>> Eat the World Los Angeles: San Gabriel Valley
Showing posts with label San Gabriel Valley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label San Gabriel Valley. Show all posts

Tuesday, 20 February 2024

Sphinx Egyptian Kitchen

Restaurant facade

๐Ÿ‡ช๐Ÿ‡ฌ EGYPT
๐Ÿ“ 1311 S. Grand Avenue, Glendora, San Gabriel Valley.

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Z

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, 10 January 2024

Mandalay Morning Star Burmese Kitchen

Restaurant facade

๐Ÿ‡ฒ๐Ÿ‡ฒ MYANMAR
๐Ÿ“ 750 Terrado Plaza #33, Covina, San Gabriel Valley.
 
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‡ฒ๐Ÿ‡ฒ๐Ÿ‡ฒ๐Ÿ‡ฒ๐Ÿ‡ฒ๐Ÿ‡ฒ

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
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Thursday, 15 June 2023

Tasty Yerevan

A cup of homemade kompot with restaurant logo

๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡ฒ ARMENIA
๐Ÿ“ 1802 E. Washington Blvd., Pasadena, San Gabriel Valley.
๐Ÿ…ฟ️ Ample parking in plaza
๐Ÿฅค No Alcohol

After you go into Tasty Yerevan, place your order at the counter, grab a homemade kompot ($4, above) from the fridge, and sit down, you will look back out the windows and notice the beautiful San Gabriel Mountains rising sharply past the streets of Pasadena. It sets a dramatic scene for eating a shawarma sandwich, easily better than heading home with what will be a somewhat soggy meal.

Spits of slightly charred chicken and pork rotate in the kitchen, making the view away from the mountains pretty beautiful as well. With a counter full of fresh salads and vegetables, sandwiches stuffed with everything are definitely the move here. Watch the slicing, the piling, the toasting, all making your mouth water as the smells drift into the dining room.

Cutting meat from the rotating spits

Do not be afraid to answer "yes" when they ask you if you want your sandwich spicy, as the hot sauce is not that hot but does add a great flavor. The small, rotating spit of chicken is well marinated and taken care of, so each piece in a wrap is tender and juicy. With the fresh vegetables and delicious sauces, the chicken lavash shawarma ($12, below) is quite the experience.

Both meats are available in a pocket of bread too, but the thin lavash is worth the $2 upgrade. The Armenian version of a shawarma sandwich is also guaranteed to have a bushel of chopped parsley, and Tasty Yerevan does not disappoint. The sauces are less garlicky than the Lebanese and Palestinian versions found around town, but the overall flavors of each fresh bite are really wonderful.

Lavash-wrapped shawarma sandwich

Bite-away view of chicken shawarma in lavash

You can get both of these shawarmas as a plate with buttery rice and a choice of hummus, vegetables, or salad, as well as an array of kebobs that are grilled to order. Plates also come with a few pieces of lavash, so they are good value, although the hummus and the kebobs themselves are fairly average if still enjoyable.

With so many delicious Armenian kebob purveyors in nearby Glendale and beyond in the San Fernando Valley, it would be wise to stick to the well-above-average shawarma sandwiches here at Tasty Yerevan. That being said, both the beef kebob plate ($15, below left) and chicken kebob plate ($15, below right) were devoured completely later at home.

Two kebab plates with salads, vegetables, hummus, and rice

๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡ฒ๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡ฒ๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡ฒ

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, 29 March 2023

ๅ–œๆน˜ๅพก Yummeet Hunan Restaurant

Garvey avenue facade

๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ณ CHINA (Hunan)
๐Ÿ“ 8450 Garvey Avenue, Rosemead, San Gabriel Valley
๐Ÿ…ฟ️ Parking lot behind building
๐Ÿฅค No Alcohol

EDITOR'S NOTE: The menu at this restaurant is only in Chinese, so those characters have been provided on the dishes below.

