>> Eat the World Los Angeles: IE Pomona
Showing posts with label IE Pomona. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IE Pomona. Show all posts

Monday, 26 February 2024

Masala Indo Pak Cuisine

Restaurant facade

๐Ÿ‡ต๐Ÿ‡ฐ PAKISTAN
๐Ÿ“ 25227 Redlands Blvd., Loma Linda, San Bernardino County

To read this article, please check out our new Substack, where all future writings will be posted. To link directly to the article about this business, CLICK HERE.
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๐Ÿ‡ต๐Ÿ‡ฐ๐Ÿ‡ต๐Ÿ‡ฐ๐Ÿ‡ต๐Ÿ‡ฐ

I COULD USE YOUR HELP
Eat the World Los Angeles is and always has been free. It is a hobby born of passion and never solicits money or free food from restaurants. No advertisements block the content or pop over what you read. If this website has helped you explore your city and its wonderful cultures a little better please tell your friends about us and if you have the means to contribute, please consider doing so. Eat the World Los Angeles is a labor of love, but also takes a lot of money and time everyday to keep running.
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Wednesday, 17 May 2023

Tacos de Cabrito y Machito El Lagunero

Francisco Salinas preparing cabrito on a flat top grill after it is done spit-roasting

๐Ÿ‡ฒ๐Ÿ‡ฝ Mร‰XICO (Coahuila)
๐Ÿ“ 2598 N. State Street, Muscoy, San Bernardino County.
๐Ÿ…ฟ️ Parking along street
๐Ÿ’ฒ Cash/Zelle Only
๐Ÿฅค No Alcohol

EDITOR'S NOTE: Business sets up at Good Choice Tires on Saturday and Sunday, opening at 08:00 both mornings.

Muscoy is a community surrounded by interstates, but the slow pace of life here could not feel further removed. As cars speed by between San Bernardino and Los Angeles on the 210 or over the Cajon Pass on the 15, places like El Lagunero are slow-roasting young goats beside a tire shop on weekends. When you roll up to the bright orange building early on a Saturday or Sunday, you will think it is the most popular flat fix joint in Southern California.

But the smells coming from behind the fence eventually give away the reason so many cars have parked around this intersection. Many of these are undoubtedly patronizing the other weekend vendors on opposite corners, but the vast majority seem to be here for a taste of Northern Mรฉxico, cabrito and machito that is most popular in the states of Coahuila and Nuevo Leรณn.

A full cabrito spit-roasting by bright orange Good Choice Tires

Those smells eventually lead you, if you come early enough, to the side yard of the lot, where the cabrito and machito are still angled over a low fire setting the scene for the meal about to be enjoyed. Take a seat anywhere you can find, surrounded by stacks and piles of tires and the cacophony of roosters in the morning. If this is your first experience with something like this, you will feel like you have arrived in a place far away from home.

A large dog crate sits amongst the tires, is this the way the baby goats have arrived? There is a bit of time to take in the atmosphere and imagine it all before your orders start arriving. The husband and wife that run the entire operation are generous and welcoming from the first minute, and the smiles on every customer's face lets you know you are in for a treat.

Cabrito and machito spit-roasting

In Southern California right now, there is no other place for the public to come for this type of experience. Folks in places like Muscoy have undoubtedly done this at their own homes for special occasions, but thanks to El Lagunero now anyone in nearby places can come on weekends. These types of celebrations are much more common in Texas, which is basically an extension of Coahuila and Nuevo Leรณn.

The cabrito and machito you see roasting are the only things on the menu, just in different forms. You can of course have tacos of either, large flautas, enormous tortas, or big bowls of cabrito en consomรฉ. No matter what you choose, portions are more than generous so bring as many friends as you can and try everything.

Tacos de cabrito

Both types of tacos come with a small cup of delicious consomรฉ fortified with garbanzos. Since the large tortillas are overstuffed, you can either eat some meat with a fork or put it in the cup of consomรฉ to make the tacos manageable. Come early and select the cuts of meat you prefer, or just order the tacos de cabrito (above) and get a dealer's choice mix.

In Texas, machito is referred to as "Texan haggis" according to Truly Texas Mexican author Adan Medrano. Tacos de machito (below) are stuffed with this mix of chopped up goat innards, seasoned and roasted to perfection right next to the full goat. While these two tacos are the most basic way to experience the offerings of El Lagunero, you can also get both cuts in other preparations mentioned earlier. On the day of this visit, the flautas seemed especially popular.

