SLO and Easy Getaway

SLO – San Luis Obispo – is far more than a half-way point between Los Angeles and San Francisco. If you haven’t discovered it yet, you should – it’s a food haven, a paradise for wine and beer afficiandos, and a town with delightful, uniquely different accommodations.

It would be hard to think of a destination that’s more of a one-stop pleasure. Take Amtrak, leave the car at home – or drive – either way, SLO is an easy and engaging destination that offers so much to explore we’ll be featuring this charming city in several articles in the next month.

Valentine’s Day sweetheart stay? President’s Day Getaway? Winter break or spring fling – SLO is a great choice.

We loved staying at SLO Brew Lofts in the center of town. The sleek urban lodging is more cool apartment than it is hotel.

Beautiful hip furnishings, a full kitchen, and bathrooms that will make you want to bask are enhanced by touches such as a blue velvet sofa, Edison lights, cushy leather dining room chairs, sleek industrial-style Smeg refrigerators and stoves, cozy, tile rimmed fireplaces, and a state-of-the-art espresso and coffee maker.

Another fun feature: rooms come with Crossley record players – replete with lp choices in the rooms, and additional selections available in the hallway.

Exposed brick walls, unique and artful lighting features, high-end furnishings all win large points; loft sizes range from one to three bedrooms, with the largest unit including a private, creek-side patio. They’re romantic, but with the space they offer, the lofts also make for an excellent friends’ getaway or family gathering.

Although the lofts make it incredibly tempting to just stay in and enjoy a 70s-era 33 rpm and a blazing fire, SLO itself is well worth exploring.

Besides, you might only have to take a short walk to one of the top restaurants in town. These five luxury short-term rentals are positioned over one of them, The Carissa.

The Carissa occupies a space that was once the more casual SLO Brew gastropub. It was terrific too, but this change is particularly sweet.

With a lovely outdoor patio that overlooks the creek, and location offers both fire pits and comfortable, cushioned alcove seating, making the restaurant a vacation in and of itself. Inside, it feels hip and airy.

The Carissa is named for the classic building in which it and the lofts themselves are located; the interior reflects its heritage with bright white and blue floor tiles, the space’s original white-washed brick walls, wood-plank flooring and pressed tin ceilings.

The Carissa has a definite California-cool feel with both beachy artwork and cozy nooks within the large room, providing a sense of intimacy.

A mezzanine level includes a pool table.

We sat outside for dinner, warmed by heat lamps and thoughtfully provided soft lap blankets, as well as inventive craft cocktails to start our meal. SLO Brew beers are also on tap, and an intelligent wine selection is available.

We went with a Salty Dog – a refreshing, vodka-based drink with bitters, grapefruit, and a sea salt rim; and the Cigar Smoke, which arrives in a dramatic, covered presentation that literally features aromatic wood chip smoke. I’ve enjoyed smoked drinks before, and this one is outstanding. Rod & Hammers straight rye, orange, sugar cube, and that richly satisfying smoke.

We began our meal with the vegan tortilla soup – thick, creamy, and delightful; redolent of cilantro and with just the right bite of spice offset by silky avocado. The Refreshing Salad lives up to its name. Spring and spinach mix with raspberries, Asian pear, candied walnuts and the lovely bite of a mint jalapeno vinaigrette, the palette is both original and just right – sweet and spicy and cool. We shared a salmon plate with fries and cucumber slices with a dusting of chili powder as our sides. Pan-seared in shallot ginger butter, the salmon was intensely flavorful, tender and fresh.

We left room for dessert: mini churros and a banana fritter. The churros came with a rich chocolate dipping sauce and more than delighted. The banana fritter far exceeded expectations – I’m not a banana fan – a fluffy fried banana with the restaurant’s signature waffle batter, caramel, strawberries, and a scoop of vanilla Van Leeuwen ice cream.

With twinkling white lights strung across the patio and feeling cozy we concluded our meal with two more cocktails – one the sensationally inventive Head in the Clouds. Featuring a pouf of pink cotton candy, Asian pear, aloe, and watermelon, this vodka based treat is also Instagram-ready. I opted for a more traditional off-menu Irish coffee, made sweeter and lighter with Amaretto in the mix.

Although shops and a bevy of other lively clubs abound on SLO’s main street, we retired to our loft suite for a great night’s sleep.

Morning found us at the lovely, bright Joliene Bakery located in The Creamery complex, where owner Chloe Fertel offered us pastries such as a lemon tartlette and honey almond cake.

The bakery features beautiful breads such as Meyer Lemon Herb, sandwiches, and French macarons. Flavors on macarons vary; we had pistachio, chocolate, and raspberry – all terrific.

We browsed shops and took a long walk along the Cerro San Luis Lemon Grove Loop. Vast views of SLO reward a steep but well laid out four-mile trail.

