
A moment of culinary escape in Spain before the tariffs struck
What a tripe meatball reveals. Plus, a restaurant for those bored with crudo on every menu, West Hollywood restaurant closures, Genghis Cohen's last days on Fairfax, James Beard finalists, a Coachella food preview and variations on the Dodger dog. I'm Laurie Ochoa, general manager of L.A. Times Food, with this week's Tasting Notes.
Chef Daniel Ochoa (no relation) approached my table with a wooden tray balancing a pair of kitchen scissors and an arrangement of clay bowls, including one with a neatly tied ball that I was about to discover contained the best meatball I have ever eaten.
This was the chef's very personal vision of callos, a reworking of the traditional Spanish tripe dish, often made with morcilla or blood sausage, chorizo and pig's feet, which help make the sauce especially rich. Where Mexican menudo uses hominy, or nixtamalized corn, callos sometimes includes chickpeas and is more of a stew than a soup.
'It's the most important dish of the restaurant,' Ochoa told me when I was deciding whether to get the full or abbreviated tasting menu at his Michelin-starred restaurant Montia in San Lorenzo de El Escorial on the hilly outskirts of Madrid. Once I knew callos — served in two courses — was on the full menu, I went all in.
At the table, Ochoa took the scissors and snipped the clean, beige natural casing, which was taut like a balloon. Immediately a beautiful brick-orange sauce seasoned with paprika, rosemary and bay leaves oozed out. He held up the bundle with twine between the blades of his scissors to let all of the sauce drip into the bowl and then with one quick motion, like a magician's slight-of-hand trick, flipped the tripe-and-morcilla meatball into the bowl. Next he plated the meatball and sauce in a fresh bowl and crowned the dish with a lightly fried, chickpea-flour-dusted circle of lacy book or Bible tripe, the most delicate of the three basic tripe types.
The dish, both funky and sophisticated, was full of rich, rustic flavors that also had an air of elegance. Next came part two of the procession — a more traditional version of callos with delicious stewed squares of tripe and sausage, slightly closer to what you might find in a Madrid bar.
It was fascinating to find these distant cousins of the menudo I grew up eating during the holidays in a Michelin-starred fine-dining restaurant. The callos seemed to bring together my Spanish, Mexican and Peruvian heritage in a single dish. Making these connections is one of the reasons we travel.
My meal at Montia, during a long-planned trip to Spain, came the week before the world exploded with bewilderment over the extent of the Trump administration's tariffs. It was an escape that seems especially sweet in retrospect now that stock markets are plunging and airlines are pessimistic about the demand for travel as consumer confidence is rattled.
Always a luxury, travel is one of the first things people forgo when the economy feels uncertain. Yet with each trip I take I acquire new insights not only into the world at large, but also into my own smaller world at home.
In addition to the callos connection, eating at Montia, about a 45-minute Uber ride from central Madrid — think Pasadena to Santa Monica with less traffic — gave me a fresh look at what it means to eat locally. Certainly, California chefs cook with seasonal local produce, but at Ochoa's restaurant, with a working garden behind the restaurant and the dining room built around two trees that reach through the ceiling, you feel the forest's influence. The Sierra de Guadarrama mountain range rises above the restaurant's town, and it's a good bet that the morel mushrooms surrounded by an escargot broth were harvested nearby. One of his welcome snacks is a wild rabbit croquette.
I was also intrigued by the chef's treatment of sweetbreads. Instead of serving the nodes whole, where they sometimes look like chicken nuggets, Ochoa slices the sweetbreads horizontally and grills them, almost making them appear like a rare piece of steak.
The restaurant's service was warm and inviting, even for a solo diner, which I was that night. The chefs, their aprons fastened with only a single shoulder strap giving the brigade a pirate spirit, brought out each of the dishes and explained how they were prepared with charm and passion. And it was hard not to fall under the spell of Marco Massolini, the restaurant's wine guru whose enthusiasm for natural wines is infectious.
When the bill came, it was shockingly reasonable compared with Los Angeles tasting menus that can cost more than $300 per person without wine. Montia charged about $250 — 130 euros for some 20 dishes plus 78 euros for an extensive wine pairing. If the tariff situation eases and we feel secure enough to travel again, Montia is a place I'd love to eat again.