Taco de machito

Cabrito en consomรฉ
Cabrito en consomรฉ.

The chef prepares meat on the flattop grill

Salty goat skins were brought over on the house

Good Choice Tires on State Street

๐Ÿ‡ฒ๐Ÿ‡ฝ๐Ÿ‡ฒ๐Ÿ‡ฝ๐Ÿ‡ฒ๐Ÿ‡ฝ

I COULD USE YOUR HELP
Eat the World Los Angeles is and always has been free. It is a hobby born of passion and never solicits money or free food from restaurants. No advertisements block the content or pop over what you read. If this website has helped you explore your city and its wonderful cultures a little better please tell your friends about us and if you have the means to contribute, please consider doing so. Eat the World Los Angeles is a labor of love, but also takes a lot of money and time everyday to keep running.
Thank you!

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CASH APP: $JaredCohee
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Tuesday, 1 November 2022

Gorditas Laguneras

The trailer parked on Arrow Blvd. with tents and seating

๐Ÿ‡ฒ๐Ÿ‡ฝ Mร‰XICO (Coahuila)
๐Ÿ“ 15755 Arrow Blvd., Fontana, Inland Empire
๐Ÿ…ฟ️ Street Parking
๐Ÿ’ฒ Cash or Zelle Only

Historic Route 66 plods by as Foothill Blvd. just one block north through Fontana and its neighboring cities, but people wanting to travel faster know to use Arrow Blvd. Traveling at near highway speeds, it is here that you may or may not notice the green and black trailer parked Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays offering gorditas made in the style of the city Torreรณn, Coahuila.

Coahuila is Mรฉxico's third-largest state and sprawls all the way from Texas and the Rio Bravo del Norte into the central part of the country and almost halfway to Mexico City. Torreรณn is in the far southwest of the state, and residents of that city only need to pass over one river bridge to be in the state of Durango.

Customers ordering at the window

In Torreรณn, you are likely to find quite a few vendors out early in the morning with their homemade guisados ready to be stuffed into fat corn or flour tortillas to make gorditas. The best of them are sold out by noon, but Gorditas Laguneras keeps more standard hours for a Southern California crowd, opening mid-morning and shutting down well into mid-afternoon serving breakfast to late lunch crowds who might be working or living nearby.

The trailer has a set list of twelve options to be stuffed into their freshly made flour gorditas ($4 each, below). Ten of these are guisados that are prepared fresh for service daily. Since one person can only put back between two and four of these depending on their appetite, the wealth of choices makes eating here a little difficult. Who would want to leave carne con chile or picadillo off an order?

Four gorditas with three salsas

You can get gorditas made with corn in Torreรณn as well, but it is their flour gorditas that really stand out and have made their way to Los Angeles in recent years. The flour is wholesome but has less of a competing taste than corn, and really allows you to focus on the flavors in those guisados. From this visit, four options were all delicious and would all be recommended. From bottom to top, these were birria con queso, arriero, chicharrรณn en salsa roja, and rajas con queso.

The arriero is worth noting more, as it is more rare than the others and really enjoyable. Described simply as "pork in red sauce and beans," that red sauce is doing a lot more than just being red. There is a superb smokiness in the roasted chiles used for the sauce, the pork is tender, and the small smear of beans provides the perfect complement.

Close-up view of chicharrรณn and arriero gorditas

They offer three salsas with every order, all delicious, but honestly the guisados themselves do not require them. The rajas con queso version is delicious on its own but is one of the few (besides beans and cheese) that can benefit from the salsa of your choice. The bright orange habanero salsa should be used with caution, but paired excellently with those poblano peppers and melted cheese.

The chicharrรณn and birria were both top notch as well, as you bite into your different options you will at the same want to try all the others and want an order of four of the same. No one ever said life was easy, and Gorditas Laguneras is not making it any easier. In addition to those already mentioned (rajas con queso, frijoles con queso), the truck also has a potatoes with chile guisado for the customers who prefer not to eat meat. There is definitely something for everyone here, including tightly packed burritos to go since you will want to have even more guisados later.

