And if This is It, I Had a Ball: A Farewell to Bars in Los Angeles

My last drink at The Varnish - a Greenpoint.

About 7 years ago now, North Hollywood’s Bar One ceased operations after 10 years in business. I had patronized the teensy wine and beer bar since I was a novice craft beer drinker, back when Chimay was considered the height of the art form. Bar One’s closure was as painless as these things can be, widely publicized with enough notice for the faithful to pay our respects, but for the first time it dawned on me - the places I love might not always be here. Since then, I’ve learned that not only can places close, they can also change, go downhill, shift their concept, shut down with no notice, have a devastating fire, go viral for racism or withholding pay. Surprise at the news of a bar closure seems almost cute, something that can only happen to someone who hasn’t lost much yet. 7 years later, I have.

I don’t know if things are changing faster than usual or if I’m just at the right age to notice changes and opine about “back in my day.” LA is where I’m from, so it’s where I’m staying, and maybe being rooted in one spot makes it natural to notice changes over the long term. It does seem like there’s been a wave of restaurant and bar closures that are getting hard to ignore. And why wouldn’t there be. We’re living in a strange time. It’s not as simple as opening back up in May of 2021 and the good times are here again. We emerged into a different world where everything is much more expensive and people are more hostile. Not exactly ideal conditions in an industry that was always difficult. I still miss Studio City’s Bellwether, one of the first places I was bummed to lose due to Covid, but that place was never really anything beyond a neighborhood restaurant that had been there a handful of years. What I’m noticing, and finding more troubling, are the closures of spots I considered successful and established. And with The Varnish shuttering most recently, I feel the need to name and pay tribute to these places, which I’d categorize as either “restaurants with good drinks” or “bars with good food,” that have closed in the last 6-8 months.

Former Cool Spot Mohawk Bend closed with not much notice. I happened to visit with a friend in from Brooklyn who always liked their vegan potato pizza. We couldn’t help noticing that the once very popular place for bad first dates was dead on a Saturday night. It almost became a joke when her boyfriend would order a beer and the waitress would check, let him know they were out of that one, and then he’d ask for another which the waitress would check and report that that one was also out. I think that happened 4 times? Bad sign for a bar with that many beer taps. Then a week later, they made the closure announcement on social media. Not shocking given our recent experience, but it was crazy to consider how far it had fallen past the peak.

The Federal anchored the NoHo arts district for 12 years and my personal story for about as long - I went the first month they were open, and the last. A hundred times in between for dinner, brunch, happy hour, debrief cocktails after seeing a movie at the Laemmle (which, by the way, that Laemmle theater is also closing). It was a lifeline during the pandemic with to-go Painkillers and a parking lot patio, and they had some truly memorable food items. Something they called Dirty Chips introduced me to Fresno chiles, an ingredient I’m always happy to see in a guacamole or hamachi crudo. 

Mezcalero downtown had a fantastic happy hour. I don’t really have any notable memories of going there, but their guacamole was good.

At Spring Street Bar, you could get really excellent sandwiches and craft beer. In the mid-10s, Phantogram had played at the free Grand Park 4th of July celebration, and my feet were so sore walking in cheap red Target flats up Spring, but I was replenished by the space and a sandwich with a bag of Zapps. The sandwiches didn’t come back after Covid, and when I visited this past New Years Eve it was basically a nondescript bar with no character or special sauce. You used to be able to stay on the same block of Spring Street and drink at multiple great bars without even crossing the street.

Over on Broadway, Bernadette’s was masculine but non-threatening, with decor (Garfield phone, The Noid figurine) that actually felt like someone’s cozy lived-in basement, not like a cheesy TGI Friday’s affectation. The bartenders played music you’d heard before and you could order loaded tots from Buddy’s next door for $4. Buddy’s closed first, then Bernadettes, and now the concept in the former Bernadette’s space is a wine bar that features tinned fish. And next door to that, there was Clacson, an aperitivo spot that had a truly excellent Italian sandwich shop up front called E. Stretto. Man, I was sad to lose that prosciutto sandwich. Clacson became Chatterbox and then The Grayson, and Stretto has become a torta shop, so it isn’t all bad. I haven’t tried it yet, but I will.

It was so good in downtown Los Angeles for so long. A new bar was always opening. Just a few years later, you think about places and realize - I haven’t been there since Covid. You’ll remember some spot you ducked into once or twice when it was hot outside. It was New Orleans themed? Nice bartenders. You’ll look up if it’s still open and of course, it isn’t. The new hotel that took over the former Ace Hotel isn’t even opening up their ground floor restaurant. What a waste. 