Columnist Jenn Harris' newest restaurant review takes a look at chef Zach Scherer's Santa Ana restaurant Darkroom: 'Imagine your cool friend from college, the one with really good taste in music, throwing a dinner party where the vibes are consistently immaculate. ... The menu is as unpredictable as the music, zigzagging among Asian, Mediterranean and Latin influences before skidding to a stop at dessert. And it likely will change with each visit. ... If you're experiencing menu fatigue, weary of the parkerhouse rolls, gem lettuce salads and crudo at just about every 'small plates' restaurant in town, consider Darkroom the antidote.'
Harris also has a separate rundown of nine affordable L.A. lunch spots where a meal costs $15 or less.
It seemed like Genghis Cohen, with its 1980s-inflected signage and 'Kanton Knish' would always be a Fairfax Avenue fixture. But as Stephanie Breijo reports, the New York-style Chinese American restaurant and music venue is under threat now that it's being forced to move from its strip mall location on May 31 after failing to negotiate an acceptable new lease with the ownership company that is redeveloping the building. Construction has already begun around the restaurant. Current owners Marc Rose and Med Abrous, who took over the business in 2015, 'are planning a temporary relocation of the restaurant as they search for a more permanent home,' Breijo writes. They 'see the survival of Genghis Cohen as stewarding a bit of the city's restaurant history.'
'We have been working our tails off to find a solution, and I believe that we found the best possible solution to a real crappy situation that we were put in,' Rose said. 'We love this place, we love what we do, and none of that is going away.' Fingers crossed.
Meanwhile, senior food editor Danielle Dorsey writes that 'after a swell of community support that ultimately couldn't save Le Petit Four, the sunny French-Californian bistro in West Hollywood closed [March 31] after 44 years of business.'
'Sunset used to be the place to hang out. It was packed, packed, packed,' owner Alexandre Morgenthaler told Dorsey. 'But since COVID everything went up in price. Minimum wage went up 30% in West Hollywood. We lost traffic.'
Two other West Hollywood restaurants, Dorsey reports, have also closed: the Den on Sunset, open for 16 years, and the West Hollywood location of Irish pub chain Rock & Reilly's.
'In an effort to bring traffic back to the area,' Dorsey adds, 'West Hollywood Chamber of Commerce and the city of West Hollywood launched an April initiative that provides free parking across all meters, city lots and city structures every Wednesday from 4 p.m. to midnight. And dozens of restaurants and bars are offering discounts and happy hour deals to encourage patronage, including $10 cocktails and bites at Formosa Cafe and $8 cocktails at Connie & Ted's.'
One sign of hope: Karen Garcia reports that Norm Langer, who seven months ago told columnist Steve Lopez that he was thinking about closing the 72-year-old Langer's Deli in part because of city neglect, has seen enough progress in the neighborhood from the Karen Bass administration to stick around — at least for now. Not that everything is perfect, but he sees the effort and hopes to stick around for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, Super Bowl LXl in 2027 and the 2028 Summer Olympics.
Stephanie Breijo devoted last weekend's cooking newsletter to variations on the Dodger dog, starting with a conversation with Tommy Brockert of the Dodger-themed La Sorted's where he offers a Dodger-dog-inspired pizza and will have a rotation of regional hot dogs throughout this year's baseball season. She also includes recipes for former L.A. Times Test Kitchen director Noelle Carter's make-your-own hot dog cart, Marcy Goldman's homemade hot dog buns and chef Curtis Stone's tomato sauce, a.k.a. ketchup. And sneak peak for next week: Jenn Harris went to Dodger Stadium to rank the best new foods, including the most baroque variation on a Dodger dog yet: the $40 Slugger, a hot dog with a 16-inch jalapeño cheddar sausage so long it needs its own handled cardboard carrying case. Look for her story and video on Monday morning.
