You might call this place Hillcrestβs secret. Itβs an old house beside an open field in Hospital Land. All the UCSD nurses and doctors come here to avoid their own cafeterias. Plus, prices are low, subsidized-cafeteria range, so the joint is always run off its feet.
That doesnβt mean itβs not fun and the food ainβt good. It is. Lettyβs has been serving coffee and more since the 1940s. It has only a small room inside but plenty of space out on the wooden decks built around the house, with tables, green umbrellas, lots of flowerpots. Interesting food specials change daily to keep those white-coats coming back.
The Bacon Breakfast Burrito is a steal. The Hawaiian Salad with mangoes, pecans, blue cheese, is really good for around $6. Soβs the BBQ pork sandwich.
Mainly I come to sit, eavesdrop on ER talk, look across the open field, and have a Hillcrest meal without paying Hillcrest prices.
Itβs not just the patio and the excellent sandwiches β Grantβs Marketplace is special because these are the guys who got this part of town off its backside, made it okay to settle around here with your kids and start bringing all these great turn-of-the-century houses back to life.
When Joe and Kim Grant took what was a crummy corner liquor joint and turned it into a classy grocery-winery-cafΓ© with seriously good sandwiches, people looked again at this end of South Park.
Sandwiches to try: hot pastrami, Joeβs Favorite (turkey, GruyΓ¨re, avo), the Californian (turkey, avo, bacon), and the BLT. All standard fare, but the breadβs great, and the stuffings are generous. Plus, you feel a part of the community; everyone hangs out here.
The one pity? They aren't allowed to let us sip a beer or a glass of wine on their deck. That would mean dropping into the bureaucratic labyrinth for months on end.
Thereβs something about the way Mark Prendergast and Dave Toth (Markβs Irish; Daveβs Canadian) have set up this pub that gives it a magical camaraderie; it's a haven for downtownβs lost souls. Regular-hour food prices are a bit high (dishes like shepherdβs pie run $10β$12), but the daily happy hour from 4β8pm offers plenty of cheap options, such as the Canadian staple Poutine (fries, gravy, fresh cheese curd), or sophisticated little numbers like mussels in white wine and garlic sauce, both around five bucks. The Stout Burgerβs a beautiful half-pound mess around $8.
The main reason to come is the chat; a lot of these guys and gals make you use your little gray cells. Sports are big, especially hockey. When Stanley Cup seasonβs on, watch out. The place fills with Canucks, East Europeans, Russians, and East-Coasters.
This is the place with signposts such as βPago Pago, 4942 milesβ; βMustang Ranch, $100 from Vegasβ; βDog Beach, 50 Butt Sniffsβ β though itβs really just an ordinary sandwich/snack joint, set up to keep Mission Bay boatyard workers from starving.
What makes it a must-visit is what happens on weekends, when they shift the operation outside. They sell brewskis, really sloppy dogs (try the spicy sausage hotdog), excellent burgers from the palapa, and during the summer, have jamminβ live music from bands like Swamp Critters playing on the grass.
The Tiki Bar is every FridayβSunday in the afternoon, from 2-6pm. Live musicβs usually Sunday afternoons only (and not during winter). Itβs a scene. Everybody gathers, catches a brew from the four-sided Tiki Bar, and orders eats from the deli, such as the grilled chicken burger or Ville de Paris salad or the occasional spaghetti dinner (a great value at around a Lincoln).
Sundays, itβs a picnic. You can dance on the grass to the band, and nobody looks stupid. This is where youβll find that time-warp, knockabout waterfront town we came for in the first place.
He used to drive his own gastro truck around town, cooking up not just Indian but South Indian (some say the real Indian) food that everyone could afford.
Problem was, most people couldnβt find him. So Allen Sem found a place (Spice Court) in Little India where he could set up in the back.
βI am Tamil,β he says, βfrom Hyderabad, so I know southern Indian cooking. Just like your Southern cooking, it is more flavorful, more exciting than northern Indian food. Nothing is canned. Every sauce I make here.β
For starters, try the dosa. Along with Hyderabadi biryani, itβs one of the go-to southern dishes, a way-big fermented rice crΓͺpe β a crispy golden flute with spicy potato inside β and rich sambar (lentil soup) to dip it in, plus dollops of sauces: green mango, sautΓ©ed onions, coconut, green coriander, and if you really want to be daring, a lethal little bowl of red chiles, featuring the ghost chili. Allen says itβs βthe worldβs hottest chili.β
Allenβs place is modest β four tables in a grocery shop, no giant golden elephants β but he is the real thing.