๐Ÿ‡ฒ๐Ÿ‡ฝ๐Ÿ‡ฒ๐Ÿ‡ฝ๐Ÿ‡ฒ๐Ÿ‡ฝ

I COULD USE YOUR HELP
Eat the World Los Angeles is and always has been free. It is a hobby born of passion and never solicits money or free food from restaurants. No advertisements block the content or pop over what you read. If this website has helped you explore your city and its wonderful cultures a little better please tell your friends about us and if you have the means to contribute, please consider doing so. Eat the World Los Angeles is a labor of love, but also takes a lot of money and time everyday to keep running.

Thank you!
VENMO: @JAREDCOHEE
CASH APP: $JaredCohee
PAYPAL: (no account necessary, use link)

Monday, 24 October 2022

KEDAI Indonesian Cafรฉ

Mountain Avenue facade

๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ฉ INDONESIA
๐Ÿ“ 110 S. Mountain Avenue, Upland, Inland Empire
๐Ÿ…ฟ️ Ample parking in plaza
๐Ÿฅค No Alcohol

The word kedai roughly translates to "a shop that sells goods" and can be used for a broad range of businesses. Here in Upland, a few blocks south of where the old Route 66 passes through San Bernardino County, the word at this new cafรฉ is always written in capital letters and the goods sold inside are worth noting and maybe worthy of a more exciting word.

If you have ever traveled through Indonesia and enjoy coffee, you have probably sampled many cups from a roadside warung kopi. Warung is a stand and probably a step down (in scale, not quality) from a kedai, and they are everywhere in the nation's cities and towns in addition to larger shinier chains. There is no country in Southeast Asia more into coffee, so it is a pleasure to have a new business focusing on this culture and bringing it to the Inland Empire.

Coffee being made behind the counter

In addition to espresso drinks, the shop also sells premium pour-over ($4.25 small, below) options of Balinese, Javanese, and Sumatran beans, which are also available in bags to go. Coffee from Bali tends to be more on the fruity side for those that enjoy that, while Java descriptions would be more earthy and Sumatra somewhere in between, although this is of course too general.

In addition to your daily caffeine fix(es) the kitchen here also has Indonesian favorites available for lunch and dinner, but where they truly excel is with all the goodies that pair well with coffee and tea. The refrigerated cases in front of the coffee bar are filled with different types of Indonesian cakes and breads that are all nicely heavy on the butter and often coconut.

Pour over coffee
A small cup of pour-over Javanese coffee.

Display case with sweet items
One of two sweets cases.

Display case with savory items
Savories case, the pastels arrived moments later.

On this visit, a combination of both sweet and savory was chosen (below). From left to right on the sweets plates, they include two kue lumpur (2 for $4), pandan-infused bika ambon ($3.50), three pukis (3 for $4), and one slice of lapis legit ($4). Seen further below in a solo photo, the bika ambon is an interesting tapioca treat that they call honeycomb cake because of the pattern the flour makes, but the winner of this round was the delicious kue lumpur, round coconut custard cakes that are made with raisins.

The savory plate included one each of a pastel, a fried pastry filled with chicken, vermicelli and potatoes, risoles, a rolled egg crรชpe with chicken ragout, and lemper, coconut milk infused sticky rice stuffed with citrus-y chicken. These are all priced at $3.50, along with other savory treats like kroket, Dutch rolls, and roti goreng.

An array of little snacks both sweet and savory

Indonesians and lovers of the food that live in western San Bernardino County are very lucky to have this new cafรฉ move into their neighborhood, but it is also the type of experience that is worth making plans to visit even if you do not live nearby. KEDAI is still finding its legs since opening in April of this year, but come and tell your friends who live close.

The sweet couple that operate the business will be happy to welcome you into their new store, which has plenty of room for people to slowly (or quickly) enjoy a cup of freshly brewed coffee and some of their treats. Come in the first hour of business and you will see the savory pastries arrive from the kitchen and be able to enjoy them as fresh as possible.

Bika ambon with pandan

๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ฉ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ฉ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ฉ

I COULD USE YOUR HELP
Eat the World Los Angeles is and always has been free. It is a hobby born of passion and never solicits money or free food from restaurants. No advertisements block the content or pop over what you read. If this website has helped you explore your city and its wonderful cultures a little better please tell your friends about us and if you have the means to contribute, please consider doing so. Eat the World Los Angeles is a labor of love, but also takes a lot of money and time everyday to keep running.

