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Soup Goddess Stirs Up A New Soup Base In Burbank

Soup Goddess - Foodzooka Splat Feature

Early this fall, a Soup Goddess shop sprung up in the Burbank media district, becoming the area’s go-to spot for comforting, plant-based soups. Though the store was new, it marked the next phase of a vegan soup business that started simmering for Lizzie Meyer over a year ago.

Before converting the storefront to Soup Goddess, Lizzie had been operating there as an I Love Juice Bar franchisee. With her passion for healthy foods and creating recipes, she was also making soups and offering them on a special menu alongside the juice bar’s fresh juices and smoothies. “People were coming in our store when it was so hot outside, and they kept asking for soup,” Lizzie recalled. “My son said, ‘You’re like a soup goddess, Mom!’”

Soup Goddess - Gianna DiDonato, Lizzie Meyer, Dillon Meyer (Foodzooka)
Soup Goddess – Gianna DiDonato, Lizzie Meyer, Dillon Meyer (Foodzooka)

As the soups grew more popular, Lizzie’s oldest son Dillon Meyer and his girlfriend Gianna DiDonato helped spin off Soup Goddess into a separate business last fall, selling three or four varieties of jarred soups across nine local farmers markets. With her soups gaining momentum and the juice bar losing business to a new Whole Foods up the street, it was a logical step for Lizzie to reinvent her shop and establish a fixed location for Soup Goddess.

“I can’t tell you how many people stop in because they’re excited to see soup,” said Lizzie. “They ignore the whole vegan part of it and just come in because it says soup!”

Soup Goddess - Bae-rito and Cabbage Fit Soup (Foodzooka)
Soup Goddess – Bae-rito and Cabbage Fit Soup (Foodzooka)

To live up to such enthusiasm, the new grab-and-go eatery offers 15 varieties of soup, plus sandwiches, salads, and an array of novelty dishes—all of which are vegan. Several soup selections carry the appeal of popular flavors, such as the Pot Pie, Mushroom Heaven, French Onion, Broccoli Cheddah, and T-Basil. But instead of using dairy, creaminess is achieved with ingredients made from cashews, almonds, or coconuts. A few gazpachos offer cold alternatives, including Wa-wa-watermelon and Avocado Mint.

Soup Goddess soups are densely concentrated with vegetables and packed with flavor, borrowing from some of the produce-pulverizing techniques that Lizzie mastered with the juice bar business. Thanks to top-of-the-line extractors, she can easily remove skins and seeds or liquefy vegetables to use as natural soup sweeteners.

Soup Goddess - Rojo Lentil Soup (Foodzooka)
Soup Goddess – Rojo Lentil Soup (Foodzooka)

A mirepoix, or flavor base, of carrots, onions, and celery goes into almost every soup. “The way I caramelize it, and the way I make it and spice it up is what builds each one of these soups,” Lizzie explained.

In the mornings, you might catch the staff chopping away at fresh produce that was delivered moments ago. Mounds of diced veggies get tossed around in pans before they fulfill their soupy destiny inside the towering stock pots simmering on stove burners.

Soup Goddess - Caramelizing leeks (Foodzooka)
Soup Goddess – Caramelizing leeks (Foodzooka)

Because customers often stop by to pick up a soup for lunch at the office or for dinner on the way home, Lizzie crafts each soup to be filling and satisfying. “They want a soup, they want it to be good for them, but they don’t want to be hungry an hour later,” she said. “I put a lot of asparagus in my soups, a lot of cauliflower. I think it may actually be too much produce, but I want it to taste good.”

Ingredients like lentils, beans, potatoes, or broccoli also add substance to individual soups. The Chili is a popular hearty choice, packed with five different beans and fresh ground pumpkin.

Another nourishing option brimming with seven vegetables is the Cabbage Fit Soup, which at only 85 calories per serving, is also the cornerstone of a weight-loss and detox diet that has been well received by customers from nearby offices. “You’re not starving yourself, you’re not hungry. So you don’t have those pangs. And then you’re doing your body a really good deed,” Lizzie said.

Soup Goddess - Cabbage Fit Soup (Foodzooka)
Soup Goddess – Cabbage Fit Soup (Foodzooka)

Recognizing that the appeal of soup is often driven by health conditions, Lizzie can offer simple vegetable broths or create customized orders in small batches on request. With so many soups that are comforting and easy to eat, Soup Goddess is a happy find for those who’ve recently had dental work or who can’t handle coarse foods or certain ingredients.

“It’s good for ailments, too, so that’s the kind of thing that I’m focused on, trying to reach people for health aspects,” said Lizzie.

As a health-conscious vegan with three active sons to feed, Lizzie spent many years crafting recipes with items that were easy to find in grocery stores. Now she can feature more of these dishes at Soup Goddess, mixing and matching a range of flavors and textures that pair well with soup. In addition to the salads, sandwiches, and wraps are items that sound indulgent without the guilt, such as nacho chips, cheesy potatoes, and cheesy pasta. The menu continues to evolve as Lizzie comes up with new creations, including Italian tacos, pizza rolls, and chocolaty breakfast oats.

Soup Goddess - K-Booty (Foodzooka)
Soup Goddess – K-Booty (Foodzooka)

The brazen names for many of the dishes—the Skinny Ass-paragus soup, the K-Booty pasta salad, and the Bae-rito burrito, to name a few—convey an attitude that resonates with young workers from nearby entertainment offices. The hashtag #VeganAF written in large letters on the window also reflects the lighthearted atmosphere inside. Regulars enjoy the energy and welcoming vibe that greets them when they visit Soup Goddess. “For me, it’s not just about what we’re serving, it’s also about how we’re serving it,” Lizzie said.

