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From Serious Eats

Snapshots from South Korea: Hotteok, Two Ways

The hotteok stand is outside California Market, at the corner of 5th and Western. I used to stop by all the time when I worked at Wilshire and Normandie, until I had to stop, for flub-reduction reasons. It may have been Jonathan Gold who was described these as sort of like pancakes with syrup, inside out. Really a pretty brilliant little treat.

From Serious Eats

Serious Eats City Guide: Los Angeles

I third or fourth or whatever we're up to the recommendation of Scoops for best ice cream. Pazzo Gelato in Silverlake is not even worth mentioning in comparison. Because of Tai Kim's willingness to experiment and to draw on his Korean background in a community with the largest Korean population after Seoul, Scoops is also a uniquely Angelino experience in a way the other three places named are not.

The recommendation of Mozza as the best pizza joint is, sadly, right. Sad not because Mozza's bad-- it's terrific, if pricey, and not the casual experience that most East Coasters associate with the best pizza-- but because its always seemed weird to me that a city with so many Italians and Italian-Americans should be unable to come up with a first rate, affordable pizza joint. Odd to recommend the Meyer lemon ice cream pie over the salty butterscotch budino, which is what gets the raves.

Not mentioning either Apple Pan or Pie n' Burger, the two usual contenders among locals for one of LA's culinary strong points, also seems odd.

And, I also think something is wrong with picking an Austrian's fusion restaurant over the many, many first rate Chinese contenders as "best Chinese." A search of Jonathan Gold's LA Weekly articles and posts by Jerome on Chowhound's Los Angeles Area message board will turn up a long list. Triumphal Palace deserved to go out of business.

I have a topic to propose for Serious Eats if it's going to get serious about Los Angeles: Pico Boulevard. You can capture much of what's great about the city's food scene in a walk (which a group of us did a couple of years ago) down its entire length, from downtown to the coast.


From Serious Eats

Serious Grape: Five Must-Have Wine Books

For tasting guides and winery notes, Hugh Johnson's guides are our household favorite. Pithy and pointed, with a more restrained aesthetic than Robert Parker, and less didactic than many wine writers.

From Recipes

Cook the Book: Hamantaschen

In the cookie variety of hamantaschen, I prefer something tangy like lemon juice or orange juice to vanilla as the flavoring agent, maybe because the oil used is generally margerine rather than butter, which makes for a pretty insipid pastry dough. But, am I alone in prefering the yeast dough hamantaschen to any kind of cookie?

For fillings, I think that poppy lekvar is the classic that in part explains the punning name: hamantaschen in yiddish = haman's pockets, and also ha-mohn taschen (the poppy seed pockets).

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From Serious Eats

Snapshots from South Korea: Hotteok, Two Ways

The hotteok stand is outside California Market, at the corner of 5th and Western. I used to stop by all the time when I worked at Wilshire and Normandie, until I had to stop, for flub-reduction reasons. It may have been Jonathan Gold who was described these as sort of like pancakes with syrup, inside out. Really a pretty brilliant little treat.

From Serious Eats

Serious Eats City Guide: Los Angeles

I third or fourth or whatever we're up to the recommendation of Scoops for best ice cream. Pazzo Gelato in Silverlake is not even worth mentioning in comparison. Because of Tai Kim's willingness to experiment and to draw on his Korean background in a community with the largest Korean population after Seoul, Scoops is also a uniquely Angelino experience in a way the other three places named are not.

The recommendation of Mozza as the best pizza joint is, sadly, right. Sad not because Mozza's bad-- it's terrific, if pricey, and not the casual experience that most East Coasters associate with the best pizza-- but because its always seemed weird to me that a city with so many Italians and Italian-Americans should be unable to come up with a first rate, affordable pizza joint. Odd to recommend the Meyer lemon ice cream pie over the salty butterscotch budino, which is what gets the raves.

Not mentioning either Apple Pan or Pie n' Burger, the two usual contenders among locals for one of LA's culinary strong points, also seems odd.

And, I also think something is wrong with picking an Austrian's fusion restaurant over the many, many first rate Chinese contenders as "best Chinese." A search of Jonathan Gold's LA Weekly articles and posts by Jerome on Chowhound's Los Angeles Area message board will turn up a long list. Triumphal Palace deserved to go out of business.

I have a topic to propose for Serious Eats if it's going to get serious about Los Angeles: Pico Boulevard. You can capture much of what's great about the city's food scene in a walk (which a group of us did a couple of years ago) down its entire length, from downtown to the coast.


From Serious Eats

Serious Grape: Five Must-Have Wine Books

For tasting guides and winery notes, Hugh Johnson's guides are our household favorite. Pithy and pointed, with a more restrained aesthetic than Robert Parker, and less didactic than many wine writers.

From Recipes

Cook the Book: Hamantaschen

In the cookie variety of hamantaschen, I prefer something tangy like lemon juice or orange juice to vanilla as the flavoring agent, maybe because the oil used is generally margerine rather than butter, which makes for a pretty insipid pastry dough. But, am I alone in prefering the yeast dough hamantaschen to any kind of cookie?