Thank you!
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Wednesday, 2 March 2022

Al-Amir Bakery

LEBANON ๐Ÿ‡ฑ๐Ÿ‡ง
Auto Center Drive facade

EDITOR'S NOTE: An updated version of this article (26 June 2025) is available as part of the Historical section of our Substack page. Check that out here:

๐Ÿ“ 426 Auto Center Drive, Claremont, Pomona Valley

It is no secret that the best Middle Eastern-style baked goods in the Southland are located in the general area in and around Little Arabia, centered on Brookhurst Street in Anaheim. Thankfully for residents of the Pomona Valley and nearby neighborhoods in western San Bernardino County, one of the most popular bakeries from Little Arabia decided to open a second location far from the 20 year old original back in 2013. This reduced commuting times for people in the area to get stocked with freshly baked manakish.

At the very edge of Los Angeles County, you could actually walk here comfortably from the county line, but its strip mall home is probably more car friendly. And to be fair, the stack of manakish you will want to take home most likely will need a good chunk of your trunk space.

Restaurant interior

When you walk into the bakery, which opens up quite early daily, you will see a menu above the counter that focuses almost exclusively on this Lebanese and Levantine treat. An oven looms large and hot with orders constantly going in and out. Everything is made and cooked fresh, so plan for twenty minutes if you stop by without calling in.

The manakish in this order were all taken to go, the bakery is conveniently located just off the 10 and great for pickups before heading eastward out of Los Angeles if that is your home. Takeout flat breads are folded over twice before packing, which makes them much less photogenic than if enjoyed at the table, but know that when still eaten hot and fresh they are a joy unmatched by anywhere remotely close.

Lahm-bajeen manakish
Lahm-bajeen manakish ($5.50)

Makhlout (zaatar and cheese) manakish
Makhlout (zaatar and cheese) manakish ($5.50)

Sojouk manakish
Sojouk manakish ($6.99)

People that do not eat meat, and even those that do, will be absolutely thrilled by the zaatar and cheese manakish, while the lahm-bajeen and sojouk are essential orders for carnivores. The former is topped with diced lamb, tomatoes and onions, and full of smoky goodness.

While the manakish are still delicious later when their warmth has left, it would be smarter to order just enough as you and your group can eat because when hot out of the oven these are treasure. It is when biting into the steaming dough that the crown above the door, a reference to the princely name of the bakery, makes a lot of sense.

๐Ÿ‡ฑ๐Ÿ‡ง๐Ÿ‡ฑ๐Ÿ‡ง๐Ÿ‡ฑ๐Ÿ‡ง

I COULD USE YOUR HELP
Eat the World Los Angeles is and always has been free. It is a hobby born of passion and never solicits money or free food from restaurants. No advertisements block the content or pop over what you read. If this website has helped you explore your city and its wonderful cultures a little better please tell your friends about us and if you have the means to contribute, please consider doing so. Eat the World Los Angeles is a labor of love, but also takes a lot of money and time everyday to keep running.

Thank you!
VENMO: @JAREDCOHEE
CASH APP: $JaredCohee
PAYPAL: (no account necessary, use link)

Friday, 7 January 2022

Centro Basco

BASQUE COUNTRY ๐Ÿด๓ ฅ๓ ณ๓ ฐ๓ ถ๓ ฟ
Central Avenue facade

EDITOR'S NOTE: An updated version of this article (29 May 2025) is available as part of the Historical section of our Substack page. Check that out here:


Opening the doors of Centro Basco can be somewhat of a shock if you come unprepared to leave the mentality of the current day. In winter, with the snow-capped Mt. Baldy and friends of the San Gabriel Mountains looming nearby and the crisp, clear blue skies above, your eyes take a moment to adjust to the darkness of the dining room you walk into from the parking lot.

When they do, you notice a group of Basque beret-wearing seniors having glasses of chilled house red wine or Picon punch while discussing the day's news, and the tables are full of families and groups of friends digging into multiple courses of the daily menu. It seems that everyone knows one another, and often times when passing by tables to say hello conversations alter between English, Spanish, and Basque (called Euskara in Basque).

