Archive for the ‘Pico’ Category

Rate-A-Restaurant, #154 in a series

December 12, 2007

Restaurant: Bloom Cafe

Location: 5544 W. Pico Blvd. (Mid-City)

Type of restaurant: Cafe

We stipulated: Tired of the same old choices near Variety, I suggested to my colleague Joe that we check out the Bloom Cafe — which I hadn’t been to, but was intrigued after walking past it on the Great LA Walk.

They stipulated: Breakfast entrees, such as organic eggs and pancakes, are available until 4 p.m.

What I ordered: Spicy Chicken Salad (organic baby greens, avocado, fresh corn, sun-dried tomato and chipotle vinaigrette; $11.50)

High point: The entree itself was decent, when it finally came.

Low point: Unfortunately, the service was extremely slow… and when the food finally came out, they got Joe’s order wrong.

Overall impression: Nice environs, good menu… just some service issues. Prices are decent.

Chance we will go back: There are a few more entrees I wouldn’t mind trying, including the red curry chicken sandwich and the fish tacos. I’m also intrigued by the lemon ricotta pancakes.

(For more than 150 restaurant reviews, visit Franklin Avenue’s companion Rate-A-Restaurant site.)

Scenes from the Strike: Assistants’ Day

November 20, 2007

It was the assistants’ turn Monday — many writers’ assistants have now been laid off as a result of the strike; they joined the picket line in front of Fox as a show of solidarity. Some pics:


The marching picketers


Using “Fox” as a verb


Joss Whedon, still getting over a virus


I forgot to ask what was in the “adult version.”

Scenes from the Strike: Assistants’ Day

November 20, 2007

It was the assistants’ turn Monday — many writers’ assistants have now been laid off as a result of the strike; they joined the picket line in front of Fox as a show of solidarity. Some pics:


The marching picketers


Using “Fox” as a verb


Joss Whedon, still getting over a virus


I forgot to ask what was in the “adult version.”

GREAT LOS ANGELES WALK: Pico Boulevard, Conquered!

November 18, 2007

(UPDATED Monday morning with new links to more recaps and pics! If you’ve written something up or posted pics, let me know, and I’ll add you to the roster!)

My legs are sore. Blisters are forming on a few toes. I could use more sleep.

Yet I can’t wait for next year.

The Second Annual Great Los Angeles Walk took on Pico Boulevard on Saturday. More than 70 people joined me as we hiked nearly 16 miles, from the historic Coca Cola Bottling Plant (at the corner of Pico and Central) straight to the ocean in Santa Monica.

Not all 70 walked the entire way… but at least 40 did. (Others joined late, left early, or had some help along the way.) Great Los Angeles Walkers who made it from end-to-end got to experience, along the way, the bustling (even at 9 in the morning) fashion district; the Convention Center (currently home to the Auto Show); the Central American-dominated Byzantine-Latino Quarter; the city’s shortest street (Powers Place); the beautiful old homes of Alvarado Terrace; a slice of Koreatown; the gut-busting food of spots like Oki-Dog and Roscoe’s Chicken and Waffles; the sight of a massive crane that tipped over (smashing the roof of a yoga studio) in Mid-City; the closed (for the Sabbath) Jewish shops and restaurants west of Fairfax; the Fox lot; dodging golf balls next to the Rancho Park golf course; the cool ocean breeze once we hit Santa Monica; and much more. One group even stood by to help as a homeless man fell and required an ambulance.

Some pics of sights on Pico:


And they’re off!


The shortest street in Los Angeles: Powers Place. Yes, that cobblestone stretch is the entire street. And yes, that’s next year’s Great Los Angeles Walk, which will take place from 9 a.m. to 9 a.m.


Beautiful homes on Alvarado Terrace — at least the ones, like this, that weren’t stuccoed at some point.


Scarface watches over Pico


Arnold Schwarzenegger: Exist. Poofy.


“Sorry, no physicians are currently on duty. Consume this pastrami burrito at your own risk.”


There it is — the grease bomb known as Oki-Dog’s pastrami burrito.


Oops. Pico was shut down between La Brea and Fairfax because of this mishap, but the cops still let us hike on the sidewalk.


“City of Los Angeles — Made in Mexico”


Winner, worst pun on Pico


One group of walkers, hitting the ocean around 5:10. (Another group made it earlier, while a third group made it there around 5:30.)

