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Nearly 7,500 of our hungriest readers voted in our annual poll—and the results are served. Dig into the 290 critic's and readers' picks. Bon appetit!
Chef Angelo Sosa, Death by Tequila
Anne Watson
Browse this year’s list by category:
Overall | Atmosphere | Specific Dishes | Specific Cuisines | Drinks
We’re next.
For decades, the national food media hunkered in the safe zones. Namely, New York, Chicago, and San Francisco. Those cities, our anthills of art and commerce, provided enough world-class dishes, cocktails, and rags-to-Michelin stories to fill the pages and posts. Sure, food media would make the occasional jaunt to exotic locales—”Tulum is the New Lima!”—but they treated secondary US markets as less-exciting siblings. Too familiar to be discovered, too not–New York to justify the travel budget.
To get recognition for their tireless work, most top-tier chefs lived and worked in the “major three.”
And now those years are over. Regional and social media have filled the holes, illuminated the cracks. Meccas were made of Austin, Portland, Charleston, Oakland, and Houston. Thanks to apps like Instagram and pubs like San Diego Magazine being online and globally readable, chefs have realized the circus isn’t the only place with a spotlight.
That’s why Richard Blais lives here, and why he was able to lure Anthony Wells from Per Se to Juniper and Ivy. That’s why Michelin-starred brothers recently moved from Italy to open Il Dandy in Bankers Hill. And why Top Chef runner-up and Jean-Georges vet Angelo Sosa chose Encinitas for his Death by Tequila. Why chefs like Trey Foshee, Jason Knibb, Claudette Zepeda- Wilkins, Carl Schroeder, and William Bradley are now resurfacing in national headlines.
The titans of media have noticed, and are adjusting. The New York Times recently allocated a food critic for our region (two San Diego restaurants have made the pages). Local chefs are trading rumors about the whereabouts of Michelin Guide critics, who are in town and looking for places to hang their stars.
The spotlight is circling our city. The best thing is that its fringes will illuminate our indies. The gems run on very little budget by locals who are passionate about food, drink, and the art of hospitality. Blue Water Seafood. Las Cuatro Milpas. Fort Oak. Grand Ole BBQ. Izakaya Masa. Dark Horse Roasters. Le Parfait Paris. Maestoso. Kindred. Special places created in the shadows, serving hustle and grit. You’ll see all of these names in my critic’s picks for our annual Best Restaurants feature.
As someone who’s covered San Diego’s restaurant scene for 12 years, I cheer the international media’s arrival. Welcome to a city with the highest number of small farms in the US, where the growing seasons are obscenely long and the produce infinitely better. Welcome to a city where the restaurants finally do those farms justice. A city that once deserved your omission, and now equally deserves your attention.
Best New Restaurant (Critic’s Pick): Fort Oak
Anne Watson
Critic’s Pick: Juniper and Ivy
Readers’ Pick: Juniper and Ivy
Runner-up: Born & Raised
Critic’s Pick: Grand Ole BBQ y Asado, (Flinn Springs)
Readers’ Pick: The Crack Shack
Runner-up: Whisknladle
Critic’s Pick: Fort Oak
Readers’ Pick: Death by Tequila
Runner-up: Jeune et Jolie
Critic’s Pick: Carl Schroeder (Market)
Readers’ Pick: Ryan Johnston (Catania)
Runner-up: Brad Wise (Trust, Fort Oak)
Critic’s Pick: Trust
Readers’ Pick: RoVino
Runner-up: Solare Ristorante
Critic’s Pick: Nine-Ten
Readers’ Pick: Nine-Ten
Runner-up: Lionfish
Critic’s Pick: Animalón
Readers’ Pick: Oryx Capital
Runner-up: Deckman’s en el Mogor
Critic’s Pick: Bankers Hill Bar + Restaurant