Since changing over from the previous tenant Hunan Spicy Taste, the new banner hung on both facades of the restaurant uses the same Chinese characters (ๅ–œๆน˜ๅพก), short for something like "happiness Hunan royal." As of at least this past October, the new "Yummeet" is owned by a new group with new chefs, but continues the offerings from this province. Chapu Tea Bar also has a counter inside the restaurant, if you are in the mood for bubble tea or their other drinks offerings.

In the early days, an English menu was promised, but this idea seems to have been scrapped in favor of keeping finicky diners away that might ask for alterations to their Hunan specialties. While possibly shunning some business, this is good news for customers that like to experience foods from around the world because they are doing Hunanese food really well here.

ๅฏŒ่ดต็บข็ƒง่‚‰

If you do not read Chinese text yourself, grab your friends that do and bring enough of them to sit at the big tables with lazy Susans and share as many dishes as possible. The menu they do give you is hand-written and laminated, and spans a range of items from cold "snacks" to stir-fry dishes, soups and so many types of meats.

The meat dishes start arriving fast after ordering, ahead of their vegetable companions. Like at most Hunan restaurants, the braised pork belly dish of ๅฏŒ่ดต็บข็ƒง่‚‰ ($23.95, above) is a must order. Many times this is translated as Chairman Mao's red braised pork, but here they use a word for rich rather than that polarizing former leader. Either way, it is wonderful, and disappeared at record speed.

็ดซ่‹็„–้ฒˆ้ฑผ

Shown in the order the dishes were dropped at the table, the second was the most expensive order of ็ดซ่‹็„–้ฒˆ้ฑผ ($48.95, above), a large stew of sea bass braised in basil. After the braised pork, this stepped up the spice levels quite a bit, where they remained for most of the rest of the meal. Plenty of chopped up peppers were swimming in light khaki-colored broth, while big soft hunks of tofu and more firm fish are mostly submerged.

Besides the basil, the soup is full of peppery flavors, and has a smooth creamy texture. While it is a bit difficult to show the scale with these photos, the bowl is massive and quite a bit larger than every other dish. You can eat this with spoonfuls of rice or on its own.

ไธœๅฎ‰่ตฐๅœฐ้ธกๅŠๅช

The most surprising sip of the night may have been the broth of the ไธœๅฎ‰่ตฐๅœฐ้ธกๅŠๅช ($23.95, above), named for Dong'an County in Hunan Province. Often this dish is served cold, but here the free range chicken comes in a hot and spicy broth that is supremely sour from rice vinegar. The soup has scallions, ginger, chopped peppers, and numbing Sichuan peppercorns, and is extremely good.

Appearing much like Mexican dishes served "divorciados" or "bandera," the ๅ‰ๆค’้ฑผๅคด ($28.95, below) is a split fish head that is prepared with both chopped red and green chili peppers. This is another distinctly Hunanese dish with spices from the province and is cooked by steaming. The meat near the head is luxuriously fatty but the finished dish has barely any grease.

ๅ‰ๆค’้ฑผๅคด

้ฆ™่พฃๅœŸ่ฑ†ไธ

No matter what the region, a plate of shredded potatoes is always enjoyable from Chinese chefs, and the ้ฆ™่พฃๅœŸ่ฑ†ไธ ($12.95, above) here does not disappoint. Since this is Hunan-style, it is of course heavily spiked with peppers, while the potatoes are cooked lightly and perfectly, leaving them crisp and chewy.

If the sound of eggplant, green pepper, and preserved egg together sounds good, try the ็šฎ่›‹้’ๆค’ๆ“‚่Œ„ๅญ ($16.95, below), a dish served in a mortar and pestle. There is plenty of garlic and other ingredients that join the three main components, but you will not get a break from the heat of the meal with this item.

