Salt’s Cure : My Last Meal in L.A.

By , 22 November, 2010,

My. Last. Meal.
We plunked down at Salt’s Cure‘s bar by the cash register, which turned out to be a strategic vantage point to chat with the chefs / owners while drooling over home baked biscuits, house made sausage and bacon – courtesy of natural happy pigs from River Dog Farm, and the griddle cakes.
Artfully arranged plates make eating the thoughtfully prepared food all the more pleasurable.

Salt’s Cure will get me back to Los Angeles sooner than later for a few simple reasons:

  1. Ambiance is cozy yet modern and clean.
  2. The art is animals-embossed-from-salt (you have to see for yourself)
  3. We laughed as much as we ate, thanks to the happy and friendly staff.
  4. The griddle cakes, oh the griddle cakes. Chock full of oatmeal the griddle cakes make a nutritious daily breakfast, or a wise choice as your last meal (on earth).
    A big scoop of butter melts from the center down the stack, intermingling with powdered sugar. Before the pancakes get to you, the butter has melted across the fluffy slabs. The cake edges delicately crunch, coupled with soft centers and mmmm butter.
  5. Beefy (porky?) slabs of house cured bacon and homemade sausages come from pork that Chris gets himself at River Dog Farm and drives back down to LA. Like a porcine road trip.
  6. Prices are very reasonable for the quality.
  7. Easy to get to, near Fairfax and Santa Monica.
  8. Everyone’s doing it: The bartender of another great restaurant had eaten breakfast there. A well respected pork-loving chef had gushed about Salt’s Cure to us, not knowing we’d just been there. Then I learned one of the chefs is my friend’s son. The Daily Candy, Tasting Table and Yelpers love it.
  9. Sigh… How often can you call a breakfast experience magical? Simply put, Salt’s Cure is the center of the universe.  I need to return to see if this was a one-trick pony or the cure for the common salt.

You’ll Never Forget Your First Finger Lime

By , 21 November, 2010,

October 2011: Finger limes were featured in Food Network magazine! Many people are writing to me to ask where to get them. You can buy them from Shanley Farms. Click here to order.


Do you remember the first time you saw a fuzzy brown egg-shaped fruit and wondered if you could eat the skin? Cutting it open to see the glistening green flesh with small black seeds? That first taste of a kiwi fruit, whether under-ripe and sour, or just perfect with a hint of strawberry?

When a citrus grower recently brought a few California-grown Australian Finger Limes – undersized like tiny fingers – to a party, cut them open, and squeezed out sacs of “lime juice caviar” … well, weeks have passed and we’re still obsessed.

Lime caviar on the rim of a cocktail; eaten straight from the lime; on frozen yogurt…our minds reeled. The juice sacs pop, which makes them the ultimate in nature’s molecular gastronomy much like a pomegranate but without the hard seed thingy.

Yet as I roved around Los Angeles spreading the word to local bartenders, the L.A. Times broke the story.

I took a special trip to the Santa Monica Wednesday farmer’s market where I met the Shanleys, among the first to introduce California grown finger limes, which they planted just a few years ago, to the market now that the trees have matured.

Want Finger Limes?

This variety of lime is still very new, in limited production. I have a few on hand (in Berkeley) for any bars or restaurants who want to experience them firsthand!


Good Food Awards Finalists Announced!

By , 16 November, 2010,

jam and cheese - susiefoodieLast month hundreds of small food producers from across the United States shipped their preserves, pickles, coffees, chocolates, cheeses and beers to San Francisco. Unlike a reality show, it was anonymous, unlabeled products that would compete in a marathon day of tasting by expert judges.

Today the Good Food Awards team revealed the finalists – a particular thrill for anyone who enjoys discovering new producers. A few caught my eye, spurring my own random Good Fun Awards:

Know any of these folks? Many are new to me.

I put this “joke” list together to show how the Good Food Awards will reveal many tiny artisan food makers from all over the map on the map. The winners will not win based on packaging or brand power but on taste. Winning will bring not only visibility but recognition for the region – a good thing for tourism. Hurrah!

This year the awards started small. If you missed the chance to enter or a product category that should be represented wasn’t, know that this was Year One.

Fun Los Angeles Food Events: Nov 12-14

By , 11 November, 2010,

EAT – SHOP – SMILE: All Week: Hello Kitty / Sanrio Birthday + Food Trucks

hello kitty eventBeen there done that, and it’s fun if you have the least affinity for Hello Kitty. A vast and creative array of Hello Kitty and friends paintings: Smart Hello Kitty cars, tons of gamd crafts, and a few good food trucks.
At Barker Hangar, at the Santa Monica airport.

