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Hiding Out at Heyoka

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So proud and happy for my friends of Heyoka Leather who have been going at it as long as Heirloom has, and now they have a very cool curated store, Heyoka Hideout in Topanga Canyon. It is filled with their handmade leather goods as well as many vintage wares and clothing. A balcony above a rolling stream with a view of mountains and trees is a perfect accompaniment to the casual rocker vibe of the store. You expect Jimi Hendrix to saunter in. 




Photos: Lindsay Lohden

Of course for their Grand Opening Party we had to roll up with some deliciousness. These girls and I go way back. So, so excited for this new venture.



Photos: Tara Maxey




Yasmine's Florals for Shark Pig

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When we did an event with Shark Pig at our place (see it here), it was really important that either we just ban any flowers whatsoever or make flowers not look like flowers, make them look like texture. Who do you call upon for a job like that? Yasmine Floral Design, that's who. She's up for these sorts of challenges.





I told her that the color palette was pig and shark, and it can't look anything like a wedding. Or flowers. There are many things to love about Yasmine, but in this case what I loved is that she didn't look at me like this request was any kind of unusual. She just nodded her pretty head and did a half smile and showed up a couple hours before guests arrived to put it all together. I was really impressed. Again.







Remember when she was featured here? She is just our darling. I mean who could find shark colored flowers? And pig colored flowers? And then arrange them in a way that they are too modest to draw attention to themselves? Yasmine. Yasmine can.



Photos: Jennifer Emerling

And who captures our girl Yasmine in all her delicate, feminine essence but yet can still find the toughness and heart of our kitchen like in these images here? Oh, yes, that would be the pink haired wonder Jennifer Emerling. She shows up in t-shirts reading "Barf" in Barbie font and you wonder why the hell you didn't get her as your little sister. Man, oh man, she is good. And it is the gospel truth that I'm just as proud of her talent and diversity and adventurous spirit as if we were related.

Follow Jenn on Instagram here. And Yasmine here.


Ping Pong Party

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Photos: Autumn de Wilde


When our friend Autumn said she wanted to throw a surprise birthday party for her boyfriend Blair, ping pong was a natural theme for this sports fan.





Autumn made a table of shirts and tennis accessories to throw on to get into the swing-a-things while drinking your Mint Julep.



For the "Concession Stand" there was Pizza Bread Pudding, Chili Dogs with House Made Sausages, Savory Corn Fritters, French Fries and House Made Cheese Sauce, Meatballs, Nachos, and a couple different Garden Salads.




Oh yes, Beer Pong! We had lots of sloshy guests thanks to this game!





What a fun night we all had!!! Happy Birthday our friend Blair!!! 


Photos: Tara Maxey


P.S. Blair beat absolutely everyone. He has a wicked two-handed back hand that threw all of his contenders off. Put your money on this guy, you'll win!!!


Wednesdays at Handsome Coffee

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Residents downtown have had the inside scoop for what's going on at Handsome Coffee every Wednesday from 5-8 p.m when The Produce Project sets up the most beautiful gathering of produce in a glorious edit of all the best of the best from the Santa Monica Farmer's Market. Remember this post when we talked about going to SMFM? The ladies of Produce Project also source directly from additional farmers and ranchers to add to their carefully curated selection for you to shop from. Raw dairy items are available here, clean meats, and fertilized eggs also.

My favorite offering from The Produce Project is their "Market Baskets" which contain balanced samplings of everything for you to enjoy through the week. How convenient! Oh and they make the most special gifts. Everyone we have given one to is just giddy by how pretty it's presentation is and then by how absolutely divine the produce tastes. It's so fun to be surprised by what you'd probably never pick out on your own (like mouse melons or finger limes) and then wonder how you lived this long without any of it. These baskets even include a few simple recipe ideas and tell you which farm every item comes from. Pretty perfect, right?