็šฎ่›‹้’ๆค’ๆ“‚่Œ„ๅญ

ไธŠๆฑคๅฐ่ฑ†่‹—

The first real chance to start feeling your mouth again comes with a bowl of ไธŠๆฑคๅฐ่ฑ†่‹— ($15.95, above), which has more preserved egg combined with small bright green pea sprouts and ground chicken. By this time in the meal, it is nice to sip on the salty broth, even if it does not stand out so much. Once again, the dish has good texture combinations with soft egg, firm ground chicken, and crunchy sprouts.

The last dish of the night was another vegetable favorite, ๅฐ็‚’็ฌ‹ๅนฒ ($11.95, below), which stir-fried thin pieces of bamboo in other vegetables and chili peppers. Besides the potatoes, it was one of the spiciest dishes of the evening, but a real pleasure to eat again because of the combination of textures and tastes involved.

ๅฐ็‚’็ฌ‹ๅนฒ

๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ณ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ณ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ณ

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, 13 October 2022

Dolan's Uyghur Cuisine

Valley Blvd. facade

๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ณ CHINA (Xinjiang)
๐Ÿ“ 742 W. Valley Blvd., Alhambra, San Gabriel Valley
๐Ÿ…ฟ️ Parking lot behind and next to restaurant
๐Ÿฅค No Alcohol

With such a large Chinese population in Los Angeles centered in the San Gabriel Valley, you can usually count on the trends happening in Beijing and Shanghai to reach their way across the Pacific Ocean in short order. It is not always the people that are native to the regions of the food they offer that are creating new restaurants, but what is hot is always a quick route to good business. Whether it be dry hot pot from Sichuan or rice noodle soups from Yunnan and Guangxi, there will be chefs and proprietors that learn the trade and offer a worthy version in big Chinese cities and here in Los Angeles.

Dolan's Uyghur Cuisine is not that type of place, with owners putting their Turkic Central Asian ethnicity front and center. It could be assumed that if posed the question, they would say that this food is not possible without the proper people cooking. While technically part of China, Xinjiang province and its original peoples are much more like their neighbors to the east such as Tajikistan and Uzbekistan, the root of all of what is going on there today. The name of the restaurant itself is the transliteration of the Uyghur word for the people and place, used proudly rather than the Chinese word Xinjiang.

Dolan's special tea

Over a pot of Dolan's special tea ($7.95, above), typically served at the beginning of a meal in the beautiful set seen above, you will see the staff's shirts with "GOOGLE UYGHURS" written large on the front and "#closethecamps" on the back. This is a subtly unsubtle way to get people to see their side of the story without getting too standoff-ish in a neighborhood that could have other ideas. If you were not aware of what is going on and moved by the strong black tea infused with cardamom, you may heed the advice of their shirts while waiting for those first dishes to arrive and start Googling on your phone.

The physical menu itself is terrific, with big beautiful photos of everything the restaurant offers. Exactly one page of appetizers is in the front before about a dozen more that dive into large, mostly meaty plates of classic Uyghur dishes. As people from modern-day Xinjiang are almost exclusively Muslim, the restaurant is of course halal so expect a meal that focuses on lamb and beef and cuts out pork.

Cold noodle

One of the (mostly cold) appetizers to try is the aptly named cold noodle ($8.95, above), a big plate that could be a meal on its own. These are the thinnest noodles you will eat during a meal that will have many, chewy long strands swimming in chili oil and topped with shredded cucumber. Somewhere down in that oil is the hint of a numbing agent, and the dish slowly builds up heat as you eat more.

In a similar but not exact oily bath is the unique dish lighirdaq ($8.95, below), long rectangular sections of jelly made from bean starch. This also gets a fortification from chickpeas sprinkled generously over the plate, so even before taking a bite of meat you can relieve any starvation you came in with. Similar to a dish found throughout China known as liangfen and in the countries to the east as ashlan fu, start with the pieces of jelly at the bottom as to best use the soy-infused sauce.

Lighirdaq

If you have ever eaten at any Uzbek or other Central Asian spots, the most ubiquitous dish that people have familiarity with is probably laghman ($12.95, below), named for the thick chewy noodles that serve as the focal point. Often in other restaurants an order of laghman will bring a bowl of hearty soup, but Uyghurs typically enjoy laghman as a plate like served here at Dolan's.

