"Max Miller writes better than you."
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Review votes:
389 Useful, 242 Funny, and 312 Cool
Culver City, CA
Yelping SinceJune 2007
My Blog Or Website When I'm Not Yelping...I'm keeping my best work on my own damn site, thank you.
The Last Great Book I ReadGod is not Great
My Favorite MovieBrazil
My Last Meal On EarthA gallon of ipecac.
Redondo Beach, CA 90277
(310) 374-9100
Triathlon Lab
Category: Bikes
Neighborhood: Redondo Beach
Boise, ID 83702
(208) 345-4100
Goldy's Breakfast Bistro
Category: Breakfast & Brunch
Everything on the menu looked delicious! I had a very hard time making up my mind. (I should state that in my caloric-deprived and post-race endorphin high state it is possible that a Home Depot aluminum gauge chart would have seemed delicious.) Because of the day before I decided to take the brakes off the diet and go for broke. I ordered the day's special: two chicken breasts split over eggs, bacon, on English muffins topped with a spicy garlic Hollandaise sauce. And what the hell, I also ordered the French toast stuffed with bananas, brown sugar, walnuts, and butter! Bring on the carbs! Rest of party ordered pancakes for the kids, omelets, salmon cakes, and more. Everything is made to order and many of the items like the salmon cake and sausages are made on the premises so the meal took some time to get to our table. But the staff was extremely friendly and attentive and we certainly didn't feel ignored.
Because when the food arrived IT WAS DELIVERED FROM OLYMPUS. Zeus's beard never had such offerings as I tasted. Farm fresh ingredients made perfectly and served in generous, almost mid-west proportions. I have been punishing myself by calling the ingredients I get in my urban hellhole "food" because the bounty that was on my plate that morning was worthy of the Platonic ideal of breakfast. Stealing bites off other plates yielded more detonations of joy, leading me to proclaim I was not going back home to L.A. I was moving in to a permanent table at Goldy's. My friends were welcome to visit any time.
I'm sure Goldy's won't mind me moving in. Especially since I'll need to race a half ironman EVERY DAY to justify eating the menu EVERY DAY. It will be a life lived in sweet, terrible ecstasy.
Culver City, CA 90230
(310) 482-3490
Vinoteque - CLOSED
Category: Tapas Bars
Neighborhood: Culver City
So rather curious that a wine bar would choose the husk of a failed coffee shop to incubate (though it could have been the live music that killed Synergy. Live music can be the death dirge of many a fine location). Scuttlebutt has it that the owner was a former partner with the Bottle Rock chap, but split over some quarrel. Vinoteque is his idea of a wine bar.
With an outstanding selection of wines from all over the world, but favoring French and Spanish, you can find something for every palette and budget here. A flight of 3 wines is a very reasonable $15, and as mentioned in other reviews a television scrolls the wines opened for other tables that are available by the glass. Bring your speed reading skills because the TV changes too quickly - especially after a glass or six of wine.
The food was a wonderful surprise. An excellent variety of cheese served at perfect temperature, all of which didn't puss out on flavor, intensity, or deliciousness. The middle east burger was a scrumptious pair of kefta rolls, the gazpacho soup was a lovely surprise, but the knockout by far was a sandwich of fig compote and a cheese blend of Gorgonzola and Camembert. This was pure panini perfection.
Dinner and several drinks for four came to $130 before tip. Our server was lovely, our drink was wonderful, and the food surpassed all expectations.
IT'S JUST A FUCKING SHAME ABOUT THE MUSIC.
The entire time our ears were assaulted by what could only be called "cruel and unusual jazz". I hate jazz, and the only thing I hate more than jazz are people who subject others to the playing of jazz. Vinoteque has a severe infestation of both jazz, jazz enthusiasts, and jazz musicians. It's bad, people. I mean, health department F-rating bad. White dude with his eyes closed twinkling the upper 88 keys bad. Double bass playing, soul-patch sporting, tweed pork-pie hat bad. Constant threat of "jamming" bad. It makes conversation impossible, it drowns out reasonable thought, and drives you screaming into the street looking for the pleasant sounds of truck drivers hammering down Sepulveda.