Readers’ Pick: Herringbone
Runner-up: Bub’s at the Ballpark
Critic’s Pick: Tiger!Tiger!
Readers’ Pick: Starlite
Runner-up: Death by Tequila
Critic’s Pick: Starlite
Readers’ Pick: Starlite
Runner-up: Royale
Critic’s Pick: The Crack Shack
Readers’ Pick: The Crack Shack
Runner-up: Extraordinary Desserts and Pop Pie Co. (tie)
Critic’s Pick: The Porchetta Shack
Readers’ Pick: The Kebab Shop
Runner-up: The Crack Shack
Critic’s Pick: Wild Thyme
Readers’ Pick: Kitchens for Good
Runner-up: Miho Catering
Critic’s Pick: Provisional Kitchen
Readers’ Pick: Barona Casino
Runner-up: Viejas Casino
Critic’s Pick: Tahini
Readers’ Pick: Everbowl
Runner-up: Café Gratitude
Critic’s Pick: Civico 1845
Readers’ Pick: True Food Kitchen
Runner-up: Frost Me Gourmet
Critic’s Pick: Kindred
Readers’ Pick: Royal India
Runner-up: Café Gratitude
Critic’s Pick: Panchita’s
Readers’ Pick: Edelweiss
Runner-up: Wayfarer
Critic’s Pick: Herb & Eatery
Readers’ Pick: Breakfast Republic
Runner-up: Snooze, an A.M. Eatery
Critic’s Pick: Lola 55
Readers’ Pick: Lucha Libre
Runner-up: The Taco Stand
Critic’s Pick: Grand Ole BBQ y Asado
Readers’ Pick: Phil’s BBQ
Runner-up: Grand Ole BBQ y Asado
Critic’s Pick: Cowboy Star
Readers’ Pick: Cowboy Star
Runner-up: Born & Raised
Critic’s Pick: Blue Water Seafood
Readers’ Pick: Truluck’s
Runner-up: Ironside
Critic’s Pick: Le Parfait Paris
Readers’ Pick: Extraordinary Desserts
Runner-up: Snoice
Critic’s Pick: Venissimo
Readers’ Pick: Venissimo
Runner-up: The Patio Group
Critic’s Pick: Prager Brothers Artisan Breads
Readers’ Pick: Bitchin’ Sauce
Runner-up: Gihon Ethiopian Kitchen
Critic’s Pick: Urban Kitchen Group
Readers’ Pick: Gravity Heights
Runner-up: El Chingon
Critic’s Pick: Soda & Swine
Readers’ Pick: S3 Coffee Bar
Runner-up: Cucina Urbana
Best Tasting Room (Critic’s and Readers’ Pick): Carruth Cellars
Anne Watson
Critic’s Pick: Realm of the 52 Remedies
Readers’ Pick: Born & Raised
Runner-up: Herringbone
Critic’s Pick: Mister A’s
Readers’ Pick: Mister A’s
Runner-up: The Nolen
Critic’s Pick: Cusp
Readers’ Pick: Coasterra
Runner-up: George’s at the Cove
Critic’s Pick: Station Tavern & Burgers
Readers’ Pick: Corvette Diner
Runner-up: Waypoint Public
Critic’s Pick: Queenstown Public
Readers’ Pick: Queenstown Public
Runner-up: The Patio Group
Critic’s Pick: George’s California Modern
Readers’ Pick: Royal Banquet
Runner-up: Truluck’s
Critic’s Pick: Jaynes Gastropub
Readers’ Pick: Rustic Root
Runner-up: George’s at the Cove
Critic’s Pick: Carruth Cellars
Readers’ Pick: Carruth Cellars
Runner-up: Ballast Point
Critic’s Pick: Alexander’s
Readers’ Pick: Catania
Runner-up: Jeune et Jolie
Critic’s Pick: El Carrito
Readers’ Pick: Studio Diner
Runner-up: Corvette Diner
Critic’s Pick: Barleymash
Readers’ Pick: Barleymash
Runner-up: Nolita Hall
Critic’s Pick: Stone World Bistro & Gardens
Readers’ Pick: Mezé Greek Fusion
Runner-up: Campfire
Critic’s Pick: Seaside Market
Readers’ Pick: Phil’s BBQ
Runner-up: Hodad’s
Critic’s Pick: Grant Grill
Readers’ Pick: Searsucker
Runner-up: Mister A’s
Best Burger (Readers’ Pick): Royale
Anne Watson
Critic’s Pick: Rocky’s Crown Pub
Readers’ Pick: Royale
Runner-up: Rocky’s Crown Pub
Critic’s Pick: Peace Pies
Readers’ Pick: Royale
Runner-up: Burger Lounge
Critic’s Pick: Whisknladle
Readers’ Pick: Urban Plates
Runner-up: Tender Greens
Critic’s Pick: The Grill at Torrey Pines
Readers’ Pick: Board & Brew
Runner-up: Mona Lisa
Critic’s Pick: ¡Salud!
Readers’ Pick: Puesto
Runner-up: The Taco Stand
Critic’s Pick: Galaxy Taco
Readers’ Pick: Rubio’s
Runner-up: Brigantine
Critic’s Pick: Chuy’s Taco Shop
Readers’ Pick: Puesto
Runner-up: Miguel’s Cocina
Critic’s Pick: Super Cocina
Readers’ Pick: Whisknladle
