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Pascal Patisserie & Cafe Holds A Trove Of Hidden Gems

Pascal Patisserie & Cafe - Foodzooka Splat Feature

At Pascal Patisserie & Cafe, the menu is a palette of artistic variety crafted to please every part of your palate. Between the scrumptious pastries, divine desserts, exquisite chocolates, puffy breads, and hearty dishes, one visit to this multifaceted bakery-confectionery-eatery wouldn’t be enough.

Commanding the corner of a Woodland Hills strip mall since 2016, Pascal Patisserie & Cafe is a partnership of culinary artistry between Sara Geller and Bruno Marcy, incorporating cultural influences from Bruno’s French upbringing, Sara’s Israeli heritage, and their combined food-crafting experiences. “It’s like French, European, Mediterranean—all of this together,” said Sara.

Pascal Patisserie & Cafe - Freshly baked pastries (Foodzooka)
Pascal Patisserie & Cafe – Freshly baked pastries (Foodzooka)

Starting at 7am nearly every day (8am on Sundays), the patisserie is an entry to a wonderland of overflowing pastry baskets, featuring flaky croissants and rolls, fruity danishes, miscellaneous muffins, and perhaps some swirly meringues, strudels, or other rotating options you might not catch on every visit. But what you will always find is an assortment of choices made almost entirely from scratch.

Bruno illustrates this point in describing the way he makes the filling for the almond croissants. “It’s an almond cream made with almonds, not marzipan. It’s not an almond paste,” he said. “To have the flavor, you have to start from the beginning, from scratch.” You’ll notice the distinctive nutty flavors of housemade almond, pistachio, and hazelnut cream tucked into several pastries and desserts.

Pascal Patisserie & Cafe - Pistachio croissants (Foodzooka)
Pascal Patisserie & Cafe – Pistachio croissants (Foodzooka)

It’s this attention to detail that recently placed Pascal Patisserie among the Frenchly.us list of finalists for best croissant in Los Angeles, driven by open nominations from LA readers and French expats. When comparing Pascal’s pastries to those in France, Sara often hears from customers, “It’s very, very close. And some people tell us it’s better than Paris.”

A peek beyond the piles of pastries reveals a stretch of more European-style treats around the corner, including colorful cakes, tarts, eclairs, and macarons. Several tarts fill crisp shells with housemade custards or creams—some with the almond cream—each paired with baked or fresh fruits. The eclairs are elongated cream puffs of flaky pastry filled with chocolate or coffee custard, covered with a light layer of fondant icing and a decorative strip of chocolate. Next to the other desserts, the macarons look comparatively simple with modest colors that match their core ingredients, such as pale almond, dark chocolate, and pink raspberry.

Pascal Patisserie & Cafe - Coffee eclairs (Foodzooka)
Pascal Patisserie & Cafe – Coffee eclairs (Foodzooka)

The cake slices are cut in uniformly long rectangles that are big enough to satisfy your sweet tooth, yet small enough to let you try different flavors. Thin coats of freshly made mousses or jams are spread between three layers of spongy cake, often topped with a shiny mirror glaze and adorned with chocolate, fruit, or nuts. “We put more fruits. We do different things. We change things around to make our cakes better,” said Sara, who has made many cakes in her career and as the previous owner of Sara J Pastries & Cakes, where she first worked with Bruno. She particularly appreciates the creativity of introducing less common cake flavors.

Hazelnut, pistachio, and banana cream cakes are among the most popular choices at Pascal Patisserie. The coconut cakes also draw attention with bright shades of pink raspberry icing or orange mango jam. The full-sized round cakes on display are also decked out with arrangements of fresh fruits, nuts, and chocolate sails, adding several inches of eye-catching height. Custom cakes can be far more elaborate, artistically designed in tall tiers or sculpted into surprising shapes or thematic scenes.

Pascal Patisserie & Cafe - Pistachio raspberry cake (Foodzooka)
Pascal Patisserie & Cafe – Pistachio raspberry cake (Foodzooka)

Despite the eye-candy quality of their appearance, the natural flavors of Pascal desserts shine through without being overpowered by sugary frostings and fillings. “The sugar can kill the taste,” Bruno explained as Sara added, “We try to do it not as sweet. We reduce sugar in things that we can.” The bakery also offers several sugar-free, gluten-free, dairy-free, and nut-free selections to accommodate dietary needs.

At the far end of the dessert display is the true meaning of eye candy. Organized in rows of stunning shapes and colors are chocolates that resemble a museum quality collection of polished gemstones. The shiny surfaces are tempered with cocoa butter to make each piece sparkle like jewels, with whirling colors of supernovas. They’re molded into ovals, spheres, hearts, cylinders, pyramids, and a few polygons gone mad. And some of the fillings are equally exotic: calamansi, mango chipotle, jasmine, and champagne. True to Pascal’s artisanal approach, the fillings are all handmade by Bruno.

Pascal Patisserie & Cafe - Housemade chocolates (Foodzooka)
Pascal Patisserie & Cafe – Housemade chocolates (Foodzooka)

As part of Bruno’s studies in France, he trained not only in the art of pastries but also chocolates. Before opening Pascal Patisserie & Cafe with Sara, Bruno owned a business called C is for Chocolate, where he made custom chocolates and sculpted chocolate centerpieces by hand. Still pursuing this craft at Pascal, his chocolate creations are often in demand for high profile customers and award show after-parties for the Oscars, Emmys, and Grammys.