As we were leaving I told the server how wonderful the food, service, and wine was but the music was an attack on all that was good in the world she said, "oh, well, some nights we have singer/songwriters, too".
So much for going back.
Culver City, CA 90232
(310) 845-1700
Akasha
Category: American (New)
Neighborhood: Culver City
The previous restaurant was an Italian piano bar that avoided closure by tinting its windows to avoid discovery. The renovations were mysterious, masked by large wooden panels. From a distance one could clearly see they were gutting and updating the location with high ceilings and serious interior design work. We knew nothing about Akasha herself, or that the restaurant's renovation was part of TLC's Flip this Restaurant. When you've lived in the same city in L.A. for eight years you become a dumb local yokels looking for a nice dinner.
Yokels who know what a dining experience ought to be and an axe to grind when it's sloppy.
We were greeted with an enthusiastic welcome and a congratulations on our anniversary. That was sweet. The waiter then added his kind congrats as well. We looked over the menu and gave our entire order at once - martini for the wife, glass of red for me, tumuric seared pear salad with goji berries and chevre, shiitake, roasted squash, and basil pizza as appetizers; Punjabi mung bean bowl and wild pepper scallops entrees. Nice waiter, lovely interior, great wine list and decent prices for all items. Well, mostly lovely interior. The chairs are the leather-strap variety your sleazy uncle had in his apartment in 1984.
The pear salad comes out - five minutes after we ordered. No wine. No cocktail. Then the pizza shortly after, simultaneous with the wine and cocktail. I'm annoyed. There's an order to a meal, and this isn't it. Fine. We roll with it. The pear salad is stunningly mediocre. Pears aren't in season and there was maybe three slices of it. I felt like Woody Allen, "the food here is terrible - and such small portions!" Four small bits of chevre and a truckload of arugala. Salad is the Styrofoam packing of the food world and there was enough of it here to ship the chandeliers back to whatever Chinese factory that knocks off Frank Gehry furniture made them. The pizza isn't really a pizza, it's a failed foccacia with stuff on it. My wife loved her cocktail, the Emerald City, and my 2005 "Prisoner" red was spectacular. But as we're enjoying our drinks out of sync with our meal, our waiter comes over and tells us he's handing us over to another. Not a trainee, just another waiter. OK. New guy is nice enough. But a handoff? "Happy anniversary." Thanks.
Entrees are served - there's still salad in the bowl and a slice of pizza on the plate. Expediter asks, "do you want me to hold the entree?" No, idiot, I want you to know better than to ask. What's the deal here, Akasha? You woo me in with your hubbub and then you hustle me through with organic grease? I understand if you've got tables to turn but this is ridiculous. We send back what's left of the styrofoam (having eaten the pear and chevre in the first two bites) and accept the entrees. I'll take them hot from the kitchen rather than warmed over and held, thank you. The scallops were outstanding and the mung bean bowl was delicious - there is no denying them that. We took our time with them, and had to ward off the busboys from taking them away. Dessert was nice, too, the salty chocolate tart was the right balance of sweet and salty. Coffee was the expected fair-trade hippie garbage.
We were given our bill with another sincere congratulations on our wedding anniversary. To be fair, I don't expect a complimentary dessert, but when the staff is falling over themselves to both acknowledge my special day and get me the hell out of their restaurant I was thinking maybe a mint and a kiss. Nope. The bill before tip was $104. Whatever.
It was the next day we found out that a friend had left his credit card to pay for our coffee and dessert. That never made its way to the bill.
I would have forgiven the weak appetizers if we didn't feel like we were being pushed out the door. But because of the shoddy service (even though our waiters were kind, they weren't expediting) I'm docking two stars. One for the appetizers and another for the mangling of the experience. And it wasn't like they didn't know it was a special occasion - they took every opportunity to remind us that they were screwing up our night.
Update: the hostess felt terrible and they made it up to me nicely with a gift certificate!
Pizzaria Mozza is undoubtedly some of the finest pizza to be had in Los Angeles, the Osteria next door does not deliver the same quality!
