Skip to main content

Food & Living

america's test kitchen from cook's illustrated
Support Provided By
Echo Mountain Tracks
The phantom switches, markers, rails, and ties of old rail trails tell stories of travel and transport, history and happenings, and the growth of Southern California.
applepaniconic.jpg
These sleepy Westside neighborhoods are filled with delicious restaurants.
theabbey.jpg
Through its history, WeHo has been a wild, progressive, and at times debauched pocket of Los Angeles.
Robert Egger ucobserver
"My motto is 'All food has power, and all people have potential.'"
Many historic shops and restaurants of the neighborhood were wiped away during the 1960s and '70s, but new classics remain today.
Photo: Isabel Gomes
"Farmland should be as integral to a community as a fire station or a school. Farms should be included in city planning."
Two chefs had a dream to provide quality, healthful fast food alternatives to under-served communities. On Martin Luther King Day, LocoL opened its first location in Watts.
LosAlamitos
Here's where you can catch a glimpse of L.A. when it was still part of Mexico.
All photos courtesy The Los Angeles Public Library Photo Collection
When Chinatown's iconic Little Joe's on Broadway finally closed in 1998, it was a megaplex of culinary Italian goodness
Surati Farsan Mart / Image courtesy of @amira_lopez
The city's dairy legacy may not be as apparent as Artesia's dining profile continues to grow.
One of two Victorian houses being moved from West Adams to University Park / All photos: Sandi Hemmerlein
Here are five places to find historic structures that have been on the move.
cookingfun
A new study says people who prepare their own healthy foods enjoy eating it more. But what if you hate to cook?
Active loading indicator