The best food and restaurants for today. Atwater, Hollywood, Silver Lake, Thai Town, Hollywood, New York and wherever my travels take me.

Saturday, March 24, 2007

Rigatoni all'Amatriciana


This is an easy recipe and one I decided to make today since I didn't feel like going to the store and happened to have all the necessary ingredients on hand. Of course you could make this with spaghetti or whatever pasta you want.

1 1/2 pounds rigatoni (I used half a box of Latini brand rigatoni)
2 1/2 tbsp olive oil
1 shallot, diced
5 ounces pancetta, diced
1/2 cup dry white wine
28 oz can tomatoes, seeded (I used San Marzanos)
salt & pepper
1/2 cup freshly grated Pecorino

Heat the oil and saute the shallots over a very low heat until soft. Add the pancetta and fry it for a few minutes. Pour in the white wine and continue cooking until it evaporates a little. Add the tomatoes to the pan and roughly chop up using the back of a spoon or a potato masher. Season with a little salt and pepper and cook down on low heat for no more than 15 minutes.

Separately, bring a large pot of salted water to a boil. Cook the rigatoni until within a few minutes of being al dente. Using a slotted spoon, transfer the pasta out of the boiling water and add it to the sauce. Add a small amount of the pasta water and continue cooking on low heat until the sauce and pasta are properly married and the rigatoni is done cooking. Sprinkle with the fresh pecorino and serve.

Red Pearl Kitchen



A boccini-toss away from Mozza and a block down from the live/work lofts that housed those hopeful contestants of Bravo's Top Design, Red Pearl Kitchen has transformed the former Meson G into a space that's lively and theatrical, where dangling paper lanterns, reclining buddhas, glossy portraits of Mao and a lively young crowd all bask in a dim, bordello-red glow. There's even a Gong Li DVD playing in the men's room. The food is also beautifully presented. Steamed shrimp dumplings (standard dim sum fare) are served in a bamboo basket with what I think was a chili and ginger-infused soy sauce on the side. The crispy, thimble-sized crab-pork spring rolls were a hit at the table too, though not my favorite. The black noodles with drunken beef and gai lan (Chinese broccoli) was rich and delicious. Udon with bacon, fried egg and smoky miso is a Asian-fusion take on the classic Roman spaghetti alla carbonara. Stir-fried shaking Kobe beef with papaya and mint packs some heat. I loved the salt and pepper shrimp and the green curry chicken satay that topped us off. Our server, Allison, was attentive and helpful. With a separate bar scene and DJ in the back corner of the restaurant it's no surprise the place was packed on a Friday night and the best reservation we could get when calling earlier that afternoon was for 9 pm.

Red Pearl Kitchen
6703 Melrose Ave
323 525 1415

Friday, March 23, 2007

Palms Thai


A dozen wooden Siamese cats peer down at you from along the ceiling while waiters with headsets scurry between tables refilling water glasses and barking commands into their mouthpieces like some sort of restaurant Secret Service. The noise, the crowded tables, the Singha malt liquor going to your head and now, on stage, Thai Elvis is giving you "Fever". True, Palms Thai is no place to go for a quiet meal, but if you're looking for fast, reliable and inexpensive, it's hard to beat. While I've never tried the frogs legs or boar curry, just a couple of the more exotic delicacies they offer, I'm a huge fan of their pad kee mao, the wide, pan-fried rice noodles, served with either chicken or shrimp. Deep-fried trout with cashews and mango sauce is nice too, though I thought the fish was perhaps a bit dry under its flaky, golden crust. With a spicy bowl of tom yum gai to start (the lemongrass, chili and kaffir lime leaf-scented chicken soup with fresh straw mushrooms that Buds and I both love), we were all set to sit back and enjoy Kevin belt out one hit tune after the other. With special thanks to Miss Peggy Lee, what a lovely way to burn indeed.