Homebound Brew House opened in a renovated former Harvey House restaurant in Union Station. It’s not that the food was that great, but a. They had good game day specials, making it a perfect spot to pregame before getting on the shuttle to Dodger Stadium, and b. The space was absolutely beautiful, timeless art deco with huge windows giving it the appearance of filtered sunlight. They (or the bar group) spent a lot of time and money restoring the space. Now Union Station is going to use it for private events, which is some bullshit if you ask me. I hate the idea of that historic space being inaccessible to the public outside of paying multi tens of thousands of dollars.

Stout Burger shut down all their locations so abruptly we were actually on our way to one when we thought to look up the holiday weekend hours and were like, uh, Google says Permanently Closed. We ended up eating a disappointing burger at Laurel Tavern while eavesdropping on a guy yammering vaguely fascist talking points at his date. Stout was my 2nd or 3rd favorite burger, outside Fathers Office, which is still kickin’ but come to think of it the Arts District location has been emptier than usual recently.

I only went to Faith and Flower a couple of times, but my BFF and I had one of the top 10 nights of our lives there in 2018 before the Drake show at Staples. Make no mistake, I’m Team Kendrick, but goddamn that show was a highlight of my concertgoing life - the energy, the production value, the year of God’s Plan, Kiki do you love me, bringing out LeBron riiiiight post signing with the Lakers and Travis Scott to do Sicko Mode. It’s a 2018 period piece, he was the zeitgeist. I gave my friend a long necklace to borrow, and a rich-looking woman complimented her on it. She had several milk punches. Faith and Flower didn’t last long into COVID, Drake is, well, Drake, and my friend took a job in Austin. Bummers all around.

I haven’t been back to Jumbo’s Clown Room or Star Garden. Truthfully, Star Garden was always a bit embarrassing but could be a good time, then shitty union-busting management made it cost-prohibitive to patronize anymore. All power to the dancers.

The phrase “end of an era” is thrown around but legitimately worth using when it comes to The Varnish shutting down. An era in LA, and a pioneer of sorts. In 2009, who had heard of a SPEAKEASY in the back of a restaurant? A Bartender’s Choice cocktail, where maybe you specify a spirit and general preference but the drink is a surprise? Cocktails made by foxy bartenders wearing suspenders and old timey arm bands? It’s so ubiquitous it became a cliché, but those are the trends they helped usher in. The drinks were always very good. Nothing had better happen to Cole’s. I can’t keep losing sandwiches in this town.

Look - people waxing nostalgic can be obnoxious, and whining about restaurants and bars closing seems particularly tone-deaf when I’m just a consumer - employees and staff are far more impacted by closures, obviously. No one has a right to places they love staying open forever in what is, by all accounts, an extraordinarily difficult time to be operating a restaurant. You could even argue that we’re still spoiled as hell with plenty of quality places remaining. But in that sense, the vastness and density of Los Angeles might actually work against the individual restaurant. I go out frequently, but not usually to the same place, week after week. You just can’t, in a place with so much to offer.

The older I’ve gotten, the more I’ve tried to embrace the notion that endings make space for something new to begin. The pandemic was poisonous to the restaurant industry, but some places managed to open, thrive, and even expand. Prime Pizza, Hanks Bagels, For the Win, Home State, Danny Boy, Ggiata, surely more that aren’t coming to mind now, all managed to open second or additional locations, which is amazing. And hey - stuff opens. Different concepts emerge in the same address, probably several times over in the life of a commercial restaurant space. The dearly departed Bar One became Mirabelle Wine Bar, which doesn’t have the former’s punk ethos but does have excellent lighting. This cycle has been happening long before I got here, and will happen long after I’m gone. I know that. I’m still allowed to lament that things change, because what is getting older if not lamenting that things change, and I can still tip my glass to what was there before while embracing the Here and Now (which, by the way, is the name of another downtown bar that closed, and I’ll miss their wintery Christmas theming this holiday season). But I remain focused on what’s here when there’s still so much to try. I haven’t tried it yet, but I will.

Central Coast Road Trip // Fall 2021

Well… been a while!

I might have things to catch up on. The insanity of our modern times demands reflection, and I’ve been mostly reflecting privately. But for now, I’ve been living a very similar story to other people my age/class/profession. WFH since March 2020. An extremely careful year spent getting deliveries and taking walks in masks. Adjustments made such as drive-ins, patio hangs, parking lots turned into dining rooms, beach and park days. Lysol. Animal Crossing. Watching Dodger games in a makeshift beer garden, the high five with a stranger after the World Series win being the only time I touched anyone other than my husband for over a year. Partying like hell on November 7. A vaccine and its promise. And a slow return to, if not normalcy, more of the things we missed in 2020. There’s obviously a lot more here, but that’s the short version.