Runner-up: Cocina 35
Critic’s Pick: Las Cuatro Milpas
Readers’ Pick: Lucha Libre
Runner-up: El Chingon
Critic’s Pick: The Taco Stand
Readers’ Pick: The Kebab Shop
Runner-up: The Crack Shack
Critic’s Pick: Mister A’s
Readers’ Pick: Mezé Greek Fusion
Runner-up: Barleymash
Critic’s Pick: Buona Forchetta
Readers’ Pick: Bronx Pizza
Runner-up: Buona Forchetta
Critic’s Pick: OB Noodle House
Readers’ Pick: Epic Wings N Things
Runner-up: Dirty Birds
Critic’s Pick: Wrench & Rodent Seabasstropub
Readers’ Pick: Sushi Lounge
Runner-up: Sushi Ota
Critic’s Pick: Facing East
Readers’ Pick: Dumpling Inn
Runner-up: Din Tai Fung
Critic’s Pick: Izakaya Masa
Readers’ Pick: Tajima
Runner-up: Underbelly
Critic’s Pick: Pho Hoa
Readers’ Pick: Pho Ca Dao
Runner-up: Phuong Trang
Critic’s Pick: Donut Touch
Readers’ Pick: Donut Bar
Runner-up: VG Donut & Bakery
Critic’s Pick: Stella Jean’s
Readers’ Pick: Salt & Straw
Runner-up: An’s Dry Cleaning
Best Korean (Reader’s Pick): Chiko
Anne Watson
Critic’s Pick: Maestoso
Readers’ Pick: Solare Ristorante
Runner-up: RoVino
Critic’s Pick: Addison
Readers’ Pick: Jeune et Jolie
Runner-up: The French Gourmet
Critic’s Pick: El Jardín
Readers’ Pick: Death by Tequila
Runner-up: Las Cuatro Milpas
Critic’s Pick: Mezé Greek Fusion
Readers’ Pick: Mezé Greek Fusion
Runner-up: Luna Grill
Critic’s Pick: Costa Brava
Readers’ Pick: Costa Brava
Runner-up: Café Sevilla
Critic’s Pick: Minh Ky
Readers’ Pick: Mandarin Wok
Runner-up: Chin’s Szechwan
Critic’s Pick: Yakyudori
Readers’ Pick: Kokoro
Runner-up: Umami Japanese
Critic’s Pick: Plumeria
Readers’ Pick: Bahn Thai
Runner-up: Lotus Thai
Critic’s Pick: Dija Mara
Readers’ Pick: Chiko
Runner-up: Monkey King
Critic’s Pick: Phuong Trang
Readers’ Pick: Phuong Trang
Runner-up: Shank & Bone
Critic’s Pick: Buga Korean BBQ
Readers’ Pick: Chiko
Runner-up: Manna Korean BBQ
Critic’s Pick: Fredcel Lumpias
Readers’ Pick: Tita’s Kitchenette
Runner-up: Manila Sunset
Critic’s Pick: Panca
Readers’ Pick: Café Secret
Runner-up: Panca
Critic’s Pick: The Flying Pig
Readers’ Pick: Bud’s Louisiana Cafe
Runner-up: StreetCar Merchants
Critic’s Pick: Masala Street
Readers’ Pick: Royal India
Runner-up: Taste of the Himalayas
Critic’s Pick: Muzita
Readers’ Pick: Muzita
Runner-up: Awash
Critic’s Pick: Pomegranate
Readers’ Pick: Pomegranate
Runner-up: Pushkin
Critic’s Pick: The Kebab Shop
Readers’ Pick: The Kebab Shop
Runner-up: Bandar
Best New Brewery (Critic’s and Readers’ Pick): Gravity Heights
Anne Watson
Critic’s Pick: Addison
Readers’ Pick: Solare Ristorante
Runner-up: RoVino
Critic’s Pick: Gianni Buonomo Vintners
Readers’ Pick: Gianni Buonomo Vintners
Runner-up: Carruth Cellars
Critic’s Pick: Wet Stone
Readers’ Pick: Gianni Buonomo Vintners
Runner-up: RoVino
Critic’s Pick: Gravity Heights
Readers’ Pick: Gravity Heights
Runner-up: Kairoa
Critic’s Pick: Alesmith
Readers’ Pick: Stone Brewing Co.
Runner-up: Modern Times
Critic’s Pick: Blind Lady Ale House
Readers’ Pick: Gravity Heights
Runner-up: Waypoint Public
Critic’s Pick: You & Yours
Readers’ Pick: You & Yours
Runner-up: Cutwater Spirits
Critic’s Pick: Polite Provisions
Readers’ Pick: Royale
Runner-up: Polite Provisions
Critic’s Pick: False Idol
Readers’ Pick: Campfire
Runner-up: Jeune et Jolie
Critic’s Pick: Cantina Mayahuel
Readers’ Pick: Puesto
Runner-up: Death by Tequila
Critic’s Pick: The Med (La Valencia)
Readers’ Pick: Farmer’s Table
Runner-up: Small Bar
Critic’s Pick: Cafe 21
Readers’ Pick: Searsucker
Runner-up: The Duck Dive
Critic’s Pick: Dark Horse
Readers’ Pick: S3 Coffee Bar
Runner-up: Dark Horse
Critic’s Pick: Northside Shack
Readers’ Pick: Nekter
Runner-up: Choice Juicery
Critic’s Pick: Boochcraft
Readers’ Pick: Mighty Booch and JuneShine (tie)