The hand-pulled noodles are all of different thicknesses, a clear indication that they have been made here in the kitchen. Stir-fried onions, tomatoes, bell peppers, and mushrooms are placed on top along with delicious cuts of beef. Vegan diners should note that this dish is available meatless and the addition of extra noodles under their vegetables and special sauce.

Laghman

Samsa

Taking a break from noodles momentarily, find out the wonders that are coming from Dolan's ovens with an order of samsa ($11.95, above), beef-filled triangular pastries. The crumbs of these flaky delights will all need picked up and eaten as the bread might be even better than the savory meat and spices within, which is really saying something.

Make sure to come to the restaurant with at least a group of four so you can also try the Uyghur goshnaan ($16.75, below), an absolute beauty of a pie stuffed with beef and a bit of lamb. The spices inside have black pepper and plenty of onion, and eaten fresh from the oven the top and bottom layers are still crispy.

Uyghur goshnaan

(Small) big plate chicken

Big plate chicken ($18.95 small order bone-in, above) has been co-opted by the entire spectrum of Chinese restaurants serving many types of regional foods, but the origins of the dish are in Xinjiang province, if not specifically Uyghur. It is actually surprising that Dolan's chooses to use the Chinese translation of the dish rather than its Uyghur name of qong, although it is so beloved all the way to the Pacific coast that they probably wanted to make sure people would come in for it here.

You can get the dish boneless as well, but either way the chunks of chicken, potatoes, and peppers are loaded into the shape of a small hill and placed on top of wide homemade noodles. The whole plate has a shallow layer of gravy that consists of the drippings of everything after it has been stir-fried. The chicken is juicy and tender and needs no extra moisture, but that gravy is still delicious enough to spoon up and not let go to waste.

Uyghur polo

Another dish that has radiated out much further than Central Asia is plov and all its various forms throughout the former Soviet republics and South Asian countries. Each spot of course has its own way of making the dish, so it is worth trying the take here with an order of Uyghur polo ($13.95, above). You can get this made with chicken or beef, but most traditional is the version seen here served with lamb.

While just a few thin slices of the meat adorn the top, the rice itself is braised in the drippings of lamb along with carrots and onions. The whole thing is like an ode to how tasty lamb can be, with small sweet and tasty raisins mixed in for fun.

Fried naan with beef

With a dusting of cumin, the fried naan with beef ($14.75, above) is one of the only "dry" dishes you can find on the menu. The naan itself seems baked for days and is as crunchy as a kettle chip, while the beef is still miraculously moist. You may also find onions and even a few crinkle cut fries in there, it all is a really satisfying dish.

If you can, do not pass up the opportunity for a plate of qordaq ($18.95, below) a dish of braised lamb that is a Uyghur representation of something found throughout Central Asia. It may be most prominent in Kyrgyzstan, where it is known as kuurdak, but it is also enjoyed in Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, and Kazakhstan, where it usually includes the liver, kidney, heart, and lungs.

Qordaq (braised lamb)

The tender lamb chunks and soft carrots are placed once again on wide handmade noodles and bathing in the gravy made from cooking. You can taste all the fats and oils from the meat as well as a touch of sweetness from the onions.

Dolan's has now been around for almost four years in Alhambra, but seems to be getting better and better as time passes. The San Gabriel Valley and everyone nearby is so fortunate that the relatively new restaurant survived the pandemic and has come out on the other side even stronger. The foods of Central Asia are not something that Los Angeles and nearby counties are blessed with much of, so Dolan's endurance in the future is something to be tended very carefully.

๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ณ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ณ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ณ

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)

Wednesday, 10 August 2022

Cindy's Kitchen

Colima Road facade

๐Ÿ‡น๐Ÿ‡ผ TAIWAN
๐Ÿ…ฟ️ Ample parking in plaza.
๐Ÿฅค No Alcohol.

