Archive for the ‘Italian’ Category

solonggoodbye

Posted 18 Mar 2010 — by lolo
Category Eating IN, Italian, Pizza, West LA, vegetarian

A few weeks ago I got email notification that Patty’s Pizza (gourmet take and bake) would be closing it’s retail location on Montana Avenue. Well, not exactly closing, but “relocating” to an online delivery service, that, much to my chagrin, will serve only West LA. If you live in Venice, Santa Monica, Marina Del Rey, Malibu, Pacific Palisades or even Beverly Hills, you are super lucky. And not just because you live in a nice neighborhood. But also because Patty’s pizza is really fucking delicious. I’ve had their soy cheese pizza and I would venture to say it is, without a doubt, one of the best vegan pizzas I’ve had in LA.

Pizzas range from $8 to $20 and can (and should) be ordered online from www.pattyspizza.com

I joked in an email with Christina, of Blaze PR, that I was tempted to pull an Elaine and order pizza from a mysterious westside address and just wait in front of their house (or in the janitor’s closet) till it arrived. I wouldn’t put it past me.

I missed their closing party but here are some shots:

Picture 004

Picture 024

See, you take ‘em home like this and bake ‘em and then when your friends come over you give Patty no credit and pretend you made it all from scratch and also grew the ingredients mostly. It’s the right thing to do.

IMG_9309

IMG_9258

IMG_9065-3

You can also get their frozen pizzas at Bristol Farms (or the Trader Joe’s Brand Pepperoni Pizza is also Patty’s)

2pakDoubleImage

Pattys Comp 10B

I don’t know if the above pictures do justice to how good this pizza really is. I’ll get my hands on some, even though it might be harder than it used to be, and I’ll show you how good that shit really looks and tastes in person. When I invite you over to taste the pizza I “made from scratch.”

Patty's Gourmet Pizza on Urbanspoon

bratpack

Posted 08 Feb 2010 — by lolo
Category Eating OUT, Hollywood, Il Sole, Italian, Uncategorized, vegetarian

Last Thursday, Kelsey, of PR firm Wagstaff Worldwide, was subjected to an entire evening at Il Sole with Diana, Sarah, Sook, and me. While she did intend to organize a food blogger dinner, I don’t think she ever anticipated us bullying our way into an exclusive dinner for just the four of us. Ha, we’re sneaky like that. Or maybe we’re just co-dependent.

Il Sole - Exterior

Il Sole is relatively small, but not in a La Buca pre-expansion sort of way. It’s intimate, cozy, romantic. Like I told my dinner partners that night, it reminds me of one of those places I can only afford going with my parents, you know, like Europe. But then once you’re there it’s so romantic that you wish your parents would beat it so you could sneak Andrés, the Spaniard you met when you broke off to smoke in a park, into your fancy hotel room. Actually, that’s not what I said to my dinner partners at all now that I think about it. Basically, take a date, not your parents.

Here’s their shot of the interior, but it was definitely more dimly lit when we were there:

Il Sole - Interior

Because of the intimate atmosphere, and the restaurant’s generally over-photographed celebrity clientele, we were asked to take our photos sans flash so as not to be super obnoxious and ruin any meals/chances of sealing the deal with Andrés.

What I’m trying to tell you is, my pictures suck.

We had bread with olive oil and peppers to start:

IMG_0639

at which point the flash had to go night-night.

Kelsey had arranged for a bevy of starters, including some vegan options for me. I like her already.

Antipasto misto con verdure grigliate:

IMG_0645

Plus an extra plate without the meat:

IMG_0662

My personal favorite, Insalata di verdura stagionale all griglia, a seasonal grilled vegetable salad with avocado:

IMG_0652

Good ol’ dairy eating me yearned for this one. Can’t believe it’s been more than 4 years since I’ve had burrata.
Burrata pugliese con pomodori e rucola–imported burrata with vine ripened tomatoes, arugula, basil and extra virgin olive oil:

IMG_0657

IMG_0660

Next each of us found in front of us a plate of parmigiana di melanzane alla napoletana, or eggplant parmigiana “napoli” style with a tomato, basil sauce, and parmesan cheese. a nice, small portion without the breading. dairy-eating lauren mentally bitch-slapped vegan lauren when this came:

IMG_0682

Il Sole is by no means a vegan restaurant and I pretty much never expect non-vegan restaurants to have vegan dishes on the menu, much less to accommodate my special requests. I was blown away, though, when I learned they had both rice pasta (!) and tempeh in the kitchen for picky people like me.

IMG_0684

This was actually a table favorite. Maybe they should throw it on the menu! No? Pushing my luck? K.