Bruno has built an array of edible pieces, from abstract structures to detailed dragons, butterflies, movie projectors, sports trophies, and more, all entirely out of chocolate. Some stand three to four feet high, featuring lifelike textures and colors and thin, protruding parts.

Pascal Patisserie & Cafe - Chocolate scuplture by Bruno Marcy (Foodzooka)
Pascal Patisserie & Cafe – Chocolate scuplture by Bruno Marcy (Foodzooka)

The Halloween witch on display in the cafe this year was a captivating example of Bruno’s architectural prowess with chocolate. It was shaped to detail a crooked pointy hat and shoes, a warty face with an extended nose, a shaggy fringe cape, bony outstretched fingers, and a woodgrain staff. Such projects can take several days to make, including late nights, followed by a few delicate operations to reattach sections that may break off.

“Some pieces take two or three days. So, you have a lot of pressure. But I like it,” he said.

While Bruno has his chocolates, Sara has her cookies. Stacks and stacks of cookie containers in dozens of flavors fill shelves at both ends of the bakery. Some are chock full of nuts (hazelnut shortbread, pistachio cookies), some are culturally inspired (Mexican wedding cookies, halva cookies), some are prettily shaped (raspberry linzers, palmiers, and apricot delights),  and some are just for fun (cornflake cookies). Most are light enough to tempt you to eat them by the handfuls. And then there are the seemingly out-of-place boxes that each contain a single, oversized slice of a giant chocolate chip cookie.

Pascal Patisserie & Cafe - Assorted cookies (Foodzooka)
Pascal Patisserie & Cafe – Assorted cookies (Foodzooka)

Also freshly packaged to take home are a variety of loaf cakes and breads scattered on top of the dessert case. Among these, Sara includes huge pillowy Jerusalem bagels, whole loaves of babka, and challah bread on Fridays.

Despite all the bakery goods and chocolates on display, you won’t want to overlook the “cafe” part of Pascal Patisserie & Cafe, furnished with seating indoors and outside. The menu offers many made-from-scratch breakfast and lunch entrees that are light but ample and flavorful.

Pascal Patisserie & Cafe - Shakshuka (Foodzooka)
Pascal Patisserie & Cafe – Shakshuka (Foodzooka)

The breakfast menu is served all day, including omelettes, a breakfast burrito, avocado toast, french toast made with freshly baked brioche, and more. But Sara’s signature shakshuka is a bestselling standout, coming from a secret family recipe infused with heart and soul. This Israeli classic is a homemade sauce that delivers the concentrated flavor of slow-cooked tomatoes, served with poached eggs and a crusty French baguette made on site.

Among the sandwiches, the schnitzel is a favorite with a flattened, sesame-breaded fried chicken breast on your choice of baguette or spelt bread, and a zip of flavor from housemade pickled lemon mayo. The carne asada and tuna sandwiches are also popular choices. Several salads, paninis, and burgers fill out the menu, along with specialty quiches.

Pascal Patisserie & Cafe - Chicken schnitzel and tuna sandwiches (Foodzooka)
Pascal Patisserie & Cafe – Chicken schnitzel and tuna sandwiches (Foodzooka)

For Pascal Patisserie & Cafe to offer so much variety from scratch is a feat that Sara and Bruno achieve with the help of chefs taught in-house and a friendly, energetic staff. With this level of versatility, you can expect their selections to continuously change, while their approach to making everything remains the same.

“We want the flavors and different textures. The flavors are the most important thing,” Bruno stated. “Whatever we do, we want to do it the best,” Sara added.

Pascal Patisserie & Cafe - Woodland Hills (Foodzooka)
Pascal Patisserie & Cafe – Woodland Hills (Foodzooka)

For restaurant hours and more info, click the Foodzooka profiles below for Pascal Patisserie & Cafe in Woodland Hills and their second location in Beverly Hills.

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Squadros Hint At The Many Sides Of East Side Eats LA

East Side Eats LA - Foodzooka Splat Feature

East Side Eats LA is out to corner the market with savory squared bundles that are part empanada, part samosa, and uniquely named “Squadros.”  These hybrid meal pockets packed with farm fresh fillings are a new creation from East Side Eats LA co-owners and chefs, Jose Vazquez and Shruti Patel.

“The entire idea behind Squadros is that it’s a complete fusion of Latin and Indian cuisine,” said Shruti. “I’m Indian and he’s Latin, so we combined our two favorite things to eat—samosas and empanadas—and came up with something on our own.”

East Side Eats LA - Fried Squadros (Foodzooka)
East Side Eats LA – Fried Squadros (Foodzooka)

Squadros are made with zesty fillings of chorizo, chicken, or vegetables wrapped in a thin layer of pastry and formed into sensibly squarish shapes before taking a dip in the fryer. The result is a baffling balance of light crispness, satisfying heft, and bold flavors.

“As soon as people try it, they dig it,” Jose said. “It’s something completely new that no one else is doing.”

East Side Eats LA currently serves Squadros dishes at the City Hall Farmers Market (Thursdays) in downtown LA and the Torrance Farmers Market (Tuesdays). Every plate comes with three Squadros, each over three inches wide, cut in halves and splashed with flavorful housemade sauces, ensuring that you’re in for a full-fledged meal: fork required.

