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All posts for the month August, 2015

When I was in 10th grade I started throwing up every day from stress. Unfortunately, after a month of this, the tang of bile was so strong I was off both sausage and honey nut Cheerios for almost two decades. You can imagine that it would take one hell of a sausage to bring me back to the encased meat domain. Jeff’s is that sausage! Jeff’s makes outstanding sausages, the chicken cilantro and smoked chicken apple are my particular favorites. I suggest calling in an order of 2 of each of the 10 varieties and doing a tasting party for your next barbecue! Keep in mind that because it is a kosher shop they’re closed Friday afternoon, all day Saturday, and re-open Sunday.

(310) 858-8590, 8930 W Pico Blvd, Los Angeles

When I look for a good Chinese restaurant, I never trust the place stocked with white people. Give me a hole in the wall packed with old men yelling at each other. In the case of Persian food (read: Iranian), I look for the age and demographic, too. Javan always has at least four or five great big fat middle Eastern men who have crammed their puffy feet into tiny little loafers. This place is perfect. For an appetizer you have to have the marinated garlic cloves that have been sitting in vinegar for 11 years. Their kebabs and chicken are splendid, as is their salads and soups. The lentil soup served with sizzling mint is a filling meal unto itself. We’ve paid around twenty five bucks for two people, before tip.

(310) 207-5555, 11500 Santa Monica Blvd, near Sawtelle

The Inn of the Seventh Ray is incredibly attentive to food allergies to the point of being insane. This is the place to go for your loved ones with auto-immune disorders, which if you ingest as much meat as I do will likely be you very soon. It is amazing that my stomach and immune system can still distinguish between what is my flesh and what I’ve just consumed. Anyway, what was once a purely vegan restaurant has changed to include meat dishes, probably in order to satisfy all the men who had to take their Beverly Hills yoga girlfriends out to a vegetarian dinner and were tired of starving and paying the outrageously high bill. Lots of Mercedes SL 500s in the parking lot, lots of people irradiating their heads with cell phones. Menu items are arranged on their “quality of vibration” which is just a bullshit reason to charge a ton of money for a squash attacked with a Braun hand blender by a chain smoking Hare Krishna in the back room. The place refuses to carry any chocolate desserts because the head chef and owner calls it “poison”. Clearly they don’t believe in poison at the Inn of the Seventh Ray as there are rats scurrying along the lattice and in the bushes. On my first visit there was a coyote on the riverbed snacking on bagels cast into the ravine. Now that the nature has come to include rats, the seating is on unpadded concrete booths, and the waiters drip vegetarian sanctimony, I think I’ll wait until my thyroid shuts down to go again. Expect anywhere from $50 to $100 per person, depending on your consumption of red wine poison.

(310) 455-1311, 128 Old Topanga Canyon Road, Topanga

Culver City is home to a lot of fun, esoteric stuff. Two of them happen to be a block away from one another. First, you should get your ass over the to Museum of Jurassic Technology. More on that in a separate area. But know that if you haven’t been to the MJT you have never been to a museum before. Just down the block is India Sweets and Spices. Culver City is home to a diverse Indian and Pakistani population and you would think this means there are tons of Indian restaurants. There’s not, just a few. India Sweets and Spices is a great place to go to challenge your definition of “sweets”. Indian sweets are made from chick peas and pistachios, rather than butter and refined sugar. Each little treat is a surprising taste. You can also get regular lunch-counter style food here, a hearty vegetarian meal for only a couple of bucks. While you’re there, you can also stock up on that quart of Ghee you were missing in your pantry. A counter-served meal here is about four dollars.

9409 Venice Blvd, Los Angeles

Yet another seedy dive in a strip mall you’ve passed a hundred times, thought, “hey, I could have a bacon and avocado burger” and then forgotten by the time you crossed Sepulveda. Places like this have a real estate curse on them. I think it has to do with the donut shops. You’d stop for a burger, but then you see the donut shop next door and think, “shit, I can’t eat a burger and a donut” and then keep driving. If these places had just a dry cleaners and a TV repair shop next door, you’d stop. But the donuts kill it. Howard’s burgers are good, but there’s not a great reason for their fame. It’s just a good burger joint with a fun sign. Four or five bucks for a wad of beef here.

On Venice east of Sepulveda

I run down Matsuhisa at every chance I get because not only was it the most expensive meal I’ve ever been treated to, but the fish and presentation was nothing I could not get downtown for a fraction of the price. Hama Sushi is perhaps the best sushi bar I’ve been to in town, possibly because there is a fish market next door. Fish comes in to the market, chef ducks through a small door to get the cut he wants. This is one of the only sushi restaurants I’ve been to where they have the standard Asahi beer menu on the table – and that’s their menu. The specials are whatever the chef decides to give you, or if you speak enough Japanese you can get whatever you want. I don’t speak a lick of it, so I let the chef do the surprising. In fact, most of the staff and clientele don’t speak English which is why you know you’re getting good sushi. You can’t bullshit a bullshitter, and you can’t pass crap sushi off the locals. The prices are basically market fish price. Back when we were rich we’d drop $90 and gorge ourselves. Nowadays we can get by for about $50.