The walk began around 9:15 a.m.; we broke for lunch around noon and hit back up at 1:30 (although some had resumed by 1); and the first crowd made it to the end by 4:45, which the majority arriving by 5:10. Victory jerk chicken enchiladas (not to mention booze purchased on the way at the Santa Monica Trader Joe’s) was consumed at Cha Cha Chicken, near the finish line.

I’ll be posting walker accounts (and their photos) as they hit online. An early list of recaps:

  • Will Campbell’s recap and his 165 pics (including the one above, of the crowd taking off at the Coca-Cola Bottling Plant).
  • Scott Trimble’s recap and his photo gallery (including the one above, of the Byzantine-Latino Quarter).
  • Atwater Village Newbie’s take on Favorite Pico guy here and his large collection of photos (including the one above, of a crazy row of mannequins in the garment district) here.
  • Check out Don Hosek’s amazingly detailed post about the walk; Don has a lot of info especially about Pico on the west side. And check out some of his pics (including that shot of the ocean at 5:30) here.
  • N at Pico and the Man has a nice wrap up here (including the pic above).
  • Raul says the walk reminded him “that there are innumerable wonderful people who make up this city who truly and proudly call themselves Angelenos.” Check out his recap here and his pics (including the one above) here.
  • Great recap here by Davey G., who, I’m jealous to say, stopped at El Parian to try one of the birria tacos (something I’ll have to do on another trek to Pico!). Check out his full photo set (including the shot of a tortilla worker at El Parian, above) here.
  • Meeko and SeanYoda have some great pics here, and have also started a Great Los Angeles Flickr pool for everyone to deposit their pics here.

  • Check out Graham — G12 The Outsider — and his writeup here and some pics (including the cool B&W shot above, of someone filling up their stationwagon with junk from a recycling bin) here.
  • Joni had a lot to do on Saturday… but decided to chuck it all and join us instead! Glad she did; here’s her post from the day.
  • And finally, another round-up, by walker Margaret Cherry:

    Just to let you know that I am still in the land of the living after walking 15.6 miles yesterday along Pico.

    It was a great experience. So many things happened to us Urban Explorers, aka the PPC (Pico Pedestrian Corps). Just made that up. That was our number one question–Who are you walking for? Our answer was because it’s there!

    My day started early in Long Beach as I drove to the Wardlow Blue Line Station. As maintenance was scheduled all weekend we were efficiently bussed from Compton to Imperial. I got off at San Pedro Station and walked .7 miles to the start, to meet up with Mike and the walking group.

    After we left the landmark Coca-Cola plant at Pico/Central, past the People’s Sausage Company, we breezed thru the Fashion District/Convention Center area into Latin America. Great place to buy a cheap air ticket to Guatemala or a two fresh Mexican buns for 85 cents.

    Took a short detour to Alvarado Terrace with the shortest street in LA and the magnificent houses –a setting in the book Paint it Black by Janet Finch.

    Onto the Byzantine-Latino Quarter that houses the Greek Orthodox church, an outstanding Christmas Eve experience. My only regret—we were too early for lunch at Papa Christos, Greek restaurant a favorite of Huell Howser.

    Most of the walkers ate at Roscoe’s but our group took over the petite Skye’s Gourmet Tacos, 5408 Pico, where for less than five dollars you can get great grub, sit outside and interface with other foodies.

    Onto the midcity, roped off as a crane had overturned on Cool Baby. Heard on the evening news that the crane was hauled in to put up the LED sign that would have stared at the Oprah billboard. Doesn’t anyone use ladders these days?

    Some young kid from his second story window threw a raw egg at us. Thank goodness he was a bad shot! We helped an old man with his walker (the stationery kind) and strolled through the area in the vicinity of the Museum of Tolerance. Nothing open, of course, it was the Sabbath. So much for Beverly Wood. Just another Day in the Life on Pico.

    A pottie stop for my companion, David, at the Westside Pavilion gave me my second wind. A beautiful young woman with the face of an angel operating the Green Tea Co. kiosk/cart gave me a free liter of ice cold green tea for energy. It worked.

    Had no problem at all with the hills as we sped along past Century City reaching Centinela, which is the border of the People’s Republic of Santa Monica. The streets seemed to start at 32 then it was 23 and next 6, we breezed past Santa Monica college expressing our affection for KCRW. The queue at Trader Joe’s took more time!

