Chef Rick Bayless, feeling naked without the guacamole
During the Grand Cayman cookout back in January a rather giddy Rick Bayless was tight-lipped about a new concept he was working on which he called "a completely new concept that you've never seen before", as he told Eater(the original announcement was back in November of 2013), in the self-stimulating hyperbole we've come to expect from Bayless-- [there's]"virtually
nothing like it in the United States." The Oklahoma native has been spending lots of time in the Modern Mexican restaurants of Mexico City and throughout the republic in the last couple of years, as opposed to the tourist friendly traditional restaurants he's favored in the past like El Bajio and El Cardenal.
This will come as a shock to many Bayless devotees who for years have considered Baylesses' restaurants to be alta cocina (high cuisine), or Modern Mexican kitchens. This is due to the fact that few U.S. citizens have experienced Modern Mexican cuisine, including the ones who've traveled to Mexico City, preferring the mid-priced, commercial restaurants found in guide books like Contramar, Hacienda de Los Morales, or Cafe Tacuba. Bayless is exited about the advancements in Modern Mexican cuisine happening in Mexico right now, claiming that it "just emerged 5, 6, or 7 years ago"--once again, the anthropologist is way off--try about 18 years ago, Chef. Regardless, this will be the first real challenge for the most famous Chef cooking Mexican flavors in the U.S.
Friday, April 11, 2014
Tuesday, April 1, 2014
Food Truck Royalty to Headline the 1st Annual Ktown Night Market on April 18th-19th
Ever since the food truck craze of the years 2008-2010, the
streets of L.A. have become a bit more calm and have fallen into a sustainable
level of fancy food trucks. It’s clear that we love them and they are here to
stay (we’re also glad that we no longer have a new food truck opening every
week). Some of the veterans of the food truck wars will be serving up their
signature dishes at the 1st Annual KTown Night Market alongside the winners of
the first 3 seasons of the Great Food Truck Race on April 18th to 19th.
That’s right, the Great Food Truck Race champs, Grill ‘Em
All (Season 1), The Lime Truck (Season 2), and KTown Night Market food truck
curators, Seoul Sausage, will be bumper to bumper for the very first time. They will be joined by old-timers—Coolhaus,
India Jones, and the White Rabbit Truck, plus East LA Tacos, Fluff Ice,
Jogasaki and Belly Bomz. Don’t see your favorite truck on the list?—well, you
can vote for your truck to win the last spot at www.KTOWNnightmarket.com/thelasttruck
The KTown Night Market is free to the public with over 100
food and merchandise stands, and 40 food vendors representing the multi-ethnic
cuisines of the Los Angeles and Orange counties. There
will be live music to celebrate the special occasion, and with Seoul Sausage in
the driver’s seat, L.A.’s newest night market experience promises to deliver
the flavor.
KTown Night Market, April 18th-19th, Robert F. Kennedy Community
Schools. For more information go to www.KTOWNnightmarket.com