The snow-capped San Gabriel Mountains overlook the sign at Centro Basco

Centro Basco opened in 1940 when the surrounding area was full of dairy farms and Basque people settled for work. It was first and foremost a boarding house, a place for these laborers to rest their heads and take their meals. (It still has one resident). Since the 1970s it has been owned by one family and run just about the same way ever since.
 
Even as the farmlands have been paved over and the need for boarding has dwindled, the restaurant has remained a very important communal hub for many generations of Basque-descended peoples. They come with their families from all over Southern California, especially since the Noriega Hotel in Bakersfield closed shortly after mandatory COVID lockdowns started in 2020. (For much more Centro Basco history, read this great Gab Chabrรกn Los Angenleno article).

The Centro Basco bar is always populated by Basque folks that seem fresh from the fields

If you visited the 75th anniversary of Centro Basco back in 2015 you would have found the handball courts alive with children playing pilota while their parents filled the interior and the temporary tent set up for the occasion. Nowadays even before COVID the courts are usually quiet as time continues to crawl forward, but the restaurant and the many people who come here regularly hope 2022 sees much more fortune than the past two years.

There are multiple rooms (and bars), but even the main dining room can comfortably host small and big groups within its wood wainscoted walls. Old photographs and paintings set the mood of culture and tradition, but within minutes of sitting down even those with no familiarity into Basque food or people cannot hide from the warm, contagious vibe.

Picon punch
The picon punch cocktail.

Usually it would be recommended that a first-timer sit down with complete strangers at the Boarder's Table, the more traditional way that those staying would take their meals communally. Soups, salads, beans, and any other starters would be set down in large amounts and diners would serve themselves, invited to eat as much as they could.

Traditional Basque communal meals are of course not in line with stopping a pandemic, so for now individual tables are the norm but those that order the family meal can still take as much or as little of each course as they like as the restaurant tries to keep as much intact as possible.

Tongue and tomatoes

Centro Basco is not shy about letting you know they have the "Best Tongue In Town," so even when you plan on ordering the family meal or other entrรฉes, take a side of tongue and tomato ($3.95, above). The beef tongue is sliced thinner than the tomatoes and the whole thing is drenched in olive oil and lemon.

It is not a wow-factor dish, but the simplicity and the tongue's marinade are enough to pack a pleasant punch when equal portions of both pieces are taken. If this modest amount is not enough, a family size platter of ten pieces of both can be ordered for $19.95.

Poulet Basquaise

The restaurant always adds the descriptor "French" in front of its Basque cuisine labels, so it is no surprise that one of their most popular dishes, poulet Basquaise ($18.95, above) is written in that language. The half chicken is smothered in a classic Basque piperade sauce consisting mostly of tomatoes, onions, peppers, and plenty of garlic.

Despite not having access to the Boarder's Table, it makes a lot of sense to enjoy a family meal if you are coming for your first time or your hundredth. For $27.95, the courses before the entrรฉe are unlimited and at least one glass of the chilled house red is included. On this last visit, the following dishes were all part of the menu:

House soup
Beef fideo soup.

House beans and cheese
House beans and blue cheese.

House salad
Salad.

Lukinka and garbanzo beans
Lukinka and garbanzo beans.

If not part of the family meal, make sure to try the homemade lukinka, pork sausages that somehow taste like the earth and the farm they come from. There are no throwaway meats used in these, the dense links are full of prime cuts and flavor. They can be enjoyed on buttery noodles or as a sandwich on any given day.

The family meal serving of lukinka came with garbanzo beans and a sauce that seemed simmered altogether with the beans and sausage for ages. It is full of many spices, but once again brimming with garlic and outstanding.

Steak and fries, the family meal entree on this day

On this occasion the entrรฉe was a piece of top sirloin, also blanketed with chopped up sautรฉed garlic. After the beauty and flavor of all the Basque dishes that came before it, the steak seemed plain and was the only weak link. Fortunately the fries it was served with were crisp and just right, and some of the other items were still around to make for more interesting bites.

If the circumstances in the world allow it, plan to join Chino's Basque community for Easter, when the Centro Basco always puts on a celebration of food and community worth experiencing. And if you leave and still have not had enough Basque flavor in your day, head around the corner to Hottinger Family Meats, a market that has served the Basque community since 1941.

