Author Archives: jessicakoslow

Neighborly yet refined: Tomat aims to be a community pillar in Westchester

Tomat is the name of the new California cuisine restaurant that husband-and-wife team Harry Posner and Natalie Dial opened five months ago in The Triangle area of Westchester. It is also the nickname given independently to each one because they both turn red in the sun.

Photo Credit: Chris Mortenson

The former health care professionals serendipitously met at a research facility in The Gambia in Africa in 2013. Once Dial realized Posner could cook — and would often make things that she requested — she began to sit one seat closer to him each night at dinner.

“We became best friends through the years,” Dial said about her husband with whom she now has a 2-year-old. “We shared a desire and dream to eventually switch careers and open a restaurant. An opportunity came along that expedited this timeline for us.” . . .

Read the entire article at The Argonaut.

71Above: The crown jewel of Los Angeles

Enter the lobby of the U.S. Bank Tower, a 1,018-foot skyscraper on West Fifth Street, and take the elevator to the 54th floor. But wait, there is more. A second elevator escorts guests to the 71st floor. The doors open into 71Above, a dining experience like no other in Los Angeles.

Photo Credit: Terry McLaughlin

On many occasions, the first words from diners’ mouths when they see the view is, “Wow.”

“We are very fortunate because we get to share that wow moment,” said general manager Alex Hasbany, who has worked at 71Above since it opened its doors in 2016. . . .

Read the entire article at LA Downtown News.

‘Dancing in the Light’: Debbie Allen works to heal with the arts

Multi-hyphenate entertainer Debbie Allen is very familiar with the healing power of the arts. Dance has been the salve that has helped catapult her to her highest peaks and push her through her lowest days.

“I grew up in Houston, Texas, in the ’50s and late ’60s when segregation was a way of life,” Allen said recently via phone, taking a break from prepping the finale of the medical drama TV series “Grey’s Anatomy,” in which she acts, directs and is an executive producer.

“We weren’t allowed to go to movie theaters or restaurants Downtown, and we could go to the amusement park one day a year on Juneteenth. Dance was what I wanted more than anything in my whole life.” . . .

Read the full article at Pasadena Weekly.

Bouncing Back Home: Victor Quijada returns to LA for ‘Second Chances’

A great deal had to occur for Victor Quijada to choreograph “Second Chances,” which will premiere this weekend, from March 8 to March 9, on BroadStage’s Main Stage in Santa Monica.

Photo Credit: Bill Hebert

As the brother of two older sisters, the first-generation Mexican American remembered entering the B-boy cipher on the linoleum floor at a laundromat as a baby breaker at the age of 7. From the age of 10 he followed his sisters to backyard parties and barbecues, where he was hooked on the feeling of receiving attention from the older kids by performing party dances like the Robocop and Kid ‘n Play.

In his first two years at Baldwin Park High School, he took a drama class with Mark Israel, a Hollywood writer, director, and producer who was so fascinated with Quijada’s breaker persona that he wrote a screenplay called “Battle Dancing.” It made an impression on Israel that a dance battle between best friends could end a real fight over street credibility and dance identity. Israel also scored Quijada an agent. . . .

Read the full article at LA Downtown News.

‘Quintessential LA’: The Gallery brings lounge, theater to Olympic + Olive

The Olympics are heading to Los Angeles in the summer of 2028, and Barbara Jacobs wants Downtown Los Angeles to shine. As the executive vice president of Allureum Experiences and project coordinator of The Gallery, she is familiar with the playbook because she has managed it previously.

Photo by: Anne Fishbein

“You walk around Downtown LA, and every place is half filled,” Jacobs said. “We need to make a concerted effort to make Downtown look beautiful, and I was part of that in 2008 with Bringing Back Broadway.”

Jacobs was also part of a small group of forward-thinking business leaders that introduced mixology to LA with the opening of The Edison — where she continued to work for nine years — which forever changed the local nightlife scene and the national cocktail conversation. . . .

Read the entire article at LA Downtown News.

