Matin Shah

Beach Cities Social Brings “Cooking California Style”!

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(Gerry Furth-Sides) Brand new Beach Cities Social Kitchen & Bar ) now bring vibrant international “Cooking California Style” to Redondo Beach! (Beachcitiessocialrb). The restaurant is inspired and influenced by our friend, Barbara Joan Hansen, pioneer ethnic food writer. As Barbara wrote in the book introduction, “The typical Californian comes from anywhere in the world, and his cookery is equally diverse.”

Pioneer ethnic food reporter Barbara Hansen and her books

Owner Sri Sambangi was so influenced and inspired by Barbara in his seven years of representing restaurants in the Southern California area that has named his restaurant after her groundbreaking 1971 book.

Sri Sambangi, pioneer food writer, Barbara Hansen, inspiration for Beach Cities Social Kitchen & Bar, Cooking California Style

Barbara not only wrote Southeast Asian Cooking and Mexican Cookery, but the Guidebooks to Indian Restaurants and Korean restaurants. Los Angeles’ culinary scene reflects its title: the culturally diverse city in the world.

Former owner, Barbara Reger, crafted every element of the double-front restaurant, Sisters Barn, with as much passion and as much detail as Barbara Hansen researched, wrote and recipe-tested her books.

Barbara Reger, Sri Sambangi, Matin Shah of Beach Cities Social Kitchen & Bar, Cooking California Style

Dishes that represent the California with an international flair on the menu include a Quinoa Salad, the Classic Bacon Cheese Burger, Grilled Shrimp, Yellow Lentil Dal and Cauliflower Fritter, inspired by the popular Indian dish, Gobi Manchurian, with its wildly popular Asian sweet-sour taste . Subtle Indian spices and seasonings spark the new dessert menu.

The quinoa salad at Beach Cities Social Kitchen & Bar, Cooking California Style

Sri’s innate cooking skills and high-tech expertise are augmented by his experience with close to 1000 chefs and restaurant owners Southern California in the past ten years.   As the founder-owner of Clorder, Inc, he designed a white label ethnic restaurant branding platform that also acted as restaurant liaison with wholesale delivery systems

Classic Bacon Cheeseburger at Beach Cities Social Kitchen & Bar, Cooking California Style

Banana Leaf Restaurant’s full-service and drop-off catering division has expanded the menus of authentic Southern Indian regional dishes throughout Los Angeles County and Orange County. 

Grilled Shrimp at Beach Cities Social Kitchen & Bar, Cooking California Style

Banana Leaf can cater parties, ranging from informal rehearsal breakfast boxes to formal Sweet Sixteen Birthday Parties.  From 10 to 1000 guests have been served, sit-down or buffet style sit-down. It can also provide American and Indian tableware, decorations, informal or classic entertainment, location sites, plus still and video photography  (www.bananaleafla.com/menu). 

Yellow Lentil Dal at the new Beach Cities Social Kitchen & Bar, Cooking California Style

Multiple Kitchens Units in Culver City, Redondo Beach, Santa Monica, Pasadena and Alhambra prepare entire orders or contribute their own specialties.  There, experienced chefs can create menus of authentic homey or ceremonial dishes for religious and national holidays and special occasion parties, such as birthdays and weddings.

The wildly popular Cauliflower Fritter at Beach Cities Social Kitchen & Bar, Cooking California Style.
Guacamole in housemade chips at the Brand new Beach Cities Social Kitchen & Bar, Redondo Beach

Sri Sambangi and Matin Shah (BananaLeafla), pioneer food writer, Barbara Hansen with the 2022 book inspired by her

Dine-in · Takeout, //Beachcitiessocialrb.com…1406 S Pacific Coast Hwy, Redondo Beach, CA 90277

Menus and more details at: Menubananaleafla.com

Other Locations:

Original: 10408 Venice Blvd., Culver City, CA 90232, (310) 838-2130

701 W. Cesar E. Chavez Ave., Suite 107, Los Angeles, CA 90012. (213) 372-5590

2302 Artesia Blvd, Redondo Beach, CA 90278 (424) 247-9710

Banana Leaf Express, 6159 Van Nuys Blvd, Van Nuys, CA 91401, (818) 453-8223

Grover Zampa Indian Winery Reinvents Itself

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(Gerry Furth-Sides) It was one of those spring days in Los Angeles where nothing could go wrong.  The Grover Zampa wine tasting for wine writers and influencers at India’s Tandoori Brentwood hosted by owner, Matin Shah, proved it.  No elevator? Guests happily took the stairs.   Can’t make it for lunch?  Matin laid out an equally impressive spread for dinner and one wine writer and grape grower even drove in from Temecula.