East Side Eats LA - Squadros=Samosas+Empanadas (Foodzooka)
East Side Eats LA – Squadros=Samosas+Empanadas (Foodzooka)

On the El Loco plate, Squadros are filled with housemade chorizo and potato, enhanced by Latin-skewed flavors of adobo aioli, crema Mexicana and a sprinkling of queso fresco. The Para Los Birds plate has Squadros stuffed with spiced organic ground chicken breast akin to Indian keema, drizzled with crema Mexicana and a rich, tangy blueberry barbecue sauce inspired by the flavors of tamarind chutney.  El Classico is the most Indian-influenced Squadros plate, packed with seasonal organic vegetables and topped with the blueberry barbecue and a mint-cilantro aioli. “We also add a tajin yogurt because there’s so much yogurt in Indian food.” said Shruti.

A pico de gallo mix of freshly diced cucumbers and tomatoes adds color to both the chicken and vegetable plates, and all Squadros dishes are garnished with cilantro and accompanied by a side of cabbage slaw. The fresh vegetables, herbs, and produce used to make Squadros are often sourced directly from other vendors in attendance at the same farmers markets, including C&L Farms, Blessed Farms, Thao Farms, and JCK Farms.

East Side Eats LA - El Classico Squadros (Foodzooka)
East Side Eats LA – El Classico Squadros (Foodzooka)

As a fusion refreshment, East Side Eats offers a jamaica (hah-MY-kah) agua fresca made with hibiscus flowers and Indian black tea, which adds a caffeine kick for midday lunch crowds at the market. Its deep red cloudy color comes from using fresh blossoms, giving it a fruitier depth of flavor that stands apart from the bright pink versions made with dried and processed flowers. East Side Eats gets these hibiscus flowers and several other specialty ingredients for Squadros from small local vendors at traditional Mexican markets in East Los Angeles.

“A lot of our vendors come from East LA so that we’re always giving back to the community,” Shruti explained.

East Side Eats LA - Jamaica Black Tea (Foodzooka)
East Side Eats LA – Jamaica Black Tea (Foodzooka)

For catering gigs and pop-up events, Shruti and Jose use East LA panaderias, tortillerias, goods from Homeboy Bakery, and small shops based in El Mercadito de La Primera. They also volunteer their time at the LA Kitchen culinary job training center, the East Los Angeles Women’s Center, the Downtown Women’s Center, and the St. Joseph Center.

With Jose hailing from Boyle Heights and Shruti growing up in Diamond Bar, both chefs are personally tied to the Eastern area. They first met as classmates at Le Cordon Bleu College of Culinary Arts in Pasadena and worked together in boutique catering before building separate careers at noteworthy fine dining restaurants and high-end catering houses on the Westside. All the while, they continued to cross paths and cook up culinary schemes, taking inspiration from their Eastside upbringings until they finally teamed up full-time on East Side Eats LA in January.

“With our kind of background in this industry, we’ve been very fortunate to travel the world. As we get older, all we want to do is get back and make sure that our roots are known,” Jose said. “Foodwise, it seems that we’re very forgotten on the Eastside. And we want to bring to light that we do it just as well on the East side as the West.”

East Side Eats LA (courtesy) - Concha ice cream sandwiches
East Side Eats LA (courtesy) – Concha ice cream sandwiches

While your first taste of East Side Eats may be from a Squadros stand at the farmers market, that’s only a small glimpse into their culinary capabilities. Given their combined resumes, Shruti and Jose shine at customizing both casual and formal menus for catered events, ranging from small in-home parties to large, illustrious celebrations such as the Oscars and Golden Globes. Drawing from this breadth of experience, they’re able to take a meticulous yet creative approach to any catering request.

“We like drawing people in based on Squadros and then introducing them to the idea that we do many more things,” Shruti said.

East Side Eats LA (courtesy) - Carrot rice pudding chickpea cakes with curry chicken salad
East Side Eats LA (courtesy) – Carrot rice pudding chickpea cakes with curry chicken salad

In an extreme demonstration of this versatility, Jose and Shruti competed as a team on the Cooking Channel show Farmers’ Market Flip, where they scrambled to impress judges with impromptu dishes made from available farmers market ingredients. They ultimately won the episode with an improvised dish of kettle-corn-crusted chicken tenders and a citrus salad.

“We try to pride ourselves on being a jack of all trades. On our off time, we’re cooking new things, and we’re trying new things to continually build our knowledge of what food can be and how to pair things together,” Jose said. “It’s always fun to be able to offer what the clients want. We can make it happen at the end of the day.”

East Side Eats LA - Chefs Jose Vazquez and Shruti Patel (Foodzooka)
East Side Eats LA – Chefs Jose Vazquez and Shruti Patel (Foodzooka)

Shruti and Jose also collaborate on a pop-up series, Rangoli Food Through Color, which specializes in Indian-influenced cuisine. Between the farmers markets, catering events, and pop-ups, the mounting schedule for Jose and Shruti is a testament to their unfettered enthusiasm for making food. “In our culinary class, our teachers told us, ‘You guys are going to make a name for yourselves,’” Shruti recalled. “And that’s been something that we’ve always taken with us.”

“The most important thing to us when we cook together, is the fact that I know she’ll always stand alongside me, and I’ll always stand alongside her,” Jose added.

East Side Eats LA - City Hall Farmers Market (Foodzooka)
East Side Eats LA – City Hall Farmers Market (Foodzooka)

For updates and more info, click the Foodzooka profile below to find the East Side Eats LA website and follow them on social media.  

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Got Paella Truck Revs Up Spain’s Main Dish

Got Paella - Foodzooka Splat Feature

As Spain’s most iconic rice dish, paella (pah-eh-yah) can be a big production to make for large groups of people. And yet, Got Paella has found a way to steer this traditionally complex cooking process onto the Los Angeles food truck scene.