    But there I was at the corner of Lincoln and Pico where my daughter works at Chrysalis. A photo op for sure as it takes her sometimes 90 minutes on the freeway. My carbon footprint was zilch!

    Arrived at ChaCha Chicken just as the sun was setting, with no appetite at all. (Hey, maybe I have discovered something.) My thighs hurt as did everyone else’s. I won’t even detail my foot aliments. Next time I am going for the wider walking shoes and the extra pair of sox as well as an emergency stash of band aids. George and Connie poured me a glass of wine which perked up my appetite and I dived into the spinach quesadilla, jerk style.

    We boarded the 720 Rapid on Ocean and I was home in Long Beach by 8:30, and into the bathtub by 8:45. Adding it all up I had walked 17 miles!

    It was a great day. I loved all my fellow walkers. The IPOD walking playlist hooked up to the speakers in the backpack was a great motivator, even earlier in the day in the fortified McDonald’s rest room! (Some things you just have to see… You know the address! Somewhere on Pico.)

    In the future, plans are being made for possibly a walk along Western to San Pedro and possibly a walk from somewhere to Palos Verdes.

    Of course, we really should be walking again next week, now that we are in condition for it.

    Yeah, not so sure I’m ready to do it next week, but I may just join other walks being planned for the future. And don’t forget to clear the Saturday before Thanksgiving next year, for the third Great Los Angeles Walk!

    One more note: I’m still figuring out why the Great LA Walk T-shirts aren’t appearing on Cafe Press. I’ll let you know when that issue is resolved.

    GREAT LOS ANGELES WALK: Pico Boulevard, Conquered!

    November 18, 2007

    (UPDATED Monday morning with new links to more recaps and pics! If you’ve written something up or posted pics, let me know, and I’ll add you to the roster!)

    My legs are sore. Blisters are forming on a few toes. I could use more sleep.

    Yet I can’t wait for next year.

    The Second Annual Great Los Angeles Walk took on Pico Boulevard on Saturday. More than 70 people joined me as we hiked nearly 16 miles, from the historic Coca Cola Bottling Plant (at the corner of Pico and Central) straight to the ocean in Santa Monica.

    Not all 70 walked the entire way… but at least 40 did. (Others joined late, left early, or had some help along the way.) Great Los Angeles Walkers who made it from end-to-end got to experience, along the way, the bustling (even at 9 in the morning) fashion district; the Convention Center (currently home to the Auto Show); the Central American-dominated Byzantine-Latino Quarter; the city’s shortest street (Powers Place); the beautiful old homes of Alvarado Terrace; a slice of Koreatown; the gut-busting food of spots like Oki-Dog and Roscoe’s Chicken and Waffles; the sight of a massive crane that tipped over (smashing the roof of a yoga studio) in Mid-City; the closed (for the Sabbath) Jewish shops and restaurants west of Fairfax; the Fox lot; dodging golf balls next to the Rancho Park golf course; the cool ocean breeze once we hit Santa Monica; and much more. One group even stood by to help as a homeless man fell and required an ambulance.

    Some pics of sights on Pico:


    And they’re off!


    The shortest street in Los Angeles: Powers Place. Yes, that cobblestone stretch is the entire street. And yes, that’s next year’s Great Los Angeles Walk, which will take place from 9 a.m. to 9 a.m.


    Beautiful homes on Alvarado Terrace — at least the ones, like this, that weren’t stuccoed at some point.


    Scarface watches over Pico


    Arnold Schwarzenegger: Exist. Poofy.


    “Sorry, no physicians are currently on duty. Consume this pastrami burrito at your own risk.”


    There it is — the grease bomb known as Oki-Dog’s pastrami burrito.


    Oops. Pico was shut down between La Brea and Fairfax because of this mishap, but the cops still let us hike on the sidewalk.


    “City of Los Angeles — Made in Mexico”


    Winner, worst pun on Pico


    One group of walkers, hitting the ocean around 5:10. (Another group made it earlier, while a third group made it there around 5:30.)

    The walk began around 9:15 a.m.; we broke for lunch around noon and hit back up at 1:30 (although some had resumed by 1); and the first crowd made it to the end by 4:45, which the majority arriving by 5:10. Victory jerk chicken enchiladas (not to mention booze purchased on the way at the Santa Monica Trader Joe’s) was consumed at Cha Cha Chicken, near the finish line.