Runner-up: Powerhaus Pizza
Critic’s Pick: Deja Brew
Readers’ Pick: Holy Matcha
Runner-up: S3 Coffee Bar
Critic’s Pick: Aero Club
Readers’ Pick: Waterfront
PARTNER CONTENT
Runner-up: High Dive
We speak with the city's top food and drink makers in this exclusive video series hosted by food critic and Food Network judge Troy Johnson
Welcome to SDM’s Guide to San Diego Food + Drink, our new video series dedicated to our favorite food and drink in the city. At the end of the summer, we’re bring many of these restaurants to the Del Mar Wine + Food Festival for a massive party. You should come. San Diego restaurants, local wineries, Food Network chefs… it’s our big dream for the city.
Check back each week to catch our newest video:
Troy Johnson is the magazine’s award-winning food writer and humorist, and a long-standing expert on Food Network. His work has been featured on NatGeo, Travel Channel, NPR, and in Food Matters, a textbook of the best American food writing.
Help us pick the city's top places to dine and be entered to win a $200 gift card to Catamaran Hotel Resort and Spa
Restaurants are the social lifeblood of a city. They offer a place to commune with friends and strangers alike, build relationships, explore new cultures through flavors, and offer a welcome escape from the reality of our own kitchens. All under the guise of getting something to eat.
With all restaurants do to nourish us, we invite you to give back to them by voting for your Reader’s Choice favorites in several categories.
Vote in as many categories as you like, but you can only cast one vote per category. If the altruistic love of your favorite spot isn’t enough, your vote will enter you to win a $200 gift card to the Catamaran Hotel Resort and Spa.
Winning restaurants earn bragging rights for the entire calendar year—and your continued love and support. So, go on. It’s up to you to decide on our city’s next culinary icon.
Spread the news. Share the poll. Voting ends on February 23, 2024.
You’ve served us delicious food all year, so, sit back and relax, and leave the marketing to us. We’ve crafted all the materials needed to recruit your biggest fans and followers to cast their votes for you. The marketing materials include logos, graphics for email and social media, restaurant signage, and cards to place in your to-go orders. All you need to do is start promoting on February 12.
Voting: February 12 through February 18
Extended get-out-the-vote week: February 19 – February 23, 2024.
Winning restaurants will be announced in the Best Restaurants issue of San Diego Magazine this May and will receive “2024 Winner” graphics to plaster anywhere that’s legal.
Winners will also be invited to participate at the Best of San Diego Party on August 2, 2023, where thousands of our readers await the chance to savor the culinary creations that earned you the top spot.
A series of “Vote for Us” graphics are below. All static marketing materials can be downloaded by clicking on the image. Follow the steps below:
• Click on the image you want to open Google Drive.
• Right-click or double-tap the image to open it larger.
• Choose download or click the down arrow on the right side of the opened image.
• Download your image.
• Click the graphic you want.
• Canva will open on your browser. If you don’t already have a Canva account, you will be asked to establish a FREE account.
• Once you log in, you can upload your photos, and add content to your graphics like the name of your restaurant and the category you aim to win.
Download an email blast graphic and send it through your email marketing platform! Don’t forget to link the email to the ballot page: www.sdmag.com/vote2024