“The dish itself is very complex because it has so many different ingredients and variables, and therefore it usually takes a long time to prepare,” said Ben Schuster, owner of the Got Paella food truck. “The quality of the paella depends on how fresh it’s done and the ingredients. So it’s hard to find.”

Got Paella-L.A. Paella Catering (courtesy) - Mixed paella
Got Paella-L.A. Paella Catering (courtesy) – Mixed paella

What makes up an authentic paella is a matter of ongoing debate across regions of Spain. But with few traditionalists looking over his shoulder in LA, Ben felt free to improvise his paella recipes to suit local tastes and ingredients. At the core of all Got Paella dishes is a Californian Calrose rice. Its short, oval-shaped grain allows it to cook evenly without getting too dry or mushy, while readily absorbing paella’s key spice: saffron.

“It all deviates a bit but comes back to the two main components which is the rice and the saffron.” Ben said. “That’s what really connects the dots.”

Got Paella specializes in a mixed paella, which combines meat and seafood ingredients, while also offering a meat-only variety and vegetable-only version for vegans and vegetarians. The meat paella includes a combination of savory and tender proteins—chorizo, dark meat chicken, pork belly, and pork rib—along with tomatoes, onions, bell peppers, baby lima beans and peas. The mixed paella adds mussels, clams, calamari, and shrimp to the meat combination. And for a vegan preparation, the vegetable paella is cooked separately, tossed with shishito peppers, brussels sprouts, mushrooms, peas, bell peppers, onions, tomatoes, and asparagus. Ingredients may vary based on seasonal availability, but all are consistently fresh and handpicked.

Got Paella - Vegan Paella (Foodzooka)
Got Paella – Vegan Paella (Foodzooka)

“So you cook all of these ingredients, and you create a broth, and you take about 45 minutes,” Ben describes. “And then you add the rice. Just think about the flavor that the rice absorbs from this broth that it cooks in.”

As a final touch, each serving of paella dons a photoworthy centerpiece. Long asparagus spears lay across the vegetable paella; the meat paella sports a chicken drumstick; and cradled in the mixed dish are one or two large whole shrimp from the Santa Barbara Fish Market, along with an impressively sized New Zealand mussel.

“For me, it’s about showcasing the dish in its perfection,” said Ben. “The mussels and the shrimp are ones that people look at and get their first impression.”

Got Paella - Mixed Paella (Foodzooka)
Got Paella – Mixed Paella (Foodzooka)

When customers aren’t familiar with paella, Ben suggests that it shares some similarities with gumbo or jambalaya. More often, unacquainted customers tend to ask whether it’s hot or spicy. “Spanish food is never spicy,” he explained. “Paella is a mild dish. There’s no hotness to it. There’s saffron, salt and pepper, and garlic.”

For those who crave a burn, Got Paella has three choices of bottled hot sauce on hand to spice up your dish. A bowl of house-marinated olives are also offered as a condiment.

To guide his recipes, Ben leans on many years of memories and practice, having learned to make paella since he was a child in Spain. He reveled in the sizzle and the smells of the dish cooking in a wide, shallow pan over a wood burning fire pit. “When it was paella Sunday, you tend to wake up earlier than if it was just a regular meat and potatoes day,” he reminisced.

Got Paella-L.A. Paella Catering (courtesy) - Owner Ben Schuster at the Paella Wine Festival
Got Paella-L.A. Paella Catering (courtesy) – Owner Ben Schuster at the Paella Wine Festival

When Ben left Spain to earn a finance degree at St. Louis University, his mom bestowed upon him a paella pan as a reminder of the family. Throughout college, he would occasionally make paella for friends, which became a favorite excuse to get together and socialize over sangrias. For Ben, these paella parties were a way of sharing a cultural lifestyle.

Though he came to Los Angeles for an accounting job, the multicultural and culinary diversity inspired him to veer from his finance career to do what he knew and loved. With few eateries specializing in paella, Ben saw potential to bring the dish to the forefront. (It’s easy to imagine that he wielded a paella pan like Captain America with his shield.)

After a few successful paella catering gigs with the help and support of his wife Carol, his backyard cooking antics had become his new profession. In 2014 they started L.A. Paella Catering, which has since grown to a crew of 15, orchestrating fresh paella feasts at large private events and weddings from Santa Barbara to San Diego.

Got Paella-L.A. Paella Catering (courtesy) - Santa Barbara Vintners Festival
Got Paella-L.A. Paella Catering (courtesy) – Santa Barbara Vintners Festival

“This dish is absolutely made for communal events, larger groups—hence the bigger skillets and the bigger paella pans,” Ben said. “Everything is done from scratch in front of people because you want to see the progression of it.”

The Got Paella truck became a natural extension of the business as a way to make paella more accessible across Southern California in more casual, fast-paced settings. However, paella is not a simple dish to make on order in the confines of a truck. The cooking process can take over an hour with 14 ingredients to juggle at a time, and making large amounts requires cumbersome, oversized pans.

This is where Ben drew upon his number-crunching skills to streamline the entire cooking and serving process, ultimately shaving the time it takes to fulfill an order down to 35 seconds. To bypass the preparation obstacles, batches of paella are made from scratch each day in a commercial kitchen then transferred to the truck, with individual portions placed in carefully calibrated heating cabinets to maintain the quality of each serving.