We’ve taken this trail at sunset as well, when the westward-facing heights make a stunning view point.

Rewarding ourselves for our hike, we had another terrific al fresco meal at 1865 Craft House & Kitchen.

For starters: Crispy Cauliflower, a dish that has been over-used in many venues was a treat here – dusted with Cajun seasoning and coconut flour, with a dipping sauce of bracing chipotle aioli. The Dip Duo is a classic appetizer that could make a meal. Comprised of both roasted corn elote and guacamole, it’s an elevated take on a casual nosh that’s hard to stop eating.

But then came the beet salad with shrimp: made with sweet greens and gorgonzola; and a mushroom truffle flat bread featuring earthy crimini mushrooms.

The restaurant added a Beyond Meat sausage topping that made the dish even heartier. To drink? The Ciro peach vodka based Pismo Fog with muddled strawberries was beyond delicious, and alluring served with dry ice for a stunning effect. The light Cambria Pines was gin based, and included fresh squeezed lemon, a quite wonderful rosemary infused simple syrup, and a splash of Brut.

The restaurant is multi-leveled, with two patios back and front; the fresh, modern look embraces its catch phrase of “eat, drink, be happy.”

Late afternoon found us just south of town in the Edna Valley, enjoying the sunny outdoor tasting tables at Saucelito Canyon Winery. Crafting fine red wines from 13 acres of Zinfindels, Bordeauxs, and a handful off off-estate Cabernets and Merlots, the winery is unique in the region which often features Pinot Noir as its signature red. In fact, Saucelito is the only winery in the region that doesn’t produce Pinot; their Zinfindel was planted in 1860 and remains a centerpiece.

Their flagship Zin is produced from 40-year old vines from Croatia, a part of the U.C. Davis Heritage Collection. 

My favorite was the late harvest Zin which was sweet and delicious with the taste of berries and chocolate notes. The Rose was crisp, bright and tart; the unique Dos Mas introduces Grenache to the winery’s line-up, blending Zinfandel with Petite Syrah and Grenache.

Open from 10-5 daily, the winery offers generous pours and an astonishing variety of tastes.

From a luxurious loft stay to wine tasting and fine dining – SLO is easy to visit and fabulously easy to enjoy.

Always reinventing and reinvigorating its historic spaces, there are more stories coming up on SLO — a Central Coast original.

  • Genie Davis; photos: Genie Davis

Center for the Arts Eagle Rock: A Wide Range of Culturally Inclusive Programming Includes Participation in Upcoming Current LA: Food

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Above, in red, Melinda Ann Farrell with Kin program artists

Center for the Arts Eagle Rock (CFAER) is a multidisciplinary arts organization location in a classic Mission Revival and Spanish Colonial Revival building with a Northeast-LA community focus. Executive director Melinda Ann Farrell calls the building itself “a community treasure,” but much the same could be said about the organization itself.

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“Our mission is to provide access to transformative art experiences and arts education. We provide free after-school arts programs throughout Northeast Los Andeles Title 1 middle and elementary schools with our after-school Imagine Studio. As a part of that program, we hold Little Masters, a salon-style exhibition in December every year in our dedicated gallery here. The kids get to see their artwork in a professional setting and share their journey of creativity with their family.”

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Farrell says the exhibition was an idea she had to make “the connection between classroom and gallery” to empower the children, and contribute to their confidence. She terms the exhibition “beautiful to see.”

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Little Masters is one of seven art exhibitions CFAER holds annually, along with multiple concerts, film screenings, and all-ages, multi-disciplinary arts workshops ranging from painting to textile designs, writing graphic novels, creature making, sculpting, and music. “Above all, we want to make sure our programming is accessible to everyone,” Farrell asserts.

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The center also hosts the 30-week Cal Arts Animation Program, offering free animation lessons; and 10-week comic arts workshops to help young people develop their own comic book characters, the culmination of which is an actual comic book.

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Above, Nica Aquino

Then there’s Balay/Bahay, “a year-long project for which we received a grant from the California Arts Council and a Creative California Communities grant. It’s an outgrowth of an exhibition we curated by the photographic artist Nica Aquino. Basically, we wanted to create a place where the Phillipine community could gather. There is a large cross-section of people here looking for that type of cultural programming,” she explains.

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The original exhibition featured percussionist Gingee. “After the exhibition, we were hoping to do monthly events like this, and now with Balay/Bahay, we’re doing them for a year.”

Coming up in November will be Other Space, featuring musical performance, food, music and art, culminating in a lecture or workshop. The multi-disciplinary approach extends beyond Balay/Bahay to all aspects of CFAER’s programming. This weekend, CFAER is creating an art care package workshop at Eagle Rock Plaza. “We try to bring our programming out in the community as well as in our location.”