During all this, we hadn’t traveled too far afield - San Diego, Palm Springs twice, and Santa Barbara for my birthday weekend. Easy driving trips, Airbnbs, outdoor dining. We’ve made some other travel plans for more large-scale trips (on planes!), and in the meantime I had a few Central Coast destinations on my wishlist for 2021. I grew up going to the Bay Area and Monterey, but I hadn’t been on the Monterey Peninsula for probably 20 years and felt like it would be great to plan a trip around there and the other destinations I wanted to check out.

It had been years since I planned a proper roadtrip and this one had a lot fewer details, but it’s a unique style of travel that involves more planning than most trips. Figuring out an itinerary and packing a little lighter, moving on from lodgings quickly, and generally just not having that much time in any given location. I wished we could have stayed longer everywhere, and as much as we packed in, there were still things we missed. But a road trip is meant to be a sampler platter, not an entree.

Day 1: Santa Cruz

The whole trip was conceptualized around visiting a brewery whose beers we love, Humble Sea. In the pandemic, we’d come to do regular hauls at our local bottle shop, Hop Merchants, and we noticed Humble Sea’s hazy IPAs were consistently excellent. We offhandedly talked about going up to their Santa Cruz outpost, which then turned into “Well, why couldn’t we actually do this?” It’s about a 5-hour drive to Santa Cruz if you leave in the morning, not the most pleasant drive but being there by lunchtime was extremely satisfying. We enjoyed a couple of brews on their spacious patio, taking our time and getting some pizza from a nearby shop. We also bought some cans to bring home. Then we headed to Natural Bridges State Beach ($10 day use parking or free street parking), a small beach with a natural arch rock formation - the first of many rock formations we saw in the region. Then, we took a slow drive down the coast to the boardwalk, stopping at a lighthouse which turned out to be a museum of surfing. All the rides were closed at the boardwalk, but it was fine. We saw seals on the pier.

We didn’t want to be constantly packing up and moving accommodations, so we picked a couple of Airbnbs as home bases to stay at for a couple of days each. The first was a guest house of a mid century modern Redwood near Pebble Beach, and honestly, the Monterey Peninsula isn’t exactly rife with Airbnb options. Despite splurging on the Airbnbs, we barely spent time in either one. Oh well!

After heading to downtown Pacific Grove, we sought out somewhere to watch the wildcard NLCS game (Dodgers v Cards). Part of the appeal of Monterey over, say, Sedona, was that COVID sensibilities would be similar to Los Angeles, and we’ve been way more comfortable sticking with outdoor dining. Somehow, we happened upon a sports bar with an outdoor patio and TV, with sound on! And even better, the Dodgers won.


Day 2: Big Sur/Monterey

This was my favorite day of the trip and we packed in so much. Big Sur pulls you in from the drive, when rounding every corner makes you gasp, and even though it’s at least 45 minutes from Monterey it feels like part of the journey. We did:

  • Pfeiffer Beach ($12 parking) - So the first thing we noticed about planning stuff to do in Big Sur was that everything is named after Julia Pfeiffer. Kind of confusing when you’re planning a trip, but after sifting through many badly-written/sometimes incorrect reviews on Yelp and Google, I managed to piece together what the differences were. Pfeiffer Beach is, unsurprisingly, a beach which had somehow slipped past my family’s awareness growing up - probably because of the additional parking fee. Set back a couple of miles on a one-lane dirt road, the semi-treacherous drive was worth it for the end result of arch rock formations, driftwood, a secluded feel, and silvery-purple sand. It wasn’t a place I’d spend hours and hours but it was lovely and if you were so inclined, you could have a pleasant picnic or chilly beach day there, perhaps with a kite.

  • Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park ($10 for a State Park day parking pass) - This is the Big Sur State Park and if you can only do one thing, it’s this. I’d been as a kid and remembered the redwoods and the creeks. You could spend hours here and while we didn’t have that kind of time, I definitely put on my water socks and got knee-deep into the freezing cold stream. We walked and hiked around, dipped our toes into the water, saw birds, and wished for binoculars. If we’d had more time maybe we would have gone to the swimming hole. Next time!

  • Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park/McWay Falls ($10 for a State Park day parking pass) - Told ya everything was named after Pfeiffer! Confusingly, this is a state park a little further south which mainly functions as a way to see a waterfall that falls directly on the beach. A gorgeous scene to be sure, but not necessarily worth a special trip if time is tight.