“We want to be able to serve a large quantity in a short amount of time, especially for lunches,” Ben said. “Our customers and our clients, they want something different, something that they don’t have all of the time. But they also want it on a to-go budget and a to-go timeframe.”

Got Paella (courtesy) - Churros and paella varieties
Got Paella (courtesy) – Churros and paella varieties

With the efficiency of the process and the quality of each plate, Ben’s objective is to offer an elevated and unique food experience from start to finish. And if you still need a sweet fix after your savory meal, Got Paella’s got you covered. The housemade churros are fried in the truck and served with a cup of warm chocolate dipping sauce. And the mango creme is a light, custardy dessert topped with whipped cream, cinnamon, and fresh mint leaves.

Got Paella Food Truck (Foodzooka)
Got Paella Food Truck (Foodzooka)

For more info about the Got Paella truck and catering services, click the Foodzooka profile below to find their website and follow them on social media.

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Cooking With Om Makes Vegan Food Bloom With Ayurveda

Cooking with Om - Foodzooka Splat Feature

Om Rishikesh is a chef with a lot on his plate. Whether at catered events, farmers markets, workshops, or in-home lessons, Cooking With Om is a discovery of vegan food that tastes as good as it looks. With a creative blend of textures, spices, and Ayurvedic wellness principles, Om aims to make healthful vegan dishes both flavorful and satisfying.

Some of Om’s plant-based creations include watermelon poke, carrot hot dogs, rice paper bacon, and sweet potato smoothies. “For me as a chef, I am not afraid of experimenting,” he said, “but I’m also very confident about how my food tastes.”

Cooking with Om (courtesy) - Chef Om Rishikesh
Cooking with Om (courtesy) – Chef Om Rishikesh

You can get a taste of Cooking With Om at the Marina Del Rey Farmers Market or Yamashiro Night Market in Hollywood, where he offers watermelon poke with black forbidden rice, jackfruit tacos or nachos, and jalapeno poppers with cashew ricotta.

To make his plant-based poke, Om marinates fresh watermelon in spices and almond butter overnight, then grills it the next day until it attains a texture similar to raw fish. Likewise, the texture of unripe jackfruit mimics that of shredded meat for the tacos and nachos. The jackfruit is cooked with a mix of detoxifying spices, topped with a vegan cheese sauce made with cashews and turmeric, then garnished with cilantro, radishes, and pickled cabbage.

“When I cook, my idea is not only for people to have good food,” Om said, “but also to experience or, even if they don’t know about it, to have the detoxing effects of different spices and herbs.”

Cooking with Om - Watermelon poke (Foodzooka)
Cooking with Om – Watermelon poke (Foodzooka)

One of the core dishes taught in lessons from Cooking With Om is known as kitchari, a classic Indian combination of basmati rice and mung beans. It’s a traditional, nourishing dish in Ayurvedic cuisine that delivers proteins and other essential nutrients. Om adds vegetables and dashes of cumin, coriander, turmeric, and fennel, which are regarded in Ayurveda to reduce inflammation, aid in digestion, or help cleanse the body.

“Those are the main four spices I’m trying to teach people how to use,” said Om. “And kitchari is the easiest way to incorporate all of those spices.”

Cooking with Om (courtesy) - Kitchari with brussel sprouts
Cooking with Om (courtesy) – Kitchari with brussel sprouts

Another high-protein dish Om makes is almond beet hummus. Om doesn’t use chickpeas because they are often hard to digest. By soaking almonds overnight, they become soft enough to replicate the texture of chickpeas, minus the gassy side effects. Om blends them with beets, tahini, olive oil, and salt. The result is a vibrant reddish-purple mash that pairs well with many entrees and looks good on your plate without hurting your tummy.

“Anything that gives you indigestion or unease in your body is something that your body is reacting to,” Om said. “Food should make us feel good; it should never make us feel sick.”

Cooking with Om (courtesy) - Almond beet hummus
Cooking with Om (courtesy) – Almond beet hummus

While Om had been vegetarian for over 15 years, he noticed that he still suffered from skin rashes. After consulting with Ayurvedic experts, he stopped eating the nightshade class of plants that are known to cause inflammation, including common potatoes, tomatoes and eggplants. It’s been a year since he also gave up his love for cheese and transitioned to a fully vegan diet that does not include soy.

“It doesn’t mean at all that when you are a vegan that you are healthy, or that vegan food is healthy,” said Om, adding that vegans should continue to scrutinize their food choices beyond avoiding meat and dairy.

Some dishes he makes to please vegans who may miss meat dishes, or to satisfy meat eaters with healthier substitutes. The carrot hot dogs are spiced roasted carrots sandwiched in hot dog buns with homemade condiments. Rice paper bacon is a smoky, salty, and crispy way to deliver the highly craved taste and texture of bacon.

Cooking with Om (courtesy) - Carrot hot dogs
Cooking with Om (courtesy) – Carrot hot dogs

Om often gets requests to teach families how to cook so they can explore healthy foods that both adults and children will enjoy making and eating. From Om’s repertoire, vegan macaroni and cheese is an obvious crowd pleaser. Kids also like the creamy soups he makes with asparagus, beets or sweet potatoes. But the big winner may be the baked taro fries with cilantro chutney.

“They are the best fries in the world. The kids go crazy for them,” he said. At the grocery store, taro looks a hairy potato patterned with rings around the skin, but it has an earthy sweetness and is richer in fiber than regular potatoes. Om bakes the sliced taro with turmeric and other spices, while the accompanying cilantro sauce adds anti-inflammatory benefits and helps remove heavy metals from the blood in Ayurvedic practice.