Click the image above to download
Click here to go to Canva and log in (it’s free to join). When you choose the graphic to edit, choose the prompt to “Duplicate” before you start. DO NOT CHOOSE EDIT. In your duplicated version, add your photos and text within the app. Download the type of file your email system requires. Don’t forget to link the email to the ballot page: www.sdmag.com/vote2024
Don’t forget to include a link to vote in your Instagram bio: www.sdmag.com/vote2024.

Click the image above to download.
Click here to go to Canva and log in (it’s free to join). When you choose the graphic to edit, choose the prompt to “Duplicate” before you start. DO NOT CHOOSE EDIT. In your duplicated version, add your photos and text within the app. Download the type of file your email system requires. Don’t forget to link the email to the ballot page: www.sdmag.com/vote2024
Official Best Restaurants voting stickers are available in Instagram stories. Search Best Restaurants and add a sticker GIFY to your content. Click on the graphic to go to download. Don’t forget to include a tap-to-vote link in your story: www.sdmag.com/vote2024.

Click the image above to download.
Click here to go to Canva and log in (it’s free to join). When you choose the graphic to edit, choose the prompt to “Duplicate” before you start. DO NOT CHOOSE EDIT. In your duplicated version, add your photos and text within the app. Download a .png or .jpeg. Don’t forget a tap-to-vote link in your story: www.sdmag.com/vote2024.

