Saturday, November 10, 2007

El Gordito (El Monte)

El Gordito is Marlene's latest discovery. We can thank my car's recent loss of its head gasket; all this week, while the car has been in the shop, Marlene and her mom have come to pick me up from work. El Gordito is about a mile from the school, right next to Art's Burgers, on the north side of Valley, just east of Peck.
I've only had one meal from El Gordito, but it was notable--four very good carnitas tacos (if the fare from Tacos El Gordo of Tijuana/south San Diego fame is a 10 of 10, then these
were 7.5) and probably the best agua de pina I've ever had. The drink was sweet but not overly so, and had pineapple chunks to add to the flavor and feel.
Marlene says the burrito she had was good, too. I've had a coupon for a free torta from El Gordito for some time; it was part of the "swag bag" we received at the luncheon the City of El Monte gave for new teachers. It looks like it's time to redeem that coupon.
El Monte insider trivia: El Gordito is owned by Frank J. Aguirre, who recently mounted an unsuccessful bid for a seat on the board for the Mountain View School District.

Find El Gordito at 11665 Valley Blvd (Peck/I-10 and La Madera) in El Monte. 626-444-4912. Call for hours of operation.

Saturday, October 20, 2007

Soccer Plus

I dropped by this little soccer equipment shop on the north side of Pasadena because I needed a goalkeeper's jersey. I found a small but impressive display of football-related wares. The owner, Joseph, was very helpful and friendly. I don't like shopping while a salesperson hovers over me, so I appreciated that he was available but discreet, waiting behind the counter in his Perugia shirt.
The shop had a wide range of team jerseys, including heavyweight clubs like Manchester United and AC Milan, but also including unlikely shirts like the Scottish National Team. The store also has a strong selection of shoes for outdoor and indoor soccer and a respectable assortment of "generic" (that is, not affiliated with a team or branded with a club logo) shirts and shorts.
I got my goalkeeper jersey, a green Adidas shirt, and I'll be back to buy a new pair of cleats soon.

Find Soccer Plus at 1640 E. Washington Blvd. (N. Oxford and N. Sierra Bonita) in Pasadena. 626-798-5405. Call for store hours.

Sunday, October 7, 2007

Fortune Bakery


This little gem at the San Gabriel / Alhambra border has been Marlene's bakery of choice for years. Its simple, small storefront features a case with birthday cakes and other baked goods like sweet loaves and cupcakes. It also has several cases filled with figurines that serve as cake decorations.
Marlene got my chocolate birthday cake here (above), and it was delicious. Another standout is their strawberry sponge cake with a light whipped-cream frosting. They have delicious cookies as well, including their lemon cookies and their sugar-free rosebud cookies. Marlene's elementary-school teacher would buy Fortune Bakery's cookies as a treat for outstanding students. Finally, Marlene's friend Carmen loves their brownies, though we can't vouch for them ourselves.
You can call ahead to pre-order if you want to be sure that they'll have what you're looking for.

Find Fortune Bakery at 700 W. Las Tunas Dr (N. Franklin and Sycamore) in west San Gabriel. 626-576-0514.

Saturday, October 6, 2007

Bahooka Ribs and Grog

Bahooka Ribs and Grog has been serving up Polynesian fare and strong tropical drinks in Rosemead since 1967. It's one of the few exponents of the Tiki craze that has survived through the years.
There seems to be some disagreement about the quality of the food. I like it, especially the appetizers and the fish and chips; Marlene really likes it, but admits that the quality is inconsistent and can depend on who's in the kitchen; a colleague once said one should eat before going to Bahooka's. That's okay, though, because you don't really go to Bahooka for the food--you go there for the strong drinks and tiki-fied atmosphere, both of which are at the same time authentic and very kitschy.
The back of the menu is devoted to the tropical drinks. While the bar serves "non-exotic" beverages like beer and Seven-and-Seven, the real draw is the selection of island tonics, such as the Deep Purple, the Mai Tai, the Singapore Sling, and Marlene's favorite, Planter's Punch. I am quite fond of their Zombie. The menu includes a short description for each of the drinks, and for the Zombie it warns, "Two of these will put you among the living dead." I tried once and found that they're not kidding!
If you have to man the vehicle and want to do the right thing while still enjoying some of the liquid island flavor, opt for a Captain Cook Goat. It's a concoction of coconut and pineapple juice that's delicious, and can be served "flaming," with a lit crouton on the top beside the tiny pink umbrella.
Another Bahooka specialty is the Flaming Bowl for Two, a tropical cocktail served flaming in a salad-bowl-sized container. Choose a designated driver! While the menu lists four specific Flaming Bowl varieties, it also notes that any drink can be served as a flaming bowl.