Poor, poor Osteria Mozza. So sad that they didn't open ten years ago when I would have been impressed with them. Before I had educated my cheese palette at the Cheese Store of Beverly Hills. Before I had the pillowy, perfect gnocchi of Angelini Osteria. Before I'd eaten a perfect steak, or superb short rib, or even before I had been to Pizzeria Mozza next door where even the desserts are much better.
Yes, the grilled octopus was sensational - thick, meaty tentacles of pure chewing satisfaction. But the Mozzarella bar was disappointing - for someone with a sophisticated love of cheese, I wanted more exotic flavor combinations and experiments with the Burrata or sheep's milk varieties. The wild boar gnocchi was the right serving style for the boar, small pieces that didn't overwhelm, but the gnocchi was gritty, too dense and lacking in flavor. Splitting the dish with my father made it easier to tackle, but this would be a belly bomb for any eater. The flank steak was very good, probably the second best dish behind the octopus, but the short rib over polenta was uninspiring and weak in taste. The mussels predictable, and the herb stuffed Oreta (fish) a lazy walk in the park. You might as well skip the desserts altogether. The chocolate tort with almond nougat and bourbon sauce isn't nearly as fun as it sounds, the fig cake with strawberry jam and Meyer lemon custard is awkward and strange, and the almond cake thing with blood orange and a vanilla yogurt gelato looks clumsily thrown together from good parts - like Tom Skerrit's face.
None of these dishes were bad - but the pizza next door is so stellar it makes the Osteria a promise unfulfilled. Nancy Silverton commands both establishments, and was even manning the counter the night we dined. But the meal made me yearn to return to the Pizzaria, the sister restaurant devoted to a singular act so good it transcends mere pleasure and soars to great heights. The Osteria lacks focus, refinement, and at worst, feels whorish.
Wilson's is good, believe it, but we paid $40 for lunch. I had the beef stuffed calamari for $13, my wife had the meatloaf for $15. I was delighted by the idea of stuffing a land mammal into a cephalopod, so I had to order it. It was tasty, to be sure, but surprisingly less complex in flavor than the meatloaf! The loaf was infused with an Indian curry that elevated it beyond just a slab of processed meat and into - no, I can't do it. It was fucking meatloaf. For $15!
Here's the thing - now that there's fine dining all over the place, shouldn't competition drive the price of this stuff down? Wilson's decor is dominated by a huge black and white photograph of a burly chef leading a squadron of chefs in morning calisthenics. Clearly Wilson is trying to portray themselves as leaner, meaner, tougher, and fitter than the rest. Shouldn't I get a death match for my quadruple duke? Maybe even a floor show? I used to live two blocks south of the place - there's a whore who lives above the hair salon, or used to anyway. The Chris Market is a bloody Mexican abattoir that hoses pig blood into the sewers nightly. Harper's, the store across the street, sells the clothes of dead street hustlers. And this is where Wilson has put a forty dollar lunch.
At this point, unless I'm eating an endangered species like the delicious gold-encrusted lobster or sweetbreads of Care Bear I'm done, done! with the forty dollar lunch for two.
Unless someone else is paying.
Berkeley, CA 94707
(510) 559-6860
A G Ferrari Foods
Categories: Specialty Food, Grocery, Caterers
Neighborhoods: East Solano Ave, North Berkeley
He was very nice. The honey was marvelous.
In my previous version of this review I had marked them down because they gave me a Piave that I thought wasn't true Piave even though it had the right label. As it turns out, the cheese has changed. I had been buying the six month aged Piave for years and it appears that the culture has changed and the flavor has degraded! I confirmed this with a recent visit to the Cheese Store of Beverly Hills.
So I officially retract any negative criticism of A.G. Ferrari Catering. Their clerk was wonderful to a stranger who came in with arms full asking for two specific items in a rush as they were closing.
And don't bother with the six month Piave. Go for the red label!
If only his crepes were mind-bendingly good as to be worth the schtick. But sadly, the crepes are serviceable, tasting like they came from a bag mix. His chicken breast is seasoned with soy sauce, and his spinach seems fresh enough. The majority of his menu is fruit, syrup, jams, and other pre-packaged goods dumped onto the same crepe batter and served from behind his anonymizing wall of plastic signage.