๐Ÿด๓ ฅ๓ ณ๓ ฐ๓ ถ๓ ฟ๐Ÿด๓ ฅ๓ ณ๓ ฐ๓ ถ๓ ฟ๐Ÿด๓ ฅ๓ ณ๓ ฐ๓ ถ๓ ฟ

I COULD USE YOUR HELP
Eat the World Los Angeles is and always has been free. It is a hobby born of passion and never solicits money or free food from restaurants. No advertisements block the content or pop over what you read. If this website has helped you explore your city and its wonderful cultures a little better please tell your friends about us and if you have the means to contribute, please consider doing so. Eat the World Los Angeles is a labor of love, but also takes a lot of money and time everyday to keep running.

Thank you!
VENMO: @JAREDCOHEE
CASH APP: $JaredCohee
PAYPAL: (no account necessary, use link)

Thursday, 28 October 2021

Sabaidee Lao & Thai Street Food

LAOS ๐Ÿ‡ฑ๐Ÿ‡ฆ
Food stand inside Haven City Market

EDITOR'S NOTE: An updated version of this article (19 February 2025) is available as part of the Historical section of our Substack page. Check that out here:

While Southern California is home to a spattering of Lao restaurants and other businesses, it is by no means the epicenter of the Lao and Lao American communities in the United States like it is for many other peoples. In addition to the Northern Virginian outskirts of Washington D.C., Dallas and its surrounding area became the destination of many refugees after this country made Laos the most bombed nation in the world. While immigration from Laos is still quite small compared to many other places (the country is very small as well), most still happens in those two places four decades later.

So it is only natural that empires have formed over the years like Sabaidee, which has four locations in Dallas and its northern suburbs. Thankfully for the Inland Empire, the fifth location has opened at the Haven City Market in Rancho Cucamonga, a two year old food hall that seems to be bursting at the seems since COVID safety rules have been eased.

A recent takeout order

Like its counterparts in Texas, the Haven City Market outpost is fast casual and mostly takeout. The market has some outdoor seating that you can take your meals to, and plenty of other spots to grab some drinks and dessert when you finish. The Thai in "Lao & Thai" is referring to Isaan province in the northeast of Thailand, a place that shares so much history and culinary techniques with Laos. So plan for the often spicy foods that straddle the border of these two places rather than pad thai or drunken noodles.

Start with their delicious nam khao ($12.99, above top right), a dish of crispy fried rice balls mixed with cured sour pork sausage (som moo) and full of scallions, cilantro, mint, fish sauce, and lime juice. It is usually topped with a healthy portion of peanuts, but that might be left off here to avoid allergies of unknowing customers. Some dried red chili is included in orders on the side and should be employed for the nam khao as it is served without spice.

Thum mak hoong (Lao papaya salad)

This is not the case for their thum mak hoong ($11.99, above), which they will request a spice level from you. Lao food starts at a higher level than most, so a 3 out of 5 "spicy" rating should give dishes like this the proper amount of kick needed. Unfortunately the papaya salad that was put into this order somehow had the level 5 "extreme" and was definitely extreme. All the wonderful elements of a really good thum mak hoong were there, it was just scorched by far too much heat.

Thankfully the larb gai ($11.99, below) was correct at its level 4 "extra spicy" preparation. The minced chicken dish can have a good upgrade because it can be tempered by cool and crispy bites of lettuce and cucumber, along with sticky rice like the thum mak hoong.

Larb gai (Lao chicken salad)

Despite the small hiccup with spice level, it is quite a lovely surprise to see complex and sophisticated Lao cooking in such an informal setting. Hopefully the people in Rancho Cucamonga and surrounding communities will have a love for Lao food that will let the franchise expand further in the Inland Empire, and then Los Angeles and Orange Counties.

Even those with no familiarity with the cuisine will find a nice entry point with an order of the Sabaidee wings ($9.99, one below, full order in top photo). These fried wings and drumsticks are marinated with soy sauce and garlic, but the sharper herbs and lime are what show through. Unfortunately the ones served on this day were just a touch dry.

Sabaidee wings

A stroll around the Haven City Market is fun, some vendors of used clothing set up outside while a thorough assortment of restaurants offer just about anything you could want inside. A few arcade games and even some sit down bars provide entertainment for those with and without children.

And if you are not living in Rancho Cucamonga, make sure to look up when you are on the streets. It is always a pleasure to be close to Mount Baldy and the highest peaks of the San Gabriel Mountains.

