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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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Cobblermania Is Just Getting Warmed Up

Cobblermania - Foodzooka Splat Feature

When you’re compelled to forage through farmers markets for freshly made cobblers, you know you’ve got Cobblermania. Shae Seward, creator and owner of Cobblermania, has been fueling cobbler fanaticism at Los Angeles farmers markets and food festivals for over 10 years.

If you add up all the seasonal variations and multi-fruit combinations, Shae cobbles together over 70 different cobbler flavors throughout the year. Some popular options include Peach, Mango-Blueberry-Peach, Strawberry-Rhubarb, Sweet Potato, White Nectarine-Blackberry-Apple, Fig-Pear, Pumpkin, and Sweet Potato-Pumpkin with Candied Pecans. Even if the top picks are sold out by the time you get to a Cobblermania stand, the mere freshness of any random choice could win you over to flavors you hadn’t considered before.

“People have told me, ‘I can’t believe I like your cobblers, because I normally don’t like cooked fruit.’ But that’s because we don’t overcook our fruit,” Shae said. “I do it all by hand. The fruit is hand-peeled, the sweet potato is hand-peeled, cooked, then strained and baked.”

Cobblermania - Freshly baked cobblers (Foodzooka)
Cobblermania – Freshly baked cobblers (Foodzooka)

Shae shops for fresh produce daily, buying some items at the farmers markets she attends, such as green and black figs, plums, and apriums from Arnett Farms and mango flavored nectarines from Ken’s Top Notch Produce. But the secret to Cobblermania comes from a family recipe Shae learned directly from her great aunt, whose peach cobbler was always her favorite. “Auntie Roi baked with fresh fruit when she made cobblers and apricot turnovers, so I was used to fresh. I’m a stickler for fresh,” she said.

Because of her sensitivities to sweets, Shae’s goal with Cobblermania is to take a more healthful approach to creating nostalgic desserts. Since she’s allergic to eggs and never liked milk, she makes cobblers without eggs, milk, or butter, so they’re all dairy-free and entirely vegan friendly. And since sugar makes her feel sluggish, Shae instead uses a light organic agave, which is flavor neutral, adding a mild sweetness without overriding the natural flavors of the fruits. ”I want everything to taste like what it is, not like a molasses flavored agave. I want you to taste the actual fruits—like white nectarines, guavas, pluots, blackberries, and apples,” she explained.

Cobblermania - Blackberry cobbler (Foodzooka)
Cobblermania – Blackberry cobbler (Foodzooka)

For Cobblermania’s signature crust, a layer of pastry covers the filling and lines the bottom of the pan. It has a tender, flaky quality that’s neither too crumbly nor too doughy. Shae also offers a gluten-free crust made with rice flour instead of white flour. Loaded with chunky ripe fruits, the cobblers come out of the oven looking truly homemade with lumpy golden tops and syrupy juices seeping through the edges. To Shae, this is what distinguishes her cobblers from neatly preened pies, but it’s okay if you want to call them pies.

The heart-shaped opening on each cobbler allows steam to escape during baking, with the offset pastry cutout adding a decorative and biscuity bonus layer to the top crust. This particular embellishment caught on several years ago when Shae switched from cutting a circular hole to a heart for Valentine’s Day and sold out of the entire batch of themed cobblers. “The following week, I was back to doing a circle,” she said, “and people returned asking ‘Where are the ones with the hearts?’” Since then, Shae has always put her heart into the crusts, though she may surprise you with other fun cutouts for special occasions, such as bunnies for Easter, or bats over the moon for Halloween.

Cobblermania - Peach Strawberry cobbler (Foodzooka)
Cobblermania – Peach Strawberry cobbler (Foodzooka)

You can feel all the hands-on work and thought Shae puts into making her fresh cobblers when you pick one up at a Cobblermania stand and find that it’s still warm. She bakes the batches of cobblers hours before each farmers market appearance, even the ones that open at 8am. For those markets, she starts work at 2am. “I tried baking the day before, but I didn’t like the texture,” Shae said. “When you buy from me, it has to be fresh-fresh.”

The 7-inch width of each cobbler looks larger than a single serving and may technically be big enough to share. But to avoid the regret of giving up a piece, Shae recommends, “If you plan on sharing it, taste it first.” Experienced customers have been known to buy two—one to share, and one for themselves, often finishing a whole cobbler in one sitting. This may be why the Cobblermania banner warns that they’re “So good you’ll (want to) slap somebody!”