At the shop, the soups are sold in 16 or 32-ounce mason jars, and other menu items are conveniently packaged to go. You can pick up a refrigerated jar of soup to enjoy later or request a warm jar to devour right away. Though the store isn’t currently set up for dine-in service, a bar counter along the window offers space to enjoy your meal on the spot. And if you bring your jar back for recycling, Soup Goddess will apply credit toward your next purchase.

Soup Goddess - Vegan takeout selection (Foodzooka)
Soup Goddess – Vegan takeout selection (Foodzooka)

You can also find Soup Goddess jars on the shelves of three independent grocery stores across LA: Rainbow Acres in Marina Del Rey, Follow Your Heart in Canoga Park, and Handy Market in Burbank. Though Lizzie had to leave the farmers markets during the transition to open the store, she has since brought Soup Goddess back to the Malibu and La Cañada farmers markets, and she aims to return to more next year.

One of the underlying motivations that pulled Lizzie into the food business was to make healthy foods more available, but an even broader aspiration for Soup Goddess is declared in its slogan: “Feed the world!” True to this cause, the team regularly works with charities to feed the homeless and those in need, setting aside time to serve their soup at places such as the Midnight Mission shelter in downtown Los Angeles. Last month, Soup Goddess fed Malibu residents who lost their homes in the destruction of the Woolsey Fire.

“That’s actually very gratifying. And it’s one of the reasons why I really want this to spread. Not for me to get credit, but to help and support people who need it,” said Lizzie.

Soup Goddess - Burbank (Foodzooka)
Soup Goddess – Burbank (Foodzooka)

For shop hours and more info, click the Foodzooka profile below to find the Soup Goddess website and follow them on social media.

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Sonny’s Amazing Italian Ices & Cremes Refreshes The Classics

Sonny's Amazing Italian Ices & Cremes - Foodzooka Splat Feature

When it comes to frozen treats, Sonny’s Amazing Italian Ices & Cremes in Sherman Oaks covers the spectrum—from icy to creamy, from old-fashioned to newfangled. With well over 50 possible flavors of housemade Italian ices, creme ices, and ice creams, Sonny’s can serve up countless combos of scoops, sundaes, shakes, floats, malts, and more.

All this frosty variety comes from the ambitious efforts of New York transplants, Sindy Habib and Matt Hoch. Sindy opened Sonny’s in 2016 as a side business to her veterinary career, pursuing a passion she inherited from her father, who had made and sold ice cream in New York. While she’s still a full-time veterinarian at McGrath Veterinary Center, Sindy spends her spare hours churning out artisanal flavors at Sonny’s. When Matt jumped in to manage the shop after retiring as a school principal, he crammed to learn the ice cream business and continues to find new flavors through experimentation. Together, Sindy and Matt run Sonny’s with a fresh take on the ice cream parlors they enjoyed as kids in Brooklyn.

“It starts with the 56 flavors we make, and they are the real deal,” Matt said. “The flavors are great, made with the highest quality ingredients. It’s fun to create other treats from those to give people more dessert options.”

Sonny's Amazing Italian Ices - Wall mural of Sonny (Foodzooka)
Sonny’s Amazing Italian Ices – Wall mural of Sonny (Foodzooka)

While New Yorkers have enjoyed Italian ices for generations, it’s often a new experience for Los Angelenos. So Matt helps explain to new customers that Sonny’s ices are similar to sorbet, made from a blend of water and fruit (or other ingredients like chocolate) for a more natural concentrated flavor, which gets churned to a smooth, velvety texture as it freezes. It tastes and feels distinctly different from other water-based frozen treats like snow cones or shave ice, which pour syrups over plain ice to add flavor. And since Sonny’s Italian ices are entirely dairy-free, gluten-free and vegan, they’ve been particularly well received by diet-conscious West Coasters.

The housemade quality of Sonny’s ices shows through in the bits of fruit embedded in flavors like cherry, mango, peach, strawberry and more. Likewise, the tangy citrus flavors contain the characteristic zest of hand-squeezed juices. “Our flavors come from high-quality liquid bases,” Matt added. Among the 20 rotating Italian ices, curiosity may lead you to try less commonplace flavors such as sour blue raspberry and tiger’s blood (a blend of strawberry, watermelon, and coconut).

Sonny's Amazing Italian Ices (courtesy) - Italian ices
Sonny’s Amazing Italian Ices (courtesy) – Italian ices

But if your sweet tooth is screaming for ice cream, Sonny’s offers many options to hush your craving. The ice cream menu includes the classic trio of flavors with subtly upgraded labels: Vanilla Bean, Dark Chocolate, and Strawberry Balsamic. For the strawberry, the berries are marinated and heated in balsamic vinegar, giving the strawberries a fruitier, brighter, robust taste. “It could be the best strawberry ice cream you’ve ever had,” Matt suggested to one customer.

You’ll find a similar scrutiny for quality mixed into all the creative creamy flavors. The Maple Walnut ice cream is made with 100% pure Vermont maple syrup and wet walnuts, which are steeped in simple syrup for a sweet, chewy nuttiness. More novel dessert and candy flavors include Apple Pie, Red Velvet, Lemon Cookie Crunch, Cotton Candy, and The Stakeout (coffee & glazed donuts). Sonny’s also makes vegan ice creams using a coconut base, offered in flavors such as matcha, cookie butter, and cookies & cream.

“We are putting our best foot forward by using top of the line ingredients for everything that we do,” Matt explained.

Sonny's Amazing Italian Ices - Chocolate ice cream (Foodzooka)
Sonny’s Amazing Italian Ices – Chocolate ice cream (Foodzooka)

It’s because there’s no skimping on the cream that Sonny’s ice creams merit the “premium” label. They contain 14% milkfat, which is on the high end of the 12-14% US standard for premium ice creams, versus the minimum 10% milkfat in regular ice creams. Whipping a bit of air into the mix keeps the ice creams scoopably soft, achieving a densely rich and creamy consistency that’s both indulgent and gratifying.