On the sweeter side, Cooking With Om demonstrates easy recipes for sweet potato smoothies and desserts, such as chocolate mousse or key lime pie made from chilled avocado, and jello made with agar rather than gelatin.

Cooking with Om (courtesy) - Key lime pie with avocado
Cooking with Om (courtesy) – Key lime pie with avocado

Om’s food has been ideal for diabetics looking for comforting, nutritious dishes that won’t spike their blood sugar. It’s also effective for some looking to lose weight. Om’s non-vegan husband Dustin lost 60 pounds after eating Ayurvedically prepared food for six months. “He’s probably my best case study,” Om said.

Ayurveda is an ancient system of medicine first practiced in India that incorporates food as a way of healing the body with a goal of achieving balance. This objective is seen in Ayurvedic cuisine as a balance of six flavors: sweet, salty, sour, pungent, bitter, and astringent. While it’s not always feasible to consume every flavor in one bite, Om looks to work them all in with a range of dishes and ingredients.

“I recommend variety—a variety of foods. I practice Ayurvedic cooking but I’m trying to push the boundaries of making any kind of food into Ayurvedic food.”

Cooking with Om (courtesy) - Butternut squash with cilantro chutney
Cooking with Om (courtesy) – Butternut squash with cilantro chutney

Color is another factor Om takes into account, as seen in pictures of his stuffed orange butternut squash drizzled with green cilantro chutney and adorned with yellow, red, and blue flowers. This kind of photoworthy riot of colors is what Om sees as an indicator of balance.

“When you eat a meal that is balanced with colors, you’re going to get all your nutrients and your mind is going to be satisfied,” he said, pointing out that visually attractive fruits and vegetables with dark red, blue, or purple colors also contain healthy antioxidants.

To include this requisite amount of color, Om is constantly on the hunt for edible flowers. Aside from adding visual appeal to his dishes, some flowers such as nasturtiums taste spicy and help rid the body of toxins. Om grows nasturtiums and hot lips sage flowers in his apartment and sources some edible blossoms from the Wednesday Santa Monica Farmers Market, though they’re a hot commodity among chefs and tend to sell out fast.

Cooking with Om (courtesy) - Rainbow salad with wild rice
Cooking with Om (courtesy) – Rainbow salad with wild rice

As a chef who moved from New York to Los Angeles nearly two years ago, Om was impressed by the magnitude of vegan foods and ingredients that California has to offer. “New York is a progressive vegetarian/vegan city, but what I am seeing here in LA is incredible,” he explained. “Even in New York, I didn’t have access to all the vegan things that I can get here now. There’s so much creativity and so much beauty in it.”

Om’s own path to culinary creativity began in his teens when his family moved to the US from Colombia. After graduating high school, Om began a journey toward spiritual nourishment by becoming a monk in a Hare Krishna temple. “The Hare Krishnas are vegetarian and are known as the kitchen religion. Every time you go to the temple, they feed you,” he explained.

Cooking with Om - Jalapeno poppers with cashew ricotta (Foodzooka)
Cooking with Om – Jalapeno poppers with cashew ricotta (Foodzooka)

His passion for cooking was sparked when he started teaching vegetarian cooking classes with fellow monks at New York University and Columbia University as part of their service to the community. After Om left the monastery, he studied at New York’s Bhagavat Life, an Ayurvedic catering and culinary school.

“That’s where my Ayurvedic training started.” Om said. “And then the rest has just been me working in restaurants and developing my own passion for clean vegetarian and vegan eating and cooking.”

Cooking with Om - Nachos with vegan cheese (Foodzooka)
Cooking with Om – Nachos with vegan cheese (Foodzooka)

Now with his own business, Cooking With Om offers prepared and delivered meal plans, catering, and private cooking lessons. Om can create a menu based on your dietary needs, or you can simply pick interesting items from his Instagram feed. His in-home lessons are two-hour sessions that will teach you how to make five select dishes with your own kitchen equipment.

For more info about Om’s services or to schedule a lesson, meal delivery, or catering, click his Foodzooka profile below to find his website and follow him on social media.

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Bulle Bakery Kneads To Bring Swedish Buns To LA

Bulle Bakery - Foodzooka Splat Feature

In characteristic Swedish style, the bulle is a pastry that seems almost complex in its simplicity. For Bulle Bakery, the art lies in creating a distinctive doughy texture with an addictive balance of mild sweetness and spice.

Usually shaped in braids or rolls, these pastries are an inseparable part of the daily coffee break in Sweden known as “fika.” In the afternoon, a bulle is ritually consumed with a strong cup of Swedish coffee.

“Almost every office in Sweden does this. People do it on the weekends, too, with friends and family,” says Sarah Reich, a Swedish native who started Bulle Bakery with her husband Ezra.

Bulle Bakery - Cinnamon Bullar (Elina Sundqvist)
Bulle Bakery – Cinnamon Bullar (Elina Sundqvist)

In their quest to introduce bulle to the US, the couple began catering out of a commercial kitchen in Marina del Rey in December. They were immediately slammed with Christmas orders from the local Swedish population.

“I got the idea for the business just from craving bulle myself,” said Ezra, a well-traveled New Yorker who has visited Sweden many times. He notes that most cafes there offer several varieties of bulle. Though Swedish furniture megastore IKEA sells a frosted covered cinnamon roll, they’re just not the same for bulle purists.

“I think you can tell that ours are made from scratch with really good ingredients,” said Sarah.