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USA Today
11 hours ago
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Bonnaroo Music Festival canceled due to severe weather, flooding: Refunds and info
Bonnaroo Music Festival canceled due to severe weather, flooding: Refunds and info Show Caption Hide Caption Coachella campers face festival traffic nightmare Coachella campers arrived ahead of the start of the famed festival only to face massive traffic lines. The 2025 Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival was canceled after one day due to severe weather and flooding. Heavy rainfall swamped the main venue, Centeroo, forcing the evacuation of attendees. Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival 2025 organizers have canceled the remaining three days of the buzzy annual event. Severe weather and flooding forced Bonnaroo officials to announce on June 13 that they were canceling the weekend portions of the festival. In a statement released the same day on Bonnaroo's official website and social media pages, organizers said they were "beyond gutted, but we must make the safest decision and cancel the remainder of Bonnaroo." "We have put our hearts and souls into making this weekend the most special one of the year, and cannot express how crushed we are to have to make this decision," they said in their statement. "Thank you in advance for your patience, your positivity and your unfailing Bonnaroovian spirit." Bonnaroo 2025 canceled: Officials call off shows after severe weather swamps grounds Initially, festival officials suspended shows around 1 p.m. local before evacuating Centeroo — the main performance venue with six stages, soon after. For the next six hours, the inclement weather ranged from gentle showers to torrential thunderstorms. The weather dropped just about an inch of rain on Bonnarroo's hometown of Manchester, Tennessee — around an hour outside Nashville — according to the National Weather Service. The rainfall swamped Centeroo and the areas around the main stages. Attendees mud wrestled even during rain delays in mucky conditions. The only headliner to perform was country hitmaker Luke Combs on Thursday, who made history as the festival's first-ever country headliner. During his rousing set, he brought out three-time Grammy winner Miranda Lambert for support and performed a slew of hits. Tyler, the Creator, Olivia Rodrigo and Hozier were set to helm the remaining days. Bonnaroo refunds: What ticket holders can expect In their statement, Bonnaroo officials vowed to "make things right" with festivalgoers and said all one-day Friday, Saturday and Sunday admission tickets and parking purchased via Front Gate Tickets will be refunded. All four-day admission tickets and camping accommodations will receive a 75% refund. "All refunds will be processed in as little as 30 days" to the customer's original payment method, according to a refund fact sheet. Contributing: Melonee Hunt


Buzz Feed
13 hours ago
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Doja Cat Addresses An Uncomfortable Fan Interaction
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Yahoo
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50 Extremely Rare Historical Photos That Show Just How Completely And Totally Unhinged The World Used To Be
is the eight-year-old bodybuilder Patricia O'Keefe, carrying a 200-pound man on her back: For reference: she's 64 pounds, he's 200. of which, this is "Boy Samson," the 14-year-old "strongest boy in the world" holding up a grown man on a motorcycle circa 1932: Today, that very same boy might have a Podcast. The mind reels. is Diane Stopky, winner of International Posture Queen in 1957, posing with her award-winning spine: Diane — congrats on the spine. of high honors, here's Gail Hooper AKA Miss National Catfish, 1954: (Kevin Garnett voice) ANYTHING IS POSSIBLE!!! is a scene from the I'm sure absolutely electric "Prettiest Ankle Competition" in London in 1930: Let me know in the comments which ankle you think won. is how some scientists tested the effectiveness football helmets in the 1950s — by banging themselves in the head with a heavy object: I'd imagine it's always a long, long day at the heavy-object-head-banging factory. used to be able to have picnics at the Los Angeles alligator farm: I wonder what an alligators favorite cheese is. is Henry Behrens, at one time the world's smallest man, doing a little tango with a cat: He stood 30 inches tall, and, we can safely assume, was one heck of a dancer. gigantic contraptions are apparently one of the first life preservers ever made: They're made out of mattresses but something tells me they aren't comfortable. is a rubber beauty mask designed to eliminate wrinkles, massage the face, and promote skin health from the 1920s: It's definitely not a parasitic, terrifying alien life form. is Robert Earl Hughes, the one-time world's heaviest man and his pet dog: At his heaviest, Robert weighed over 1,000 pounds. Michelin Man not only used to be absolutely terrifying, but he used to run with a gang of several other musically inclined Michelin men: Chet Baker is shaking. diving used to be all the rage. No, really. This is Eunice Padfield and her horse diving head first into a pool of water: Let's be thankful this is no longer a thing. is George Stern and his prized invention, a fast-vaporizing fluid that basically let you light your hands on fire and not get burned: George looks so happy with his hands on fire. Good for him. a picture of a very safe, normal setup for parents and a baby to enjoy ice skating from the late 1930s: No problems here. of