When you can’t decide between the decadently rich ice creams and the vibrantly light Italian ices, Sonny’s creme ices will meet you in the middle. “If the Italian ice and the ice cream were to have a baby, it would be the creme ice,” said Matt. Made with a base of 75% water and 25% premium ice cream mix, creme ice brings the smooth richness of dairy to Italian ice, with less fat and a lighter texture than ice cream. Flavors include orange creamsicle, peanut butter, pistachio, nutella with chocolate ganache, and cherry vanilla chocolate chunk.

Sonny's Amazing Italian Ices (courtesy) - Creme ice
Sonny’s Amazing Italian Ices (courtesy) – Creme ice

Still looking to intensify your dessert experience? Pile your scoops into a housemade waffle bowl with your choice of over 20 toppings, including fresh whipped cream and various fruits, nuts, candies, sprinkles, and sweet sauces. Baseball fans can even have scoops served in a mini baseball helmet, featuring teams from the East Coast, West Coast, and in between.

Or you can chill out with a signature sundae. Sonny’s Chocolate Brownie Sundae, Strawberry Shortcake Sundae, and Cookie Sundae are all made with freshly baked goods and two scoops of ice cream. While the Sonny Split takes longer to make, you’ll see why it’s worth the wait. Once the banana is split lengthwise, the inner surfaces get fired with a brulee torch, creating a caramelized layer that gives the flat sides of the banana a sweet, crispy shell. The two candied slices then flank two scoops of vanilla ice cream, topped with a mountain of whipped cream, sprinkled with graham crunch, and drizzled with caramel sauce, all packed into a waffle bowl.

“People identify that with us, because I don’t know anywhere else that you can get it,” Matt said.

Sonny's Amazing Italian Ices - Sonny's Split (Foodzooka)
Sonny’s Amazing Italian Ices – Sonny’s Split (Foodzooka)

Other rare finds at Sonny’s give you an excuse to think of ice cream as a meal. After all, it’s practically brunch if you add a scoop of vanilla ice cream, whipped cream, and a sprinkle of powdered sugar to a pile of warm mini Dutch pancakes known as poffertjes (PAW-fer-chez). You can order freshly made poffertjes coated with cinnamon sugar or topped with caramel and bananas, chocolate sauce, wild cherry topping, or strawberry sauce.

Sonny's Amazing Italian Ices (courtesy) - Poffertjes
Sonny’s Amazing Italian Ices (courtesy) – Poffertjes

And then there’s Sonny’s latest lunchy creation: the Panini Pressed Ice Cream Sandwich. In the true sense of a sandwich, an ice cream scoop is centered between buttery brioche buns. Matt adds sauces and crunchy stuff such as pecan pralines or cereal, and heats it up in a specialized panini press that seals the bun around its cold contents.

“Tasting is believing. What you get with that is the hot bun when it’s pressed and the cold ice cream inside. And you get the soft ice cream with the crunchy texture within it,” Matt explained.

Sonny's Amazing Italian Ices - Ice cream sandwich (Foodzooka)
Sonny’s Amazing Italian Ices – Ice cream sandwich (Foodzooka)

If you’re too rushed to handle a hot-cold sandwich or even balance a bowl and spoon, you could always consume your frozen dessert with a cup and straw. Shakes, floats, and malts deliver any of Sonny’s artisanal flavors in more slurpable forms. Try the Cake Shake made with cake batter, or one of the six different Girl Scout Cookie Shakes, which include real Girl Scout cookies with ice cream, toppings, and sauce combinations that recreate the flavors of specific cookies. There’s even a float inspired by a beverage from the Wizarding World of Harry Potter at nearby Universal Studios: the Butterbeer Float. It’s made with cream soda, butterscotch, vanilla ice cream, and whipped cream. “Many, many people have said that they like this better than what they’ve had at Universal,” said Matt.

Sonny's Amazing Italian Ices (courtesy) - Peanut butter shake
Sonny’s Amazing Italian Ices (courtesy) – Peanut butter shake

Though the extensive dessert choices at Sonny’s may undermine your decision-making skills on your first visit, take comfort in knowing there are plenty of reasons to return to try more. As the specials board wisely advises, “Try them all!! (Not all at once, silly).”

You may catch a bout of silliness when you spot the large cartoon logo painted on the wall. It pictures Sonny the dog sitting in a cross-legged lotus pose, balancing a bowl of colorful scoops in one paw and gripping a spoon in the other. His gaze seems fixed on you as he patiently licks his chops, as though waiting for you to give him the go-ahead to dig in to his dessert. It’s a whimsically playful depiction that memorializes the shop’s namesake. Sonny was a rescued black labrador with a life-threatening condition that Sindy took in as a puppy. Under Sindy’s care, Sonny persevered through his illnesses and enjoyed a full life of 13 years.

“He never really held a bowl of ice cream, and he didn’t really sit in a lotus position,” Matt confessed. “But he was a great pet.”

Sonny's Amazing Italian Ices - Original Sonny's logo (Foodzooka)
Sonny’s Amazing Italian Ices – Original Sonny’s logo (Foodzooka)

As ice cream spots go, Sonny’s Amazing Italian Ices and Cremes is a young pup with a lick of old-timey gusto. Nostalgic hints at ice cream parlors and candy shops of bygone eras are embedded in the cherry red metal furnishings and shelves full of retro candies, including Necco Wafers, Big League Chew, Reed’s Candy Rolls, and Bonomo’s Turkish Taffy. A wall of vintage New York photos and baseball scenes further hint at the East Coast inspirations behind the business. In both the atmosphere and the flavors, Sonny’s mix of old and new, East and West, triggers a sense of familiarity and wonder.

“Most people come here not just to satisfy a sweet craving but to relive some long-ago memory from their past,” Matt commented. “They’re sharing something that means something to them.”