Bulle Bakery (courtesy) - Cinnamon and Cardamom Bullar
Bulle Bakery (courtesy) – Cinnamon and Cardamom Bullar

For the Reichs, artisanal entrepreneurship sprang from their commitment to bake bullar the right way. While Sarah had been making them since childhood, entering into the LA food industry took some research. They wanted to find local, high quality ingredients—such as the flour, butter, and yeast—that were as similar as possible to those found in Europe. Only the pearl sugar and the vanilla sugar are imported Swedish products that they buy from a local source.

Achieving the look is the easy part, according to Ezra. But to truly nail the thing that defines the bun, the dough must be thick and stretchy. Part of the solution was to dedicate four hours to the entire process, much of that time spent letting the yeast repeatedly sit and rise.

“So many Swedish people immediately try to know the secret,” said Ezra, who will only reveal that it took several months of experimentation to finalize the recipe.

Bulle Bakery (courtesy) - Cardamom Bullar
Bulle Bakery (courtesy) – Cardamom Bullar

The ultimate test was the approval of the local Swedish community. Bulle Bakery does private orders for many companies and individuals including weekly shipments to the Hollywood offices of Absolut Elyx Vodka, a Swedish company. And on Fridays and Saturdays, Bulle Bakery sells a few batches from home furnishings boutique Huset on Abbot Kinney Blvd., which sees a steady stream of tourists from Scandinavia.

“They’ve actually said ours tastes better,” said Ezra.

Bulle Bakery (courtesy) - Available at Huset in Venice
Bulle Bakery (courtesy) – Available at Huset in Venice

Customers trying the buns for the first time say they prefer the bulle over a cinnamon roll because it’s not as sugary, and they appreciate the mixture of savory and sweet flavors, especially in the cardamom bulle. The soft chewiness of the pastry also feels more substantial as a snack.

“It will make you satisfied, like you just had a bagel,” Ezra said.

Bulle Bakery offers two main flavors: cardamom and cinnamon. They also make a vanilla, and in accordance with Swedish Christmas tradition, they offer a saffron bun during the holidays. The bullar are priced at $5 each, and minimum orders of 10 buns can be placed by emailing Bulle Bakery or calling 310-227-2099. Orders can be picked up in Marina del Rey or delivered to your location for a fee.

Bulle Bakery - Saffron bullar (Foodzooka)
Bulle Bakery – Saffron bullar (Foodzooka)

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

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Donut Princess Re-dough-fines The Bouquet

Donut Princess - Foodzooka Splat Feature

For those die-hard donut lovers who can’t help but cradle a box close enough to sniff out which flavors mingle inside, the donut bouquet was made for you.

This creative repackaging of a typical box of donuts comes from Mayly Tao, a local pastry pioneer and co-owner of DK’s Donuts & Bakery in Santa Monica who recently launched her own donut delivery and catering service that borrows her nickname, Donut Princess.

Tao’s donut bouquets are carefully arranged in a manner loosely resembling their floral counterparts. Three or more decorated donuts are placed atop long-stemmed sticks, nestled in a colorful bed of neatly crumpled paper, wrapped in a burlap cloth, and tied together with a delicate bow. The bundle is then bejeweled with a custom Donut Princess logo pin and sealed in a fanciful gift box with velvet ribbons. You can also include a message for a more personal touch.

Donut Princess - Valentine's Day Bouquet (Foodzooka)
Donut Princess – Valentine’s Day Bouquet (Foodzooka)

Donuts for the bouquets are chosen to create an explosion of colors and tastes. A typical arrangement includes flavors such as white chocolate, cream cheese frosting, blue velvet, red velvet, dark chocolate ganache, passion fruit jelly, and raspberry cheesecake.

“The donut was originally just a breakfast food,” said Tao, regarding the pastry’s evolution. “Now, it’s treated as a gift item.”

Tao saw an opportunity to meet growing demand for unique food gifts in LA, and donut bouquets seemed like the next logical step for her business. “You can create a conversation about this donut bouquet,” said Tao, acknowledging that its charmingly edible presentation makes it a more shareable, social experience than receiving flowers.

“I love getting roses, every girl does,” she said. “But to receive flowers in a different form that involves food? That also appeals to a girl.”

Donut Princess - Mayly Tao (@jess.t.johnston)
Donut Princess – Mayly Tao (@jess.t.johnston)

The Donut Princess moniker reflects Tao’s familial ties to local donut royalty. Her great uncle, Ted Ngoy, earned the nickname Doughnut King of California in the ‘80s for acquiring dozens of shops throughout the state. As a Cambodian immigrant with a growing empire, he was able to bring on relatives and employ refugee families that fled to the United States to escape the Khmer Rouge violence. Tao’s parents started running the Santa Monica location of DK’s Donuts & Bakery in 1980 and turned it into a success. Tao remembers standing on a milk crate to assist her parents in the shop when she was seven years old.

“Instead of watching cartoons on Saturday mornings, I was with them in the shop,” she said.

Donut Princess - DK's Donuts (Foodzooka)
Donut Princess – DK’s Donuts (Foodzooka)

After graduating from University of California San Diego in 2012 with a degree in communications, Tao returned to DK’s with a goal to reinvent the bakery for an age of insatiable Instagram foodies actively seeking out the next dessert icon.

DK’s Donuts & Bakery made local and national headlines for being the first West Coast shop to create its own donut-croissant hybrid, which they now call the O-nut. Other hits that followed include the purple-colored Ube Donut, a waffle-donut hybrid called the Wow-nut, and the Galaxy Donut, which resembles a photo of deep space with the help of some cosmic-colored icing.