When you walk into Cindy's Kitchen you will see customers perusing the refrigerated cases and frozen goods, buying six big bags of vegetable buns at a time, bags of dumplings, and quite a few of the dozens of homemade chilled dishes displayed with pride. The case holding these cold gems is what you will probably see first when walking in, large bowls set out in a deli format ready to be ladled into takeout containers or into dishes to be served immediately at tables.

Named for the owner's daughter, twelve year old Cindy's Kitchen looks and feels a lot older than it is in reality. It would be easy to believe if someone told you this restaurant had been serving happy customers for 50 years. While the prices have of course risen a bit over the past year, the full smack in the face of inflation happening in the restaurant industry has not quite shown its ugly head here. Getting homemade quality dishes around $10 and not more than $15 somehow feels really good.

Spicy pig ears and cucumber salad

Of the over 30 rotating dishes in that refrigerated case, it is hard to narrow down the choices. Thankfully, they allow you to combine two in one dish, usually coming out to $7 or $8. The four in the photos above and below were all winners, including spicy pigs ears that come in wide cross sections. There is a great crunch in each sliver of cartilage, but this is unmatched to that of the chilled cucumbers which come with a delicious savory garlicky coating.

The seaweed salad has some bean sprouts for extra crunch and plenty of vinegar added to the savory tastes of its marinade. The seaweed itself is ever so slightly sweet and pairing them with the hot and sour shredded potatoes is a great choice on these blisteringly hot days. You can also find interesting cold drinks like the popular mung bean barley (็ปฟ่ฑ†่–ไป, $3, not shown) to wash everything down and further lower the temperature.

Shredded hot and sour potatoes and seaweed salad

If someone is not that familiar with Taiwanese food, there is still a good chance that they have seen and probably tried the island's beloved beef noodle soup. Cindy's Kitchen has always had a serviceable bowl but was never known to be one of the best in town. This seems to have changed in recent years, as they may have taken some of the comments to heart.

The broth of the beef stew noodle soup ($11.50, below) is still very clean but now there is a richness and depth in each slurp that may have been missing if you visited the restaurant before the pandemic. Choose the larger noodles, which do the soup more justice, and make sure to ask for their homemade pickled mustard greens. A big spoon or maybe just a full fist of them are a necessary addition to the savory, soy sauce broth.

Beef Stew Noodle Soup ็บข็ƒง็‰›่‚‰้ข

Big chunks of tender beef bob at the surface of the bowl but also underneath, the price to quality ingredient ratio of this dish will bring a smile to your face even if grandma's version is still better. Bring grandma anyways to secretly enjoy this bowl while claiming it is missing something, she deserves a break every now and then.

The second dish someone will probably reference, especially if they have taken trains in Taiwan is the bento boxes with fried chicken or pork chops served over rice. Those meat dishes are not the specialties here at Cindy's, but they do the ground pork that usually comes with those bentos about as wonderful as you could ask for.

Ground Pork Mushroom Over Rice ้ฆ™่‡่‚‰็‡ฅ้ฅญ

The beautiful bowl of ground pork and mushroom over rice ($10.95, above) is a must order, the kind of dish you take a first spoon of and look across the table at your dining partner nodding your head. Both the mushrooms and pork are very finely chopped and spread generously over a pile of fresh white rice, but what sends this over the top is that it is not just lean pork in there. Instead, it is also joined by smoky pork belly, which really puts this version on another level no matter what spices its competitors are using.

The tea egg that comes standard with the bowl is pleasing enough, but more enjoyable is the marinated tofu that they use with this and other dishes, firm and delicious in its own right. Do not push this to the side even if you are salivating for more pork and mushroom.

Hometown Braised Pork Belly ๅฎถไนก็บข็ƒง่‚‰

Another way to enjoy even more of this tofu is with an order of the irresistibly named hometown braised pork belly ($14.95, above), which leaves the pieces of its namesake in their full fatty glory. With no knives on the table, the intention here is to pop the full piece in your mouth at once to enjoy its many layers of deliciousness. Grab those near the bottom to make sure and get plenty of the dish's sauciness in that bite.