Sonny's Amazing Italian Ices & Cremes - Sherman Oaks (Foodzooka)
Sonny’s Amazing Italian Ices & Cremes – Sherman Oaks (Foodzooka)

For Sonny’s store hours and more info, click the Foodzooka profile below to find their website and follow them on social media.

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Tortoni Caffe Tangos With Argentina’s Coffee Culture

Tortoni Caffé - Foodzooka Splat Feature

Though it bears a conspicuously Italian name, Tortoni Caffe is a new coffeehouse that brings a subtle Argentinian ambiance to Sherman Oaks, from the yerba mate and empanadas on the menu to the painting of tango dancers on the wall.

Such cross-cultural cues may seem obvious if you’re familiar with the famously historic Café Tortoni in Buenos Aires, which inspired the naming of this Ventura Blvd arrival. Having come from Argentina, Tortoni Caffe co-owner Daniel Avaca saw the name as a sign of good luck for both its longevity and multicultural legacy. The Café Tortoni in Argentina was founded in 1858 by a French immigrant, who had named it after an earlier one established in Paris by an Italian immigrant.

“So, we as Argentinians moved to the US, and we opened a cafe called Tortoni. We are continuing the chain,” said Daniel.

Tortoni Caffé - Sherman Oaks (Foodzooka)
Tortoni Caffé – Sherman Oaks (Foodzooka)

With its red brick facade, high ceiling, cozy seating, and tempting snacks, Tortoni sets an easygoing, sociable atmosphere that differs from the impersonal coffee chain scene of rushed pickups and reclusive laptop warriors. The cafe aims to create a welcoming gathering place that connects with the local community.

“We want to establish relationships with people. We become part of the daily lives of our customers,” Daniel said. “They appreciate the experience of sitting with an espresso or a cappuccino served in a porcelain cup, not a paper cup.”

Tortoni Caffé - Espresso (Foodzooka)
Tortoni Caffé – Espresso (Foodzooka)

This point is emphasized by the Tortoni-branded porcelain cups lining the top of the espresso machine in various sizes made for espressos, cappuccinos, and other styles of coffee. For all their coffee beverages, Tortoni chose to use beans from Santa Cruz roaster Verve, because of its reputation for sourcing directly from farmers and paying them fair prices. “Plus, it’s very good coffee,” Daniel said.

When he initiated this venture in 2016, coffee was something Daniel loved to drink but didn’t know how to make. So he enrolled in the American Barista and Coffee School in Portland, Oregon, where he received a crash course in all things coffee. Among the familiar list of coffee drinks at Tortoni Caffe, the piccolo is also known as “cortado,” a commonly ordered style in Argentina which adds steamed milk to an espresso shot to make a 4-ounce beverage.

Tortoni’s tea selection comes from Palais des Thes, along with an imported traditional Argentinian yerba mate. Grown in northern Argentina, this indigenous nutrient-rich concoction contains caffeine and often provides an energy boost, but without the jitters. It tastes similar to green tea, but slightly more grassy. Tortoni serves it hot or cold, making their cold-brewed version with orange peel for a refreshing hint of citrus flavor.

Tortoni Caffé - Yerba Mate (Foodzooka)
Tortoni Caffé – Yerba Mate (Foodzooka)

From the food menu, the lunch items, pastries, and snacks at Tortoni are made locally and curated by Daniel’s business partner, Natalia Primo. Many items including baguettes, sandwiches, and brownies, come from Bread Lounge, a bakery in downtown LA’s Arts District, known for making everything by hand and using natural yeast. Since Bread Lounge has a loyal customer base in the San Fernando Valley, Tortoni also offers a closer location for residents to pick up popular items like challah loaves.

To incorporate some traditional Argentinian eats, Tortoni serves savory empanadas with options including chicken, beef, spinach, and ham and cheese. The empanadas, along with several choices of quiche, come from Carniceria Latina in Glendale. “We sell more empanadas than sandwiches,” said Daniel.

Tortoni Caffé - Empanadas with chimichurri (Foodzooka)
Tortoni Caffé – Empanadas with chimichurri (Foodzooka)

Included with the empanadas are little cups of chimichurri sauce, made in-house with parsley, garlic, and olive oil. It’s prepared in small batches every two to three days so that it not only looks fresh, but tastes fresh. Tortoni also sells their specialty sauce separately in larger amounts.

On the sweeter side, Tortoni offers an Argentinian treat called alfajores, made by Sweetshop, a baker in Upland. These blonde baked confections look like delicate cookie sandwiches. A thick layer of dulce de leche is spread between two cornstarch-based butter cookies and finished with a dusting of coconut flakes around the edge. It’s a crumbly combination with a light sweetness that melts in your mouth and pairs well with coffee. When Daniel offers samples to inquiring customers, the reactions are enthusiastic. “Once they try it, then boom!” he described.

Tortoni Caffé - Alfajor (Foodzooka)
Tortoni Caffé – Alfajor (Foodzooka)

Natalia is still experimenting with the menu and plans to introduce new items in the future, including more aspects of Argentinian cuisine that are not well represented in Los Angeles. With Daniel having managed several local restaurants before, including the first Argentinian restaurant in Los Angeles, Gaucho Grill, he knows that some compromises have to be made to bring authentic flavors that appeal to local tastes.

But beyond the menu, perhaps what truly conveys the Argentinian essence is the people behind Tortoni. Daniel’s wife Karina and Natalia’s husband Gonzalo Cullen are also key partners running the cafe, giving it the aura of a family business. They aspire to make this former office space a cozy coffee hangout where the baristas aren’t just order-takers, but people who remember your name and your order.

“I think the main component of Argentinian coffee bar culture is the Argentinian culture itself, how we interact with people, how you suddenly become friends with someone you just met,” Daniel explained. “Without that human component, it wouldn’t be an Argentinian experience.”