This is the time of year for Girard Gourmet. βWe have a one-acre garden up in Julian that my husband FranΓ§ois tends each week,β Diana Goedhuys told me. She looks and sounds just like Julia Child. βWe have been composting it for eight years, and itβs really starting to pay off, everything from eggplant to eggs to pears to peaches. We have 40 fruit and nut trees. And it will all come down to enter our little food chain here.β
The beans I have with my roast chicken, the squash, the parsnips, chopped and sautΓ©ed beautifully with potatoes, all have come down the mountain and all have vibrant flavors. And weβre paying eight, ten bucks for these full, mostly homegrown meals.
Stephanie, the gal in the Hobbit-like seating on the sidewalk, is spooning up a soup of tomatillos and zucchini that were also plucked from FranΓ§oisβs garden, you can bet.
βItβs a meal,β she says. With a chunk of eight-grain bread, it cost her $3.77. In La Jolla? Go figure.
Hey, if this place is good enough for Tiger Woods⦠Seriously, he used to come down with his buddies for paintball war games at the military range nearby, then pop into the Campo Diner. Always had a cheeseburger, medium rare, with fries.
Debbie Benjamin and Carmen DeLaGuerra-Sylva, two gals who grew up around Campo, bought the place a couple of years ago and now run it for what it is: a for-real down-home country diner. Itβs like the glue that holds the scattered people in this rural area together. Heck, thereβs pretty much nothing else for 20 miles either way.
Itβs hard to miss, too. Bright paint outside, right at Cameron Corners on Highway 94. Inside has that traditional counter with squishy red stools. Breakfasts, like omelets, are around the $8 to $10 mark, but you can get two eggs with home fries and a biscuit and gravy for $5.95. Burgers β certified Black Angus beef β go from $7 (quarter-pounder) to $8 (half-pounder with fries or coleslaw).
Warning: watch out for the triple-decker Clubhouse Sandwich. It is truly ginormous. For snake-jaws only.
In this location, they have no right to succeed. Itβs the graveyard of a bunch of previous brave wannabe eateries. But Meijo Sushi, the Vietnamese-owned Japanese place on the edge of I.B., is a wild success. Something about the ownersβ fun-loving personalities has endeared them to locals.
Like, they have masu, wooden sake boxes, dangling, each with the name of a customer. Guy comes back from a WestPac, first thing he does is fill his personal masu with sake and down it. Then heβs really home.
Main dishes can get up there, but the place has daily specials, such as sushi mix, fried gyoza (dumpling), tiger eyes (calamari stuffed with salmon), or dream rolls (with tempura shrimp, avocado, and cream cheese inside, and tuna, shrimp, and spicy crab outside) β all falling between $5 and $9.
And they donβt skimp. The sushi mix has five different kinds of fish on rice, plus nine sushi rolls. And it comes on china with a beautiful Japanese motif. And yet, somehow they keep it lighthearted and down to earth.
They even have tacos β except they spell it with a k. Tako in Japanese means octopus. Tako salad is chopped and seasoned octopus with vegetables.
You should visit this deli for its fabulous arty bathrooms alone. And for its quirky, beautifully carved, purpose-built house. And for its musicians who play in the patio at night. And because the place is open 24 hours every day except the Sabbath, which is celebrated from Friday lunchtime till Sunday lunchtime.
The people who run Yellow Deli are a community of the Twelve Tribes of Israel. They try to live like the early Christians.
Their house-restaurant is a collection of rooms, caves, alcoves, barn doors, raw wood, and poles, like a ship (an ark, maybe?).
And, man, they deliver on the food. Yes, itβs a little bit nuts-and-twigs, but they have beef and lamb sandwiches. And salads come direct from their garden in Valley Center, picked today. And wonderful wholesome soups. The potato-cheese soupβs to die for. You can get a cupful for four bucks and change. And the veggieburger would fool even my dedicated carnivore Carla.
But donβt expect TV screens. βTV has replaced the hearth,β says one of the crew.