Play Ball! Catch the Dodgers up close at Spring Training

Los Angeles has suffered significant losses in property and human life, and the city is in urgent need of good cheer and upliftment. Fortunately, just such a spirit boost is on the horizon. Later this month, the World Champion Los Angeles Dodgers will play at Camelback Ranch-Glendale in Arizona for Spring Training.

Katie Chin/Los Angeles Dodgers

The Dodgers will play 20 games starting on Thursday, Feb. 20, during the 2025 Cactus League schedule.

One of the biggest draws of Spring Training is that fans can catch the Major League action up close, and this upcoming season — which officially begins at Dodger Stadium against the Detroit Tigers on March 27 — promises to be another one for the history books. . . .

Read the full article at LA Downtown News.

Settecento: One of LA’s Most Anticipated Restaurants

“Settecento” means 700, the number of the building that houses the new Italian restaurant and latest culinary effort from Global Dining Inc., which opened La Boheme in West Hollywood in 1991 and 1212 Santa Monica in 2016.

“When we were scouting a third location, we went to the 69th floor of the U.S. Bank Tower in Downtown LA and saw Maguire Gardens,” said Settecento owner Lucian Tudor. “We fell in love with the garden aspect of it and saw the potential of creating something unique, a space for the community to enjoy.”

Settecento will open its doors to the public on Friday, Jan. 24, and reservations are available via OpenTable. The menu is cloaked in secrecy until the opening date. Established in 1995, Café Pinot previously operated at 700 W. Fifth Street for 25 years until 2019. The space had been vacant for the past four years while Tudor’s team worked toward launching Settecento. . . .

Read the full article at LA Downtown News.

Delicious and Conscientious: Starbird offers tasty food and a positive impact

Starbird CEO Aaron Noveshen measures his success in more than dollars and cents. For the Los Angeles native, true pros-perity means helping people improve their lives.

“For me, it is first and foremost about giving opportunities to people with jobs, with growth, with education,” he said.

That economic boost is continuing. With the recent additions Starbird’s Pleasanton and Palo Alto locations, the chain founded in Sunnyvale now operates 16 restaurants in California. Starbird recently inked a seven-unit franchise development agreement in Colorado and is eyeing additional deals in Utah, Arizona and Washington by the end of 2025.

“The reception is nothing short of miraculous,” said Noveshen, calling from his Bay Area home. “The sales per square foot in our average unit is upward of $2,000, two to three times what typical restaurants experience. We are fortunate to be growing while so many others in the industry are struggling.” . . .

Read the full article at Playa Vista Magazine.

Nalu Vida: ‘There is Nothing Like it in Venice’

When Christian Warren moved to Catamaran Street on Venice Beach in 1992, he passed by 1 Washington Boulevard and gazed at the prime location. He thought a business could thrive there. 

Photo Credit: Chris Mortenson

On May 3, Warren and his partner, Justin Urich, turned his decades-old musings into reality when they opened Nalu Vida. The beach bar and restaurant offers tropical cuisine and cocktails. Nalu translates to “wave” in Hawaiian, and vida is “life” in Latin.

“It feels like coming full circle for me,” Warren said. . . .

Read the full article at The Argonaut.

‘It Has a Great History’: Melody Bar & Grill singing a new tune

Melody Bar & Grill owner Christian Warren refers to his business partner, who is 20 years his senior, as a legend. 

Photo Credit: Chris Mortenson

“Old bartenders stick together and confer that title on each other,” Warren’s partner Bobby Hughes said. 

Being called a legend is an honor bestowed on bartenders who have survived many years in the business.

Hughes, who laughed upon hearing about his legend status, started his career in New York City, where he once served a martini to actress Lauren Bacall. He gained a reputation as a first-rate bartender working at Chez Jay in Santa Monica and Cheesecake Factory in Marina del Rey.

Warren was working as a bartender at Baja Cantina in Venice when he met Hughes through a mutual friend.  

“Buying a bar was the penultimate dream for most bartenders then,” Hughes said. . . .

Read the full article at The Argonaut.