Tortoni Caffé - Interior (Foodzooka)
Tortoni Caffé – Interior (Foodzooka)

For cafe hours and updates, click the Foodzooka profile below to find the Tortoni Caffe website and follow them on social media.

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Almond GoodMylk. It Does A Latte Good

GoodMylk Co. - Foodzooka Splat Feature

There’s almond milk, and then there’s almond GoodMylk. Crafted by the Los Angeles-based juicer formerly known as Made With Love Wellness, GoodMylk is an artisanal brand of cold-pressed, organic almond milk that has caught on with local coffee shops in search of a better dairy alternative.

While baristas have long fulfilled requests for non-dairy creamers, lattes, and cappuccinos with soy and almond milk, the latest crop of so-called “third wave” coffee shops have grown more discerning about what goes into their brews. With their reputation for investigating the source and quality of every coffee bean and tea leaf, they’re applying similar scrutiny to find premium dairy and plant-based milks.

“There are many people who want almond milk. They just don’t know that they want a better almond milk,” said Brooke Rewa, owner of GoodMylk Co.

GoodMylk Co. - Served at Alanas Coffee (Foodzooka)
GoodMylk Co. – Served at Alanas Coffee (Foodzooka)

Brooke versed herself in the benefits of raw, cold-pressed juices and almond milk for her own health when she became vegan. Almond milk is often a staple of vegan diets as both a beverage and an ingredient in recipes. Though widely available at grocery stores in refrigerated cartons or in shelf-stable boxes, most brands must use a number of stabilizers, preservatives, sugars, and other additives to extend the shelf life and tweak the flavoring.

“I started looking at the ingredients because I was trying to cut out processed food, and I realized there were all kinds of junk in almond milk. So I started to make it myself at home. And once you taste that, there’s no going back to the store bought stuff,” she said.

Brooke had already been selling organic cold-pressed juices as a vendor at the Mar Vista Farmers Market four years ago, when inquiries about almond milk persuaded her to add it to her lineup. Growing demand allowed her to open a permanent storefront location nearby on Washington Blvd. As she was able to increase production, she soon needed a commercial facility to create larger batches of the almond milk.

GoodMylk Co. - Almond milk flavors (Foodzooka)
GoodMylk Co. – Almond milk flavors (Foodzooka)

While Brooke’s method of making almond milk continues to be the same as it was when she made it at home, it’s now on a bigger scale. The raw almonds are soaked overnight, blended with a natural flavor (honey, vanilla, etc.), and then pressed and strained through a filter. The key is to avoid heating the milk or nuts throughout the process. “You’re trying to keep as many of those micronutrients and enzymes as possible. But if you pasteurize it, you’re killing those micronutrients and enzymes,” she said.

She went on to explain that the sprouting mechanism that occurs when these raw almonds are soaked makes GoodMylk more digestible for those who may be less tolerant of other almond milks, as the enzyme inhibitors in the nuts that typically interfere with digestion are released during the soaking process.

Because California almonds are required by law to be heat-pasteurized or treated with a fumigant, the organic almonds used for GoodMylk are sourced from Spain and Italy, where they’re sold raw and unpasteurized. “They’re picked off of a tree and put in a box for us,” said Brooke.

This attention to maintaining a pure and unprocessed product would not go unnoticed. When Blue Bottle Coffee came to Los Angeles, it was the first coffee company to ask about getting GoodMylk wholesale for their shops. The Oakland-based roaster ordered 20 gallons a week, which prompted Brooke to formulate an exclusive coffee shop version of GoodMylk to serve the needs of espresso drink makers: the Barista Blend. Now GoodMylk is used in lattes across more than 50 coffee shops throughout Los Angeles and Orange County.

“It was made to pair really well with coffee, so there’s no overpowering taste. It’s lightly sweetened, so it kind of reminds you of dairy,” she said. “And it foams really beautifully.”

GoodMylk Co. - Served at Kiffe Kafe (courtesy)
GoodMylk Co. – Served at Kiffe Kafe (courtesy)

Because GoodMylk is made with more almonds than other plant-based milks, its higher fat and protein content gives it the ability to foam. This past June, Brooke hosted a Mylk Latte Art Throwdown event to promote GoodMylk’s plant-based pairability with espresso and matcha. Held at Alana’s Coffee Roasters in Mar Vista, 62 baristas came to compete for prizes. About 300 spectators were treated to a festival atmosphere with lawn games, locally made vegan food, a beer garden hosted by LA Aleworks, and vodka cocktails mixed with juices from GoodMylk Co.

“We wanted to show these baristas that you can do really cool things with our almond milk,” Brooke said. The Mylk Throwdown also marked the launch of a new product: flash frozen pouches of concentrated Barista Blend, branded for wholesale. This repackaged option allows coffee shops to order and store larger quantities for longer periods. Because freshly made raw almond milk must remain at 41 degrees and only has a shelf life of five days, coffeehouses had been reluctant to place large orders and would often run out of almond milk. The new packets make GoodMylk more accessible to more shops, and the flash freezing doesn’t affect the taste or compromise the quality.

“Flash freezing happens super quick; there’s no degradation of the nutrients and the product,” said Brooke. In the freezer, the pouches have a shelf life of six months.

GoodMylk Co. (courtesy) - Wholesale Barista Blend concentrate
GoodMylk Co. (courtesy) – Wholesale Barista Blend concentrate

So far, some of the other coffee shops and cafes in the Los Angeles area using Goodmylk include Refined Grind, 10 Speed Coffee, Espresso Cielo, Civil Coffee, The Conservatory, Chaumont Bakery, Kiff Kafe, Gracias Madre, Gjelina, Uplifters Kitchen, Bardonna, Green Table Cafe, and La Colombe Coffee.