Bahooka's over-the-top decor is the restaurant's other main draw. The restaurant is a maze of booths, each of which has a view of at least one fish tank. In fact, there are over a hundred fish tanks in the place! My favorite fish tank is at the bar--or perhaps I should say my favorite fish tank is the bar. On crowded nights, you can sip your drink, catch a bit of a baseball game, and watch the fish while you wait for your table.
The fish tanks are the most obvious element in the decor, but there are plenty of other kitschy touches as well, such as the plastic birds that hang from the ceiling throughout the restaurant, and, of course, tiki gods. The entrance features a wall of mailboxes and vintage post office signs. Authentic naval memorabilia abounds, including buoys and an old-fashioned scuba set; according to the Bahooka website, lamps are "hand crafted from castoffs, port holes, parts of ships, etc." A large banquet room sits in the back, and Bahooka also does catering at homes and offices.
Bahooka recently celebrated its 40th anniversary with a three-day rib special. The celebration has come and gone, but I recommend you join Bahooka as it gets its fifth decade of tiki kitsch
underway.

Find Bahooka Ribs and Grog at 4501 N. Rosemead Boulevard (Lower Azusa) in Rosemead. 626-285-1241. Mon.-Thurs. 11:30 am to 9 pm; Fri. 11:30 am to 10:30 pm; Sat. noon to 10:30 pm; Sun. noon to 9 pm.

Transit options include Metro Bus 266 and Metro Bus 489 (as the latter is a commuter express route, it operates Monday through Friday only; only the northbound route runs in the afternoon, and only between 4 and 6 pm).

Friday, August 24, 2007

California Cactus Center


Blink and you'll miss it as you drive down Rosemead Boulevard. It's inauspiciously tucked into a nondescript pocket of East Pasadena (some might say the word "nondescript," and even the word "pocket," is redundant), near a handful of fast food joints and furniture shops, across the street from a fortune teller, and next to an air conditioning supply and repair shop. Nonetheless, however unpromising its neighborhood may look, California Cactus Center is worth the trip.
I first popped in because I needed a small bag of cactus mix to repot a plant that had been knocked over (the cat is a prime suspect). I parked on a side street and had to pass CCC's aforementioned neighbor, Air-Tech. It appears that CCC has furnished Air-Tech with some plants. As a result, Air-Tech has a beautiful little cactus garden in its small entryway. I was especially taken with a lovely succulent with a rosette of pink-tinted leaves, the echeveria.
Inside, the relatively small space teems with drought-tolerant life. Quite a few aloes and agaves live in the entryway space, which is uncovered. Marlene especially admired the "Black Beauty" (also called "Schwartzkopf") plants we found in this space. A few steps further inside the property and you enter a covered nursery space that has row after row of plants and a greenhouse.
Highlights of the space include the strangely beautiful lithops or "living stones" in the nursery and greenhouse the Giant Saguaro in the front. The shop also has a selection of handsome pottery and a small space with books (more than a bookshelf, not quite a bookstore). I found my cactus mix--the shop has bags of 3 different sizes (the workers will help you load the largest bag). My bag, the middle size, was a reasonable $3.
I'll be back, I expect, to buy some more cactuses or succulents--an echeveria or two for me and a Black Beauty for Marlene.

Find the California Cactus Center at 216 S. Rosemead Boulevard (near Del Mar), and on the web at http://www.cactuscenter.com. Open 7 days a week, 10 am - 4:30 pm. 626-795-2788.