 

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Farrell says she’s extremely proud of a community mural-making workshop series with Ismael de Anda III in English and Spanish, a collaborative project in which participants were given a 28” x 28” panel to paint together. The panels were then compiled into a large mural at Eagle Rock High School. Student participants collaborated with professional artists and worked to the prompts of “where is your home, who is your family?” The project was completed earlier this year.

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“Our philosophy is to provide arts experiences. When we do an exhibition, there is always a companion workshop or concert, there is always thematic programming that goes with the exhibition, so people can have a richer experience that brings the community together. There is a lot of cultural discovery and collaboration that comes from that,” Farrell relates.

Her background in filmmaking is a part of this process for her. “I have always loved bringing people together, seeing what ideas work and come out of that. Filmmaking is such a collaborative process. I feel very grateful to be the director of this organization, because wonderful things happen with unexpected parings of people.” She feels that her background has helped her to communicate “the story of all these talented artists and all these people in the community.” Her focus has also led to including more filmmaking at CFAER, from showing a documentary on what was going on in Northeast LA to her support of Jorge Alarcon-swaby who provides photography of center events.

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Farrell has brought together a total of 14 grants for CFAER recently, including those for Balay/Bahay. Others include a general operating grant from the Annenberg Foundation; a National Workshop of the Arts grant for the community ink program building on Comics of Color; and a grant from the Ahmanson Foundation for documentary camera equipment which Farrell describes as “near and dear to my heart.” There is also an exhibition grant from the Los Angeles Arts Commission and the DCA for community arts programs; an international concert grant that allows CFAER to bring in an act from New Zealand; and the Dwight Stuart Youth Fund Grant, which provided a grant youth arts programming for Imagine Studio. Then, there is the grant for Current: LA Food, LA’s public art triennial.

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According to the City of Los Angeles Department of Cultural Fairs general manager Danielle Brazell, “There are over 75 commissioned events during the month-long triennial taking place across the city for residents and visitors.” The events begin October 5th; artists and community organizations were paired together to encourage conversations and provide engaging experiences in each location, and encourage audiences to think about food and issues surrounding food in new ways through art.

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Farrell describes CFAER’s Current: LA Food interaction as taking place November 3rd in the Exhibition Park Rose Garden. “We’re turning it into a site for culinary and artistic discovery. People will discover all these wonderful tableaus we set up. We’re doing an enchanted picnic with model Tara Zorthian. Sascha Stannard, a fantastic whimsical painter, is leading a painting and drawing scenario with a wonderful scavenger hunt tableau experience in the gazebo, themed to Alice in Wonderland.”

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Also on tap: Nica Aquino will lead a vegetable print-making workshop, vintage cookbooks will be used to reveal reveal poems in a workshop from the Los Angeles Poet Society, and a community recipe book will also be produced. “We also have an artisan chocolate maker, Zoila Newton, making Zapotec-heritage chocolate recipes from cacao,” Farrell notes, adding “I am the curator of our Current: LA project, and I’m really proud of the CFAER programming for the event. I’m really proud of  all the programming CFAER is creating.”

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  • Genie Davis; photos provided by CFAER

Radici: Sleek Italian by the Sea

 

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Hermosa Beach is home to one of the most elegant and luxurious Italian restaurants in LA. With a small patio and quiet, leisurely paced indoor dining, Racidi features a lovely array of pastas, salads, and main courses that include a delightful fresh salmon and perfectly prepared shrimp dish.

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Located on the second floor of a small two story, outdoor complex, the restaurant features comfortable seating that encourages lingering. The softly illuminated bar area is also a great spot for a sophisticated craft cocktail.

The Northern Italian cuisine is created from scratch; diners will find a wide range of pastas, vegetable selections, and seafood choices on the menu. Among the highlights are incredibly fresh produce that is tender and succulently prepared, from eggplant to a simple Insalata Arugula. The ricotta cheese is made in house, and is a revelation when it comes to ricotta. The owner’s mother, Lucia Gasbarri, is to thank for this and the overall powerful ability of the kitchen to turn a simple dish into a classic. She oversees the kitchen, uses many family recipes, and has worked for thirty years with the accomplished chef. Owner Laura Francisco and restaurant manager, Francesca Iacobellis provide high quality service.

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Try the crisp, light, calamari as a starter, breaded crisp with tender fish inside. The arugula salad had a fresh tang, accented by sweet, crisp slices of pear; we found the simple olive oil and vinegar dressing to be lovely, with olive oil from Olive Cove. Bread is warm and fresh; but don’t fill up, there’s more ahead.

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Roasted tomatoes and homemade manicotti with that light-as-air ricotta was a perfect first course; fire roasted sweet peppers can be topped – or not – with equally light and flavorful goat cheese. The Bruschetta is also crisp and perfect. The Portobello features a tender mushroom stuffed with onions, breadcrumbs, polenta, and bell peppers, offering another taste of beautiful produce.