babies, they used to travel up with the luggage on planes: Related: 23 Cute, Happy, And Wholesome Posts I Saw On The Internet This Week That You Absolutely Need To See totally fine to me: Yup, nothin' to see here. Out of sight, out of mind. another terrifying rubber beauty mask designed to eliminate wrinkles from the 1920s: AHHHHHH! a totally non-unhinged inventino: a GUN was designed to take a picture each time its trigger was pulled: Can't image why this didn't catch on. is Martin Laurello, AKA "The Human Owl," a sideshow performer from the early 1900s who could turn his head almost completely around: Good for Martin. what a treadmill looked like in the 1920s: Looks like you could take that thing OFF ROAD. of exercise and weight-loss, for a brief, wonderous moment, portable saunas were a thing. Just look at how happy this man is: Lookin' good, bud. 1924, a game of Human Chess was played in the Soviet Union: You know, if you weren't able to watch Babe Ruth hit 46 homeruns back then, you had to find some other way to entertain yourself. 1918, over 30,000 soldiers came together to make a giant human-shield: This is what life before the Nintendo Switch was like. picture, from the early 1900s, shows an early basketball game, kneepads and all: Josh Hart would make that man CRY. Related: 40 Really, Really, Really, Really, Really, Really, Really, Really, Really, Really, Really, Really, Really, Really, Really, Really Creepy Wikipedia Pages another photo of a vintage basketball player, standing in front of a piano and striking fear into the hearts of his opponents: I think Jalen Brunson could put up 176 on this dude. one brief, strange moment, WOODEN bathing suits were a thing: Bring them BACK. is apparently a group of teachers getting lit and celebrating Spring Break in the early 1900s: Not sure how accurate the teacher and spring break thing is, but they are certainly getting lit. 1948, one brave man invented a spoon with a fan on it, meant for cooling soup: Although, according to the Getty Images caption, there's more than meets the eye with this spoon. Apparently, it was for "inedible soup," and "the offending soup is drained away through the hollow handle, via a tube hidden up the sleeve, into a hot water bottle attached to the leg." 30.I know you've seen a bicycle built for two... but how about a bicycle built for FOUR: What's next... a bicycle built for five? Probably. is the Dynasphere, a giant wheel vehicle invented by Dr. J. A. Purves that could go as a fast as 30 MPH: Doc is having the time of his life. is how condoms were tested in the 1930s: Water balloon fights at the condom factory probably went crazy. is Norwegian speed skater Oscar Mathisen pictured with his many, many, many, many awards and honors throughout the early 1900s: He set numerous world records, some even apparently lasting until the 21st century. a scientist testing out a hands-free shaving machine that used robotic arms: Okay, it was actually meant to be used with radioactive material, but shaving is a cool second use-case. is the cross-section of the 1,300 year-old Mark Twain sequoia tree, cut down in 1892 for display in New York: The unfortunately maimed tree measured 16 feet across. Beach in California used to have a bunch of oil derricks on top of it: Looks like something out of a Star War. is Alfred Langevin, a man renowned for his very useful talent of being able to smoke out of his eyeball: Flight? Invisibility? Nah. Gimme the smoking eye power. is Stephan Bibrowski, otherwise known as Lionel the Lion-faced Man. Stephan had a condition known as hypertrichosis that caused hair to grow up to eight inches long all over his body including, obviously, his face: He performed for years with Barnum & Bailey and spoke five languages. is the cyclomer, an amphibious bicycle meant to work on both land and sea. It, unfortunately, didn't catch on: That looks very difficult to ride, not going to lie. World War II, some soldiers would utilize their gas masks while cutting onions: Our strongest, our bravest, and our least-teary-eyed. right here is a piano specifically designed for people on bedrest: We need a theramin designed for people on bedrest. airplanes were pressurized for commercial use, flyers had to wear oxygen masks at higher altitudes: This picture is from 1939 and taken while 20,000 feet in the air. is a giant elephant seal, pictured here at a Paris zoo in the 1930s: That's my guy right there. 1936, architect André Basdevant proposed making the Eiffel Tower accessible by car. It would look like this: Imagine taking a Dodge RAM up there and just lettin' her rip. Bliss. a bunch of soldiers practicing their swimming moves while on land: here's a bunch of kids doing the same: Can we please get these kid some WATER. another strange way to learn how to swim. Each one of these kids is connected by rope to this "merry-go-round" contraption: Looks very safe. the 1930s, this couple won an Atlantic City dance marathon after dancing for 1,473 hours: Mamma mia! is one of the earliest designs for roller skates. They didn't catch on for some reason: Maybe make the wheels even bigger? finally, here's a lady covered head to toe in potatoes: Not much to say here. That's a lot of potatoes. Also in Internet Finds: Lawyers Are Sharing Their Juiciest "Can You Believe It?!" Stories From The Courtroom, And They're As Surprising As You'd Expect Also in Internet Finds: People Are Sharing "The Most Believable Conspiracy Theories," And Now I'm Questioning Everything I Thought I Knew Also in Internet Finds: 51 People Who Quickly Discovered Why Their Hilariously Clueless Partner Was Single Before Meeting Them