The portability of the pouches means they can go far beyond Southern California. Brooke plans to expand GoodMylk into San Francisco in August and break into Portland and Seattle in the fall, eventually working its way over to the East Coast by next year. The product even has potential to be sold directly to consumers.

“Hopefully, it will go to retail, and you can go to your freezer and have homemade almond milk at home,” she said.

Although the Barista Blend is currently only sold wholesale, you can buy fresh bottles of GoodMylk at the shop in Culver City or at the farmers markets in Mar Vista, Studio City, and Pacific Palisades, all held on Sundays. There you’ll find up to 10 different flavors of almond GoodMylk to choose from, including vanilla, chocolate, coffee, strawberry, matcha, and lavender. Pint-sized bottles are handy as a quick beverage, or you can take home quart-sized bottles for your smoothies, granola, desserts, and other non-dairy recipes.

If you’ve built up an appetite or need a post-workout pickup, try a Mylkshake. These drinks have a base of almond milk plus several more satisfying and filling ingredients such as pistachios, cashews, dates, goji berries, and coconut meat. You’ll also get the benefits of additional nutrients such as chlorophyll and astragalus, and turmeric. “There are a lot of healthy fats and proteins in there. They’re pretty hardy,” Brooke said.

GoodMylk Co. - Mylkshakes (Foodzooka)
GoodMylk Co. – Mylkshakes (Foodzooka)

GoodMylk Co. also continues to create juices to address specific health aspects, such as anti-inflammation, promoting healthy skin, balancing hormones, and boosting energy. Some of the choices include Glow (pineapple, cucumber, spinach, kale, apple, and probiotic), Inflammation Flush (pineapple, orange, red pepper, cilantro, cucumber, celery, lemon, habanero, and probiotic), and Heart Happy (beet root, beet greens, apple, chaga, chia seeds, lemon, ginger, and probiotic).

Aside from the beverages, the boutique features a number of nutritional supplements and health and beauty products, some made exclusively by GoodMylk Co. and some from other local vendors. A few edible goodies made by local artisans are also available, such as bite-sized date morsels from Magic Dates and salted caramels from Freedom Farm.

GoodMylk Co. - Local artisanal snacks at the retail shop (Foodzooka)
GoodMylk Co. – Local artisanal snacks at the retail shop (Foodzooka)

Toward the back of the shop, you can even get a cyrotherapy treatment in a chamber that blasts your body with liquid nitrogen nearing -250° Fahrenheit. This brief jolt of ultra-low temperature is thought to stimulate blood flow to help heal problematic areas.

All of the products sold at GoodMylk Co. have a similar theme of improving your health. “You boost your immunity and your overall health, your longevity, your vitality,” Brooke said. “There are so many great side effects to go along with getting into this type of lifestyle.”

For shop hours and info, click the Foodzooka profile below to find the GoodMylk Co. website and follow them on social media.

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Muddy Paw Coffee Nudges For Attention To Animal Causes

Muddy Paw Coffee - Foodzooka Splat Feature

If the thought of drinking coffee without cream and sugar leaves a burnt taste in your mouth, Muddy Paw Coffee may change your thinking. At their shop in Silver Lake, Darren and Natalia La Borie bring a coffee roasting artistry that makes their dark roast a top seller.

“Some people have never really had a good dark roast coffee black because they’ve gotten so used to adding stuff to it before they even taste it,” Darren said. “We joke that we’re bringing people back to the dark side.”

The other side of Muddy Paw Coffee is implied in its name. The shop not only welcomes coffee lovers and their pets, but also actively gives back to support local animal causes.

While the dog-friendly patio and frequent on-site pet adoption and fundraising events draw many customers who come for the animals, just as many are lured in by the quality brews.

“The majority of customers who return are coming back for the coffee,” Darren said.

Muddy Paw Coffee - Dark roast pourover (Foodzooka)
Muddy Paw Coffee – Dark roast pourover (Foodzooka)

Darren’s coffee journey began 25 years ago in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, where he and his brother Derek La Borie acquired a roaster and facility that became Port City Coffee Roasters. Derek continues to run their East Coast roastery and shop, which offers small-batch sustainable coffee in the New England area and online. Derek also supplies freshly roasted beans for Muddy Paw Coffee, which Darren and wife Natalia oversee along with all West Coast operations.

While cultivating their family business, the La Borie brothers picked up the nuances of the coffee craft from Italians who held generations of roasting experience.

“We learned how to roast by sight, sound, and smell,” Darren said.

With this intuitive hands-on approach, they’re able to achieve a dark roast that brings out the rich, smoky flavors of the beans without the strong bitterness and notes of ashtray associated with many commercial roasts.

For Muddy Paw, the Growler blend of beans is most popular—an Italian dark roast with a deep unified color and a sheen of oil. When smashed with a thumb, the bean cracks easily with no husk fragments, releasing a chocolaty fragrance.

Muddy Paw Coffee - Growler coffee (Foodzooka)
Muddy Paw Coffee – Growler coffee (Foodzooka)

The specialty of the house is the cold brew espresso. For many caffeine outlets, cold brew coffee is often made overnight with a solid 12-hour soaking. However, Muddy Paw Coffee takes its time with the process, brewing their espresso over a three-day incubation period at room temperature, hidden away from light.

This espresso is used in the shop’s signature iced drink, Wag The Tail, blended with coconut water and a splash of milk. The combination energizes and hydrates the body, making it the preferred beverage for some customers before a workout.

“It’s also a great hangover cure,” Darren suggested.

In the shop and online, Muddy Paw sells several blends of regular coffee, espresso, and decaf, plus a few organic and fair trade single origin beans. They also offer teas selected by a local supplier, Convergence Health Teas. To flavor the drinks, Darren orders spices from Spice Station and bitters from Bar Keeper, both Silver Lake establishments.