(Barbara Hansen) The wine, a Grover red blend, was surprisingly good, not sourish, like most Indians wines I had tasted. Fast forward a bundle of years, and I am tasting a Grover red blend again, not from a paper bag but at a respectable Indian restaurant in Los Angeles.wines

Grover has changed a lot over the years. The company is now Grover Zampa, the result of a merger, and produces quality wines that sell for as little as $9.  Already exporting internationally, Grover is entering the American market starting with eight states, including California.

CEO Sumedh Singh Mandla came from India for the Los Angeles tasting, held at India’s Tandoori in Brentwood. The food was Indian, but not because Indian wines can’t stand up to other cuisines.

“We usually do tastings with international food,” Mandla said. “but Indian food is getting more refined, not as spicy, less oily, and well plated. We want to be part of that movement.”

Wine-making in India started from scratch in the 1970s, despite the conviction that wines couldn’t be produced in a tropical climate. At that time, Kanwal Grover, an Indian businessman, visited wineries in France and fell in love with what he tasted. Today, Grover vineyards are planted with French clones on American rootstock, and Kanwal Grover is regarded as the father of Indian viticulture.

The earlier wine was fine. This one, the 2012 La Réserve Cabernet Sauvignon-Shiraz was so good I would buy it by the case once it reaches Los Angeles.

The wines poured in Los Angeles were from vineyards in the Nandi Hills near Bangalore, one of three areas where the company has planted grapes, and the one that gives the best results.

In the 1990s, renowned French enologist Michel Rolland came on board as a consultant. More recently, Grover added star power by connecting with Vijay Amritraj, India’s most famous tennis player.

The two Vijay Amritraj wines are a Reserve Collection White (top right), which is a Viognier that is barrel fermented and aged on lees, and the Vijay Amritraj Reserve Collection Red (above), which blends Cabernet Sauvignon, Shiraz and Viognier. Amritraj is on the labels as he appeared in his heyday (above and at the top).

And here he is today, a surprise guest at the tasting.

The Amritraj white was paired with steamed mussels in a creamy curry-accented sauce and Chicken tikka masala (below).

Chicken tikka masala

Lamb seekh kebab and tandoor paneer went with La Réserve and the Vijay Amritraj red.

The other four wines were from the Art Collection, so named because each label features the work of an Indian artist, Paresh Maity, known for his tightly cropped faces.

The first wine poured was the 2013 Grover Art Collection Rosé (above), a dry, intense wine that is 100% Shiraz. Its deep salmony color resulted from skin contact with the grapes.

Paired with the rosé were potato pakoras with chickpea flour batter and spring rolls filled with noodles and vegetables.

 potato pakoras

The other Art Collection wines poured were a Sauvignon Blanc, made in the Loire style, and a Cabernet Shiraz, which was accompanied by fish or chicken tandoori.

chicken tandoori

Grover is experimenting with additional varietals. Tempranillo is giving good results, Mandla said. Others with potential are Cabernet Franc and Malbec. Merlot is less promising so far.

Syrah has done “wonderfully well,” and Mandla recommends it with Indian food, as well as Viognier. Missing from the line are Pinot Noir and Chardonnay. “The climate is not cool enough for them,” Mandla said.

Grapes are hand harvested and picked toward the evening when the temperature is lower. White wine grapes go to a cold room to relax before the wine-making process begins. The vines are young, averaging 8 to 10 years, with 15-year-old vines producing the grapes for La Réserve. Tonnage is kept low.

Grover produces 33 wines, seven of them chosen for the United States.”The trend [wine-drinking] has not really picked up in India,” Mandla said. There, spirits are more popular.

“Given the climate, rosé is good for India,” he said. The  Art Collection rosé poured that day (at the right) was complex and assertive enough to be good anywhere, in my opinion.