Newsletter: Counter: Fried chicken, oysters and hot sauce
The fried chicken and potato salad at Osso.
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Cheers, everybody!
Jonathan is in Italy on vacation, eating, last I heard, 12 courses at a restaurant in Modena. Of course he is. Did you think he'd go on a juice fast or something? Back here in L.A., where it's apparently cooler than it is in Italy, we've been doing plenty of eating too. No juice fasts for anybody.
This week came the news of chef changes, with one noted chef decamping for Spain; another, from Peru, has stepped in behind the stoves. A new restaurant in Little Tokyo has whole fried chickens on the menu, which is reason enough to visit -- as well as more hot sauce available to you than I've seen since our hot sauce video party. (And, yes, we're going to do that again soon. Suggestions? Send 'em our way.) In addition, we have a wine list cheat sheet for you, and a list of where to get $1 oysters every day of the week. Happy times, indeed.
And be on the lookout for Wednesday's In the Kitchen newsletter, with cooking tips and news, including new recipes from the L.A. Times Test Kitchen.
More fun in Little Tokyo
Jenn Harris checks out Osso, a new restaurant in Little Tokyo brought to you from alums of Cliff's Edge and Momofuku. It's got some pretty good brined chicken — that is then fried whole before being brought to your table. With potato salad and, if you want it, lots and lots of hot sauce. There's also lots of charcuterie, beef jerky and cocktails. Fried chicken and beef jerky? No wonder Jenn ended up there.
A variety of hot sauces are available with the fried chicken.
Betty Hallock / For The Times
Kitchen musical chairs
At Smoke.Oil.Salt, Perfecto Rocher has hung up his apron — he's returning to his native Spain, at least for a while — and Ricardo Zarate has put his on. Russ Parsons reports that Zarate, who left Mo-Chica, Picca and Paiche last year, is now the "exec consulting chef" at the Melrose Avenue restaurant. What does this mean for the food itself? Apparently, less Catalan and more "global Latin." Maybe if we're lucky, Zarate will cook some of his quinoa risotto.
Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times
Oysters and more oysters
Like oysters? Like cheap oysters? We've got a list of 13 restaurants where you can find $1 oysters — somewhere, every night of the week. Also, at one place, $1 tacos as well. And at another, $4 Mules. You may never cook at home again.
Ricardo DeAratanha / Los Angeles Times
What to drink at Bestia
S. Irene Virbila navigates the wine list at Bestia, the Italian restaurant in downtown L.A. where Ori Menasche and his wife, Genevieve Gergis, work the stoves, the pastry kitchen — and the enormous wood-burning oven. While you're waiting to get a reservation (good luck with that), there's a pretty good wine list to check out. Or: what to pair with pan-roasted chicken gizzards with roasted beets.
Katie Falkenberg / Los Angeles Times
Your '90s flashback cocktail
In her latest cocktail video (Jenn & Tonic), Jenn Harris chats with E.P. & L.P. beverage director Alex Straus about something called a Kriss Kross, a drink he named for the '90s band — and gets a recipe. Something to mix up for happy hour while you're thinking about all those GOP candidates and reminiscing about Bill Clinton.
EP+LP’s Kriss Kross cocktail.
Los Angeles Times
What we're reading
If you, like some of us, missed Paul Greenberg's recent piece "Three Simple Rules for Eating Seafood" in the New York Times, here's your chance to read it. If you didn't miss it, maybe read it again.
Or try this: one chef's love affair with rare bourbon — and the happy hobby of bourbon collecting, in Punch.
Check out the thousands of recipes in our Recipe Database.
Feedback?
We’d love hear from you. Email us at [email protected]
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