๐Ÿ“ 8443 Haven Avenue, Rancho Cucamonga, Inland Empire

๐Ÿ‡ฑ๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡ฑ๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡ฑ๐Ÿ‡ฆ

I COULD USE YOUR HELP
Eat the World Los Angeles is and always has been free. It is a hobby born of passion and never solicits money or free food from restaurants. No advertisements block the content or pop over what you read. If this website has helped you explore your city and its wonderful cultures a little better please tell your friends about us and if you have the means to contribute, please consider doing so. Eat the World Los Angeles is a labor of love, but also takes a lot of money and time everyday to keep running.

Thank you!
VENMO: @JAREDCOHEE
CASH APP: $JaredCohee
PAYPAL: (no account necessary, use link)

Tuesday, 26 October 2021

Monik's Barbacoa Estilo Texcoco

Mร‰XICO ๐Ÿ‡ฒ๐Ÿ‡ฝ
(ESTADO DE Mร‰XICO/CDMX)
Once inside the backyard, a view through the tortilla grill and tents

EDITOR'S NOTE: An updated version of this article (21 February 2025) is available as part of the Free Friday Favorites section of our Substack page. Check that out here:
 
There is not an awful lot of noise coming from the backyard restaurant known as Monik's, tucked into a residential neighborhood at the far western reaches of Ontario. Often when you park you will hear music and conversations from the semi-formal eateries that take place behind people's homes around Southern California. But even though you can see tents from the street here, there is not much sound. Entering then is a surprise when all the tables are full of families happily attacking their many plates of food.

The hush, it turns out, is because the food served at this Sundays-only establishment is the type that shuts everyone up. There simply is just no time for words between one delicious bite and the next. A spoonful of salsa gets placed on the next bite as you chew. Lips are still moving when a napkin catches a dollop of crema left behind. Slowing down is just not an option, much like any conversation.

Consomรฉ de barbacoa de borrego

The three final words in the name might make you believe this is a specialist who caters in one type of food, but the operation has continued to grow since its inception. In addition to lamb barbacoa in the style of Texcoco, a small town 25 kilometers from the center of Mexico City that residents of the capital make their way to on weekends for the dish, the chefs here also purvey a wide variety of antojitos proudly served in "estilo DF."

There are tables of local families and other groups enjoying barbacoa by the pound, all their favorite cuts requested and served along with large, freshly made tortillas, chopped onion and cilantro, lime wedges, and squeeze bottles of three housemade salsas. On this visit, a wider variety of foods was desired so the barbacoa was enjoyed via a bowl of consomรฉ (above) and flautas de barbacoa de borrego (below). The consomรฉ is murky with bits of shredded lamb, fatty chunks, chickpeas, and the adobo and smoke that tastes of slow pit cooking.

Flautas de barbacoa de borrego

Flautas are pre-fried and stacked near the entrance. You will see this stack of rolled tortillas as you enter and slide past a grill full of fresh tortillas being made and a giant pot of barbacoa. An order of the flautas has them re-warmed and dressed with salsa verde, lettuce, and crema, and dusted with cheese. Since they were not prepared at this moment, they do have a bit of a tired feeling, but a dip in the consomรฉ brings them right back to life.

The barbacoa is indeed wonderful, but if you have only one chance to come here you might be jealous of the other tables enjoying plates of Distrito Federal-style antojitos. The most impressive of these might be their almost two foot long machetes, massive tortillas folded over into a blade shape and beloved in the capital. These are probably too much for two people to handle, but there are many other options as well.

Sopes (cochinita pibil, cecina, carne asada)

You cannot go wrong with an order of sopes (above), which come in orders of three and can be made with different meats. These masa bases are medium thickness and crispy on the bottom from the grill, smothered with a generous layer of beans and ready for their meats. The plate above includes cochinita pibil, cecina, and carne asada sopes served on an aluminum pizza tray, all topped properly with a mountain of lettuce and an avalanche of cream and grated cheese.

These provide a good vehicle for testing out their three salsas, a typical tomatillo and serrano green salsa, a complex salsa de molcajete, and a magical and fiery salsa de cacahuate. When the dishes started arriving, multiple people working here made sure all three were provided on the table and each was described and encouraged (and warned about in the case of the latter).