    I’ll be posting walker accounts (and their photos) as they hit online. An early list of recaps:

  • Will Campbell’s recap and his 165 pics (including the one above, of the crowd taking off at the Coca-Cola Bottling Plant).
  • Scott Trimble’s recap and his photo gallery (including the one above, of the Byzantine-Latino Quarter).
  • Atwater Village Newbie’s take on Favorite Pico guy here and his large collection of photos (including the one above, of a crazy row of mannequins in the garment district) here.
  • Check out Don Hosek’s amazingly detailed post about the walk; Don has a lot of info especially about Pico on the west side. And check out some of his pics (including that shot of the ocean at 5:30) here.
  • N at Pico and the Man has a nice wrap up here (including the pic above).
  • Raul says the walk reminded him “that there are innumerable wonderful people who make up this city who truly and proudly call themselves Angelenos.” Check out his recap here and his pics (including the one above) here.
  • Great recap here by Davey G., who, I’m jealous to say, stopped at El Parian to try one of the birria tacos (something I’ll have to do on another trek to Pico!). Check out his full photo set (including the shot of a tortilla worker at El Parian, above) here.
  • Meeko and SeanYoda have some great pics here, and have also started a Great Los Angeles Flickr pool for everyone to deposit their pics here.

  • Check out Graham — G12 The Outsider — and his writeup here and some pics (including the cool B&W shot above, of someone filling up their stationwagon with junk from a recycling bin) here.
  • Joni had a lot to do on Saturday… but decided to chuck it all and join us instead! Glad she did; here’s her post from the day.
  • And finally, another round-up, by walker Margaret Cherry:

    Just to let you know that I am still in the land of the living after walking 15.6 miles yesterday along Pico.

    It was a great experience. So many things happened to us Urban Explorers, aka the PPC (Pico Pedestrian Corps). Just made that up. That was our number one question–Who are you walking for? Our answer was because it’s there!

    My day started early in Long Beach as I drove to the Wardlow Blue Line Station. As maintenance was scheduled all weekend we were efficiently bussed from Compton to Imperial. I got off at San Pedro Station and walked .7 miles to the start, to meet up with Mike and the walking group.

    After we left the landmark Coca-Cola plant at Pico/Central, past the People’s Sausage Company, we breezed thru the Fashion District/Convention Center area into Latin America. Great place to buy a cheap air ticket to Guatemala or a two fresh Mexican buns for 85 cents.

    Took a short detour to Alvarado Terrace with the shortest street in LA and the magnificent houses –a setting in the book Paint it Black by Janet Finch.

    Onto the Byzantine-Latino Quarter that houses the Greek Orthodox church, an outstanding Christmas Eve experience. My only regret—we were too early for lunch at Papa Christos, Greek restaurant a favorite of Huell Howser.

    Most of the walkers ate at Roscoe’s but our group took over the petite Skye’s Gourmet Tacos, 5408 Pico, where for less than five dollars you can get great grub, sit outside and interface with other foodies.

    Onto the midcity, roped off as a crane had overturned on Cool Baby. Heard on the evening news that the crane was hauled in to put up the LED sign that would have stared at the Oprah billboard. Doesn’t anyone use ladders these days?

    Some young kid from his second story window threw a raw egg at us. Thank goodness he was a bad shot! We helped an old man with his walker (the stationery kind) and strolled through the area in the vicinity of the Museum of Tolerance. Nothing open, of course, it was the Sabbath. So much for Beverly Wood. Just another Day in the Life on Pico.

    A pottie stop for my companion, David, at the Westside Pavilion gave me my second wind. A beautiful young woman with the face of an angel operating the Green Tea Co. kiosk/cart gave me a free liter of ice cold green tea for energy. It worked.

    Had no problem at all with the hills as we sped along past Century City reaching Centinela, which is the border of the People’s Republic of Santa Monica. The streets seemed to start at 32 then it was 23 and next 6, we breezed past Santa Monica college expressing our affection for KCRW. The queue at Trader Joe’s took more time!

    But there I was at the corner of Lincoln and Pico where my daughter works at Chrysalis. A photo op for sure as it takes her sometimes 90 minutes on the freeway. My carbon footprint was zilch!

