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Urasawa was a Japanese restaurant located in Beverly Hills, California run by head chef Hiroyuki Urasawa who used to work with Masa Takayama. [1] As of 2018, the restaurant was considered the second most expensive in the world after Sublimotion at $1,111 per person. [2]
Kim, a Korean engineer and regular customer at the Santa Monica location, had previously bought a Todai location in Studio City, Los Angeles in 1995. [2] The Makino brothers reportedly sold their stake in the late 1990s to early 2000s. [6] [3] The buffet line at the Planet Hollywood Todai in Las Vegas.
In Japan, many teppanyaki restaurants feature Kobe beef [7] or Wagyu beef. [9] [2] Side dishes of mung bean sprouts, zucchini (courgettes) (though this is not a popular vegetable in Japan and rarely found in that market), garlic chips (crisps), or fried rice usually accompany the meal. Some restaurants provide sauces in which to dip the food.
Cole's Pacific Electric Buffet, also known as Cole's P.E. Buffet, is a restaurant and bar located at 118 East 6th Street in the Historic Core district of downtown Los Angeles, California, the oldest operating in Los Angeles at the same location since its founding. Sign in front with claim to being the oldest bar in Los Angeles
In late 2012, Fresh Choice closed approximately half its locations. According to the Capitola-Soquel Patch, [6] Fresh Choice planned on re-organizing the restaurants into a new concept of à la carte fare and charging people by weight for their salads.
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The Clinton family's five generations [18] as California restaurateurs began when David Harrison Clinton came to Los Angeles from Missouri in 1888 and purchased the Southern Hotel and its dining room in downtown Los Angeles. David's son Edmond settled in San Francisco, where he and his wife Gertrude became co-owners of a group of cafeteria ...
The Taix family came to Los Angeles from the Hautes-Alpes region of France in 1870 and opened a hotel in downtown Los Angeles. [1] French immigrants represented 20% of the city's population in the middle of the 19th century, and the neighborhood that is today's Chinatown was home to a French hospital, French theater, and weekly French-language newspaper. [2]