogger friends and enjoyed the support of my crackhead readers. It was a great five years.

It’s funny also looking back on my really old posts, especially that very first one on August 2, 2005 about the Beverly Hills Soda Fountain Shoppe, which is now called the Beverly Hills Fountain Coffee Room. Yes, that post is 95% quoted material from Girl’s Guide to City Life but I was just starting out and eventually got the hang of it. Eventually. I also went from completely leaving my personal life out of my blog to admitting that, yes, my BF is my DD.

In any case, I thought to commemorate this blogiversary it would be fun to list the top 5 popular CoC posts of all time.

  1. La Descarga: A Little Bit of Havana With Rum, Cigars & Dancing Girls
  2. 100 Things To Try in L.A. Before You Die
  3. Red O Restaurant: New Mexican, Tequila Tunnel and More Cowbell
  4. Photo Gallery: Ludo Bites 4.0?s Entire Menu
  5. 5 Ways Not To Order a Beer by LA Experts

Thanks again, everyone, for your support and encouragement. I couldn’t have gotten this far without you. Big up to Tiny Nancer of The Wanderkind for giving my ol’ blog a fresh, new face. And a special shout-out to my LA bartender friends, for providing me with drink for thought.

BTW, if you’re in the vicinity of downtown tomorrow, I’ll be celebrating at First and Hope’s Fedora Lounge at 9pm. Hope to see you there!

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