    Arrived at ChaCha Chicken just as the sun was setting, with no appetite at all. (Hey, maybe I have discovered something.) My thighs hurt as did everyone else’s. I won’t even detail my foot aliments. Next time I am going for the wider walking shoes and the extra pair of sox as well as an emergency stash of band aids. George and Connie poured me a glass of wine which perked up my appetite and I dived into the spinach quesadilla, jerk style.

    We boarded the 720 Rapid on Ocean and I was home in Long Beach by 8:30, and into the bathtub by 8:45. Adding it all up I had walked 17 miles!

    It was a great day. I loved all my fellow walkers. The IPOD walking playlist hooked up to the speakers in the backpack was a great motivator, even earlier in the day in the fortified McDonald’s rest room! (Some things you just have to see… You know the address! Somewhere on Pico.)

    In the future, plans are being made for possibly a walk along Western to San Pedro and possibly a walk from somewhere to Palos Verdes.

    Of course, we really should be walking again next week, now that we are in condition for it.

    Yeah, not so sure I’m ready to do it next week, but I may just join other walks being planned for the future. And don’t forget to clear the Saturday before Thanksgiving next year, for the third Great Los Angeles Walk!

    One more note: I’m still figuring out why the Great LA Walk T-shirts aren’t appearing on Cafe Press. I’ll let you know when that issue is resolved.

    One Day Until the Great Los Angeles Walk!

    November 16, 2007

    And we’re getting some cool mentions in several publications — including the Los Angeles Times, L.A. Weekly and the online Thrillist L.A. newsletter! Thanks as well to everyone who has mentioned the walk on their blog.

    Here’s the Los Angeles Times mention, which was listed in the new “The Guide” section’s “Underrated” column:


    WALKING IN L.A.

    The sight of people pounding the pavement of L.A. can be alarming, but walking this city happens to be the best way to see it. For those who would prefer to do it with a small army, you're in luck: This Saturday you can hike the 15-mile length of Pico Boulevard -- from downtown to the ocean, with some history lessons along the way. For more details on this free event, go to www.greatlawalk.com. Or simply show up at 9 a.m. on Saturday at the historic Coca-Cola bottling plant (where Pico begins at Central).


    The L.A. Weekly mentioned the Walk in its “La Vida” column, penned by Libby Molyneaux:


    Pico — rhymes with Neko — Boulevard may not be a street they’ll ever write a song about (though Michele Shocked did, so never mind), but it’s the stretch of pavement designated for the next Great Los Angeles Walk, sponsored by Franklin Avenue. (That’s a local blog, kids.) When/if you get to Sepulveda, you’ve earned the right to sing “Pico and Sepulveda.” Meet at the corner of E. Pico Blvd. and S. Central Ave.; Sat., Nov. 17, 9 a.m.; free (it bloody well better be!)

    And here’s Thrillist L.A.’s take:


    The unfortunate reality of our live-by-car, die-by-car lifestyle means the only thing you know about the streets you drive is that six presidential administrations'll come and go before you can make a U-turn. Shed your metal exoskeleton for Great LA Walk.

    Now in its second year, Great LA Walk is the brainchild of a Variety scribe determined to get Angelenos to interact with their city by way of casually deathmarching an entire East-West street. This year covers all 16 miles of Pico, starting at Downtown's retro-cool Coca-Cola Factory and ending with a BYOB party at Santa Monica's tiki-cheesy Cha-Cha Chicken -- a trek that bears witness to both the richness around Hillcrest Country Club and the gettin' richness around MacArthur Park. Thanks to recs by Pulitzer-winning food writer Jonathan Gold, you'll have the option of chowing at El Birrion (Carne Asada Tacos), El Colmao (Fried Pork Leg w/ Onions), or Roscoe's (ill shiz).

    Walking the length isn't mandatory; the lazy can join up along the route, while the extremely lazy can just enjoy the bus ride back east -- to the Walk's starting point, or wherever they abandoned their car in frustration waiting to make that U.


    Looking forward to seeing all of you tomorrow. For last minute info, go check out the Great LA Walk website.

    Two Days Until the Great Los Angeles Walk: Eating Our Way Down Pico

    November 15, 2007


    (Flickr pic of birria taco at El Parian by larryleenyc.)

    Before we all embark on the Great Los Angeles Walk this Saturday, here’s some required reading: Jonathan Gold’s recap of he year he ate down Pico Boulevard.