With so many bags of frozen dumplings practically staring at you from the freezer while you dine, it is hard not to order some. The usual suspect ingredients are all their for these Taiwanese-style dumplings, but the best choice might be the pork, leek, and shrimp combo ($9.50, below). These three very different parts combine for the right tastes and textures, especially when you craft your own dipping sauce from the condiments on the table.

Pork leek shrimp dumpling ไธ‰้ฒœๆฐด้ฅบ

Biteaway view of pork leek shrimp dumpling ไธ‰้ฒœๆฐด้ฅบ

Kids that grew up with Taiwanese grandparents here in Los Angeles might decry the thickness of the wrappers at Cindy's, but these godly dumplings are meant for feeding the masses and to fill the freezers of their many customers. The skin can not be too thin for dumplings like this or the wrappers will have too many tears by the time people have them ready at home. For those that enjoy a thicker skin, you are in for a treat.

They also have stacks of green onion pancakes in the freezer, certainly better than those now found at Trader Joe's. Eat them in house or take some home on a second visit, as well as the mustard green and pork noodle soup, the homemade Taiwanese pork jerky, and plenty of those other chilled dishes. The menu also has a long list of vegetable options for those that might find this article a bit to porky. Something for everyone.

๐Ÿ‡น๐Ÿ‡ผ๐Ÿ‡น๐Ÿ‡ผ๐Ÿ‡น๐Ÿ‡ผ

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, 3 June 2022

Mazesoba Hero

JAPAN ๐Ÿ‡ฏ๐Ÿ‡ต
Grand Avenue facade

COVID-19 UPDATE: The restaurant is fully open for indoor dining. Staff and most customers are wearing masks.

There were almost 70 years between the first bowl of Taiwanese-inspired mazesoba being made in Nagoya, Japan and its arrival in Southern California thanks to Menya Hanabi. That chain, originally forming in Japan in 2008 opened up a location in Arcadia in 2019 and until now has cornered the market. Much further east in the San Gabriel Valley, Mazesoba Hero opened up in the middle of autumn 2021.

As you walk into the new space, the large wall on the opposite side of the restaurant is dominated by a mural of a fighter simultaneously chasing a dragon whose body consists of noodles and slicing an egg perfectly in half with a large sword. These two ingredients are the most important in a bowl of mazesoba, from which the dragon's noodle body emerges. Do not stare too long, it makes less sense the more you try to decode!

Ika sansai seaweed salad

Since mazesoba is a soup-less noodle bowl and comes coated with egg and plenty of starchy goodness, bowls can be thick and it makes sense to look through the appetizers and get at least one salad or green to the table. A simple seaweed salad or edamame with sea salt will do the trick, but the move here is to enjoy the ika sansai seaweed salad ($5.50, above), with thin slices of chewy squid laid over the fresh sea greens.

Hot appetizers like karaage and shrimp tempura are also available before the mains come out, or this takoyaki ($6, below). The small pieces of octopus buried within the creamy pancake ball are almost difficult to find sometimes, but the dish is enjoyable nonetheless as a vehicle for takoyaki sauce and Japanese mayo.

6 pieces of takoyaki

Classic mazesoba (spicy)

You may have noticed by this time the words "Saucy Ramen House" outside under the name or on the menu, probably added to make people feel comfortable coming in even if they have never heard of mazesoba. Lovers of dry ramen dishes like mazemen will remember that maze means "mix" and always alludes to a lack of soup, but once that mixing takes place these bowls are indeed saucy (see below).

The thick and chewy noodles underneath all the chosen toppings will remind you of those used for tsukemen dipping ramen, and indeed these noodles are made of wheat flour and not buckwheat like most soba. The classic mazesoba ($12, above and below) is a good introduction to the restaurant and is available in either non-spicy or spicy (seen here) versions. The poached egg is laid on top of a bed of ground pork right before serving, all to be mixed with the shredded seaweed, onions, and garlic.

