1050 S. Flower St.
Los Angeles, California 90015

Explore different restaurants each month while getting to know other singles in the age group of your choice . . . so even if there's no love connection you'll still have a wonderful time. You'll order off the menu and receive separate checks for your purchases. Our website allows you to view the profiles of those registered for each dinner, tracks who've you've dined with so you meet new people every time, and then let's you send a private message to those you've dined with afterward.


For current space availability, to see who's going, and to register please visit our website at www.TastyLA.com.


It's important to register early. Seats fill quickly, and dinners generally close three days in advance. Occassionally, space opens up last minute, but this cannot be relied upon, so register early for best results.**


This week enjoy dinner at Rivera:


"Nouvelle Southwestern legend John Sedlar returns to Downtown’s Met Lofts with midpriced Pan-Latino cooking served in a hyper-modern space that features a glass-walled wine ‘cava’ and multiple bar areas, including one for dining with a view of the chefs at work; there's an encyclopedic tequila selection as well, including flavored varieties served in flights – it's all so Sedlar." - Zagat.com


'In 1984, John Rivera Sedlar opened his first restaurant, St. Estèphe, in Manhattan Beach. Here is what we wrote about it at the time: "One must be a formidable artist to create an equal marriage without allowing one to erase each other." We were talking about his "surprising attempt at a Nouvelle Cuisine of the Southwest." Being from Santa Fe, and after falling in love with French cuisine during his years at L'Ermitage in Los Angeles, he had decided to mix the two: a true challenge considering how these two cuisines are so dramatically opposed. We continued with: "But John Sedlar has a great deal to learn." After two more restaurants in Santa Monica, Bikini and Abiquiu, fourteen years of travel throughout the world, private catering, and the creation of a museum devoted to Latin food history, we are happy to report that Sedlar has learned a lot, maybe more than we could have even imagined. Rivera, located across from the L.A. Live complex, has a modern décor, in accordance with the chef's creativity. Enter and find on the right a glass-walled cave containing wines from the Americas and Spain, many produced bio-dynamically; and on the left is a bar with leather lounge chairs shaped around the restaurant's logo. The main dining room boasts gorgeous Brazilian marble floors, and a 40-foot-long video wall with ever-changing images. A communal table and the dining bar will let you follow the action in the kitchen. The Sangre room, with its white tablecloths, offers a more serene ambience; it is also where "members" can sip their private Tequila Reserve, retrieved from a locked wall of bottles, that designer Eddie Sotto likes to describe as “drinkable architecture”. The menu, divided into Prologos (snacks), Varios (starters) and Individuales (larger plates), is ideal for exploring the culinary diaspora of Latin cooking, re-imagined through Sedlar's own distinctive lens. Start with the delicate corn tortillas, embossed with a flower, to dip in a superior guacamole; a shooter of two soups in the same glass with different flavors and temperatures; or the caviar with a chipotle lime cream on a (maybe unnecessary) potato chip. Next, get ready to use your eyes and nose before your knife and fork. Sedlar has always excelled at presentation; here he creates graphics made of house-mixed spices, this time carrying political messages. The tricky part is to not allow the spices to overpower the sauces already accompanying the dishes, but to complement them. The perfectly cooked, seared black cod on a tomatillo salsa, the lamb chops with capers and the quail with mole may be dipped into the seasonings---or not. Your choice. We have to say, this is another success. You will surely appreciate the Postres (desserts), as vibrant and elegant as the savory part. Sedlar has reinterpreted the classic baba au rhum, really worth a try; and chocolate lovers have to order the torta xocolata. " - Gayot.com


Official Website: http://www.TastyLA.com

Added by tastyla on May 20, 2009

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