Palms Thai
5900 Hollywood Blvd (at Bronson Ave)
Hollywood
323 462-5073

Sunday, March 18, 2007

Seafood soup


Continuing the fish stock theme, I made up a seafood soup recipe last week that I really liked. It goes a little something like this:

1 carrot, diced
1 onion, diced
6 tomatoes, seeded (I used canned San Marzanos)
1 small red pepper, diced, some seeds removed (I used a Fresno)
1/2 pound monk fish (or any firm white fish), cut into bite-sized pieces
some fresh clams
some fresh shrimp, cleaned and deveined
1 qt fish stock (see below)
1 tsp dried oregano
1 tsp dried thyme
fresh shredded basil
fresh parsley, finely chopped
olive oil
salt and pepper to taste

Heat the olive oil in a deep sauce pan. Add the onion, red pepper and carrots and saute until soft. Add the tomatoes, thyme and oregano and any tomato sauce from the can and cook down for about five minutes. Pour in the fish stock and bring to a boil. Return to a simmer for 20-30 minutes. Add the fish to the broth and cook gently for a few minutes; add the shrimp and clams and cook until the clams open up. (Be sure not to let the fish boil or it will turn tough.) Stir in the parsley and basil. Serve the soup with fresh croutons on the side.

Saturday, March 10, 2007

India Sweets & Spices, Atwater Village


One of my favorite places to go within walking distance of my house, India Sweets & Spices offers a vegetarian Indian buffet with Northern and Southern specialties. Typically there are a few vegetable standbys like daal (lentils) and choley (chickpeas) along with specials like squash, eggplant or spinach in some combination or other. Order a combination plate and you'll get your choice of two vegetables, basmati rice, raita, plus a potato samosa, papadam, paratha, some firey hot pickles, and, depending on the combination you choose, a mango lassi to cut the heat. This will cost you six dollars. On other occasions I'll order a masala dosa, which eventually appears on the counter from the kitchen crisp and steaming hot and filled with buttery, spicy potato mixture. Yum.

I've actually never tried the sweets but they look good and the place is always filled with Indians so I assume the chefs know what they're doing. The giant Indian grocery store next door carries all sorts of Indian grocery staples including a nice selection of Cadbury and other British-brand chocolates and confections made for the Indian market. As an added bonus, odds are extremely good that you'll get to enjoy a rousing Bollywood musical on the enourmous flat screen TV in the brightly lit dining room while you eat. And who knows, the smiles on the beaming Indian actors faces may just match your own as you stumble back out onto Los Feliz Blvd delirious on all that ghee.

India Sweets & Spices
3126 Los Feliz Blvd
323 345-0360

Grilled Seabass in Acqua Pazza



Acqua Pazza (crazy water) is a simple sauce of fresh tomato with chile pepper into which you can poach any firm white whole fish or fillet. When I learned this recipe in Italy, we used bream fillets and slipped them into the sauce to simmer until just cooked through. When I was shopping at Fish King I found some beautiful fresh seabass caught off the coast of Santa Barbara. Since these pieces of fish were thicker and better suited to grilling or pan-sauteing, I went that route. Buddy wanted to try the fish grilled, so that's what we did. Fresh tomatoes are out of season so I used some leftover canned San Marzano (Italian) ones which are great. I used a simple fish stock in my sauce so that it tasted of the sea and complemented the fish perfectly.

In my version, the fish and sauce never meet until they both show up on the plate, but the result was fantastic. Like all cooking, it's about starting with the best food you can find and improvising along the way.

1 pound seabass (two pieces)
5 tomatoes (peeled and seeded)
1 glove garlic, chopped
1 red chile pepper, diced
1 tbsp parsley, finely chopped
1 tbsp dried oregano
1/2 cup olive oil
1/2 cup white wine
2 cups fish or vegetable stock
salt to taste

Saute the garlic and chile pepper in the olive oil until the garlic is just softened but not brown. Add the tomatoes, oregano and stock and cook about 10 minutes. Mash up the tomatoes. When complete, turn off the heat and stir in the parsley.

Separately, set the grill on high. Salt the fish well with sea salt on all sides. Oil the grill and cook the fish with the cover down for about 4 minutes. Turn and cook for another 4 minutes. The fish should not be totally cooked through but will continue cooking as the sauce is completed.

Once the sauce is done, arrange fish on a plate and spoon over the Acqua Pazza sauce.

Fish stock

According to Julia Child, all that's required for a fish stock is to buy some fresh scraps and simmer them in lightly salted water for about half and hour. I'd never tried it so the other day while shopping for fish at Fish King in Glendale, I asked for a pound of fish heads and meaty skeletons. I covered the scraps until they were covered with about an inch of water then kept skimming the scum that rose to the top as it all boiled. After 30 minutes I removed the scraps to the trash and passed the liquid through a couple different strainers to remove any other little bits that remained. I used the fish stock in place of vegetable stock in an "Acqua Pazza" tomato sauce I cooked later that night for some grilled seabass.