Classic mazesoba (close on mixed noodles)

There are technicalities that keep mazesoba from being called ramen, but that discussion is probably a dissertation on its own. Lovers of either will most likely enjoy their meals here, and it is at least worth a try especially for a region of the city that is mostly populated by run-of-the-mill bowls of tonkotsu ramen.

There is a list of 21 add-ons that range from $1 to $4 and are available for any of their various bowls of mazesoba. This makes the amount of variety here enough to keep you busy for quite some time if the style ends up being to your liking. Corn, cheese, black garlic oil, chashu, creamy crab sticks, and even marinated pork ribs (the $4 item) can be thrown on top.

Saikoro mazesoba

A list of four signature mazesoba creations are on the back of the menu, which include many of those 21 topping options, but the saikoro mazesoba ($13, above) looked more tempting on this day. This is limited to a certain number of bowls per day and probably more available for lunch, substituting braised pork belly for the ground pork and adding crisp red cabbage.

While the thick starchiness is not perfect for warming up later, these "mixed" soba noodles are pretty addictive in person. If nothing more, it is something very new to try in a town that has almost everything.

๐Ÿ‡ฏ๐Ÿ‡ต๐Ÿ‡ฏ๐Ÿ‡ต๐Ÿ‡ฏ๐Ÿ‡ต

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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Monday, 30 May 2022

[CLOSED] ...donde Angie?

Valley Blvd. facade

๐Ÿ‡ช๐Ÿ‡จ ECUADOR
๐Ÿ…ฟ️ Small parking lot for customers.
๐Ÿ’ฒ Cash or Zelle Only.
๐Ÿฅค Bottled Beer Available.

EDITOR'S NOTE: The La Puente restaurant permanently closed, but the business is now operating out of the proprietor's home in Buena Park. Please check their Instagram page for more information.

Back in the beginning of February, a flagpole was constructed just outside a new restaurant on busy Valley Blvd. The bright, tri-color flag of Ecuador is probably the best advertisement in a town starved for Ecuadorian food, especially since the recent closing of Silver Lake's El Caserio. Inside is now the only true restaurant featuring the food of the country in Greater Los Angeles, although a terrific home chef and some vendors exist elsewhere.

Be careful as you slow down and turn into the small parking lot, for the 18 wheelers of City of Industry (which completely surrounds the restaurant starting with the train tracks across the street) will most likely be right on your rear bumper. The location is an interesting choice, but eventually the owners want the restaurant to be a community hub for Ecuadorians coming from different parts of town. On weekends, they are already getting good turnout for Ecuadorian league football, with fans of Guayaquil rivals Emelec and Barcelona SC showing up in the strongest numbers.

Ecuadorian flag posted on Valley Blvd.

For now there is still no menu, and especially on weekdays there are just a few items available daily which they are happy to tell you all about if you are new. Weekends see more dishes like the delicious bowl of caldo de bola available on Sundays. Bring cash or have your Zelle account ready, as those are the two forms of payment available for now.

Probably available daily is the Guayaquil and coastal favorite encebollado de pescado (below), usually made with a type of whitefish but here full of meaty slices of tuna. The name alludes to the cooking of the stew with plenty of onions, which fill the flavors of the broth and are used raw for topping as well. As customary, the encebollado is served with a cup of freshly toasted chifles, thinly sliced plantain chips, and plenty of limes to squeeze into the soup.

Encebollado de pescado

You can also ask for a small side of white rice if desired to further fortify your stew, dipping the grains in the broth is somehow very pleasing. There is yuca in the mix as well, but it is not overloaded as you see in some bowls, the fish makes up the bulk of the offering.

On the Thursday afternoon of this visit, another main course available was seco de pollo (below), a stewed chicken dish served with a drumstick. The gravy or stew can look like this without being very saucy and can even sometimes read more like a soup, or somewhere in between. Of course everyone has a different recipe but there is always naranjilla fruit and a traditional fermented corn drink called chicha, which today is often substituted with beer, especially outside of Ecuador.