Handsome Coffee turns these Wednesdays into a gourmet event by including Guerrilla Tacos (they have a food truck now!) and Sweet Clementine's Popsicles (ask about featuring them at your next party with spiked pops). Oh, yes, and the most refined and sophisticated coffee of all time. They don't even offer sugar, they want to control that cup that you drink in all of it's perfection. Don't go ruining it with sugar. 

Let me tell you something, this sugar loving coffee drinker appreciates a Handsome cup of sugarless coffee. The milk is skillfully heated to a particular level which creates a rich sweet creamy foam and I just don't miss the sugar. Oh.... and their ice coffee..... it's brewed for 24 hours and is so smooth and layered. I honestly wouldn't spoil that brew in any way. Heresy. I can't believe I'm saying that, I love sugar. Anyway, give it a try for yourself and let us know what you think. Ring up some friends this Wednesday and have yourselves a casual, affordable, and deliciously enjoyable fine night out.


Handsome Coffee:  582 Mateo St. in the Downtown LA Arts District


"Market Baskets" from The Produce Project can be picked up on Wednesdays at Handsome or you can order them by contacting hungry@theproduceproject.com. They offer two sizes, one at $45 and the other at $65



Jibs, Food, Sharks and Pigs

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Photo: Tara Maxey


A couple weeks ago I was talking with my friend Joy and she said videos are the new photos for blogs. Then Bri said the same thing on her blog here. That's convincing enough for me, but how the heck do you make a video? I have no idea. You know who does though? Shark Pig. Shark Pig definitely knows how to make videos. Here's one they did for us a while back here.

There will be more, friends, there will be more. Stay tuned.



Poketo at Heirloom LA

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Purchase Tickets HERE


Oh this one is going to be FUN! Our garden will be transformed into a Thai and Korean Street Fair by Poketo! We will have music and movies and food and drinks and photos! There will be appetizers but also live cooking. See our inspiration board on Pinterest here. Poketo will be bringing in color and design, and we're serving up the menu:



TRAY PASSED APPETIZERS + SOJU COCKTAILS

AND FOUR ACTION STATIONS:


FROM THE GRILL

served with steamed rice + pickled daikon radish

Kalbi Beef  

Bulgolgi Pork 

Spicy Bok Choy


FROM THE FRYER

Kyochon Style Chicken Wings

with sweet + salty soy garlic glaze + house made kimchee


FROM THE WOK

Boat Noodle Soup 

5 Bar Beef Top Round Meatballs, Beef Broth, Chilis + Rice Noodles


LETTUCE WRAP STATION

Crispy Pork with Thai Basil + Chilies

Beef Larb with Pickled Red Onions Sesame + Rice Vinegar

Spicy Thai Eggplant with Wild Mushrooms + Curry Vinaigrette








** Reservations are confirmed by payment here

** This event will be PHOTOGRAPHED. Your image may be used from this event for the promotion of Heirloom LA and Poketo.

Wild Boar in the House

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Photo: Jennifer Emerling


A few months back I had arrived at the kitchen around 4 am for reasons explained here. I put on NPR or Sam Cooke, both of those are my favorite morning play lists so either can be heard at that hour when I'm the first to arrive. I tied a crisp apron on, smoothed my hair back into a bun, set up my station and then went about gathering ingredients to knock out my prep list. In our walk-in, I smelled some fruit, picking the prettiest to make an inside out cake like this one, then I pivoted to walk out and.... SCREAMED!!! 

What the heck?? There was a bristle haired, tusk bearing, whole wild boar upon it's back that I had somehow missed when I entered the walk-in. It resembled our pit bull, Charlotte, but much meaner looking. Oh, to see it like that, humbled and still, was a sight to behold. I'm accustomed to whole pigs in our walk in (remember our first one here?), these make me pause only a little, but a wild boar! Sheesh!

It seems a federal agent friend of Matt's enjoys hunting on vineyards and asked him if he would like a wild boar sometime. "Sure," Matt replied. I mean why not, is his thinking.