EAT: November 12-13: LA Tamale Throwdown

The LA Tamale Throwdown will feature Tamale Vendors, representing various regions of Mexico and the Central America. (more on Facebook)

LEARN: Nov 12-13: Learn Urban Farming in Pasadena

Ditching your acting dreams? Want to sell at farmer’s markets? Take workshops weekend at the Huntington Ranch – a laboratory for studying and experimenting with sustainable urban agriculture. (more at LA Times)

ART & EATS: Nov 14: Monster Drawing Rally + Food Trucks, Eagle Rock

Got the tip for this wacky fun event from Dave, who I met while “relaxing” at Little Flower Candy. (See,  LA’s a friendly place!)

Over 100 artists drawing live while beer by New Belgium Brewing Company will be poured. The Coolhaus [awesome ice cream sandwiches!!], Fresh Fries, and Slice Truck food trucks will be parked outside for your dining pleasure. (more info)

GET SWEET: Valerie Confections

Head downtown via Valerie Confections where Tasting Table notes they’re having an open house. Valerie’s chocolates and jams made from local fruits will make your day and let you take care of your Thanksgiving house gift shopping.

If a monster live drawing rally isn't enough, get there for the ice cream sandwiches.

Slow Food Meets Food Craft

By , 9 November, 2010,

In a “party hostess” panic, I threw the dehydrated citron peel in a jar and filled it with vodka then set out a Flourless Almond Citron Cake*, moving on to hunt for plates and forks. It was 30 minutes till our Slow Food group meeting for which John and Shirley Kirkpatrick were driving from the Central Valley to share the fruit (citrons and buddha’s hand) of their labor.

*Based on an Eating Well recipe, but with citron zest; doused with citron syrup; and half the honey, substituting half agave nectar.

Panic averted: Our two-hour meeting extended to 4 hours filled with laughing, questions, tasting, sharing ideas, even good old fashioned joke telling. There was something different about this meeting, and today it hit me: Slow Food’s manifesto meets the Foodcrafters Manifesto (unveiled at this year’s Real Food Festival). Slow Food USA’s manifesto proclaims “that pleasure and quality in everyday life can be achieved by slowing down, respecting the convivial traditions of the table and celebrating the diversity of the earth’s bounty” and food that reflects “generations of commitment to the land and devotion to the processes that yield the greatest achievements in taste.”

We went back to a slower time with this third-generation California citrus grower, who the Wall Street Journal once profiled on its front page (yes with one of those cool sketches!) and whose crop was once victim of espionage by a couple of Israeli rabbis.

It all started 30 years ago when John received a call from an 18 year old boy living back east, in search of etrogs (citrons). “Who should I speak with about having these grown in the U.S.?” he asked. “That’s me,” John answered, proceeding to dedicate himself to the task, learning the stringent religious laws; how to cultivate the fruit; and spoken Yiddish (I heard Alice Medrich admire this American Christian man’s pronunciation.)

Today he is the sole large grower in the United States. The farm also has lemons, olives, buddha’s hand (sold to St. George Spirits as well as kaffir lime leaves and mandarin blossoms), and assorted pomegranates.

Show, Tell & Eating Food Craft

Rolling food craft into the meeting was a big part of our relaxed happiness. The Eat Real Festival’s Food Craft Manifesto states “Food craft is the transformation of raw ingredients into foods with techniques that change and build flavor, make foods last longer, and increase the impact of land and place on flavor.”

For the second time, this event format worked splendidly. John’s son dropped a case of fruit the week before. I distributed it to culinary takers.

June Taylor shared the fruits of her labor with John, presenting a small batch of citron preserves.

We started the meeting by tasting my citron vodka, which had largely had the peels in it for only an hour. A great discovery! This dehydration method immediately infuses the vodka with flavor that requires no sweetening.

We passed around chewy Citron Butter Mochi and candied citron peel. Then tried eating the citron’s mild white pith. (Later I dehydrated some slices which oddly have a kaffir lime leaf taste. Worth infusing in booze, eh?) Thoughts on extracting oil somehow led into tasting my first batch of homemade pickles.

Everyone left with bags of fruit, for continued experimentation.

While huge events reach more people, provide the opportunity to connect, and of course to sit at table togethers, I look forward to more of these smaller events to connect with the producers and sit at a splendid table, enjoying the pleasures that heritage foods and good people can only bring.

Need Raw Olives to Preserve or Craft?

John grows 30 acres of Manzanilla olives. If you’re interested in an event or want to buy olives to preserve and sell, he’s got ‘em! I can connect you.