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Often gnocchi can be heavy and dense, not so with the light pillows here. Potato and spinach dumplings can be served with a rich gorgonzola cream sauce or sautéed with fresh tomatoes.  There is also a rich pink sauce choice for the ravioli – mouth meltingly flavorful.

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Spaghetti Pomodoro may just be the quintessential vegan dish: the pasta is perfectly al dente, chewy and flavorful; the lovely fresh tomato and basil sauce is brilliantly flavorful, simple but somehow rich with complex flavor. Yes, it is “just” spaghetti, but it is a classic rendition; the restaurant also serves variations on the pomodoro with other flavorful sauces and pastas.

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Another simple dish that is all too often treated as either an after-thought or something starchy and bland, is polenta. Available as a side on many of the fresh fish or meat dishes, it can also be ordered in a more generous portion separately, and is well worth sampling. It made a terrific pairing with dishes such as the salmon: prepared crisp, with fragrant, light lemon butter sauce.

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Also terrific: the jumbo shrimp in white wine and garlic with lemon butter, gamberoni al limone.

Cocktails were inventive, and many used Italian ingredients or had unique touches such as the rosemary syrup in the Italian Greyhound. On the non-alocholic side, the Italian Limonata soda refreshed.

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Desserts are well accompanied by beverages such as the L’Americano Corretto made with biscotti liqueur; espresso and teas are beautifully served and prepared. There are four delicious grappas too, including a chocolate version that must be savored.

As to the sweets themselves, the cannoli is perfect, but then so was the imported chocolate gelato. You’ll have to save room for both, or better yet, come back for another delicious visit. We did.

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  • Genie Davis; photos: provided by Radici; supplemental by Genie Davis

 

It’s a Championship Game with Masters of Taste at the Rose Bowl

 

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Held at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, the annual April Masters of Taste event is more than a luxury food event – proceeds from the delicious event benefit Union Station Homeless Services, an organization devoted to helping the homeless. If you’re looking for a food festival with a heart – as well as a way to tickle your taste buds, this is it.

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Guests dined on delicious and ample samples from over 40 chefs and restaurants, 25 cocktail purveyors, wineries, and breweries.

Wonderful food from desserts to drinks were served up from white tents on the field of the Rose Bowl. It’s a thrill to just enter the stadium – some stands are set up just outside, including one of several booths offering information from Union Station. Once you step inside, you feel a part of the lush grandeur of the grassy field, and enjoy a lovely setting that includes both sit-down and standing tables, vases of flowers, and food-focused demonstrations and seminars from master chefs.

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Highlights were many, and the fresh greens of spring – from matcha desserts and teas to sunny salads and soups – were everywhere.

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Above and below – the perfect green delights from Matcha Matcha – a mango and matcha flavored drink, and matcha rice crispy treats.

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We loved the delicious mac n’ cheese with aged cheddar and Gruyere plus veggies from Granville – which just opened a new outpost in Pasadena; chilled pea and watercress soup from Wax Paper and Lingua Franca; World Empanadas were terrific; so was the Dungeness Crab Tostada from The Kitchen for Exploring Foods.

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Mrs. Fish served up inventive sushi samples, while Patina offered perfectly prepared and presented scallops with edible flowers in crisp pastry “cones.”

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Pasta delights from Celestino…

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and creamy pesto from Prince of Venice…

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Immordl Nitro Coffee was the perfect beverage to recharge energy and keep on tasting.

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Or perhaps a crisp white wine or rich red was more your cup of … well, not tea.

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Los Angeles Ale Works offered Palmera Pils, a delicious pilsner with fizzy carbonation; American Born Moonshine offered a potent drink…

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But the fruity flavors of Wild Roots vodka were also a big hit.

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Beyond refreshing, the terrific organic tastes of Dry Sparkling mineral water included our favorite, lavender.

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Buzzbox Cocktails offered an easy-carry, pre-mixed option.

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Fresh fruit punch with my tostada from The Kitchen for Exploring Foods? Yes, please.

Below: Desserts were delicious, from Lark Cake Shop cupcakes to vegan ice pops from Nomad.

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Mignon Chocolate not only featured a larger-than-life chocolate bunny, they had a chocolate fountain, too, with marshmallows to dip.

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Lady M Cake Boutique did not disappoint either, with light fluffy squares of cake: yes, matcha was one of the flavors – it’s a trend in LA.

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Lemon cheesecake? Chocolate cheese cake? A sample of both please, from among the gorgeous selections at Fantasy Frostings

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Don’t miss the event next year — from an iconic setting to innovative food, and a great mix of sweets, drinks, appetizers, and mains. And in the meantime, do reach out to support Union Station Homeless Services.

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– Genie Davis; photos: Genie Davis