Cobblermania - Farmers market banner (Foodzoka)
Cobblermania – Farmers market banner (Foodzoka)

Cobblermania turned out to be not just a fun name for Shae’s bakery, but a reflection of its loyal customer base. Shae came up with the name when a friend told her she had turned her into a cobbler fiend. As the business has grown, Shae’s cobblers—along with her exuberant and welcoming personality—have earned a devoted following of self-proclaimed Cobblermaniacs. You may even spot a few celebrity Cobblermaniacs at her booth, such as Congresswoman Maxine Waters, actress Marla Gibbs, Los Angeles Laker John Salley, “Weird Al” Yankovic, legendary model Lauren Hutton, “Byrd” the bailiff from Judge Judy, Tony Todd from the cult classic horror film Candyman, and more.

Shae has gotten to know many of her repeat customers, forming friendships that have lasted for years. Regulars have invited her to parties and family events not just for catering, but as a personal guest. For instance, Chef Tanya Petrovna, the founder of Native Foods, approached Shae to take part in vegan pop-ups at her place in Palm Springs. And at the recent wedding between Jasmine White and Tilmon Keaton, Shae even received surprise recognition when she heard them state in their vows, “I promise never to eat Cobblermania without you.”

“To me, Cobblermaniacs are as important as the cobblers. I focus on both of them. They are both growing my business,” said Shae.

Cobblermania (courtesy) - Cobblermaniac customers
Cobblermania (courtesy) – Cobblermaniac customers

Back when Shae asked her Auntie Roi to teach her how to make peach cobbler, she had no designs on starting a cobbler business. Shae still fondly recalls the first cobbler she made for her great aunt: “She ate it in silence. She was standing up and eating it, and she didn’t say a word. So I thought, oh my God, I messed it up. But then she sat down and she started scraping the bowl, and she said, ‘You have outdone me.’ And she never made it again, ever.”

From then on, Shae made the cobblers for family dinners, holidays, and potlucks, soon receiving requests to make them for friends and parties. As orders grew more frequent, cobblers became enough of a business for Shae to leave her career as a medical transcriptionist and become a regular vendor at local farmers markets. Cobblermania now covers four corners of Los Angeles at the Hollywood (Sundays), Culver City (Tuesdays), MLK Hospital (Wednesdays), and Torrance (Saturdays) farmers markets. You’ll also find Cobblermania cobblers at the annual vegan food gathering VegFest LA held in Van Nuys, as well as other local annual events and festivals.

Cobblermania - VegFest LA booth (Foodzooka)
Cobblermania – VegFest LA booth (Foodzooka)

Now, with Cobblermaniacs coming from all over, Shae has her sights set on expanding to a handful of Cobblermania storefronts. She envisions the shops as distribution spots that would recreate the look and feel of her farmers market booths. To ensure consistent quality and taste, the cobblers will be baked at a centralized commercial kitchen. Having run Cobblermania on her own since the beginning, she also now sees potential in strategic partnering with other complementary businesses as an opportunity to pool resources and grow together.

“Cobblermania is very popular and I work very hard. There’s so much more to it than just the baking,” Shae said. “I love my company, but it’s not that I just love baking. I like my customers, and they’re happy to see me. This is a happy business, and I love what I do.”

Cobblermania - Shae Seward and Kisha Boyd (Foodzooka)
Cobblermania – Shae Seward and Kisha Boyd (Foodzooka)

For more information and updates, click the Foodzooka profile below to view Shae’s farmers market schedule and follow Cobblermania 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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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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Fill Up On Fruzion Fruit Cocktails & Crepes

Fruzion - Glendale - Foodzooka Splat Feature

On your first visit to a Fruzion cafe, you may need to reset your expectations of a fruit cocktail. Here, it’s a mix of freshly cut fruits bathed in fresh juice with a choice of creamy and nutty toppings—a colorful medley that’s both substantial and refreshing.

Forget the soft and syrupy canned version of fruit cocktail. And don’t expect to find the makings of alcoholic mixed drinks here. With Fruzion, husband-wife owners Mike and Mary Yacoubian are reshaping notions of fruit cocktails to match the fresh and healthier version they know from their familial Lebanese-Armenian roots.

With an artful eye, Mary demonstrates an arrangement of fresh fruit ingredients in a tall glass mug that reveals the vibrant layers and swirls from a pour of juice. She crowns the overflowing cup with a dollop of cream or gelato, and then adds pistachios, almonds and honey.