Click the image above to download.
Get out the vote by placing one of these cards in all your to-go orders. A convenient QR code that links to voting is on each card. The QR Code will take your customer directly to vote at www.SDMag.com/Vote2024

Click the image above to download.
Print and hang a poster in your restaurant! The QR Code will take your customer directly to vote at www.SDMag.com/Vote2024

Click the image above to download.
Add a logo or icon to your email or website. Don’t forget to include a link to vote: www.SDMag.com/vote2024

Click the image above to download.
Click here to download our full suite of assets.
Yes, Chef! winner Emily Brubaker leads the robust culinary program at Omni La Costa Resort & Spa
For Executive Chef Emily Brubaker, Omni La Costa Resort & Spa feels like home. She grew up just a mile-and-a-half away from the 400-acre property and fondly recalls walking the golf course perimeter as a kid. Though her ambitions led her away from San Diego for nearly two decades in which she honed her craft in some of the highest of high-profile Las Vegas restaurants—including triple Michelin-starred Joël Robuchon at MGM Grand—they ultimately brought her back to North County.

Today, the classically French-trained chef, who’s fresh off a victory on NBC’s Yes, Chef!, judged by Martha Stewart and José Andrés, oversees Omni La Costa Resort & Spa’s seven distinct dining concepts. Her goal is to elevate the resort’s culinary program with her creative, hyperlocal ingredient-driven approach while maintaining the Spanish- inspired flavors and fresh California coastal cuisine that are the bedrock of its culinary identity.
“The San Diego food scene is really growing, and in North County alone, it’s really exploded in the last five years,” Brubaker says. “There are Michelin stars, beautiful tasting menus, craft bakers, and all this food—when I was growing up in La Costa, it was fish tacos. Now there are really cool things popping up, and I’m so happy to be here to see where it’s going to go.”
Brubaker gives chefs de cuisine at each individual restaurant autonomy, however, her influence is evident across the resort.
For example, lobby restaurant Bar Traza serves as Omni La Costa’s culinary centerpiece and features bold Spanish flavors in a lively, social atmosphere. Brubaker overhauled the menu to be more consistent and centered on casual bites with that signature vibe. Think smoky paprika, vibrant citrus, and Spanish meats and cheeses.
At VUE, the focus is on seasonal offerings, California coastal cuisine, and Baja-inspired dishes. She and Chef de Cuisine Cameron Dixon change the menu biannually, which heading into summer, will highlight farm-fresh produce and hyperlocal ingredients—the resort even has its own herb garden and honeybee hives.

Poolside dining options are leaning into the country’s 250th this summer with a selection of classic American dishes with an Omni La Costa twist. And Bob’s Steak & Chop House (Brubaker is a trained butcher) offers a classic steakhouse experience with elevated service.
The chef and company also plan menus for special events at the resort where her creativity can really shine. For an upcoming National Ski Association dinner, the banquet hall will be transformed into an Alpine-themed winter wonderland complete with a snow machine, savory sausages, and melty, decadent raclette. A recent dinner was built around the Carlsbad Flower Fields and each course was matched to a color of ranunculus (Did you know pink dragonfruit are grown in North County? You do now.).
“It’s my zen to be in the kitchen playing with food,” Brubaker says.
Omni La Costa’s culinary program is a key part of the resort experience. And with Brubaker’s leadership, it’s becoming a draw for visitors and locals alike.
“These aren’t just hotel restaurants, these are restaurants that you should go to. They’re destinations, and I’m really hoping for the future that’s where we’re going,” Brubaker says.

Brubaker is also channeling her experience on Yes, Chef! into the culture at Omni La Costa—more emphasis on teamwork and collaboration, empowering her staff to share constructive critiques, and embracing different perspectives. Alongside her leadership role, Brubaker has become an advocate for mental health in the hospitality industry, serving as chief ambassador for the Burnt Chef Project and serves on the Board of Advisors for the Apex Culinary Program, where she mentors and develops future talent.
For more on Omni La Costa Resort & Spa and its dining program, please visit omnihotels.com/hotels/san-diego-la-costa.
From world-famous hot pot to a tiny fish shop, food critic Troy Johnson names his top new eateries of the year
Logically, the restaurant scene should’ve been dead-silent this year. Food costs went berserk. Labor costs swelled. We all knew how to cook because we were marooned in our own homes for a few years. And yet San Diego’s food scene unveiled a few dozen more pretty fantastic restaurants in 2023. This is what I love about restaurants and the people behind them. It is not a get-rich-quick scheme. Sure, money is to be Danny Meier’d for the few and the lucky and the ulcered.
But financial analysts who are not sadistic would advise you to put your money into the stock market, into real estate, into off-brand Beanie Babies before putting it into the restaurant industry. That means all you’re left with are people who do it because they have to, or because the dream of creating a hospitable place that makes humans happy is just too compelling to ignore.
Here are the new arrivals that won me over in 2023 and became part of my own personal hit list of the best new restaurants in San Diego.