    He writes:

    Sunset may have more famous restaurants, La Brea better restaurants and Melrose more restaurants whose chairs have nestled Mira Sorvino’s gently rounded flanks. No glossy magazine has ever suggested Pico as an emerging hot street; no real estate ad has ever described a house as Pico-adjacent. The street plays host to the unglamorous bits of Los Angeles, the row of one-stops that supply records to local jukeboxes, the kosher-pizza district, the auto-body shops that speckle its length the way giant churches speckle Wilshire. And while Pico may divide neighborhoods more than it creates them — Koreatown from Harvard Heights, Wilshire Center from Midtown, Beverly Hills–adjacent from not-all-that-Beverly-Hills-adjacent, neighborhoods your cousin Martha lives in from neighborhoods she wouldn’t step into after dark — there isn’t even a Pico-identified gang.

    But precisely because Pico is so unremarked, because it is left alone like old lawn furniture moldering away in the side yard of a suburban house, it is at the center of entry-level capitalism in central Los Angeles, and one of the most vital food streets in the world.

    Indeed. It was partly Gold’s gradual eating trek down Pico in his 20s that inspired me to pick Pico for this year’s walk.

    So, of course, I had to contact the Pulitzer Prize-winning scrbe. To my pleasant surprise, he emailed back quickly, and even said he read Franklin Avenue! I managed to pick his brain on a few spots we should all consider trying once everyone’s bellies start growling. A selection:

  • El Salvador Cafe. 575 E. Pico
  • El Parian. 1528 W. Pico (“I went on record in 1990 claiming that El Parian’s birria was the single best Mexican dish in Los Angeles, and nothing in the thousand L.A. Mexican meals I have eaten since then has done anything to sway me from that belief,” Gold wrote in 2006)
  • La 27th Restaurante Familar. 1830 W. Pico (Nicaraguan food — Gold suggests “nacatamals and fritanga”).
  • El Colmao. 2328 W. Pico (Cuban food — Gold suggests “fried pork leg with onions).
  • Las 7 Regiones de Oaxaca. 2648 W. Pico. (“It is Las 7 Regiones’ coloradito, its version of one of the famous seven moles of Oaxaca, that is a really remarkable concoction — thick and dense and sweet-hot and unctuous, the product of hours of labor and probably 20-odd toasted seeds and chiles and spices,” Gold writes.)
  • Roscoe’s Chicken and Waffles. 5006 W. Pico. (“Roscoe’s is the Carnegie Deli of L.A.’s R&B scene,” Gold wrote in an old review.)
  • Oki-Dog. 5056 W. Pico. (Go for the pastrami burritos, Gold says.)
  • Magic Carpet. 8566 W. Pico. (Gold once wrote that he used to live close by: ” if I had tasted Magic Carpet’s melawach back then, I might never have moved – a bronzed, pizza-size fried Yemenite pancake that seems to have a hundred levels of wheatiness, a thousand layers of crunch and the taste of clean oil, melawach is one of the greatest dishes in Los Angeles.”)
  • Twin Dragon. 8597 W. Pico. (Gold admits that he likes some of the Shanghaiese dishes here, writing a few years back: “Although the kitchen is perfectly capable of turning out dishes stunning only in their mediocrity, some of the truly Shanghainese dishes — smoked fish, round steamed dumplings, shredded pork sautéed with salted vegetables — are fine.”)
  • Pico Kosher Deli. 8826 W. Pico. (Gold recommends the pastrami sandwiches, and wrote in 2004 about its “PLT” — like a BLT, but with pastrami.)
  • John O’Groats. 10516 W. Pico. (“Smoked pork chops,” Gold recommends.)
  • Pico Teriyaki House. 10610 W. Pico. (Gold notes it’s nearly impossible to get in, so it’s not a spot to visit during our hike. But for future reference, he says try the robatayaki.)
  • Torafuku. 10914 W. Pico. (Their izakaya dishes are a little too pricy for he hike, but Gold named it one of L.A.’s 99 essential restaurants in 2005.)
  • That’s it for now– “Man, it’s a long street. I’ll try and think of some others,” he writes. Thanks to Jonathan Gold for sharing his insight on eating down Pico!

    Two Days Until the Great Los Angeles Walk: Eating Our Way Down Pico

    November 15, 2007


    (Flickr pic of birria taco at El Parian by larryleenyc.)

