Showing posts with label Short Order restaurant. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Short Order restaurant. Show all posts

Sunday, September 23, 2012

A BIRTHDAY TRADITION





A BIRTHDAY TRADITION


To quote Tevye in “Fiddler On The Roof,” – “Tradition!” 

For years, Michael, my “boy” BFF has been taking me on birthday “culinary” and “design” adventures - I even started blogging about them when I began this blog.  Sometimes it’s just the two of us, sometimes Richard joins in. 

We’ve toured the Hollyhock and Ennis houses, both designed by Frank Lloyd Wright…

We ooh-ed and ah-ed through four houses located on the Malibu Estate compound Barbra Streisand donated to the city (a “country barn,” a Mediterranean villa, an art deco house and a craftsman bungalow all decorated by Ms. Barbra), then had “tea” on the patio…

We gazed at the art in the Frederick Weisman Museum located in Weisman’s home in Beverly Hills…

He treated me to my first Umami and The Counter cheeseburgers and we waited on line to experience the fabulous sandwiches from The Grilled Cheese Truck…

Last year he took Richard and me to Short Order, renowned chef Nancy Silverton’s cheeseburger “joint” in Los Angeles’ famed Farmer’s Market.

So, when he called this year to invite me/us for a b’day brunch at the Old Place, I jumped at the chance to experience this new food adventure.

The Old Place is, in fact, an “old place” located in the Santa Monica mountain town of Cornell. I’d been hearing about this restaurant for quite some time, but had never eaten there. This beautiful mountain area is where the television series “M*A*S*H” and “Dr. Quinn Medicine Woman” were shot. Cool.

In its youth, the Old Place was Hank’s Country Store where locals and travelers saddled up (literally) to buy their supplies. But when Tom Runyon bought it, he converted the old place into the “Old Place,” a rustic restaurant that he and his wife ran for more than 40 years. 

The menu then was short and consisted mostly of steaks cooked over a red oak fire, clams, baked potatoes and crusty sourdough bread, all of which you could wash down with beer or wine.


Though locals flocked to the place, it wasn’t unusual to see Steve McQueen, Jason Robards or other Hollywood celebs sitting in a booth or on a bar bench. All these years later, locals still hang out there, complemented by Valley-ites like Richard and me, surfers from Malibu, movie and TV stars, and bikers. Jay Leno has been known to “saddle up” on one of his “hogs” for a meal.

The minute we arrived, it felt as if we had been transported to another more rugged time. Before we went into the restaurant we checked out the Cornell Winery next door with its rustic, country charm and private dining room with a huge, antique crystal chandelier hanging over a long wooden table, not to mention an abundance of fine wines for sale.

Directly across the street from the Old Place, is the Peter Strauss Ranch, a many acre former park that the actor bought and donated to the National Park System which maintains nature trails and picnic areas. Peter also raised peacocks which still live behind the Cornell Winery and roam freely on the winery’s and Old Place’s property.

Tom’s son now runs the restaurant and though the menu has expanded to include such dishes as wild rosemary pale ale chicken, oak grilled chicken pot pie, oak grilled fish, and a noodle and cheese bake, the woody saloon atmosphere remains, even if the hitching posts outside are gone. 


The interior truly made me think of the saloons in TV westerns that I watched as a kid. Seeing women behind the bar brought visions of Miss Kitty in “Gunsmoke,” though their wardrobe brought me back into the 21st century.




 

We settled in at a table in back filled with artifacts and cowboy collectibles...






...then ordered.   
 

First we shared a breakfast “appetizer” – a gooey homemade cinnamon roll that was probably the most delicious, gooiest cinnamon roll I’ve ever eaten.


Michael’s “main course,” was the wild mushroom and goat cheese frittata. 


Individually made in a cast iron skillet, the frittatas have a thin sliced crispy potato base and are then topped with a sourdough herb crust. Of course, I had to have a taste. It was frittata perfection. Other frittata choices include a sausage, ham, grilled onion and Irish cheddar concoction, a grilled seasonal veggie frittata and one made with goat cheese, sun-dried tomato and spinach.

Richard ordered the 3-stack blue corn meal flapjacks with real maple syrup. 


He was going to order the 5-stack, but our lovely waitress warned him that the flapjacks were huge and unless we were thinking of feeding a small village, the 3-stack would be more than enough. Not only were they huge as “advertised,” they were moist and truly mouthwatering (yes, I had to have a bite of this, too). His “side” of applewood bacon was the thickest bacon I’ve ever had (yup- grabbed a slice). Hearty – bacon-y (a good thing).


Famous for their red oak grilled steaks, I opted for steak and eggs. Though my steak was a bit chewy, the flavor was amazing, and my eggs were cooked exactly the way I wanted them – over easy.


After brunch, we walked the property and saw horses corralled behind a limo... pretty sure the horses didn't arrive IN the limo (unless they were Ann Romney's).  :)



...then checked out the “Mailroom,” the restaurant’s private dining room that seats parties from 9-12.


Loved the rustic room with its tons of candles and artwork painted by Tom’s wife, Barbara.





When it was time to leave this cool old place, I was a happy, sated camper.

Thank you, Michael for keeping my birthday tradition alive.


OLD PLACE
299983 Mulholland Highway
Cornell, Calif. 91301
818-706-9001
 

Check out a few of my prior Michael birthday adventures:

The Grilled Cheese Truck:

Short Order - Nancy Silverton’s hamburger joint:

The Frederic Weisman Museum in Beverly Hills

Monday, February 20, 2012

CHEESEBURGER, CHEESEBURGER, CHEESEBURGER - Nancy Silverton's New Burger Joint



CHEESEBURGER, CHEESEBURGER, CHEESEBURGER
(Short Order – Nancy Silverton’s New Burger Joint)


My name is Ilona and I’m a burgerholic. 