  • Nepenthe - A very beautiful, very famous restaurant. Possibly a tourist trap, definitely one of the only options, probably still worth experiencing at least once. Service was quick and friendly (they want to churn you through, I reckon) and the food was pretty good, for prices that seem insane but in that setting you just shrug and sign the check instead of thinking about how their burger costs more than the one at Father’s Office. We also enjoyed a terrible Mai Tai. And I do mean enjoyed.

  • Drive-bys of the Henry Miller Library (new life goal is to see a show here) and the Bixby Canyon Bridge, all with a region-specific soundtrack.

The long day in Big Sur tired us out, but we still managed to see a few key spots on the 17 Mile Drive before scooting back to Pacific Grove and seeing Lover’s Point, a spot I remembered from our visits there as a kid. We grabbed dinner at a brewery in a converted train station and got some really good cocktails elsewhere before heading back.

Day 3: Paso Robles

Somehow, we’d never been to Paso - if we feel like visiting a wine region and can’t get to Napa, we have Temecula and the Santa Ynez Valley a lot closer. Alas, here we experienced one of the sad pitfalls of a road trip, which is that sometimes you just blow through town and don’t have much time to really explore. We got on the road from Monterey early enough to get lunch at Tin City, which is a multi-building industrial complex of breweries, wineries, and restaurants. We hit BarrelHouse Brewing and the namesake Tin City cidery and wished we could have had much more time there, since there was so much to see (much like a more expansive Los Olivos). We had a tasting at Sculpterra which was very nice, and then got to explore the grounds and taste grapes straight off the vine.

Nearing sundown, we headed to Sensorio, a light exhibit in the rolling hills. I was poorly attired for the wind and for some reason we’d spent extra for early admission, which was mostly pointless as the lights didn’t start turning on until later. Nonetheless, once they did start turning on it was a breathtaking scene that had my photos looking like something from someone far more technically skilled than I am. Once we’d taken enough pictures, we headed to dinner in downtown Paso Robles and still had to drive to our next Airbnb 30 minutes away. It was an Airbnb Plus, which meant there were scones.

Day 4: Morro Bay/SLO

In the morning’s light, the Airbnb’s private patio was a nice place to have a coffee and breakfast. We had a slow morning and eventually made our way to the Madonna Inn, basically just to take a few pictures. After that, we headed to Morro Rock, another place I’d never once visited! We saw otters in the bay, explored around the rock, and hung out on the beach where we got playfully chided by Giants fans (we were 1 game into the NLDS). Then we explored the wetlands of Morro Bay State Park and went back into the main drag to grab late lunch and a beer.

By sheer coincidence, some of my extended family happened to be visiting the area at the same time, so we headed over to their rental to caravan to Montaña de Oro State Park. With bluffs, steep cliffs, chaparral, and tide pools, it was such a lovely scene to catch up with my cousins and their kiddos. We also saw a raccoon.

At night, we had probably the nicest dinner of the trip at Granada Bistro. Great drinks. We thought about trying to go to a bar but it was a Saturday night in a college town, so we took a slow walk back and only got a little bit lost.

Final Day: Pismo & the Slow Drive Home

Not a ton to say about this day - we packed up and got breakfast sandwiches at Beachin’ Biscuits. There was a hell of a wait even with an online order, and with good reason - these breakfast sandwiches were AMAZING. We took them over to the beach to eat, then walked on the pier. There’s a famous place called Old Town Cinnamon Rolls which we really wanted to try, but truly didn’t have the stomach space.

We then slowly made our way south, and decided to stop in Los Olivos and enjoy the grassy patio at Figueroa Mountain. Then we ambled down the 101 to Ventura and stopped at the In-N-Out right off the freeway, and finally got home at a reasonable hour.

Stray Observations

  • Our refrain of the trip was “We’re outdoorsy!” Traditionally, we’ve been more into cities - taking transit, trying as many bars and restaurants as possible, visiting museums and culturally enduring locations . With COVID, the idea of having one of those old-fashioned nights somewhere unfamiliar seems unappealing, unless we’ve done some heavy-duty planning, so shifting to locations where it’s easy to be outside in your own space is, for the moment, the way to go. Spending a day in athleisure and showing up to a restaurant (for lunch) that way? Not my typical style. But I guess this is just the domain of us outdoorsy types, baby.

  • My IG likes correlated to my enjoyment of each location: Big Sur > Santa Cruz > Paso > SLO > Monterey

  • Despite the whirlwind, I don’t think this was too much to fit into the time frame. We covered a lot of ground and got some ideas for what to spend more time exploring next. I think a proper Paso Robles trip is probably in order!