It's a dude serving street food out of a tiny kiosk in Nanotokyo. He's got to work some angle to bring in the customers, it's just a shame he spent so much time on those cheap plastic signs instead of making dynamite crepes.
Oakland, CA 94618
(510) 655-6385
Zachary's Chicago Pizza
Category: Pizza
Neighborhoods: Rockridge, North Oakland
But now I find Zachary's and I'm in love. Worth the 6 hour drive from Los Angeles to SF, Zachary's completely fulfills my need for a stuffed crust pizza. Weighty, thick, dense with toppings, the sauce is spicy and delicious, the crust crispy yet buttery soft on the inside, and the flavor is marvelous.
While Zachary's uses less cheese than the Chicago pies I've had, they excel at taste and combination offerings. The whole wheat crust on their "healthy" pizza was equally as yummy as their standard stuffed crust pie.
Tragically, my friend who moved from San Francisco to Chicago and back prefers New York style floppy pizza to Chicago style deep dish goodness. And being married with babies prevents him from the other things the bay area does well: same-sex ass play and liberal sanctimony.
It's a good thing he has me to enjoy those things for him. Well, 2 out of 3 ain't bad.
Culver City, CA 90232
Hoagies and Wings
Category: Restaurants
Neighborhood: Culver City
At some point their deadly combination of wings+boobs dominated the chicken wing market so it had become impossible to get a decent plate of dark meat without some serious breast meat to go along with it.
I mean, I love boobs. Can't get enough of them. Especially the porn shots where some buxom thing is looking down at her rack with an expression that says, "Oh, my! They just burst out again!" Like they're experiencing seventh grade in a massive rush all at once, including the dark eye makeup.
But sometimes I just want wings! (Not true. I always want boobs.)
The newest location of Hoagies and Wings has opened, replacing local owned Markie D's Taste of Philly. When I asked my delivery guy why Markie D had closed up shop, the kid wearing an "I (heart) Capitalism" t-shirt replied that he didn't know why someone who closed early and wasn't open on weekends could have gone out of business.
While I liked Markie D, the steak hoagie at Hoagies and Wings is just as good - and you can still get it wit' wiz.
Scrumptious wings available in lots of great flavors, they deliver, and each order has been right and good.
If they can figure out how to hire buxom delivery drivers it's all over for me.
Date


I just completed my first season of triathlon, racing 5 events including Boise 70.3 and Santa Barbara Long Course. I started blogging at the beginning of the year, discussing my immersion in the field including training, product comparison, and my own personal growth. The triathlon community in Southern California is large for such an iconoclastic sport, but it's still a tight-knit community of intelligent, opinionated people. Which is why it felt out of place that I had several bad experiences my first several times shopping at Triathlon Lab. I felt brushed off, ignored, and not taken seriously. Eventually I took it personally and blogged about my negative experiences.
It came as quite a surprise that one of the owners personally reached out to me via Facebook (linked from my blog page), apologized for the way I was treated, and asked more details about my experience so she could address it as a customer service opportunity with her staff. I sent her a detailed report of my visits and spending experience, contrasted this to my positive experiences at Triathlete Zombies in Santa Monica, and thanked her for reaching out. That began a dialogue that has resulted in my purchase of a new 2008 Cervelo P3C triathlon bike.
For those who don't know, when you buy a bike you're buying the shop as much as the bike itself. A good shop will do a proper fit, and then a follow-up fit to make sure the bike is right. Also, there is maintenance, tune-ups, and the never ending list of STUFF that gets added to the bike over time. The way the owner reached out, accepted responsibility, and then made up for the initial negative experience was enough to encourage me to forge this new relationship.
The store is well stocked with a wide variety of gear, clothing, and staff. They have a considerably large bike shop and a solid spread of brands from entry-level and road all the way to pro level. I suggest talking to different staff members and finding someone you get along with and then coming back to them. Going in alone and browsing might not yield immediate gregariousness, but asking questions and getting to know the staff will make your experience better.