Fruzion - Turbo fruit cocktail (Foodzooka)
Fruzion – Turbo fruit cocktail (Foodzooka)

You’re encouraged to customize your own combination of strawberries, mangos, bananas, pineapples, kiwis, or papayas. The juice choices include blends of several of the same fruits, plus an avocado-milk and a coconut-pineapple blend.

But for the indecisive, the expansive pictorial menu wall at Fruzion includes many helpful suggestions. The top selling cocktail bears the cafe’s namesake, Fruzion, mixing all the fruits with a strawberry-banana juice.

Fruzion - Menu board (Foodzooka)
Fruzion – Menu board (Foodzooka)

Whatever your mix, you can give your fruit cocktail a Lebanese finish by getting it topped with a cream called ashta. Commonly used in Middle Eastern desserts as a custardy filling, ashta offers a neutral milky flavor with a mouthfeel similar to ricotta. It brings a smoothness that contrasts the bulky bites of fruit, and since Fruzion makes ashta without sugar, it’s sweetened with a drizzling of traditional honey or rosewater syrup.

Other options to add creaminess to your concoction include whipped cream, gelato, or even ripe avocado as a vegan option. “We cater to a large vegan population, so we can do just fresh juices with sorbet,“ Mary said. The interplay of creaminess with plump fruit and crunchy nuts creates a satisfying symphony for your mouth. Unlike a fruit cup or smoothie, the fruit cocktail is a desserty treat that allows distinct flavors and textures to mingle for a different taste experience in each bite.

Fruzion (courtesy) - Exotic 7 fruit cocktails
Fruzion (courtesy) – Exotic 7 fruit cocktails

If your ice cream cravings overrule your fruity intentions, Fruzion also offers an inverse preparation: ice cream cocktails with a gelato base and fruit toppings. Among the nearly 20 gelato or sorbet flavors on display, ashta gelato is a popular pick.

“That’s our specialty. And if you noticed in the gelato case, that’s the one we have the least of. We sell out,” said Mary, adding fondly that she remembers her father giving her ashta ice cream with crushed pistachios as a child.

Fruzion - Ashta gelato with pistachios (Foodzooka)
Fruzion – Ashta gelato with pistachios (Foodzooka)

Where Mike grew up in Montreal, Canada, fruit cocktail shops have hooked customers well beyond the large Lebanese community. When the Yacoubian family settled in Los Angeles where Mary grew up, they realized an opportunity to popularize the concept here. Even without a background in the restaurant business, they ambitiously opened a location in Chatsworth three years ago and a second location in Glendale shortly after.

Beyond the fruit cocktails and gelatos, Fruzion also assembles made-to-order crepes and Belgian waffles with your choice of ingredients. “We customize all orders to fit the customer, whether it be for taste or dietary needs,” Mary said.

Fruzion - Crepes made to order (Foodzooka)
Fruzion – Crepes made to order (Foodzooka)

The crepes have been a particularly strong draw for Fruzion, adding even more versatility to the menu with sweet or savory fixings. Crepe orders come together swiftly, using a wooden spreader to lay an even coat of batter across the wide circular surface of a specialty crepe griddle. Within moments, the crepe is deftly flipped with a turner, then transferred to a plate for accessorizing.

The nearly 16-inch diameter of the crepe gives Fruzion plenty of room play with different folding techniques. Some crepes wrap around the fillings on three sides and others are folded into layers, creating a bed of pastry for ingredients to be piled on top. Though the crepe looks deceptively thin and delicate, the ample folds give it a heftier chew that makes for a filling meal. Couples may even find a single crepe order ideal for plate-sharing.

“Our portions are huge, so they normally feed approximately two,” said Mary.

Fruzion - Juliette crepe (Foodzooka)
Fruzion – Juliette crepe (Foodzooka)

Crepes and waffles can be stuffed or topped with fruit, ashta, gelato, or savory ingredients such as ham and cheese. The top seller on the menu is the Juliette, filled with Nutella, strawberries and bananas. Since Nutella is the most requested filling, even for custom orders, Fruzion goes through several dozens of 7-pound buckets each week.