ββHearth,β βheart,β same word.β
Instead, they have live bands of guys playing mandolins, zithers, and drums, and they hold discussions on subjects like βShould spanking be allowed?β
You might call this place Hillcrestβs secret. Itβs an old house beside an open field in Hospital Land. All the UCSD nurses and doctors come here to avoid their own cafeterias. Plus, prices are low, subsidized-cafeteria range, so the joint is always run off its feet.
That doesnβt mean itβs not fun and the food ainβt good. It is. Lettyβs has been serving coffee and more since the 1940s. It has only a small room inside but plenty of space out on the wooden decks built around the house, with tables, green umbrellas, lots of flowerpots. Interesting food specials change daily to keep those white-coats coming back.
The Bacon Breakfast Burrito is a steal. The Hawaiian Salad with mangoes, pecans, blue cheese, is really good for around $6. Soβs the BBQ pork sandwich.
Mainly I come to sit, eavesdrop on ER talk, look across the open field, and have a Hillcrest meal without paying Hillcrest prices.
Itβs not just the patio and the excellent sandwiches β Grantβs Marketplace is special because these are the guys who got this part of town off its backside, made it okay to settle around here with your kids and start bringing all these great turn-of-the-century houses back to life.
When Joe and Kim Grant took what was a crummy corner liquor joint and turned it into a classy grocery-winery-cafΓ© with seriously good sandwiches, people looked again at this end of South Park.
Sandwiches to try: hot pastrami, Joeβs Favorite (turkey, GruyΓ¨re, avo), the Californian (turkey, avo, bacon), and the BLT. All standard fare, but the breadβs great, and the stuffings are generous. Plus, you feel a part of the community; everyone hangs out here.
The one pity? They aren't allowed to let us sip a beer or a glass of wine on their deck. That would mean dropping into the bureaucratic labyrinth for months on end.
Thereβs something about the way Mark Prendergast and Dave Toth (Markβs Irish; Daveβs Canadian) have set up this pub that gives it a magical camaraderie; it's a haven for downtownβs lost souls. Regular-hour food prices are a bit high (dishes like shepherdβs pie run $10β$12), but the daily happy hour from 4β8pm offers plenty of cheap options, such as the Canadian staple Poutine (fries, gravy, fresh cheese curd), or sophisticated little numbers like mussels in white wine and garlic sauce, both around five bucks. The Stout Burgerβs a beautiful half-pound mess around $8.
The main reason to come is the chat; a lot of these guys and gals make you use your little gray cells. Sports are big, especially hockey. When Stanley Cup seasonβs on, watch out. The place fills with Canucks, East Europeans, Russians, and East-Coasters.
This is the place with signposts such as βPago Pago, 4942 milesβ; βMustang Ranch, $100 from Vegasβ; βDog Beach, 50 Butt Sniffsβ β though itβs really just an ordinary sandwich/snack joint, set up to keep Mission Bay boatyard workers from starving.
What makes it a must-visit is what happens on weekends, when they shift the operation outside. They sell brewskis, really sloppy dogs (try the spicy sausage hotdog), excellent burgers from the palapa, and during the summer, have jamminβ live music from bands like Swamp Critters playing on the grass.
The Tiki Bar is every FridayβSunday in the afternoon, from 2-6pm. Live musicβs usually Sunday afternoons only (and not during winter). Itβs a scene. Everybody gathers, catches a brew from the four-sided Tiki Bar, and orders eats from the deli, such as the grilled chicken burger or Ville de Paris salad or the occasional spaghetti dinner (a great value at around a Lincoln).
Sundays, itβs a picnic. You can dance on the grass to the band, and nobody looks stupid. This is where youβll find that time-warp, knockabout waterfront town we came for in the first place.
He used to drive his own gastro truck around town, cooking up not just Indian but South Indian (some say the real Indian) food that everyone could afford.
Problem was, most people couldnβt find him. So Allen Sem found a place (Spice Court) in Little India where he could set up in the back.
βI am Tamil,β he says, βfrom Hyderabad, so I know southern Indian cooking. Just like your Southern cooking, it is more flavorful, more exciting than northern Indian food. Nothing is canned. Every sauce I make here.β
For starters, try the dosa. Along with Hyderabadi biryani, itβs one of the go-to southern dishes, a way-big fermented rice crΓͺpe β a crispy golden flute with spicy potato inside β and rich sambar (lentil soup) to dip it in, plus dollops of sauces: green mango, sautΓ©ed onions, coconut, green coriander, and if you really want to be daring, a lethal little bowl of red chiles, featuring the ghost chili. Allen says itβs βthe worldβs hottest chili.β
Allenβs place is modest β four tables in a grocery shop, no giant golden elephants β but he is the real thing.