Muddy Paw Coffee - Retail coffee bags (Foodzooka)
Muddy Paw Coffee – Retail coffee bags (Foodzooka)

To pair with your java experience at the shop, Muddy Paw Coffee also partners with Los Angeles area businesses for their selection of treats.

The sticky buns are a top seller, which come from Breakaway Bakery on Mid Wilshire, along with other vegan, organic, and gluten free options. At the front entry, the display case greets you with a dozen tempting varieties of Nonna’s Empanadas. Several cookies, pop tarts, and other baked goodies are sourced from She Baked Me in Los Angeles. Croissants are made by Cafe Los Feliz.

Muddy Paw Coffee - Nonnas empanadas (Foodzooka)
Muddy Paw Coffee – Nonnas empanadas (Foodzooka)

And, of course, you’ll find treats for dogs! Dog cookies are provided by downtown LA pet retailer Pussy and Pooch.

Between the dog and cat-themed beverages, the pet portraits on the walls, and the patio full of patrons with their furry companions, Muddy Paw effectively blends the love of coffee with a love for animals. Occasionally, this atmosphere can give first-time customers a mixed up impression.

“Some people come in thinking we sell coffee for dogs,” Darren admits with a chuckle.

Muddy Paw Coffee - Dog friendly patio (Foodzooka)
Muddy Paw Coffee – Dog friendly patio (Foodzooka)

Since opening its doors in 2013, Muddy Paw Coffee has worked with animal rescues and nonprofit organizations to raise funds and awareness within local communities and neighborhoods. The brand’s motto is “Have a Cup, Save a Pup,” and portion of everything sold — from coffee to empanadas, and from tea to t-shirts — goes to local nonprofits supporting worthy animal causes.

Muddy Paw Coffee - Beverage menu and snacks (Foodzooka)
Muddy Paw Coffee – Beverage menu and snacks (Foodzooka)

Muddy Paw has also created a means for nonprofits to raise additional funds through coffee bean sales. With the La Borie family’s coffee roasting resources, they can white label wholesale bags of beans for organizations to sell themselves, with $2 for every bag going directly to the nonprofit. To make this process even easier, Darren is working to build a customizable online sales platform that provides a stronger web presence for nonprofits.

The Muddy Paw mission extends well beyond the Silver Lake storefront. At this year’s annual CoffeeCon in downtown LA, the La Bories invited neighborhood cat rescue group Luxe Paws to join them at their Muddy Paw Coffee booth, along with two adoptable kittens. While the coffee crowd sampled Muddy Paw’s cold brew espresso drinks, the irresistibly playful kitties put a spotlight on Luxe Paws’ volunteer efforts to save, spay and neuter homeless animals.

Muddy Paw Coffee - Owner Darren La Borie at CoffeeCon LA with Luxe Paws (Foodzooka)
Muddy Paw Coffee – Owner Darren La Borie at CoffeeCon LA with Luxe Paws (Foodzooka)

Though Muddy Paw supports many different animal causes and organizations, Darren sees a particular need to address the overwhelming number of stray animals in LA resulting from high sterilization costs, unregulated breeders, cultural barriers, and lack of awareness.

While he admits that seeing cats and dogs get rescued from shelters attracts more attention, he believes that educating people on why and how to get pets spayed and neutered can have a greater impact by reducing the potential for more strays in the first place. He points out examples including Spay4LA, a mobile spay-neuter clinic, and FixNation, a low-cost and free spay-neuter program that sterilizes as many as 100 cats per day. “We need more people doing the dirty work,” he said.

10 years ago when Darren started Muddy Paw, he was heavily inspired by the people he saw working to rescue animals and each other after Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans.

“My mind went to all those animals that needed our help…and the unsung local heroes who were putting their lives at risk that needed our help as well.” He asked himself, “How do I help their cause?”

Selling Muddy Paw Coffee online was the first step he took to help to raise money for local heroes at a national level. Opening the storefront in Silver Lake was the next step to establish a physical presence and give more direct support to causes at a local level. Natalia has also been instrumental in expanding the brand and getting the word out.

Muddy Paw Coffee - Silver Lake (Foodzooka)
Muddy Paw Coffee – Silver Lake (Foodzooka)

In 2019, the couple will open a second Muddy Paw Coffee location in Eagle Rock, near the thriving business junction of Colorado Blvd. and Eagle Rock Blvd. Darren said they’re still finalizing plans, but the territory will be significantly larger than the Silver Lake shop. Rest assured, the new digs will first have to pass inspection by their own three rescue dogs: Abby (a pug-beagle mix), Santana (a Shar Pei labrador mix), and Maple (a pitbull-boxer mix).

“It’s going to be an oasis for dogs and coffee,” he said.

Muddy Paw Coffee (courtesy) - La Borie rescue dogs - Maple, Santana, Abby
Muddy Paw Coffee (courtesy) – La Borie rescue dogs – Maple, Santana, Abby

For hours and information on the Silver Lake and Eagle Rock locations, click the Foodzooka profiles below to find the Muddy Paw Coffee website and follow them on social media.

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Cookie Good Holidays Make You Feel Like A Kid Again

Cookie Good - Foodzooka Splat Feature

You know you’re in holiday spirits when familiar flavors stir fond flashbacks of being a kid. That’s why Santa Monica bakery Cookie Good aims to recreate something yummy from your Christmases past.

This bakery initially captured attention when it opened its doors in 2014 with a series of breakfast cereal-themed cookies. The young at heart couldn’t get enough of Cap’n Crunch, Apple Jacks, and Lucky Charms. And then came the glowing orange Cheetos cookie, and the rest is Instagram history.

