Monthly archive September 2010

Los Angeles: Roscoe’s House of Chicken ‘n Waffles

I had chicken and waffles for the first time during my freshman year of college. One of my professors took us to a museum in Harlem; afterward, we went to a soul food joint where he foisted chicken and waffles upon us until we all (quickly) saw the light.

In L.A., I go to Roscoe’s House of Chicken ‘n Waffles to get my fix. I’ve only been to the Hollywood branch, but there are five locations throughout L.A.

You can order pretty much any combination of chicken parts and waffles. The Country Boy combo is three wings with a waffle (or french fries/potato salad):

I usually get the Carol C. Special, which the menu describes as “1 succulent breast, 1 delicious waffle”:

The chicken tastes like they serve it to you right out of the fryer; it’s piping hot, juicy, and crispy.  The waffles are good on their own, but even better with the fried chicken — an unexpected but delicious pairing of sweet and savory.

For side orders, I like the mac and cheese and smothered potatoes with gravy. The mac and cheese is more of the dry kind as opposed to the gooey cheesy kind, but it’s comforting.

These potato chunks are indeed smothered with gravy. Tasty tasty.

Roscoe’s recently expanded so the wait isn’t as bad as it used to be, but it’s still better to avoid peak lunch or dinner hours. If you don’t mind getting your food to go, they have special deals for take-out orders only (like five fried chicken thighs for $6.00).

Roscoe’s House of Chicken ‘n Waffles
1514 North Gower Street (corner of Sunset)
Los Angeles, California 90028

Los Angeles: Nom Nom Truck

Nom Nom Truck (of Food Network’s “The Great Food Truck Race” fame) serves two items: báhn mì — Vietnamese sandwiches — and Vietnamese tacos. The day I stopped by for lunch, they were parked in front of 5900 Wilshire Blvd., a food truck hot spot. There were five or so trucks parked on the same block, but Nom Nom had the longest line.

The grilled pork Vietnamese taco was basically the innards of a báhn mì (pickled carrots and daikon, cucumber, cilantro, pork) served on a soft taco tortilla.

The lemongrass chicken báhn mì was tasty; the chicken was moist and the baguette was fresh and crunchy. I ordered mine without cilantro, because I’m on Team Anti-Cilantro.

The Nom Nom Truck is a solid and reasonably priced lunch option if they happen to be in the area; however, I don’t think I’d travel out of my way to eat there.

Nom Nom Truck / @nomnomtruck
Check their website or Twitter for the truck schedule.