For fillings, I think that poppy lekvar is the classic that in part explains the punning name: hamantaschen in yiddish = haman's pockets, and also ha-mohn taschen (the poppy seed pockets).

From Serious Eats

The Best Pies in America: The Serious Eats Pie Honor Roll

In the L.A. area, Jongewaard's Bake and Broil, just off the 405 near Atlantic Blvd in Long Beach, CA is better than both the better known Pie N' Burger and Du-Par's, IMHO.

From Serious Eats

The Best Worst Restaurant Names Ever

I got the name wrong. The official name was
"Mo' Better Meatty [sic] Meat Burger"

Awesome.

From Serious Eats

The Best Worst Restaurant Names Ever

There's a "Something's Fishy" in Malibu. Don't know if it's part of the South African chain rudbeckia mentions, but that one has definitely caught my attention as particularly unappetizing.

Also suspect in sunny LA-LA land: "Wacky Wok" and "Killer Shrimp," both on Washington Blvd, in Venice. Wackiness and lethality are just not attributes I like to associate with my food.

Honorable mention: the now defunct Mo' Meaty Meat Burgers on Pico and Fairfax Blvds. (They didn't specify what kind of meat, or what state of meatiness had existed prior to the onset of "Mo'.")

From Serious Eats

Onion Action Goggles

I'm pro-onion goggles, as well. I added a pair to my wedding registry this past year, on a whim. To my surprise, I've found myself using and enthusing about them repeatedly. They really do work, and make you feel like a Ninja Turtle while you cook (especially mine, which are green), which is an added bonus, in my book. I have never tried the plastic wrap idea-- do your eyelids really open and close comfortably when wrapped in plastic wrap...don't your eyelashes get smushed into your eyeballs?-- but I try to limit my use of plastic wrap, generally, for environmental reasons.

From Serious Eats

Does Eating (The Best?) Pastrami Prolong Your Life? What's Your Favorite?

On the upside, given that we all have to go at some point, what a great way to go: not only 94 years old and in apparently reasonably good health, but moreover just a couple of weeks after the deli's giant 60th anniversary celebration, at which everyone from top city officials to Joan Nathan feted Al's accomplishments, and the corner of 7th and Alvarado was renamed Langer's corner in his honor. May more such deserving folk be so recognized in their time.

I'm relieved to hear the deli will stay open, since I count it among the great geographic features of my office, just one stop away on the subway (that's not a typo, there really is a subway in Los Angeles), as well as conveniently located halfway between the office and a variety of venues that work as a public interest lawyer takes me during the day. It's only in registering the nostalgic siren song with which Langer's, a relic among Salvadorean and Mexican joints (some of which are first rate-- MacArthur Park is a great eating neighborhood), beckons as I pass that I've come to recognize good deli food as an endagered cultural species. The recognition was also brought home last summer, in the experience of acting as cultural tour guide for a clerk (originally from rural Michigan) and translator (originally from El Paso) whom I took there as thanks for helping me prepare a case. Both loved Langer's, but also clearly saw it as an exotic experience, and peppered me with questions about pastrami versus corned beef, half-sours versus full-sours, chopped liver, and egg creams. Fine, there aren't many Jews in the U-P or in El Paso, but there are many in L.A., especially in my neighborhood (near Fairfax) and points West and North. Why (and I mean that as a question of current markets, not historical neighborhoods) aren't there any delis worth pointing to, proudly, as demonstrations of the finer (perhaps even the only fine) culinary traditions of my Ashkenazi-American ancestors anywhere in L.A. outside the Rampart District? Canter's is wholly mediocre, except at 2am, sort of the L.A. Jewish Deli equivalent of Morningside Height's Tom's Diner; Nate and Al's and others are expensive substitutes, at best. Pastrami's a reasonably cheap and accessible cuisine-- what happened?

From Serious Eats

Eating on a Limited Budget

I can understand fast food for a person short on time and energy as well as money, but from a purely financial standpoint, none of Bauer's choices listed above make any sense. Anyone who's ever had to watch his or her budget knows that (in the Food4Less, not the Whole Foods, universe), processed foods, and particularly a name brand processed food like Campbell's Tomato Soup, are the worst. Because of dairy subsidies, for better or worse, the milk Bauer refrained from adding would be the cheapest, not to mention most nutritionally valuable, part. Seems like he's aiming more for bougie shock value than accuracy, to me. There's a reason why starving people the world over eat variations on rice and beans, and why potatoes had such a profound impact on industrializing Europe; such items remain far more healthy and economical options than McD's or hot dogs today. In the classic essay on the subject, M F K Fisher's "How To Cook A Wolf," her answer to abject hunger, as I recall, was a sludge-like meatloaf made of 1/3 cheap veggies (carrots, onions, turnips, etc.), 1/3 cheap starches (beans, oatmeal, etc.), and 1/3 cheap meat (fatty stew beef, etc.)-- a sort of super low-rent pate. Not exactly Mm-mm good, but probably not worse than a cheap slice of bologna.

From Serious Eats

A Toast from Serious Eats

Woo-hoo! I'm off to buy a pair of elastic waistband pants in anticipation...

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