To diversify your palate, you can try some of Fruzion’s culturally inspired options. The Yerevan crepe reflects the Yacoubians’ own Lebanese-Armenian heritage, filled with a thick, spreadable yogurt (lebni) and seasoned cured beef (basturma). The 1001 Nights crepe was influenced by Middle Eastern stuffed pancakes known as atayef, which are filled with cream and nuts. Likewise, Fruzion’s crepe is topped with a mound of ashta and covered with chopped pistachios and peeled almonds, while fruits and honey or rosewater syrup add sweetness. And the Latin-inspired Mango Tajin fruit and gelato cup has the red chili Mexican seasoning sprinkled over fresh mango and mango gelato.

Fruzion - 1001 Nights crepe (Foodzooka)
Fruzion – 1001 Nights crepe (Foodzooka)

The vastness of the menu speaks to the endless custom possibilities of “fruit creations,” a description that Mike and Mary combined to come up with the name Fruzion. Still, there are more available items that aren’t yet displayed on the menu. Feel free to ask about their chocolate-dipped fruit, “sushi” crepes (wrapped around fruit instead of fish), and waffles on a stick. You can also get toppings of Lotus biscuits and cookie spread or Kinder chocolate spread, products that are well known in Europe and the Middle East.

“We listen to our customers,” Mary explained. “If we get requests, we try and offer it.”

Fruzion - Glendale (Foodzooka)
Fruzion – Glendale (Foodzooka)

In addition to the 56 menu choices spread across the wall above the cash registers, the available combinations are enough to feed you day or night. In fact, Fruzion’s busiest hours are after 8pm, particularly on the weekends when they’re open till midnight.

For cafe hours and updates on special menu items, click the Foodzooka profiles below to find Fruzion’s website and follow them on social media for their Glendale and Northridge locations.

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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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Pick A Peck Of Coldwater Canyon Provisions

Coldwater Canyon Provisions - Foodzooka Splat Feature

How do you supercharge the flavors of fresh fruits and vegetables? Pack ‘em into jars! Coldwater Canyon Provisions accomplishes this feat with award-winning results among its dozens of jarred jams, jellies, chutneys and pickles.

While owner Rondo Mieczkowski offers many of the classics at Los Angeles farmers markets, he also features some varieties you’ve probably never heard of, such as kiwi jam, red guava butter, tarragon cherries, and pickled crab apples.

Coldwater Canyon Provisions - Owner Rondo Mieczkowski (Foodzooka)
Coldwater Canyon Provisions – Owner Rondo Mieczkowski (Foodzooka)

Rondo learned how to preserve foods from his grandmother while growing up in Ohio and Michigan. Pickled watermelon rind particularly brings back memories.

“It was something my grandmother would make in the summer, and we couldn’t touch it until Thanksgiving,” Rondo said. He remembers how well it paired with turkey, mashed potatoes, and other starchy foods. “It revitalized the palate.”

Though his grandmother’s craft for food preservation was a necessity in times of scarcity, Rondo absorbed her sense of resourcefulness. Even with the abundance of foods available today, some heirloom fruits and vegetables are hard to find and enjoy at their peak ripeness. Coldwater Canyon Provisions captures that experience in jars.

Coldwater Canyon Provisions - Sweet Red Pepper Jelly samples (Foodzooka)
Coldwater Canyon Provisions – Sweet Red Pepper Jelly samples (Foodzooka)

Customers at farmers markets are often looking for tastes that remind them of holidays, picnics, and other good times, and with the right ingredients, Rondo can get pretty close. “It’s like we’re selling memories on some level,” he said.

Rondo’s efforts haven’t gone unnoticed. Most recently, Coldwater Canyon’s Habanero Jelly placed third in last year’s World Hot Sauce Awards condiments division of hot/x-hot jam/jelly. In both 2017 and 2013, his Tarragon Cherries won the national Good Food Award, which recognizes authentic, responsibly produced food with sustainable ingredients. The pickled Spiced Crab Apples were also nominated for the Good Food Award in 2012.

Coldwater Canyon Provisions - Good Food Award winners (Foodzooka)
Coldwater Canyon Provisions – Good Food Award winners (Foodzooka)

The catalyst for starting a business occurred at the 2010 California State Fair, when his Strawberry Rhubarb Jam won the category for “Best In Show – All Jams and Jellies.” At that point, Rondo and his late partner Danny Barillaro had yet to sell anything at the markets.

“We were just having fun,” he said, “and we thought, ‘Why don’t we enter state?’”

