Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Local Eats Part I

Local eats are one of those things...

Either you know where to go or you don't. Personally I like the local joints near my place. Within walking distance from my house I can find cocktails and plenty of good grub, not just ethnic food but a variety of ethnic foods, tonkotsu ramen, vegetarian Indian curry, pho, teriyaki, Japanese curry, Hawaiian plate lunch, Korean fusion, did I leave anything out? Oh yeah Mexican, Cuban, Pastrami, Salvadoran, oh sushi, and several others that I can't even recall as I type this. 

Really my thing is your local eats are YOURS! Just like anything that is yours take care of it. I really do love going to Chinatown or Monterey Park for Chinese food or dim sum, or I love going across town for something that I think is funky or sounds tasty. The Oinkster in Eagle Rock has some great pastrami. But I have Johnnies right around the corner from me. I'm not saying it's the best but it is Westside and that makes it mine.

What really toasts my cookies is when neighborhood people tell me, "Oh that place is okay but this other place halfway across town (in a place YOU never go).... is better!" There is nothing wrong with that per se, I love to hear about new places, what is wrong to me is telling me without even trying the local place that your taste is better than mine!

Listen up its not!!!

All of that being said thanks for listening, now on to the restaurants!

My favorite local spot is near the corner of Washington and Sepulveda. Yamadaya Ramen is some great food. Tonkotsu Ramen is the be all and end all of ramen in my world. I grew up eating that ramen in freeze dried form with the packets, that was probably where I decided that I could be creative with food, I mean what 12 year old thinks, "Lemme boil these noodles then stir fry them." Yamadaya Ramen brings this to a whole other level for me. The 'tonkotsu' broth is made by taking pork bones and boiling them for hours and hours and hours before draining off the broth and using that as the base for your ramen noodles. The KICKER for me is the 'kakuni' braised pork belly cut into 4 oz slices. I won't even go into detail about the different versions of broth that you can get, needless to say its not your simple cup o' noodles.
Here is the link to my Yelp review so I don't get too verbose in here:
Yamadaya Yelp REVIEW


Samosa House
Let me begin this review by saying I am not a vegetarian! I have been in the past but I love meat too much. That having been said, this vegetarian food rocks. Every once in a while I go on a vegetarian kick, when I do this is where I go. Granted it can be expensive, but that's cause when you walk in you see all the stuff that looks good, Chile Pakora, Naan, Samosas, then you look at the steam table and end up ordering the combo plate on top of everything else I just mentioned that's when the bill adds up. The samosa here are the signature item. And the Naan is especially awesome when they take it right out of the oven.


Super Pho & Teriyaki
Yes pho and teriyaki in the same place. They also have some killer kim chee and Korean grilled pork, but I digress. For a good bowl of soup this is my second choice. The only reason it's second is that I don't like the "green medicine dispensary" next door. The pho broth is light and tasty here, it is the very opposite of the tonkostu broth at Yamadaya. The flavor of the herbs and spices permeate this dish. The star anise and pepper aren't overpowering but you know they are there. The teriyaki is done pretty well here too. The service did go down hill a little but the last time I went through there it was pretty good.

Mitsuwa
This place isn't a restaurant in and of itself but the food court is a good spot to get some grub. The vendors provide some decent variations on Japanese fast food. Santouka, Misasa, and Sanuki each do something a little differently, ramen, curry, tempura are the staples of the menus. Plenty of food but it's only for cold hard cash.

Rutt's
This is just a good place for what we imagine as Hawaiian food. The roast pork with gravy gets an honorable mention as one my favorite dishes. Not the best but right up there in the running. Royales (stir-fried rice dishes) are the breakfast of choice and the fench toast made with Kings Hawaiin bread is great. But the spam musubi is the best here.

Tito's Tacos
For me I often wonder what I did before I discovered Tito's! This is NOT Mexican food. This place is LA food! The greasy tacos, the blenderized salsa, the white paper bags filled with chips. As a little kid my Grandfather would take me to Jack in the Box for the tacos along the way to the Marina in San Francisco. Back then they were 4 of $1. It was a great memory that resurfaced the first time I ate at Tito's. The fried taco shell with the melted (or not so melted) American cheese slices. The chili with the chunks of beef, and then the burritos filled with that same chili and cheese. 

I'll continue this down the cause as you go down the road there is always a better place to eat!