It was just very early in the morning to be surprised by some thorny beast. Oh, how my heart nearly beat out of my chest, I still remember. In honor of the animal, this pig gone wild, we have preserved it's skin and kept it for hanging. 

It's a showstopper, beware.


Sunday Fried Chicken for Food GPS


Caduceus in The Salon

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We have paired our food with Maynard James Keenan's spectacular Caduceus Wines several times over the last few years at Sunday Silverlake Wine Tastings, so when he approached us to do a more formal pairing in our own space, The Salon, we were already keyed in on how passionate and serious he is about winemaking. 





Maynard makes all of his wine in Jerome, Arizona, an old mining town, and for this tasting he wanted to feature exclusively his beautiful Rosé Wines so we played on those two themes for the decor of our garden but with a bit of an edge of course to acknowledge Maynard's music identity. Our color palette was variations of pink, peach, ox blood, gold, and black. Glen of Smog Design recreated the Arizona flag in those colors for us, as well as the announcement to pre-purchase tickets here. Those lollies had actual scorpions inside in a sweet nod to the desert.





To help outfit the vignettes we set up in our garden, I called upon Dominique Cody who works closely with Heyoka Hideout (remember when we cooked for their opening here?). All I had to say was "Arizona slash rock vibe" and she just magically made it all happen filling in every corner of our garden with interesting details.





All of these items above can be found at Heyoka Hideout in Topanga, such a cool store... well, except for that wild boar skin up there, here's how we got that guy.






To start, we hosted a cocktail hour so everyone could come in and loosen up. Even Maynard drank one, the Prickly Pear Margarita.






We foraged through our own garden to pick white, green, Japanese, and globe eggplants to grill outside for the pasta dish of the evening. Their smokey char filled the air just as appetizers started to make their way out to guests.









One: Blackened Balsamic Crispy Crostini with Coffee Crusted Elk Loin Carpaccio, Black Garlic Smoked Chili Aioli + Pickled Peppers

Two: Tostaditas with Red Chili Braised 5 bar Beef Shank, Crumbled Queso Fresco + Homegrown Aleppo

Three: Fried Forbidden Rice with Tuna Tar Tar, Saffron Hollandaise, House Fermented Chili Sauce + Cilantro

Four: Black Navajo Fry Bread + Indian Avocado Butter with Squash Blossoms + fried Chick Peas

Five:  Grilled Cornbread Madelines with Charred Corn Kernels + Whipped Cumin Honey Butter




After cocktail hour, guests made their way into The Salon and found their seats by looking for their name printed on "Snake in the Boxes" beside menus with feathers weaved in their margin. We really had fun with this desert theme.

Before the dinner, Maynard gave the kitchen a bottle of each of the four Rosés we were to serve so we could taste and pair them with each course. He explained that he makes them with the same intent and purpose that he does his red and whites. They each are age worthy with backbone and tempting aromatics which is not typical of most Rosés. 




To start, we served an Amuse-Bouche of Sweet Corn and Sheep's Milk Ricotta Tamale with Huilacoche and Pearl Onion Ragu.

The first Rosé was Chupacabra Rosa, a Primitivo/Montepulciano with 138 cases produced, and it was served with a Salad of Shaved Black Radish, Compressed Watermelon and Lemon Cucumbers with Marinated Fresh Feta Cheese, Candied Almonds and Date Chipotle Viaigrette.





Matt is breaking off some beautiful flowering marjoram from Windrose Farms here to infuse in his brown butter, the base of this pasta course. The nutty aroma is about to completely permeate The Salon.









And for the second course was poured Lei Li Nebbiolo Rosé with 171 cases produced. It's block is farmed specifically for this rare and practically lost Langhe Nebbiolo Rosé clone. Maynard explained that it wants to be a Rosé.

