Sunday, May 31, 2020

Okamoto Kitchen UPDATE - Los Angeles


It’s a uniquely difficult time for restaurants, but Okamoto Kitchen continues to thrive. Their food is already on wheels, and they dispense and deliver with a level of mobility and flexibility that the brick-and-mortars will never know. 

Social distancing isn’t a problem if all you have to do is pick it up, and as an added bonus they deliver. They park and spread far beyond the borders of Los Angeles, availing their awesomeness all across the South Bay. 


There’s no wrong item to order, and you can start strong with the JFC. Okamoto style is great, with a soy/teriyaki-esque house glaze, and I’m curious about the spicy sauce, which will have to wait for next time.


A stand-alone side of Fries is so much more when they’re seasoned. The Japanese BBQ is like a sweet seasoned salt with an Asian flare and a mild fish finish in ample katsuo-togarashi.


Soy Garlic Butter is an equivalent choice, sweet and delightfully sticky.


Eat all the sandwiches. The Nom Bomb is a must, with a tender and savory naban style fried chicken, sweetened by teriyaki, cooled by cabbage, with peppers the add the heat. All sandwiches are served on a buttery brioche, a noteworthy addition in and of itself.


A crispier fried chicken oozes with a rich curry, with melty cheese to add to the goo. The Nom Bomb is my favorite, but the Katsu Curry deserves a try.


The Yanki Burger awaits those who don’t want chicken. A fried egg adds weight to a juicy patty drizzled with garlic teriyaki, a combination to combat the heaviest of hangovers.

This stuff doesn’t travel well. It’s meant to be eaten hot and steamy by the lights of a bustling food truck on a busy sidewalk on Saturday night. But as much as the fried bits may lose their crisp in transit, the flavors never fade, and the freshness barely falters. I know it could be better but it’s already so good I’ll just keep getting it delivered. 

Monday, May 25, 2020

Otafuku Noodle House - Gardena


I used to love my mornings in Gardena. Whenever I had a random weekday free, I would start at Meiji Tofu right before everything sold out and follow at almost-adjacent Chikara Mochi during the rare times they were open. I would use all my discipline not to eat anything I bought right away and find a little local something to slurp down a set lunch or noodle soup.

At Otafuku, I get one of the best noodle set lunches LA has to offer. Even Little Tokyo can only compete with Otafuku. 


A bustling background of the lunchtime rush creates a quiet repose at the small and crowded counter as I ponder their extensive menu. I can only get one thing when I’m dining alone, and the choice of the new-to-me seiro or kakoichi vs a tried-and-true udon or soba is agony. I start with Zaru Udon, as house-made udon is a LA unicorn. I’ll try the seiro or the soba next time and I’ll kee coming back until I’ve tried every noodle they make. No regrets. Their udon is ropy rolls with a perfect spring to the texture. The noodles are medium-thick in diameter and they carry the al dente all the way through. I dare say their udon is even better than South Bay legend Ichimi An.  


I select a basket of tempura to complete the set. They give you one of every good thing, a light shiso leaf for maximum fragrance and crunch, eggplant that chooses softness without the goop or slime. The shrimp is fresh, the onion sweet, the shiitake full of juice. I love the sweet potato and gooey kabocha squash the most.

It’s a filling lunch but the cold noodles keep it light. I leave refreshed instead of comatose and move onto the last part of my day: the narrow wooden bench outside Kansha Creamery.

I miss those Gardena days, and if I had known it would be months, if ever, before I could return to Otafuku, I would have tried all the noodles at once. Now I wait and cling to the hope that they stay strong in this lockdown and survive to later thrive.  Their noodles are just too precious to lose, and when they dining room opens again, you can bet I’ll be first in line.
Otafuku Noodle House Menu, Reviews, Photos, Location and Info - Zomato

Y’Not Burgers - Torrance


A fast-food-diner mash-up with a drive-thru is high on convenience, impressive in speed. Food gets onto your table in a flash and into your car almost instantly. 


They have a wide range of offerings, and you can get almost anything between two slices of bread. The Double Cheeseburger is a classic with thick patties and toppings in so many iterations. 


They also have lighter offerings, like a deli-style Turkey Sandwich


And a pretty juicy Grilled Chicken. 


The Gyro is my personal favorite, a flashback from the carts that line the NYC streets. The meat isn’t roasted on a spit, but I do like how they heat the pita and slice the onions paper thin. 

Every item works with a side of fries, though I feel I need to try some others. Given the half-mile convenience of a drive-by, Y’Not has consistently outranked fast food chains in my need-something-to-eat-now repertoire. Why Y’Not? Why not Y’Not?
Y-Not Burgers Menu, Reviews, Photos, Location and Info - Zomato

Monday, May 18, 2020

El Barrio Neighborhood Tacos - Redondo Beach


Five dollars for a “street taco”.

But don’t let the price deter you. These street tacos and their prices are a reasonable reflection of the street they come from, the streets of Redondo Beach. Redondo is hardly a budget barrio, and neither are the ingredients at El Barrio’s.


The tacos are the major draw, and if you try the Birria, you’ll never eat birria anywhere else. There’s no coming back from this spectacularly seasoned wagyu brisket. Each strand of melty meat is encased in a fat suspension so rich it’s like a liquid jello. The beefy savor will linger, drizzled with a salsa “emulsion”, a gentle, acidic reminder between the globules of unforgettable fat.


The Mulito is a new one for me, a sandwich-quesadilla full of juicy wagyu steak. Blue corn tortillas are fluffy and perfect, and layers of chewy cotija ooze between the sheets. Add a touch of avocado cream and sharp green salsa and you have the best Mexican grilled cheese north of the border. 

They’re not cheap but they’re worth every penny. You taste what you pay for at El Barrio, and believe me, you won’t mind paying for it. 

Sushi Sumo - Gardena


Sushi Sumo. *shrug* 

Sushi Sumo? Sure, why not. 


Try some standard-mid-range-sushi-place rolls like the Pearl Roll, a generous stuffing of scallops under salmon stripes. If you’re looking for either the tuna or the tuna, the Red Dragon has it both fiery and fresh.


The Chirashi bowl is okay, fresh enough fish, not-bad cuts on sushi rice. It comes with from-a-mix miso soup and salad so you get a whole meal though it’s a bit pricey for the quality. 

Mid-range casual, conveyer-belt cuisine, fun for a eat-in, good enough for takeout on a whatever kind of night. You won’t remember what you ate and it won’t linger on your palate, but it’ll hit the spot when you want it, and as a moderate meal, you probably won’t regret it much.
Sushi Sumo Menu, Reviews, Photos, Location and Info - Zomato