5 Overlooked L.A. Dining Trends of 2012 (That Will Change the Way You Eat in 2013)

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G. Snyder
Summer salad at Alma
Every year dining trends come and go -- on the suface 2012 might not have looked like the most eventful year, aside from the foie gras ban and some high-profile restaurant closures. But like the Santa Ana's, the winds of change are forever blowing in L.A., and the seeds of what will likely arrive in 2013 have already been planted by some of the less noticeable developments in 2012. Here are some the most important changes we noticed this year that will likely change the way you eat next year.

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Anne Fishbein
Cortez in Echo Park
5. Echo Park/Silver Lake Ups Its Dining Game:
Prior to 2012, one of the common laments from Northeast L.A. residents was the lack of contemporary dining (one can only eat at Taix and Elf Café so much, after all). Establishments like Black Hogg, Red Hill, L&E Oyster Bar, and a re-vamped Cliff's Edge made eating in this section of town more exciting then it's been in years. The recently opened Cortez, which is already enjoying fascination from L.A.'s hippest circles, along with the upcoming Alumette, aim to turn Echo Park and Silver Lake into a dining destination worthy of a cross-town, rush-hour drive.

4. A Continental Comeback:
One of the most influential openings of the year, in a sense, was Papilles, which opened up shop late last December in Hollywood. Chef Sanots Uy and Tim Carey, inspired by the bistronomie movement in Paris, championed simple French cooking served via reasonably-priced prix fixe menus. Classic European cuisine was a major casualty of the recession, (see: Bastide) but just like the slow growth of GDP, entry-level-priced French and Italian cooking have found their way back on the scene, with places like Papilles, Gusto, Racíon, Maison Giraud, BierBeisl and Ba Restaurant leading the charge. Look for more higher-end options coming in 2013, including Evan Funke's Italian homage at Bucato and Ludo Lefebvre, Jon Shook and Vinny Dotolo's Le Routier, inspired by the homey cooking of rural France.

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G. Snyder
Cider Glazed Wings at Corner Door
3. The Gastropub Bubble Bursts:
To clarify: It's not that 2012 didn't produce some top-notch gastropubs (The Parish, Freddy Smalls, Black Hogg, and The Pikey come to mind) but it appears, rather, that the tired-formula of gourmet burgers and overpriced craft beers no longer equated instant success. For every outstanding new gastropub there were several mediocre incantations (Corner Door, Little Bear, Spanish Fly) and more that were downright unremarkable (The Fat Cow, Eat.Drink.Americano, Link N' Hops). Also: when gastropubs begin to turn into mini-chains, in the case of Pasadena's Haven Gastropub and the new Public School 310 in Culver City, it should tip you off that the days of this trend's dominance are severely numbered.

2. K.I.S.S. (Keep It Simple, Stupid):
The recipe for success in 2012: taking food people already love and making it more convenient. Sycamore Kitchen, Storefront, and the recently opened Sqirl Café are examples of restaurants and delis emphasizing to-go goods and hyper-focused menus. Sycamore Kitchen and Storefront are casual offshoots from Hatfield's and Salt's Cure respectively, condensing the cooking style of both restaurants into take-out friendly pastries, sandwiches, and salads. At Sqirl, Jessica Koslow's homemade preserves, long available via retail, are spread on humble slices of toast and topped with thin slices of cheese or a fried eggs to create simple nourishing snacks at her Silverlake shop. Even booming burger giant Umami Burger saw fit to debut U-Mini, a burger shop that condenses Umami's already casual dining set-up into a fast-food style operation. Next year keep and eye out for Michael Cimarusti's Connie and Ted's, an East Coast-style seafood shack (think crab cakes and chowder) that plans to be much more casual than the high-end Providence.

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8 comments
JosephinLosAngeles
JosephinLosAngeles

black hogg doesn't even have a wine beer license, so how can the place be a gastropub? dumbshit

brodell
brodell

@JosephinLosAngeles Black Hogg has had a license for a while now actually.

politikchik
politikchik

Hart and Hunter got their liquor license a few weeks ago. They have beer and wine available to purchase with your meal.

ArtsBeatLA
ArtsBeatLA like.author.displayName 1 Like

"5. Echo Park/Silver Lake Ups It's Dining Game:"

No apostrophe in 'its' here, Garrett. 

What3ever
What3ever

@ArtsBeatLA Do you really think he doesn't know that? It was a MISTAKE. Relax. Pointing it out is douchy. 

tabascoprincess
tabascoprincess

For Number 5: Don't forget Chef Ludo and his two restaurants coming up.

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