    Before we all embark on the Great Los Angeles Walk this Saturday, here’s some required reading: Jonathan Gold’s recap of he year he ate down Pico Boulevard.

    He writes:

    Sunset may have more famous restaurants, La Brea better restaurants and Melrose more restaurants whose chairs have nestled Mira Sorvino’s gently rounded flanks. No glossy magazine has ever suggested Pico as an emerging hot street; no real estate ad has ever described a house as Pico-adjacent. The street plays host to the unglamorous bits of Los Angeles, the row of one-stops that supply records to local jukeboxes, the kosher-pizza district, the auto-body shops that speckle its length the way giant churches speckle Wilshire. And while Pico may divide neighborhoods more than it creates them — Koreatown from Harvard Heights, Wilshire Center from Midtown, Beverly Hills–adjacent from not-all-that-Beverly-Hills-adjacent, neighborhoods your cousin Martha lives in from neighborhoods she wouldn’t step into after dark — there isn’t even a Pico-identified gang.

    But precisely because Pico is so unremarked, because it is left alone like old lawn furniture moldering away in the side yard of a suburban house, it is at the center of entry-level capitalism in central Los Angeles, and one of the most vital food streets in the world.

    Indeed. It was partly Gold’s gradual eating trek down Pico in his 20s that inspired me to pick Pico for this year’s walk.

    So, of course, I had to contact the Pulitzer Prize-winning scrbe. To my pleasant surprise, he emailed back quickly, and even said he read Franklin Avenue! I managed to pick his brain on a few spots we should all consider trying once everyone’s bellies start growling. A selection:

  • El Salvador Cafe. 575 E. Pico
  • El Parian. 1528 W. Pico (“I went on record in 1990 claiming that El Parian’s birria was the single best Mexican dish in Los Angeles, and nothing in the thousand L.A. Mexican meals I have eaten since then has done anything to sway me from that belief,” Gold wrote in 2006)
  • La 27th Restaurante Familar. 1830 W. Pico (Nicaraguan food — Gold suggests “nacatamals and fritanga”).
  • El Colmao. 2328 W. Pico (Cuban food — Gold suggests “fried pork leg with onions).
  • Las 7 Regiones de Oaxaca. 2648 W. Pico. (“It is Las 7 Regiones’ coloradito, its version of one of the famous seven moles of Oaxaca, that is a really remarkable concoction — thick and dense and sweet-hot and unctuous, the product of hours of labor and probably 20-odd toasted seeds and chiles and spices,” Gold writes.)
  • Roscoe’s Chicken and Waffles. 5006 W. Pico. (“Roscoe’s is the Carnegie Deli of L.A.’s R&B scene,” Gold wrote in an old review.)
  • Oki-Dog. 5056 W. Pico. (Go for the pastrami burritos, Gold says.)
  • Magic Carpet. 8566 W. Pico. (Gold once wrote that he used to live close by: ” if I had tasted Magic Carpet’s melawach back then, I might never have moved – a bronzed, pizza-size fried Yemenite pancake that seems to have a hundred levels of wheatiness, a thousand layers of crunch and the taste of clean oil, melawach is one of the greatest dishes in Los Angeles.”)
  • Twin Dragon. 8597 W. Pico. (Gold admits that he likes some of the Shanghaiese dishes here, writing a few years back: “Although the kitchen is perfectly capable of turning out dishes stunning only in their mediocrity, some of the truly Shanghainese dishes — smoked fish, round steamed dumplings, shredded pork sautéed with salted vegetables — are fine.”)
  • Pico Kosher Deli. 8826 W. Pico. (Gold recommends the pastrami sandwiches, and wrote in 2004 about its “PLT” — like a BLT, but with pastrami.)
  • John O’Groats. 10516 W. Pico. (“Smoked pork chops,” Gold recommends.)
  • Pico Teriyaki House. 10610 W. Pico. (Gold notes it’s nearly impossible to get in, so it’s not a spot to visit during our hike. But for future reference, he says try the robatayaki.)
  • Torafuku. 10914 W. Pico. (Their izakaya dishes are a little too pricy for he hike, but Gold named it one of L.A.’s 99 essential restaurants in 2005.)
  • That’s it for now– “Man, it’s a long street. I’ll try and think of some others,” he writes. Thanks to Jonathan Gold for sharing his insight on eating down Pico!

    One Week Until the Great Los Angeles Walk!