If this were a perfect world, I’d eat one every day.  My perfect job would be to review cheeseburgers around the world… but the world (and life) is not perfect.  I’d be elephantine.  Don’t get me wrong, I love elephants – I just don’t want to ape them in weight.

But, I do get to review cheeseburgers for my own blog, and I found a new favorite right in my own back yard (well, really “over the hill” from the Valley to the city part of LA)…

Sometime ago I wrote about the burgers that Nancy Silverton, one of America’s premiere chefs, makes at home. I called them Nancy Burgers and told y’all about her perfect ground beef blend and how she recommends cooking them.


Well Nancy, in celebration of her love for burgers, along with her partner, restaurateur Bill Chait, recently opened up her first burger joint, Short Order, located in the famed Los Angeles Farmer’s Market.  And though the restaurant is named “Short Order” – it’s anything but fast food. These are real burgers from delicious ground beef cooked to perfection.

For my first visit, I took my friend Cindra, a fellow cheeseburgerholic.  We take each other out for lunch for our birthdays, and her choice this year was a Short Order birthday. 

 
The restaurant has a patio and "indoors" with sort of communal sitting downstairs

 
and a covered deck with separate tables and enclosed room w/ tables and a bar upstairs.   


We wanted to chat and catch up so we took a deuce on the upstairs deck.

Did I mention that Short Order has a full bar – not just wine and beer?  It does. 


So as is our birthday lunch custom, we ordered Bloody Marys.  Oops!  No Bloody Marys.  They don’t make them. They don’t have tomato juice or Bloody Mary mix.  Duh – what?!  OK, a big negative, and we were disappointed, but we were game, so Cindra decided to try one of Short Order’s “fancy” cocktails – Morning Glory Fizz, a drink consisting of scotch, lemon, sugar, egg white and absinthe.  It tasted pretty good – but really was just a variation of the scotch sour.  I opted for a vodka martini with olives.  Oops!  No olives.  They don’t have them  Duh – what?!  But, I could have my martini w/ a lemon peel.  OK, another negative, but we were there for the burgers.

We both decided on “Ida’s Old School Burger” (named after a 17 year old family friend).  Grass-fed beef, cheddar, pickles, tomato, griddled onion, iceberg lettuce and a secret sauce, all on a homemade bun… it was a “Dagwood” of cheeseburgers.  Burgers are cooked to a perfect medium rare, unless you specify otherwise. Cindra wanted hers more medium-well and I had it the way Nancy wanted me to have it… both of our burgers were just the way we liked them.  We ate. We ooh-ed. We ah-ed.  We loved every bite.

For our “side,” we went with the old school fries – shoestring style – crunchy on the outside and soft on the inside.  Yum.

Our waitress, knowing we were disappointedly-deprived of our Bloody Mary’s, brought out a bottle of white wine the restaurant just ordered for its “wine cellar” and gave us a glass on the house.   

 
The wine was good, but the service she gave us and the acknowledgement of our disappointment was even better.

And, since this was a birthday lunch – dessert was in order and Cindra ordered “Nancy’s Favorite Chocolate Chip Cookie” w/ TCHO chocolate.  It was delicious and big enough I could have put a candle in it.  I sang one bar of “Happy Birthday,” anyway.  And, it was a happy and satisfying birthday lunch.

Then it was my turn, birthday-wise.  Every year my friend Michael takes me to a fun diner or dive or food truck to indulge my “gourmet” comfort food cravings.  He’s also my cheeseburger enabler. A fan of Nancy’s, Richard joined us.  Again, I found myself on the upstairs deck, sipping water that’s served in Mason jars and perusing the menu.


I decided to have another martini (no I’m not trying to revive the martini lunch) with a lemon peel since they still had no tomato juice or olives.

The day was a perfect medium-warm and I decided that, this time, I would try Nancy’s Backyard Burger, made with her blend of dry-aged beef and topped with North Country Smokehouse applewood bacon, comte (cheese), avocado, heirloom tomatoes, onion, iceberg lettuce and spicy mayo.  I love all those things, but knew that this was going to be an even bigger “Dagwood” burger, so I asked for everything (but the cheese) on the side… besides I really wanted to taste this incredible grilled beef and cheddar w/ no frills.

Richard ordered the same burger, but with everything piled on top the way Nancy intended.

Michael opted for Ida’s burger – the one I had on my first visit.

Biting into my Nancy burger, with the beef juicy-ily medium-rare and the cheddar melted to perfection, I soared into burger heaven.

This time we ordered the Short Order Spuds which are small potatoes, cooked, crushed, then deep-fried so they’re soft and crunch all in the same bite.  Loved them! 

 
Michael ordered a vanilla malt which was too thick, it was like eating Hagen Daas vanilla ice cream and not drinking a malt.

Other choices on the menu are delicious-sounding pork, lamb, turkey, and tuna burgers, along with a double-double vegetarian chick pea patty burger, with yogurt sauce, harissa, cucumbers and iceberg lettuce for non-meat eating crowd.

Or you can get a grilled cheese, patty melt, tuna melt, corn pups (miniature corn dogs) or a mac ‘n’ cheese raft to name just a few selections.  And, yes, even a salad or two.

What can I say, the full bar may not serve a full menu of cocktails – and the overly sweet, way too thick malt needs a rethinking, but…

Short Order is very long on great burgers.


Short Order
6333 W. 3rd Street
Los Angeles, CA 90036


No reservations.  First come, first serve