Seco de pollo

The dish is always served with particularly Ecuadorian rice, tinted yellow by annatto powder, and full of oils and butter. It is flavorful enough to enjoy on its own, but even better with the garlic, onions, and variety of herbs and spices in the gravy.

Another dish you can try daily is the bolรณn de verde (below), available in both cheese and pork versions. These large balls are made of mashed green plantains and the ingredients of your choosing, here shown in pork but sometimes seen with chicharrรณn or chorizo if you are at a place known for making a variety of them.

Bolรณn de verde

There might be no more typical breakfast in coastal regions than combining a bolรณn de verde with a fried egg and a fresh cup of coffee. The deep fried ball satisfies the cravings for something greasy in the morning and provides enough calories for a hard day's work.

Returning on the weekend for their specials and also the communal atmosphere is looked forward to and any reports will of course be updated here and announced on Twitter and Instagram.

๐Ÿ‡ช๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ช๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ช๐Ÿ‡จ

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, 27 May 2022

Aljibani Halal Meat Co.

LIBYA ๐Ÿ‡ฑ๐Ÿ‡พ
Golden Springs Drive facade

COVID-19 UPDATE: This is a fully open market with a steam table and kitchen within. A couple tables are outside for eating, but most business is takeout.

While Libya might not be the nation that comes to mind first when someone puts "Mediterranean Food" on their menu or awning, there may be no place with more claim to the moniker. The traditions of countries all around this body of water, the rest of North Africa, and Berber cuisines are all found in the common foods Libyans eat daily. Traveling in Libya surprises many guests by the amount of pasta that is involved, a consequence of a long painful history of colonization by Italy.

If you ask the owner or chef what the food cooked here at this halal meat market by the 57/60 interchange in Diamond Bar is, both of them will tell you simply: Mediterranean. The only hint of more specificity is the small faded flag that is placed above the register, the red, black, and green horizontal stripes of the flag of Libya. In addition, they are quick to point out that they also cater to all area Muslims by providing Pakistani biryani, halal rotisserie chickens, and many other dishes including a range of meze.

Two lamb combo plates

Make sure to upgrade to combo platters so that you can get some sides with your order, including sharmoola (above, top right), a cucumber salad with finely diced vegetables. Note that the serrano peppers diced up in the spicy version are larger than the rest of its parts, allowing people to fish them out if undesired. They also make a workaday hummus and minty, cucumber-y yogurt sauce that goes very well with the meaty rice platters.

Many of the offerings available daily are laid down in the steam table (call ahead if you want freshly fried falafel which take about 15 minutes), which also has some South Asian curries and pan-Mediterranean shawarmas. The tray that stands out the most is definitely the lamb shank ($9.99 for platter, below), which you almost feel like a thief taking from the restaurant at this price.

Lamb shank

This is not seasoned so much, allowing you to enjoy all the lamb flavor with the option of combining some of the sides and/or the flavorful rice that is full of ladled in lamb drippings. The meat is perfectly tender but not overly cooked into mush. Bites with both the yogurt and garlicky hummus are nice to alternate between.

If you want more of the flavor taken care of for you but still want lamb, try the lamb stew ($7.99 for platter, below). This can be enjoyed on its own or spiked with the spicy sharmoola. Instead of a shank, the stew uses lamb ribs, again cooked just right and perfectly tender without being overcooked. It is always fascinating when chefs can produce such top quality foods for steam tables without something suffering from being out and hot for longer than dishes cooked to order. Halal and non-halal eaters should seek out Aljibani when quick and delicious lunches are needed in the area.

Lamb stew

๐Ÿ‡ฑ๐Ÿ‡พ๐Ÿ‡ฑ๐Ÿ‡พ๐Ÿ‡ฑ๐Ÿ‡พ

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)