    November 11, 2007

    Great Los Angeles Walk T-shirts are for sale! Several different T-shirt styles available, all with the cool logo designed by Maria. We’re not making a dime off these things; the prices you see are exactly what Cafe Press charges. Check out our new Cafe Press store to order. Unfortunately, we won’t get the shirts until after the walk… but you want some sort of conversation starter to brag how you hiked Pico, yes?

    Now, the Walk FAQ:

    1. WHEN/WHERE? Saturday, Nov. 17, 2007. Get to the Streamline Moderne-style historic Coca Cola Bottling Plant at the corner of Pico and Central. We leave at 9 a.m. sharp.

    2. WHAT IF I CAN’T GET THAT FAR EAST? Just wait for us somewhere on Pico downtown. (Fashion district? Convention center) Still arrive there by 9, so you can join the crowd when we walk by.

    3. HOW LONG IS THE HIKE? 15 miles. That’s actually a mile shorter than last year’s Great Wilshire Walk.

    4. WHEN WILL WE GET TO THE END? If last year is any indication, around 5:30 p.m. or so. Depending on how often we break.

    5. WHAT WILL WE DO ALONG THE WAY? Pulitzer Prize-winning food scribe Jonathan Gold has given us a list of must-eat Pico joints for starters, so we may hit a few of those. The L.A. Conservancy is (hopefully, still waiting to hear back) also providing us a list of Pico architecture we should take a look at. And if you’re a writer, you can even picket as we walk past the Fox lot.

    6. WHAT HAPPENS WHEN THE WALK IS DONE? We’ll celebrate at Cha Cha Chicken, which is conveniently located at the very end of Pico in Santa Monica. It’s BYOB, so we can even celebrate with booze. Up to you.

    7. HOW DO I GET HOME? Ahh, the big question. We’ve arranged for a bus to take stranded walkers back downtown. But it’s $300 — and we need to hear from enough people to make it worthwhile (and make sense cost-wise). So far, we’ve only heard from around five people that they want to pitch in — unfortunately, that’s not enough. I figure we’d need at least 10 people (at $30 a pop) to make it reasonable. If you want to join in, email franklin_avenue@yahoo.com by Monday… the bus people have to know by Tuesday. If there’s not enough takers, then everyone may have to figure out the return trip (MTA, I guess) on their own.

    8. WHAT SHOULD I WEAR/BRING? Loose, comfy clothing. I’d wear shorts, a t-shirt and then bring a jacket — it gets chilly in Santa Monica. Also, tennis shoes… sunglasses… a hat… sunscreen… and most importantly, a camera! We’ll all be documenting it and posting pics later.

    9. WHY ARE YOU DOING THIS? Why not? Last year, it was to mark my 10th anniversary in Los Angeles. But it was so much fun, and it was a chance to meet so many new people, that I wanted to make it an annual event. It’s the Saturday before Thanksgiving as well, so somehow I don’t feel as bad gorging on sweet potatoes and pumpkin pie a few days later. And hey, it’ll be a cool conversation piece at your holiday party. “What the hell was I thinking, spending all day walking down Pico?!”

    10. WHERE CAN I GET MORE INFO? Go to www.greatlawalk.com or email franklin_avenue@yahoo.com

    GREAT LOS ANGELES WALK: Details, Details, Details!

    November 5, 2007

    Here it is… the info on where the walk will begin, and what time:

    The Great Los Angeles Walk takes place starting at 9 a.m. on Nov. 17 at the corner of E. Pico and S. Central Ave. Most importantly, that’s at the landmark Coca-Cola Bottling Plant — the Streamline Moderne building shaped like a cruise ship (above).

    Meet right in front of the Coca-Cola building, and allow yourself plenty of time — we’re leaving at 9 a.m. sharp!

    There isn’t much right there by way of pre-walk food, other than a McDonalds and Burger King close to Olympic. But we’ll be passing by plenty of great spots to grab food along the way.

    What’s more, Pulitzer Prize-winning food writer Jonathan Gold is passing along a list of Pico restaurants we can’t miss — all the more reason to come join us on Nov. 17!

    More details at GreatLAWalk.com!

    P.S. Don’t forget, if you’re already on the email list, to make sure we’re deemed OK and not seen as spam! And if you’re not on the email list, drop us a note right now at franklin_avenue@yahoo.com!


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