This is the time of year for Girard Gourmet. βWe have a one-acre garden up in Julian that my husband FranΓ§ois tends each week,β Diana Goedhuys told me. She looks and sounds just like Julia Child. βWe have been composting it for eight years, and itβs really starting to pay off, everything from eggplant to eggs to pears to peaches. We have 40 fruit and nut trees. And it will all come down to enter our little food chain here.β
The beans I have with my roast chicken, the squash, the parsnips, chopped and sautΓ©ed beautifully with potatoes, all have come down the mountain and all have vibrant flavors. And weβre paying eight, ten bucks for these full, mostly homegrown meals.
Stephanie, the gal in the Hobbit-like seating on the sidewalk, is spooning up a soup of tomatillos and zucchini that were also plucked from FranΓ§oisβs garden, you can bet.
βItβs a meal,β she says. With a chunk of eight-grain bread, it cost her $3.77. In La Jolla? Go figure.
Hey, if this place is good enough for Tiger Woods⦠Seriously, he used to come down with his buddies for paintball war games at the military range nearby, then pop into the Campo Diner. Always had a cheeseburger, medium rare, with fries.
Debbie Benjamin and Carmen DeLaGuerra-Sylva, two gals who grew up around Campo, bought the place a couple of years ago and now run it for what it is: a for-real down-home country diner. Itβs like the glue that holds the scattered people in this rural area together. Heck, thereβs pretty much nothing else for 20 miles either way.
Itβs hard to miss, too. Bright paint outside, right at Cameron Corners on Highway 94. Inside has that traditional counter with squishy red stools. Breakfasts, like omelets, are around the $8 to $10 mark, but you can get two eggs with home fries and a biscuit and gravy for $5.95. Burgers β certified Black Angus beef β go from $7 (quarter-pounder) to $8 (half-pounder with fries or coleslaw).
Warning: watch out for the triple-decker Clubhouse Sandwich. It is truly ginormous. For snake-jaws only.
In this location, they have no right to succeed. Itβs the graveyard of a bunch of previous brave wannabe eateries. But Meijo Sushi, the Vietnamese-owned Japanese place on the edge of I.B., is a wild success. Something about the ownersβ fun-loving personalities has endeared them to locals.
Like, they have masu, wooden sake boxes, dangling, each with the name of a customer. Guy comes back from a WestPac, first thing he does is fill his personal masu with sake and down it. Then heβs really home.
Main dishes can get up there, but the place has daily specials, such as sushi mix, fried gyoza (dumpling), tiger eyes (calamari stuffed with salmon), or dream rolls (with tempura shrimp, avocado, and cream cheese inside, and tuna, shrimp, and spicy crab outside) β all falling between $5 and $9.
And they donβt skimp. The sushi mix has five different kinds of fish on rice, plus nine sushi rolls. And it comes on china with a beautiful Japanese motif. And yet, somehow they keep it lighthearted and down to earth.
They even have tacos β except they spell it with a k. Tako in Japanese means octopus. Tako salad is chopped and seasoned octopus with vegetables.
You should visit this deli for its fabulous arty bathrooms alone. And for its quirky, beautifully carved, purpose-built house. And for its musicians who play in the patio at night. And because the place is open 24 hours every day except the Sabbath, which is celebrated from Friday lunchtime till Sunday lunchtime.
The people who run Yellow Deli are a community of the Twelve Tribes of Israel. They try to live like the early Christians.
Their house-restaurant is a collection of rooms, caves, alcoves, barn doors, raw wood, and poles, like a ship (an ark, maybe?).
And, man, they deliver on the food. Yes, itβs a little bit nuts-and-twigs, but they have beef and lamb sandwiches. And salads come direct from their garden in Valley Center, picked today. And wonderful wholesome soups. The potato-cheese soupβs to die for. You can get a cupful for four bucks and change. And the veggieburger would fool even my dedicated carnivore Carla.
But donβt expect TV screens. βTV has replaced the hearth,β says one of the crew.
ββHearth,β βheart,β same word.β
Instead, they have live bands of guys playing mandolins, zithers, and drums, and they hold discussions on subjects like βShould spanking be allowed?β
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