Gordita de chicharrรณn en salsa roja

A combination of a long list of guisados and a daily special of gorditas fritas de asiento (above and below) made an order of a couple of these a no-brainer. Gorditas in Southern California backyards are always a good idea, and was no different here. Especially satisfying was their chicharrรณn en salsa roja (above), large, perfectly stewed pieces of fatty pork skin in a an earthy, smoky red salsa.

The gorditas themselves are very thin here and crispy from being fried in pork lard. Their pockets are stuffed with far too much meat and other ingredients to allow for clean eating, make sure to lean far forward unless you want a lap full of food.

Gordita de carne deshebrada

The carne deshebrada (above) is another good option, strands of flavorful shredded beef mixed with a few grilled potatoes. It may have been while enjoying this that the third or fourth person came to the table to make sure everything was ok. The team here is obviously so proud of the place they have created and it translates to happy faces on everyone.

On other Sundays you may find daily specials like pozole verde, chilaquiles con huevos, or tlacoyos made with blue masa. It makes the place even more special for those living nearby, the kitchen is always offering new and exciting items and seems to be good at whatever they try. Make sure to put some of the salsa de cacahuate (below) on at least one of your orders, a peanut-based sauce made very spicy with dried chillies. It is excellent.

Salsa de cacahuate

๐Ÿ“ Ontario, Inland Empire (DM on Instagram for address)

๐Ÿ‡ฒ๐Ÿ‡ฝ๐Ÿ‡ฒ๐Ÿ‡ฝ๐Ÿ‡ฒ๐Ÿ‡ฝ

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Friday, 21 May 2021

Aroi Mak Mak

THAILAND ๐Ÿ‡น๐Ÿ‡ญ

EDITOR'S NOTE: An updated version of this article (10 October 2024) is available as part of the Historical section of our Substack page. Check that out here:

While it would probably not make sense for folks that live closer to Thai Town or other wonderful restaurants in the Valley or the Southeast LA/Orange County borderlands to drive out to Redlands for the food at Aroi Mak Mak, there are definitely reasons to pull the car off the freeway on trips to points east. All of those reasons reside on the cocktail menu, surprisingly.

That menu is full of Thai-inspired options born of true depth and creativity, not just throwing some lemongrass or kaffir lime leaves in a spirit. The one that might take the cake is the clever sorry, sorry, sorry ($12, below), a mezcal-forward cocktail that also incorporates Riesling and Suze and the freshness of bergamot orange, pineapple, chrysanthemum, and lime. A garnish of coconut jelly colored by butterfly pea flower is speared with a dried slice of dragon fruit.

Other selections range from just about every main spirit branch, with hints of tropical flavors and Thai ingredients mixed in with other cocktails that also do not stretch to find ways to make their home at a Thai bar. The cocktail list was designed by someone who knows what they are doing.

The restaurant, located in downtown Redlands, has the feel of a place that does not see a lot of Thai clientele. It uses stereotypes and well-known touristy iconography, but somehow it does not come off too badly. Sitting at the bar or at the tables out front are equally comfortable. You may even snag a seat at (in?) the tuk-tuk in the back.

And the food? It is certainly not that of a lackluster Manhattan or Midwestern suburban takeout place, but there is a decent amount of room between the best options in Los Angeles County and the plates offered here. They probably have to tone down and remove some ingredients to keep their client base happy, but they are using fresh ingredients and it shows.

Both the phad thai ($14, above) and khao mun gai ($14, below) were finished without complaint and made for a good meal. It is suspected that most of the other dishes will have the same effect.


๐Ÿ“ 344 Orange Street, Redlands, Inland Empire

๐Ÿ‡น๐Ÿ‡ญ๐Ÿ‡น๐Ÿ‡ญ๐Ÿ‡น๐Ÿ‡ญ

I COULD USE YOUR HELP
Eat the World Los Angeles is and always has been free. It is a hobby born of passion and never solicits money or free food from restaurants. No advertisements block the content or pop over what you read. If this website has helped you explore your city and its wonderful cultures a little better please tell your friends about us and if you have the means to contribute, please consider doing so. Eat the World Los Angeles is a labor of love, but also takes a lot of money and time everyday to keep running.

You can Venmo me @JAREDCOHEE, Cash App $JaredCohee, or click here to send PayPal donation, where no account is necessary. Thank you!