Cookie Good - Candy Cane, Cap’n Crunch’s Christmas Crunch, Hot Chocolate (Foodzooka)
Cookie Good – Candy Cane, Cap’n Crunch’s Christmas Crunch, Hot Chocolate (Foodzooka)

Ruffles potato chips, Nilla Wafers, Snickers, the list goes on and on. It’s no accident that many of the dozens of flavors on Cookie Good’s menu read like a greatest hits of iconic American snacks. The company does brisk business with adults who connect with owner Ross Canter’s nose for nostalgia.

“I’m in my 50s, but I have the palate of a six year old,” Canter jokes.

Cookie Good (courtesy) - Assorted cookies
Cookie Good (courtesy) – Assorted cookies

This year’s holiday lineup includes a classic Christmas cereal: Cap’n Crunch’s Christmas Crunch. Canter has also recreated another of his childhood favorites in a Yule Log cookie with Oreo crumbs forming the outer layer of “bark.”

From candy canes to marshmallowed hot chocolate, Cookie Good’s holiday lineup is packed with nostalgia. The Danish Sugar Cookie, a new flavor this year, is a tribute to those blue tins that often get passed around during the holidays.

“The ones filled with tiny sugar cookies in pretzel shapes, little rectangles, round ones with ridges,” Canter remembers. “My favorite was always the little circles topped with sparkling sugar crystals.”

Cookie Good - Holiday lineup (Foodzooka)
Cookie Good – Holiday lineup (Foodzooka)

As a former screenwriter, Canter says he sometimes goes to Starbucks to sit with his laptop and compose cookie recipes like a scene in a film.

“I’m tasting it in my head,” said Canter of the process. He’s been known to go to great lengths to develop ideas. To master the true essence of a babka, Canter crisscrossed bakeries throughout New York sampling the most popular ones.

“The trick was to get the layers right,” he said. The result is a cookie with a slightly malty base with layers of cinnamon and chocolate, plus a sweet, buttery streusel topping.

Cookie Good (courtesy) - Babka cookies
Cookie Good (courtesy) – Babka cookies

But with any cookie, ya gotta have milk, right? Cookie Good prepares their own varieties of milk by dunking cookies in plain milk and filtering out the crumbs. Ask for samples of holiday milk flavors including Oreo Candy Cane and Gingerbread Latte.

Cookie Good - Flavored milk (Foodzooka)
Cookie Good – Flavored milk (Foodzooka)

You can pick up Cookie Good’s holiday cookies and milk in time for Santa, and they’ll continue to be available through Dec. 30. In addition to cookies, you’ll find a selection of brownies, pretzel bars, blondies, and flavored popcorn. Though the deadline for holiday shipping has passed, you can still order online for local delivery or pickup at the Santa Monica shop.

Cookie Good - Holiday gift packs (Foodzooka)
Cookie Good – Holiday gift packs (Foodzooka)

For more information and store hours, click the Foodzooka profile below to find the Cookie Good website and follow them on social media.

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Make Zooies Cookie Shop Your Pit Stop

Zooies - Foodzooka Splat Feature

To find one of the latest additions to LA’s batch of must-try cookie shops, you’ll need to pull into an unlikely place: a United Oil gas station. Zooies isn’t just a mere kiosk but a full-fledged bakery with a kitchen, display case, espresso station, and a frozen yogurt bar. The variety alone is impressive, showcasing 20 to 30 cookie flavors, plus several brownies, coffee cakes, and lemon bars made on site. Offering so many options on a daily basis is a multi-stage process that involves thoughtfully handcrafting batters and many separate cookie components, from marshmallow toppings, to graham cracker mixtures, to pumpkin or stewed apple fillings.

Zooies - Handmade cookies (Foodzooka)
Zooies – Handmade cookies (Foodzooka)

The gas station sees a steady stream of customers every day, which was a good enough reason to set up shop, says owner Arezoo Appel. It was a concept that worked for her at an Apro station in San Diego, and the recent remodel of this Cheviot Hills station presented a prime opportunity to bring her craft to Los Angeles. At this United Oil location, the We Got It! convenience store shares a third of its space with Zooies on the sleek and spacious ground floor of a modern metallic 2-story structure.

Zooies - Cheviot Hills United Oil (Foodzooka)
Zooies – Cheviot Hills United Oil (Foodzooka)

Zooies’ most popular seller is the Gooie, a cookie with crisp edges and a soft chocolatey center. Achieving this coveted balance of crispness and gooeyness took an insane amount of trial and error, Appel said, but was worth it in the end. She applies that obsessive focus to her other creations, such as the almond cookie that’s chewier than its Chinese restaurant counterpart, an apple pie cookie that closely mimics crust and filling, and the baklava cookie that screams authenticity with rosewater and pistachio.

Zooies (courtesy) - Cookies and coffee
Zooies (courtesy) – Cookies and coffee

These cookies can be enjoyed with plain or flavored milks from Rosa Brothers, a California family-owned dairy. Or you can pair them with coffee drinks made with beans from local roaster Caffe Luxxe. And for the diet conscious, Zooies makes a paleo chocolate chip cookie made with coconut flour and honey, and a diabetic friendly version made with Splenda. All baked goods exude their own flavors and textures without shortening or hydrogenated oils.

Zooies (courtesy) - Galettes
Zooies (courtesy) – Galettes

Now with a customer base making special trips to a gas station for her sweets, Appel wants to introduce some savory treats, starting with galettes. Her version of this French favorite is similar to a hand pie filled with meats and vegetables, perfect for hurried drivers who can conveniently pop in for fuel and pick up a portable gourmet breakfast or lunch to go.

Individual cookies range from $1.95 to $2.75, and are sold in packages of four, six, and 12. Buy a dozen and get $1.95 in store credit for your next purchase.

Zooies - Cookie selection (Foodzooka)
Zooies – Cookie selection (Foodzooka)

For more information and updates on Zooies, click their Foodzooka profile below to find their website and follow them on social media.