“I’m here showing that donuts are not outdated,” she said. “Donuts are cool!”

Donut Princess (courtesy) - Galactic Donuts
Donut Princess (courtesy) – Galactic Donuts

Tao started Donut Princess LA in 2017 to bring more tailored options to the vast population of donut aficionados. In addition to bouquets, her company assembles stylishly packaged curated boxes and designs letter-shaped donuts to spell out custom greetings such as “happy birthday.” Donut Princess also caters corporate events, weddings, and most recently, special menus at local microbreweries.

“Pairing beer with donuts is popular now,” said Tao. She predicts that the next stage in this trend could bring the start of donut and wine pairing parties, so she’s developing a cheese flavored donut just in case.

Donut Princess (courtesy) - Avocadokale
Donut Princess (courtesy) – Avocadokale

Donut Princess bouquets can be ordered online or by phone at 323-675-6001. Bouquet options include the classic trio ($20), six donuts ($35), mini donuts ($35), a six-donut Valentine’s Day bouquet ($45), and custom built bouquets (price varies). Bouquets can be delivered locally the same day for an extra charge or picked up at the Donut Princess kitchen facility near downtown Los Angeles (1842 W. Washington Blvd.). For orders outside of Los Angeles, Donut Princess can also ship nationwide overnight.

Donut Princess - Classic Trio Bouquet (@lifeonaplate_)
Donut Princess – Classic Trio Bouquet (@lifeonaplate_)

For more information and updates, click the Foodzooka profile below to find the Donut Princess website and follow them on social media.

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For Dami’s Famous Foods, It’s Always Chili In LA

Dami's Famous Foods - Foodzooka Splat Feature

When the temperature swings in Los Angeles have you debating if you’re craving soup or summer barbecue, the answer is probably chili.

“Chili is a year-round food that warms your heart and comforts your soul,” said Damien Pierre, owner of Dami’s Famous Foods. “With all the transplants from all over the United States, LA is a chili town.”

As a self-taught cook who prefers to be called a “food connoisseur,” Damien offers his take on the classic comfort food every weekend at the Brentwood Farmers Market (Sundays). When you visit the booth for Dami’s Famous Foods, he’ll greet you with a smile and ladle in hand, happy to serve a sampling of his chili and cornbread.

Dami's Famous Foods - Damien Pierre at Marina Del Rey Farmers Market (courtesy)
Dami’s Famous Foods – Damien Pierre at Marina Del Rey Farmers Market (courtesy)

His three chili varieties include vegetarian, turkey, and spicy bison; all with a bean-to-meat ratio that heavily favors the protein. The texture is chunky enough to feel satisfying, but smooth enough to work as a topping on burgers, hot dogs, or omelets. Every variety has a spicy heat that won’t set your mouth on fire, but makes each bite more addictive.

“My style of cuisine came from my background. I’m Caribbean-American. Caribbean cuisine has a lot of spices, herbs, and flavor,” Damien said. “We like things spicy.”

Dami's Famous Foods - Turkey chili (Foodzooka)
Dami’s Famous Foods – Turkey chili (Foodzooka)

To pair with your choice of chili, Dami’s Famous Foods offers three kinds of cornbread: buttermilk, bacon jalapeno, and sweet corn. All are comfortingly moist and buttery with the kind of crumbly firmness that lets you wipe up the last licks of chili from your bowl.

Dami's Famous Foods - Cornbread (Foodzooka)
Dami’s Famous Foods – Cornbread (Foodzooka)

Part of the secret to the chili’s tomato base is Damien’s own brand of barbecue sauce, made with natural ingredients. He also sells this separately at the markets in bottles labeled as Dami’s Famous BBQ Sauce.

“The inspiration for my barbecue sauce was my grandmother, Cyrilla Pierre. She believed in all of my food creations and taught me a lot about cooking and food as a whole,” he said. “She was the first person who tried my barbecue sauce the first time I ever made it from scratch. She loved it!”

Damien describes his sauce as Kansas City meets Memphis style barbecue, resulting in a flavor profile that’s thick and sweet, but also tangy. He considers his BBQ sauce to be a more versatile condiment than people realize, with some fans raving that it even goes great with sardines.

Dami's Famous Foods - Dami's BBQ Sauce and chili (Foodzooka)
Dami’s Famous Foods – Dami’s BBQ Sauce and chili (Foodzooka)

“Don’t limit your food exploration with barbecue sauce to just grilling. There’s so much out there that you can do with a great barbecue sauce.”

If you can’t make it to the Westside farmers markets, Dami’s Famous Foods also has chili and cornbread on the catering menu. As for other new offerings from his recipe box that may be in the making, Damien says,”…Stay tuned, you never know what I will do next.”

He learned the basics of cooking from his relatives while growing up in Brooklyn, New York and Port Charlotte, Florida. Stewed peas and dumplings, and baked macaroni and cheese with salted codfish were among his favorites as a child.

Drawing from his love of making food, Damien recently released an book of his own health conscious recipes titled Eat Good, Feel Good, available on Amazon.

“I want to be known for always making great tasting food and consistent products that are ahead of the curve,” he said.

Dami's Famous Foods - Catering banner (Foodzooka)
Dami’s Famous Foods – Catering banner (Foodzooka)

For more information and updates, click the Foodzooka profile below to find Dami’s website and follow him on social media.