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Sweetfin (formerly Sweetfin Poké) is a Los Angeles–based fast casual restaurant chain that serves poke bowls. [1] [2] [3] Sweetfin was founded in 2013 by Alan Nathan, Brett Nestadt, Seth Cohen and Executive Chef Dakota Weiss, [4] with their first store opening in Santa Monica in April 2015.
Michelin Guide Los Angeles 2008. Michelin Travel Publications. 2008. ISBN 978-2-06-712990-0. Michelin Guide Los Angeles 2009. Michelin Travel Publications. 2009. ISBN 978-2-06-713708-0. Michelin Guide California 2019. Michelin Travel Publications. 2019. ISBN 978-2-06-724129-9.
In dining restaurants, it is often served as like tartare (sans egg yolk) or tostada with chips of fried wonton wrappers or with prawn crackers, sometimes referred to as "poke nachos". [56] In casual sushi restaurants, poke fills inari sushi. [57] Poke became increasingly popular in North America starting in 2012.
A view of a part of the eastern end of the Melrose Avenue District in April 2004. Melrose Avenue (sometimes referred to simply as "Melrose") is a shopping, dining and entertainment destination in Los Angeles, California, starting at Santa Monica Boulevard at the border between Beverly Hills and West Hollywood, and ending at Lucile Avenue in Silver Lake.
Versailles on La Cienega Boulevard in Los Angeles. Versailles is a chain of three Cuban cuisine restaurants in Los Angeles, California, USA. The first restaurant in this chain opened in 1971 in West Los Angeles, specifically in the Palms district on Venice Blvd, just north of Culver City.
Signs along the Sunset Strip Sunset Blvd at the West Gate of Bel Air Emerson College Los Angeles Center at 5960 Sunset Blvd. Sunset Boulevard is a boulevard in the central and western part of Los Angeles, California, United States, that stretches from the Pacific Coast Highway in Pacific Palisades east to Figueroa Street in downtown Los Angeles.
The Los Angeles Chargers kicked Kansas City Chiefs star Harrison Butker into the kitchen in a video animation, creatively mocking his controversial commencement speech.
St. Vincent's Place is located at St. Vincent Court at 7th Street and Broadway in the City of Los Angeles in Los Angeles County. St. Vincent's College became L.A. College in 1911 and Loyola Marymount University in 1917. [1] Saint Vincent's College used the Downtown Los Angeles site from 1868 to 1887. Broadway was called Fort Street in 1868. [2] St.