Lobster ravioli:

IMG_0690

IMG_0704

Spinach ravioli:

IMG_0697

IMG_0703

Baked Branzino and another fish, not sure which. Somebody tell me.

IMG_0691

IMG_0701

At this point in the meal, a fan of Sarah’s recognized her from her blog and surprise attacked. She was so excited/nervous about seeing Sarah that she could barely hold still for me to capture the moment. It was pretty weird adorable.

IMG_0706

Dessert came and dairy-eating me gave regular me a one-two combo followed by an uppercut.

Not so much because of this:

IMG_0720

But because of this:

IMG_0716

IMG_0717

Just as the world is a sad place without Michael Jackson, and Showtime is a sad place without L Word, my tummy is a sad place without bread pudding in it.

The Good News? You don’t need your parents to have a hot date at Il Sole, especially if you go on a Sunday. Chef Issac Rivera has introduced affordable Rustic Dinners on Sunday evenings so you can get the full family style Italian experience and the, holy shit, that was kind of a bargain, experience. You know the one.

For $35, you get to select one appetizer and one main course from a list of Italian comfort foods, including this tomato bread soup, veal osso bucco, sweet potato ravioli, branzino, lasagna, eggplant parmesan, and burrata, to name just a few of the prix-fixe options.

Il Sole - Pappa al Pomodoro

You can opt to add dessert, ranging from $6-$8 and wine from $8-$11 by the glass or $29-$39 by the bottle.

Il Sole has been around for nearly 15 years, a rare feat in the restaurant world and a sign that sometimes usually it’s beautiful, simple, well-cooked food that outlasts trends like tapas and food trucks.

After dinner, Sarah convinced us all to join her for a drink at Delphine in the new W on Vine and Hollywood.

Crowd was exactly what you imagine. Prince of Persia meets Christian Audigier formalwear.

Decor was cooler than the place deserved maybe. Almost like a 4th grader having his architect mom build his Mission for the school project.

3091513310_aa156b44ef

Something’s not adding up.

IMG_0723

IMG_0721

We had a bizarre after dinner combination of bread, olives, and sorbet. And more wine.

IMG_0722

IMG_0725

IMG_0736

I accidentally ate a giant clove of garlic out of the olive bowl, having mistakenly assumed it was an artichoke heart. Nobody’s fault but my own. That’s like mistaking me for Oprah. Clearly no resemblance.

Sorbet flavors were nothing to write home about–lemon, mango and raspberry. Lemon was popular, and since I’m a rebel without a cause I immediately rejected the lemon and bonded with the mango.

IMG_0741

IMG_0738

IMG_0743

Delphine? I wasn’t ultra impressed or super horrified, so I’d get peer pressured back into going.

Il Sole–I’ll be doing the peer pressuring. Every Sunday for the rest of our lives! Who’s in??

Il Sole on Urbanspoon

EmbracetheAustrianEmbracetheChange

Posted 02 Nov 2009 — by lolo
Category Eating OUT, Italian, Osteria La Buca, hot babe, vegetarian

My visit to Mozza wednesday really tested my patience with vegetarianism, especially so close to the end of my month-long commitment. So I’m not sure why I decided it was a good idea to visit a different, equally delicious Italian eatery on Thursday.

Before meeting some homies at Osteria La Buca, I had a drink at the bar with my Austrian buddy Manuel. This dude taught me the meaning of jumping out of “a perfectly good airplane” and goes skydiving about once a week.

photo-280

The best thing about him is that he has an incomparable sense of justice. To that end, he often fights the system and he almost always wins. If you are a cop, for example, who decides to give Manuel a moving violation, expect to lose in court when he decides to sue you. True story. And there’s more where that came from.

FYI there is a new chef and a new menu at La Buca, but don’t despair, the pasta is still homemade and now that Mama is not there it’s easier to make special requests.

We shared some tomato and mozzarella before getting to the good shit.

photo-281

The hardest part about going vegan has had nothing to do with dairy for me–I’ve gone without it for about four years now. Generally it’s the meat. But when I saw this lasagna I just about dropped everything and denied any former evidence of food allergies.

photo-282

photo-283

I think two of my friends had the pappardelle fume.

photo-285

photo-286

I had fusilli with a basil and tomato sauce and asked for no ricotta. They very kindly accommodated me.

photo-287

They even sent out a complimentary dessert which I didn’t photograph in protest since I couldn’t eat it. It was tiramisu. You get the picture.

La Buca, I loved you when you were the size of a port-a-potty and I love you now that you have leg room. I loved you when mean Mama was in the kitchen and I still love you now that she’s not. Especially since I am so fucking terrified of her.

La Buca on Urbanspoon