We served a Squid Ink Ravioli stuffed with Homegrown Eggplant and served with Butter Poached Lobster and Mesquite Grilled Eggplant with Piquillo Buerre Rouge shaved on top.







Out back, Chef Todd grills succulent pork chops from Cooks Pigs Ranch over mesquite coals for our entree. These pigs are fed a steady diet of avocados, macadamia nuts, apples and tortillas rendering the most divine pork we have ever experienced, so very little needs to be done to it. Salt, pepper, grill.





And in the kitchen plates were prepped for service with velvety smears of White and Sweet Potato Puree. The sides of Yellow Wax Beans, Romano Beans, and Broccoli Leaves all came from our garden, as well as the garnish of Red Climbing Spinach Buds.





As Maynard presented the next pour,
a Velvet Slippers Club exclusive, in other words not available to buy, he discussed that with the influx of job creation, tax revenue, and other economic benefits associated with wine making in Arizona, the state has recently begun to subsidize wineries there.






And finally the Nagual del Marzo Rosé, a Sangiovese whose block is also specifically farmed for this wine. Once it's target Brix is reached, it is hand harvested, whole cluster pressed, and cold fermented in stainless steel.


For the plated dessert, we made a play on Tres Leches Cake, with coconut cake, strawberry sorbet, coconut ice cream, kaya jam, house made graham and finger limes from our garden.







Guests still had wine to finish! And it was such a beautiful summer evening so we invited them to make their way out back for one last sweet bite of Fried Sopapillas with Local Spiced Honey to linger over as Fleetwood Mac tunes gave us all a reason to sway and smile and appreciate the evening.


Photos: Jennifer Emerling




See our Pinterest Inspiration Board here.

My Favorite Instagrammer

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I follow quite a few talented restaurant people on Instagram because it's so interesting to get perspectives on other kitchen cultures and see what deliciousness they are creating. By far my favorite, the profile that consistently wows me with it's plating and creativity and care is not a restaurant person at all, it's Samantha Lee who describes herself as an "ordinary stay-at-home mom". I wouldn't say there's too much ordinary about her with these plates. Check her out here. She's hilarious and inspiring, and even gives instructions on how you can make these plates for your own kids over on her blog here.





Food GPS Fried Chicken Festival

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Oh hey, Channel 5 News! Welcome to our kitchen! That's Josh Lurie of Food GPS on the far right. He organized an event for all the fried chicken lovers out there by gathering up his restaurant friends (listed here), and asking them to make 800 portions of a fried chicken dish. Allie Mac Kay of KTLA Channel 5 Morning News came out to our kitchen to help promote it a couple days ahead of time and featured Matt along with Ricardo Zarate of Mo Chica and Chris Oh of Seol Sausage on the program.






We made 800 Fried Chicken Karaage Sandwiches with Fresh Plum Katsu Sauce, House-Made Siracha, and Weiser Farms Fingerling Potato Salads for the Festival.


Photos: Tara Maxey



We ran into lots of kitchen friends and drank very delicious tequila cocktails by Matt Biancaniello that had chicken feet in them! See more photos on Instagram at #FoodGPSFriedChicken.













Poketo In The Salon

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Have you seen the menu here? And that's not even all of it! Grab some friends and join us! Purchase tickets here this week for the early bird special!



As seen here


As seen here.

As seen here.





Sweet Birthday Party in The Salon

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Remember our very first destination wedding in Jamestown, VA that we talked about here? This was back in our nascent stages when we just had lasagna cupcakes and a whole lot of ambition. We were working out of a kitchen in it's off hours (read: 10 pm to 10 am) and we were conducting tastings in our house! Ah, man, we were small change with a big vision, and Dana and Quinn read that in us... the big vision part! They brought us to Virginia to cater their beautiful wedding that got featured in Martha Stewart Weddings here. It was a turning point in our confidence and our image, and we have remained friends with Dana and Quinn and their family ever since. 