Transit options include Metro Bus 266 (Rosemead and Del Mar), and Foothill Transit 187 and Metro Bus 181 (both have stops at Rosemead and Colorado).

Friday, August 17, 2007

Pepe's Finest Mexican Food (Temple City)



Pepe's Finest Mexican Food has locations in Alhambra and Covina as well as in Temple City. This blog refers to the Temple City location.

Pepe's is a very, very good taco shop, in business since 1964. It serves what you might call "old-school" taco shop fare--hearty food that's more mildly seasoned than the "street tacos" you might buy in Tijuana.
The hard-shell tacos may be the best thing on the menu. These are the real deal, full of tender shredded beef and cheese, tomato, and lettuce.
Their burritos are good, too, and packed-to-bursting with (for example) chile verde pork or seasoned eggs and potatoes.
Bill Coburn's San Gabriel Valley Menus website has a number of photos of Pepe's offerings along with his review of the Temple City location.

Find Pepe's Finest Mexican Food at 5829 N. Rosemead Blvd., at the corner of Hermosa and near Las Tunas. 626-286-3055. Sun-Thurs 9 am - 9:30 pm; Fri. and Sat. 9 am - 10:30 pm. Closed major holidays.

Transit options include Metro Bus 78 and Metro Bus 487. Montebello Bus 20 stops at San Gabriel Boulevard and Hermosa, about a mile west.

Saturday, August 11, 2007

Lafayette Park

Jimmy Webb never wrote a song about Lafayette Park, but maybe he should have. Less famous—or perhaps less notorious—than its neighbor to the east, Lafayette Park nonetheless offers a good deal of charm. Flanked by the imposing Superior Court building and the impressive First Congregational Church, Lafayette Park bridges the neighborhoods of Koreatown, Pico-Union, and Rampart/Westlake.
Its best feature may be the handsome Felipe de Neve Branch Library, which stands on Sixth Street at the corner of Hoover Street. (The park bisects Hoover, which starts again at Wilshire and continues south.) What the De Neve lacks in its collection, it makes up for in its architecture, which resembles the brick structures that populate the UCLA campus. The library has a patio; unfortunately, this patio does not open out onto the park or onto the space around the nearby fountain. This may be due to vandalism--indeed, the fountain itself is closed off by a fence, and the website Public Art in Los Angeles notes that the statue that once stood in the fountain may have been stolen.
The City of Los Angeles Parks and Recreation Department maintains the facility and organizes activities. The park features two new Nike-built futsal fields (futsal is a variation of soccer similar to what we call "indoor soccer"). On any given night you can see adult rec league teams battling for supremacy on the pitch. The basketball courts are also a popular draw, and there's a playground for kids.
Arnold Foerster's 1937 statue Marquis de Lafayette stands near the southeast corner of the park. If you cross Wilshire, you will find two tennis courts and the 1934 statue The Power of Water. Standing opposite the statue, the famous and beautiful Bullocks Wilshire building (now part of Southwestern Law School) shines to your left.
As mentioned above, there is vandalism, and the park is often dirty, but it still offers a shady, quiet place (insofar as a place can be quiet when Wilshire Boulevard runs past it!) to play sports or read a book.

Find Lafayette Park along Sixth Street between Commonwealth and Park View in the Wilshire Center district of Los Angeles. Wilshire Boulevard bisects the park; most of the park is north of Wilshire. Tennis courts and a small patch of grass south of Wilshire are in the traffic triangle created by Wilshire, Hoover, and Lafayette Park Place.

Transit options include the 20 Rapid Bus (Wilshire and Vermont), Metro Red Line (Wilshire and Vermont station), and the 320 Bus (Wilshire and Hoover).

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Helping Hand Thrift Store


On Sunday, RJ's on Pico was really crowded, so Marlene and I went to Little Ethiopia to eat. Rosalind's was the only meat-serving restaurant open, so we had Yadoro Wat and a cabbage dish whose name I can't remember.