Eight years later, Rondo still enjoys submerging fruit and vegetables in vinegar and pulverizing foods into jams and spreads. He especially likes discovering rare heirloom foods — such as baba raspberries, Pakistani mulberries, Elberta peaches — even if they only yield a few jars.

“Peel it, chop it, jam it,” Rondo recited as his motto as he realized, “I should put that on a t-shirt.”

Coldwater Canyon Provisions - Pickled Okra (Foodzooka)
Coldwater Canyon Provisions – Pickled Okra (Foodzooka)

When you finish off a jar of pickles, Rondo suggests saving the juice to put to good use as a marinade for meats, a vinegar for salads, or even drink it like “an old-fashioned Gatorade.”

Rondo uses fresh organic or responsibly grown California produce from the farmers markets, making all of his products vegan and gluten-free. He sources from Mud Creek Ranch for oranges, McFarlin Family Farms for pomegranate juice, Chuy’s Berry Farm for blueberries, blackberries, and raspberries, and J&J Produce for strawberries. He then prepares and cooks each batch at the Chefs Center of California, a shared rental kitchen in Pasadena for food entrepreneurs.

In keeping with his support of the local community, he also donates proceeds to Under the Bridges and On the Streets, a Los Angeles County nonprofit program that brings sack lunches to the homeless.

Coldwater Canyon Provisions - Pickled varieties (Foodzooka)
Coldwater Canyon Provisions – Pickled varieties (Foodzooka)

Coldwater Canyon Provisions are available at five farmers markets in the Los Angeles area: Altadena (Wednesdays), Westwood Village (Thursdays), Playa Vista (Saturdays), Studio City (Sundays), and Hollywood (Sundays). Bon Vivant Market & Cafe in Atwater Village carries a variety as well, or you can order jars online from their Etsy shop.

Most jars of pickles and jam at the markets range from $8 to $12, with package discounts available: buy three jams for $29 or get $5 off a purchase of four items.

Rondo highly recommends them as gifts, wittily remarking, “Nothing says I love you like a jar of pickles.”

Coldwater Canyon Provisions - Jam gift packs (Foodzooka)
Coldwater Canyon Provisions – Jam gift packs (Foodzooka)

Click the Foodzooka profile below and follow Coldwater Canyon Provisions on social media for more information and updates.

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Drop The Guilt When You Pick Up Iggy Chips

Iggy Chips - Foodzooka Splat Feature

Calling all crunchavores with New Year’s resolutions: If your body is telling you to ditch the greasy party chips, then consider switching to some crunchy wonders from Iggy Chips.

These dehydrated fruits and vegetables achieve their crisp and crunchiness without being fried in oil, which means fewer calories. Some, such as the zucchini chips, only have 25 per bag.  “It takes more calories to open the bag,” quipped Daniel Bernstein, owner of Iggy Chips.

Iggy Chips - Zucchini Meeny Miney Moe (Foodzooka)
Iggy Chips – Zucchini Meeny Miney Moe (Foodzooka)

Iggy Chips are dried in a home kitchen without preservatives and come in nearly a dozen produce and flavor varieties with more in the making—all vegan and gluten-free. Some versions use natural seasonings which add pizzazz to even reputedly bland vegetables. Bernstein specializes in crunchifying foods not found from other local and national dehydrators, such as cauliflower, black eyed peas, and watermelon.

“It’s almost like a magician’s trick,” said Bernstein, of turning the juice-soaked watermelon into crispy snack flakes. “It does not want to be in this form.”

Iggy Chips - What A Melon flavors (Foodzooka)
Iggy Chips – What A Melon flavors (Foodzooka)

Bernstein sells bags of Iggy Chips at the Beverly Hills and Manhattan Beach farmers markets, the Rainbow Acres Natural Foods market in Marina Del Rey, the Follow Your Heart market in Canoga Park, and online at Etsy.

Sometimes a low calorie vegan snack can be a hard sell, which is why Bernstein makes his stall impossibly hard to miss at farmers markets, with the help of his sun-loving iguana mascot. Iggy and his team of bespectacled and wide-eyed plush iguanas thoroughly surround the booth, making direct eye contact with passersby.

Children are easily drawn to his stall to check out the lizards, and parents buy the snacks to put in their kids’ lunchboxes. Bernstein hopes his green-skinned spokesmen will someday propel his product to large markets, or at the very least, encourage people to eat healthier food.

Iggy Chips - Farmers market stand (Foodzooka)
Iggy Chips – Farmers market stand (Foodzooka)

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