Now they have a sweet baby boy, and for a night out Quinn surprised Dana with a babysitter and a birthday party for 20 of their closest friends in The Salon. It was so fun to have them all here to cook an intimate dinner in this format to enjoy. They believed in us from the beginning for such a huge scale wedding which affirmed our own belief in what Heirloom was doing, in our vision of what we would be doing... in what we are doing now. 

Thank you to Dana and Quinn for being part of our support system, our friends and always positive and fun to be around. We are better people for having you in our lives.




Poketo In The Salon

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We have teamed up with our friends over at Poketo to make an Asian fusion-themed street party in our garden! They will be reimagining The Salon and we are fast at work to convert our garden into a busy Asian street fair! Matt even bought a motorcylce that he says is a prop but me thinks he has other ideas for it. Nicolette and I have been running around Asian markets and having fun planning this event with the colors palette of Poketo! 

We are getting a lot of questions if $45 is all inclusive of the menu here. Yes it is! Think street food with several "action" stations. There will be lines for food, there will be noise just like any street environment but oh it is going to be fun! Save yourself the air fare of going to Asia, we are bringing it to Eagle Rock!

Space is limited so act fast!



Out Back During Our Salon Dinner With Caduceus

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Photo: Jennifer Emerling

Our private tasting room, The Salon, is a small, intimate dining room that seats 26-32 people. For special public events we've been hosting, we usually have an overflow of friends and family of Heirloom that we want to include but we don't have the space to in the dining room like here with Caduceus Wine so we've been having a separate seating out back.



Photos: Glen Nakasako

Plumes of smokey pork fill the air as Chef Todd grills over some luscious pork chops from Cook's Pigs (remember when we visited their ranch here?). Meanwhile in our kitchen Matt and I prepare family style platters to serve outside. For the most part, the menu is very similar to what is being served in The Salon, just more simple and rustic.


Photos: Jennifer Emerling

While Matt goes back to cook in The Salon for the guests in there, I sit on down with our friends outside and share some laughs, enjoying the beautiful food and company. Such a good night!





Sold Out

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We are so excited for this event and the huge response to it! We're putting lots of love into it, can't wait to see you all! For those who didn't get to purchase tickets, please follow us here on Instagram, we have more exciting collaborations coming up!


Pumpkin + Coconut Soup

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For the last month, I have been going to the Challenger's Boys and Girls Club in South LA on my own each Thursday. Today, however, Matt was able to go too, and the kids went crrrazzy. They love him, and the best part is that they love him even when he keeps things healthy. In the spirit of Halloween we taught the children how to make Pumpkin Soup (remember when we did another version here?). We used Butternut Squash because it has less water than a traditional pumpkin but you could also use a Kabocha Squash. Adding yams to the mix lends a bit of natural sweetness and some density, but you can use all butternut squash or carrots or zucchini even!

Also here we cut the liquid (you can use stock or water) with coconut milk which adds nice body and tones down the color of the soup but you can simply add all stock. The children commented that it looked like "mustard" and "baby food" but I always insist they taste everything we cook. Funny thing is that they across the board end up loving everything we all make together, crudite platters, hummus, brussel sprouts, salads, healthy juices. I have found that when you engage children in the cooking process that they then feel connected to what they are preparing and they are less inclined to stick their nose up. They want to try it and usually really like what we make. So Mom's bring your babes in the kitchen the next time you cook and talk about what you're making. I tell you, it works!