Omakase-only sushi spots took over the whole dang scene (omakase means you eat what chef deigns their best and most creative stuff that day, with no menu to choose from). Azuki in Bankers Hill has long been one of the city’s favorite sushi spots. It was never hype-trained. It just quietly, consistently snuck up on us all, probably because of owner Shihomi Borillo and chef Nao Ichimura’s obsession with the good-food movement.
Kinme is their tiny (900 square feet), 10-seat, omakase-only concept a block up the hill. It’s a mix of Edomae-style sushi and kaiseke, a seasonal, multi-course Japanese meal. The menu changes all the time, but it has included things like grilled corn with koji miso and tomatillo salt, A5 wagyu in ginger shoyu, and chawanmushi, plus Japanese whiskys, rare sake, and top-notch tea to finish.

A hell of a fish-taco-and-sammy shop. San Diego born and raised, Pablo Becker helped open some of the bigger Mexican restaurants in the country with his cousin, famed Mexican chef Richard Sandoval. He needed a break, so he moved to Chicago for five years and became a line cook. He was offered management roles, refused. Head down, cooking. Five years.
Fish Guts is his return home, a small-but-mighty corner spot in Barrio Logan. It serves sandwiches during the day, tacos at night, using almost all sustainable fish from local boats. Get the blackened whitefish with the jalapeño-cabbage slaw, the mushroom taco, or the fantastic Negra Modelo beer–battered lunch sammy with Mexican tartar sauce.

MAKE Projects is one of the city’s most inspiring food nonprofits, helping low-income refugees and immigrant women learn farming, cooking, and catering skills and earn a living as they acclimate to their new life in the US.
During the weekends, the women cook and sell specialties from their native countries—East African mandazi (they’re like beignets), halloumi with farm veggies, pancakes with Cambodian orange syrup, Afghan chicken tacos with Haitian pikliz—made with ingredients from their urban farm. Now they have a permanent home in North Park.

I could hang on this back porch all day, joy-shoveling lumpia with a couple beers. Chef Spencer Hunter’s grandma owned one of the first Filipino restaurants in San Diego decades ago and was famed for her hand-rolled lumpia (being lazy, but real close to accurate, let’s call it the egg roll of the Philippines).
Spencer went to college for sustainable hospitality and cooked in huts in South America, then came home to work through some top-notch kitchens (Searsucker, Waters Fine Foods + Catering). He and his mom, Benelia Santos-Hunter, started doing lumpia pop-ups at festivals, including Coachella. They went on Great Food Truck Race, nearly and probably should’ve won (a contestable second place), and found a permanent spot in Barrio Logan in an old house filled with pop-culture and Filipino cultural knicknacks.
It’s a total work in progress, design-wise. This is two family members ad-hoc’ing a dream, and I like that. Spencer will do seasonal riffs (ramen lumpia, Thanksgiving lumpia), but get “Lola’s Lumpia,” stuffed with a mix of beef and pork marinated in oyster sauce and various things. And don’t miss their ube-coffee ice cream with white chocolate shavings.

Troy Johnson is the magazine’s award-winning food writer and humorist, and a long-standing expert on Food Network. His work has been featured on NatGeo, Travel Channel, NPR, and in Food Matters, a textbook of the best American food writing.
Ann Sim partnered with chef Travis Swikard to build a million-dollar baby—and now they’re doing it again
Ann Sim is telling me about her children. She says she has 50 of them, give or take, and her main job is protecting them and providing them everything they need to succeed.
It’s not uncommon to hear restaurant managers refer to their staff this way, but, unlike most of them, Sim has a necklace that I noticed when we sat down: a thin chain with “Callie” written in gold, like some people wear with the names of their actual kids. You get the sense Sim really means it.
Sim is the general manager of Callie. She opened the East Village Mediterranean-style gem with chef Travis Swikard in the middle of 2021, and now they’re joining forces again for their second location, a to-be-named French restaurant in La Jolla Commons. Much has been made of Swikard’s experience, and rightfully so—more than a decade alongside Daniel Boulud in New York tends to draw eyes—but in terms of pure tonnage of resume fireworks, Sim might have him beat.