After the meal, we went across the street to a thrift store Marlene had seen. I didn't spend a lot of time looking at anything but the books--and what a book selection! There are about half a dozen large bookshelves, and several sections--including a Hebrew-language section and a section of books about Japan and China. There were also quite a few reference volumes, and a handsome partial set of The Story of Civilization by Will and Ariel Durant.

I bought two volumes by a Chinese author, Lin Yutang. They set me back $10--not exactly thrift store prices, it's true, but along the lines of what to expect from a used bookstore.

Marlene checked out the rest of the store while I browsed the books, so she'll write (or provide me with info) about that in the near future.

Find the Helping Hand Thrift Shop at 1033 S. Fairfax Avenue, near the intersection with San Vicente and Olympic. 323-857-1191. Open Sun-Thurs 10 - 6:30; Fri 10 until 2 hours before sundown. Closed Saturdays. Donations are tax-deductible.

Transit options include Metro Bus 28 (stops on Olympic), Metro Bus 305 (stops at Fairfax and San Vicente), and Metro Rapid Bus 20 (stops several blocks north at Wilshire and Fairfax).

Sunday, July 29, 2007

Chroni's Famous Sandwich Shop

This easy-to-miss-if-you're-not-looking-for-it shop on Whittier Boulevard in East L.A. makes some A-plus hot dogs. Mustard, ketchup, and onions is all they put on the dog, and these are really all the dog needs. It's very flavorful, and cooked so perfectly that, as Marlene points out, it snaps when you bite it.
Marlene has been going here for years with her mom and grandparents. Apparently, her grandfather took her mom and aunts for a tasty snack in the years when Marlene was just a glimmer in various eyes. The shop has been owned by the same family (we assume that their name is Chroni) since its inception; today Ron, a hulking, mustached descendant of the founders, mans the counter. He is polite, and likes people, as Marlene's mom puts it, but he'll pass you over and take the next customer's order if you don't know what you want. He also adds up all the totals in his head--no need for a cash register here.
We each ordered a dog, a hamburger, and a grape soda. $15 and change for both of us, which isn't the cheapest meal in town, but for such a delicious one, certainly a reasonable bill. The hamburger, though perhaps not worthy of a Huell Howser special as is the hot dog, was quite good, and the grape soda tasty--though next time I'll opt for that noble and long-neglected cola, Royal Crown.
Jonathan Gold of the L.A. Times has written elegantly of Chroni's pastrami sandwich and chili fries. Also according to Gold, Los Lobos gives the shop a shout-out in its liner notes.

Find Chroni's Famous Sandwich Shop at 5825 Whittier Boulevard, near Keenan, and between Atlantic and Garfield. 323-728-7806; closed on Sundays. Cash only (at least until Ron figures out how to swipe a credit card in his head).

To take public transit to Chroni's, catch the Metro Rapid Bus 720 on Whittier. The same line runs along Wilshire west of downtown.

Saturday, July 28, 2007

Pasadena Really Really Free Market


We attended the third installment of the Pasadena Really Really Free Market this morning. I found some books for myself as well as for my classroom, and Marlene found some great coffee cups and yarn among other things.
The idea of a Really Really Free Market is that you bring stuff you don't need and take whatever you like. As the Wikipedia entry puts it, it's an effort to "counteract capitalism in a non-reactionary way" by setting up a "temporary market based on an alternative gift economy." You can also find information about the philosophy behind the idea at the Really Really Free Market website.
Unfortunately, we didn't have any items with us to share this time, but we intend to go through the garage and my apartment and find some things to take to the next installment. I might take my chess board if it isn't too hot.

Find the Pasadena Really Really Free Market when it meets at the Bresee Nazarene Church parking lot, a 1480 E. Washington in, you guessed it, Pasadena. Check their blog for upcoming installments.

Public transit options include the Pasadena Arts 31 and 32 and the Metro Bus 256 and 268.

Monday, July 23, 2007

Welcome!

This blog is intended to share information and opinions about places and activities in Los Angeles that are a bit outside the scope of what's generally considered "hip" or "trendy."