PROCEDURE FOR PUMPKIN SOUP:

• preheat oven 425 F
• peel + roughly chop butternut squash + yams the same size, then toss with olive oil, salt + pepper. 
• roast squash + yams in oven until caramelized
• toss pumpkin seeds with olive oil, cayenne, salt, + chili flakes, then roast in oven until they pop
• chop onions + garlic, + place in a hot skillet with olive oil, sage, salt + pepper, tossing to caramelize
• once onions are caramelized, add liquids (including maple syrup) + roasted pumpkin, simmer until pumpkin is very tender
• blend
• add some lemon juice to thin out the creme fraiche + to add brightness, then use this as a garnish for the soup along with the pumpkin seeds and cilantro





Pescatarian Buffet

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My friend Yasmine has an acute eye for detail, that is one reason she is so talented with floral design. So when she asked us to do a little lunch buffet for her workshop at Poketo (see it featured on The Chalkboard), I asked Matt to whip up whatever he wanted because he has an eye for detail too and when you allow him be creative, he really works magic. 





This friends, is an Autumn Harvest gratin which has kale, sweet peppers, baby eggplants, pears and carrots. Matt said he put it together like a layered gratin or lasagna alternating the roasted veggies and pears (these leant a delicate sweetness) with béchamel and smoked mozzarella. That and a salad is a meal I could eat every night.




Okay, these were gorgeous. They started with a beet cream cheese (see that color there, oh, I die!), smeared on a toasted crusty bread rubbed with garlic and topped with a house cured salmon, green chickpeas, lemon cucumbers, and capers. Help me, I could've eaten the whole platter. These elegant crostinis took bagels and lox to a completely different spectrum.






Oh man, and these. Whoa. We have sliced roasted yams as the bed here for a whipped potato salad (yes, everything you find in a potato salad, whipped up and then piped out) and topped with deviled eggs and trout. I know you would lose it like I did over these. Honestly I was cramming them in my mouth and hoping no one would ask me a question, and it was real challenging at this time not to stomp the ground in joy. They were that sensational.







No, no, no... are you serious? These were vegan? How is that even possible you wizard Matthew Poley? Spicy Beet Gazpacho with a Persimmon Bruschetta. People were freaking out the most over these beauties. Look at the color! 





And there was a beautiful cous cous salad, and a gorgeous garden salad and a colorful crostini station, as well as our house wine, but you've seen all those. These items above here, Matt just came up with them on the fly this past Sunday morning while prepping for three weddings after a night of four weddings. That, in case you didn't know, is called bad ass. I didn't even remind him that Yasmine ate fish but no other meat, it's just his gift this catering thing. I marvel constantly. Constantly. There are a lot of great chefs in this city, their food is unbelievable and I'm so happy to call many of them friends, but Matt is in a class of his own holding down this rapidly growing company of ours while cooking like a magician. Stay tuned, he has so much more to cook for you.




See feature here





Garden to Lunch Box

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Don't you think every child deserves to learn about cooking and healthy eating and buzz words like "organic" and "GMO" in a garden at their school? Garden to lunch box is the motto. Garden School Foundation is working to make this movement happen in public schools across Los Angeles but it takes a lot of money to maintain and our government isn't forking it over so let's help out! Come join chef friends across the city who will be cooking for a party and fundraiser this Sunday: Cook's County, Loteria Grill, A-Frame, Little Doms, Clementine, Canele, just to name a few. Get your tickets here and see you Sunday!

Passion Fruit Vinaigrette

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You know how a great way is to cover up an ugly chain link fence here in California? Plant a passion fruit vine and let it climb all over it! Remember when boys from The Challenger's Manhood Program each tasted one for the first time in our garden here? Today for our cooking class at The Challenger's Boys and Girls Club cooking class we taught them how to turn this lovely fruit into a versatile vinaigrette which can be stored for up to 2 weeks and used as a salad dressing and a marinade for chicken or fish. Yum City USA!


INGREDIENTS:

1 cup passion fruit juice, strained (no seeds)
1 tablespoon mustard
2 oz honey
chopped herbs
sea salt, black pepper
1 cup olive oil

PROCEDURE:

1. mix passion fruit juice, mustard, honey, herbs, salt and pepper in a blender or whisk briskly

2. slowly drizzle in olive oil

3. taste for seasoning, ready to go!


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