She’s worked at some of the most well-respected places in New York and Los Angeles, including a marquee stint as a captain at Eleven Madison Park, what was—at the time, by every metric available—the best restaurant in the world.
You wouldn’t know it to talk to her. The SoCal native is approachable with an easy laugh. But to watch her at the restaurant is to witness a pro at work. You see it in the way she adjusts a napkin or pushes in a chair, the way she glides between tables or opens a bottle of wine. But you also sense it in the warmth with which she greets guests, touches tables, and coaches her staff.
The front of house at Callie is, like the cuisine, a union of world-class refinement and California vibes. The synthesis of these apparent contradictions is a big part of why Callie is such a local treasure—and why it has earned it national and international recognition (as well as this magazine’s award for Best Restaurant two years in a row). It’s an impressive CV for a woman whose main professional goal throughout college was to get out of restaurants for good.
The daughter of Korean immigrants-turned-restaurateurs, Sim was born and raised in Orange County. As a kid, Sim was “free child labor,” she quips—she worked the counter, grilled chicken, waited tables, whatever her parents’ business needed that day. She stayed in restaurants through college, serving and bartending, and graduated from UC Irvine sans debt. The tradeoff: They were bad places with toxic cultures. She had different ideas of success.

After college in 2011, she took her meager savings and moved to New York, something she had wanted to do since she was a kid. Though she had planned to change industries, she needed a job, so a friend got her an interview at Daniel Boulud’s celebrated Mediterranean restaurant, Boulud Sud, as a host.
For all her experience, she was completely unprepared. “I didn’t know who Daniel Boulud was,” she says. “I didn’t know what fine dining even meant. I never heard the phrase.” What she did know, however, was how to work hard and learn. She absorbed everything she could, bouncing from the host stand to the events team to management.
It was there that she first met a young Swikard and other high-caliber restaurant pros, and it opened her eyes to what this life could be. “They were so good at what they did that I was like, ‘Oh, this is actually a career. This is a profession. This is actually something very respectable,’” she recalls.
Her next job was at Eleven Madison Park. The restaurant already had three Michelin stars, and, during her tenure, it earned an exuberant review from the New York Times, a James Beard Award for outstanding service, and the title of Best Restaurant in the World from the World’s 50 Best.

When Eleven Madison Park closed for renovations, Sim took the opportunity to come back to California. She arrived in LA at the end of 2017 to open the area’s NoMad Hotel, and did a stint as the GM of Maude in Beverly Hills. After the start of the pandemic, she got a random text from Swikard, her old Boulud Sud colleague, who was trying to open a restaurant in San Diego and had just lost his GM. Did she know anyone who might want the job?
Callie is theirs. It is her and Swikard’s united vision of hospitality and what a restaurant should be. She’s not courting the 50 Best awards—she’s too “old and jaded,” she says, and those things come at too high a human cost (she still can’t watch The Bear, for example). To her, success comes from working hard, taking care of her people, and connecting with the community. Nearly two and a half years after she and Swikard opened the restaurant’s doors, the reservation list at Callie is still full pretty much every night.
“I genuinely care about the business as well as every single one of my employees,” she says. “So I don’t care if anyone’s like, ‘Oh, you wear a necklace with the name of your job?’ I don’t think it’s weird, because for me, it’s like, ‘I also pushed this baby out.’”
And with her and Swikard’s second culinary progeny incoming, she may have to add another charm.
Scripps study shows that some patients may be able to taper their dose and maintain results
While glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agents have been used to treat Type 2 diabetes for more than 20 years, their recent emergence as weight-loss wonder drugs marked a new frontier in medicine. But their effectiveness has left some patients wondering what to do once they’ve reached their goal. Stopping the medication could mean regaining some, if not all, of the weight. A Scripps Clinic internal medicine physician recently conducted a small study of whether GLP-1 patients who had reached their goal weight could maintain that weight by taking their regularly prescribed injection every other week instead of weekly. Spoiler alert: 30 of 34 patients did. Read more about the study here and what that may mean as pharmaceutical companies roll out oral GLP-1s.
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