Mao's Kitchen, Melrose and Venice



The space where the old Tommy Tang's used to be on Melrose has been reincarnated as Mao's Kitchen, a branch of Mao's first outpost in Venice. I'm always a bit skeptical about Chinese restaurants where not a single Chinese person is in evidence (I think our waiter was in Dogtown and Z-Boys) but Jon and Jason vouched for the place and I'm always up for a new find. They had already ordered a Chinese chicken salad in lettuce cups when I arrived. I don't know if this dish has ever been served on the Asian continent or if it was invented by P.F. Chang's but I dutifully filled my leaf of iceberg up with the diced, stir-fried chicken with bits of green beans and cleaned my plate, the lettuce included. The menu has Chinese restaurant favorites including both kung pao and orange chicken as well as some more exotic specialties like the typically Muslim Chinese lamb with leeks which I was happy to try. Aside from the lamb, we ordered a lo mein with chicken and a salt and pepper seafood. Jason thought the lamb was the best dish--thinly sliced and stir-fried with green leeks--and it was pretty delicious. But I thought everything was really good. The salt and pepper seafood was lightly battered, deep-fried pieces of shrimp and sole, not greasy at all. The lo mein noodles with chunks of white meat chicken provided a nice balance to the other dishes. The waiter and staff were all friendly and accomodating and talk about a cultural revolution, Mao's even has their own parking lot sans valet. They just opened in late January and don't seem to have a huge following yet as they were only moderately busy on a Friday night. But hopefully with time Mao's will catch on as LA could definitely use a decent Chinese restaurant this side of the SGV.

Mao's Kitchen
7315 Melrose Ave (west of La Brea at Fuller)
323.932.9681 (call for delivery)

Thursday, March 08, 2007

Indochine Vien, Atwater Village

Don't do like I did and show up on a cold and rainy Monday night when the only thing you want to do is curl up with a hot bowl of pho and a blanket, because Indochine is closed on Mondays. Drat! But that's how we learn, isn't it? Go any other night and Indochine will serve you up a flavorful chicken or beef pho into which you can shred up pieces of fresh Thai basil or add bean sprouts (or not). Not juicy enough? Add some more fish or chile sauce. Need it to go? Indochine is prepared for you with styrofoam containers for the broth and separate plastic bags for the noodles and other accoutrements. Find a big bowl at home, combine it all together, and you're ready for a night of television, or a nice book, or whatever it is you do at home.

Indochine also makes a nice guoi cuon (spring roll) filled as it is with fresh steamed shrimp, rice noodles, chicken, lettuce and mint. They also make an amazing fresh lemonade or nuoc da chanh if you're inclined to order it in Vietnamese. The atmosphere is very low key, clean and modern, a perfect stop on the way home or no-hassle spot to grab a quick dinner with a friend. They even have a few spots at the counter for solo diners.

Indochine Vien
3110 Glendale Boulevard
Atwater Village
(323) 667-9591

Sunday, March 04, 2007

Oomasa, Little Tokyo

Was it all that feminist art that was making me so hungry for sushi at 10:45 on a Saturday night? What luck to stumble upon Oomasa just off of 1st Street in the outdoor Japanese Village Plaza Mall as it's open till midnight on Saturday. There was a mob of other MOCA opening patrons in the entryway all waiting with a plastic number for the next available wooden booth. All the more reason for Mark and I to grab two open seats at the sushi bar. Hamachi was of the melt-in-your-mouth variety; toro also excellent but a bit more firm; my ikura sushi was also top rate, the nori wrapper crisp and the salmon eggs briny and fresh as they popped in my mouth. Mark enjoyed his sweet shrimp sushi but found the standard presentation of their crispy deep-fried heads off-putting and superfluous. I took a bite anyway. Service from our Japanese sushi chef was friendly and efficient. Oomasa is a definite find, very reasonably priced, and as such may end up as one of my stand-by spots for a sushi fix.

Oomasa Restaurant
100 Japanese Village Plz Mall (corner of E 1st St and S Central Ave)
Little Tokyo
(213) 972-9640