Downtown LA

You’ve died and gone to pancake heaven. The Griddle is nirvana for those of us who occasionally find ourselves staring longingly for what IHOP promises and never delivers. The Griddle is a café, specializing in breakfast concoctions that are simply amazing. Not only do they have a dozen monster pancake specialties, but their coffee is freakin’ fantastic. Each coffee order is served in an individual French press made to your strength request. Because it’s next to the DGA, however, the parking sucks elephant butt and the tables outside are always jammed with wannabe starlets and their scummy boyfriends who think they’re the next Johnny Knoxville; which should tell you their relative intelligence. Average price for two people is about twenty bucks before tip.

(323) 874-0377, 7916 W Sunset Blvd, Los Angeles

A two part review here. Here is the blurb I sent to Green Clean when they requested a quote from me, a loyal customer: I’ve been using Green Clean every two weeks for over a year. My decision to use them was primarily because of their commitment to using non-toxic cleansers. The Green Clean staff is consistently friendly, capable, and efficient. They work well around my dogs and have never damaged any of my possessions. To be frank, hiring a cleaning service or person in Los Angeles brings a giant set of unknowns. With Green Clean I feel secure in knowing my residence is cleaned safely and professionally without any doubts as to its environmental impact. I look forward to their lovely notes and a clean house left behind after a job well done. Now, let me qualify a few things. I use a non-toxic cleaning service because I have a high maintenance dog with severe allergies and a wife who makes me a better person by using environmentally friendly products. Truthfully, I really just don’t care any more. I went to a severely liberal arts school, I spent years being holier-than-thou and to be perfectly honest I don’t give a shit if someone uses fresh orphan blood to clean something as long as it works. But these are the compromises one makes in a marriage and as long as stuff feels clean I can support the hippie attitude. I’m sorry that others had negative experiences with Green Clean. The staff has always been very nice and done a solid job 95% of the time. With non-toxic cleaners you have to use a lot more elbow grease to get stuff clean and these folks have never skimped on my watch. I am here the entire time they do the cleaning and try and stay out of their way. Perhaps that’s why I’ve gotten such a good experience. Or I’m not creating as much filth as I could and not challenging them. Truth be told, their fancy Miele vacuum doesn’t get all the dog hair off my hipster Flor and I’ve got to do my own Hoovering later in the week. But it’s clean. I acknowledge I pay more for the experience. With a $20 tip, a two person crew takes two hours and costs $115. I tip $20 ($10 each) because I like them. Could I pay less? Probably. Do I speak Spanish? No. Am I paying more to satisfy my inner hippie? Probably. Have I done any due diligence to find out if I’m paying more because they offer health benefits, union options, or other progressive “Green” values? No. This red is only concerned about his own green.

(866) 476-4736, Los Angeles

It’s actually a French bakery, but it’s owned and run by no-nonsense Argentinian women. The Grand Casino is a sta(ple of main street; they provide yet another damn fine reason to drink your coffee in Culver City. Family owned and operated businesses abound here, each one with a distinct flair and feel. The Grand Casino’s desserts and confections are irresistible, as is their mochas made with some sort of Argentinean choco crack. They make nice sandwiches, too.

3826 Main Street, Culver City

Goda Yoga opened in downtown Culver City in the fall of 2000. They offered an introductory weekend workshop that intrigued my partner enough to sign up and I joined her. The women who own the studio ran the workshop and though I went primarily to support my spouse, I was gobsmacked with how much I enjoyed the practice. We went to classes three times a week and formed a deep friendship with one of the teachers. It was through yoga that I began to understand that I could participate in a physically challenging activity that had nothing to do with the person on a mat next to me, that competing with others was futile since we have different bodies, different habits, different lives. While my time on the mat expanded the space between joints, elongated tight muscles, and connected my conscious mind to parts of my body that had been on autopilot my whole life; the biggest change I experienced was with my relationship to my body. Comparison and competition were stopping me from being a physical person. The crippling fear of coming in dead last, or looking stupid while trying something new, or not being good at something had stopped me from trying. Yoga changed everything for me. I was very lucky to find a teacher who led a secular practice with a rigorous focus on forging connections between the mind and body. She knew her anatomy, was unafraid of a challenge, and would only praise me for showing up – regardless of results. There are a wide variety of classes in this neighborhood studio. The two co-owners met via Anna Forrest’s teacher training, but both have evolved their own practice as teachers and studio owners. If you are looking for a wonderful studio committed to its students and community, I highly recommend GODA Yoga.

(310) 287-1255, 9711 Washington Blvd, Culver City