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The biggest San Diego headlines you might have missed and news items that went viral this year
San Diego’s Stories of 2019
Brad Wise | Photo: Anne Watson
Beloved chef Brad Wise (Trust) opened Fort Oak in Mission Hills. Five months later our magazine named it Critic’s Pick for Best New Restaurant.
The annual Point-in-Time Count found 8,102 homeless people living in San Diego County.
San Diego’s Stories of 2019
Justin Rose | Photo: Shutterstock
Justin Rose won the 2019 Farmers Insurance Open, not only undercutting Tiger Woods’ famous 2008 win by two shots, but also nailing the lowest Farmers Insurance Open score since the South Course was made more difficult in the early 2000s.
San Diego pot company Cannabiniers became first in California to launch a line of THC-infused, nonalcoholic craft beer.
Walter Munk, the Scripps Institution of Oceanography geophysicist known as the “Einstein of the Oceans,” died in his La Jolla home. He was 101.
San Diego’s Stories of 2019
The super bloom in Anza-Borrego | Photo: Shutterstock
DesertUSA.com declared that “Poppies Are Poppin’” when the super bloom got underway.
San Diego’s Stories of 2019
Manny Machado | Photo: San Diego Padres/Andy Hayt
Manny Machado signed a 10-year, $300 million contract with the San Diego Padres.
North County assemblywoman Tasha Boerner Horvath introduced state legislation to ban certain kinds of vacation rentals in beach neighborhoods in San Diego County; the bill is currently moving through Sacramento.
Alaska Airlines added a direct route to Everett, Washington. Other nonstop flights added in 2019 included Omaha and Norfolk. No Paris?
One Paseo finally opened. Kinda. Sorta. Slowly. Just the retail. Some of it, anyway.
Maureen Hodges was the first woman to receive the title of lifeguard lieutenant in the San Diego Fire-Rescue Department.
Federal authorities alleged a wide-ranging scandal wherein parents bribed universities to grant their child admission. Among those eventually charged? At least three parents residing in San Diego, including Elisabeth Kimmel, a previous owner of KFMB.
The California drought was pronounced officially over by the National Drought Mitigation Center at the University of Nebraska. The center announced it in a tweet, saying that we’d been in a drought since December 20, 2011.
Voice of San Diego reported that four men had come forward accusing Kevin Beiser, a San Diego Unified Board of Education trustee, of sexual assault and harassment. One was a former campaign manager, who sued him. The lawsuit was settled confidentially in September, and Beiser remains on the school board.
San Diego’s Stories of 2019
Electric scooters | Photo: Shutterstock
Lime and Bird sued towing company Scoot Scoop for impounding thousands of their electric scooters. Scoot Scoop later countersued.
Legoland celebrated 20 years.
Sea World turned 55, just five years older than Comic-Con, which celebrated 50 years on the same day.
NBC reported that Carlsbad resident Toni Anderson, 74, won $150,000 in child support at once, 50 years after her divorce.
San Diego’s Stories of 2019
Abby’s | Photo: NBC
NBC premiered Abby’s, the first-ever sitcom filmed outdoors before a live audience. Set in South Park, it was cancelled two months later.
The San Diego Fleet, our Alliance of American Football team, went out of business when the AAF suspended operations just two games shy of completing their first and only season.
San Diego’s Stories of 2019
Conrad Prebys Performing Arts Center | Photo: Gate Photography
The $82 million Conrad Prebys Performing Arts Center enjoyed its grand opening. The new CEO of the La Jolla Music Society started the same day.
The San Diego Padres turned 50. (Hey, at least some of our sports teams are sticking around!)
SDSU astronomers reported their discovery of a third planet in the binary system Kepler-47, some 3,400 light-years away, making it the first known system where three planets are orbiting two stars at once.
The Plaza de Panama Committee officially scrapped their long-embattled plans to remove vehicular traffic from Balboa Park’s central plaza.
A 19-year-old shooter killed one and wounded three at the Chabad of Poway synagogue.
Sycuan Casino completed a drastic redo for a cool $260 million, and got some rad food as a result (Bull & Bourbon steakhouse, Hangry Slice, Lucha Libre), giving us more reasons to head east.
Shake Shack opened in Little Italy, the fourth San Diego County location in two years.
The public oohed and aahed at the San Diego Zoo’s last pandas, Bai Yun and her cub Xiao Liwu, before they departed for China. The two had been on loan as part of an international conservation program.
San Diegans got a glimpse of the Coronado Bridge’s future when it lit up with color-changing LEDs. The test run on a section near Barrio Logan was part of an estimated $14 million to $16 million lighting project set to be completed in 2022.
San Diego’s Stories of 2019
San Diego Seals
San Diego’s lacrosse team, the Seals, lost in the National Lacrosse League Western Division Semifinal against the Calgary Roughnecks.
Il Dandy opened in the Mister A’s building. The Italian restaurant is helmed by a father-and-son chef team who earned a Michelin star in Calabria.
A3 Education, a network of 19 online charter schools, was indicted for a scam worth $80 million, according to Voice of San Diego.
The San Diego City Council approved Stockdale Capital Partners’ plans to turn Horton Plaza into a tech hub called “The Campus at Horton.”
San Diego’s Stories of 2019
San Diego Gulls
The San Diego Gulls advanced to the Western Conference Finals for the first time ever and ended up falling to the Chicago Wolves in six games during the Calder Cup Playoffs.
Michelin awarded eight San Diego restaurants Bib Gourmand status in its inaugural guide to California restaurants: Campfire, Cucina Sorella, Cucina Urbana, El Jardín, Juniper & Ivy, Kettner Exchange, Lola 55, and Solare.
Old Trieste, which had been a Bay Park fine dining institution for 56 years, closed.
Sweetwater Union High School District cut 29 bus stops for four high schools where many students were depending on the buses for transportation, according to the U-T.
Addison received one Michelin star, the first and only San Diego restaurant to do so.
The USS Midway Museum turned 15.
San Diego’s Stories of 2019
Guild Hotel | Photo: Robert Benson
The $80 million Guild Hotel opened on West Broadway in the 1924 Army Navy YMCA building.
UC San Diego launched a partnership with EvoNexus to create a new “fintech” (financial technology) hub in the city.
Susan Brown Snook became the first female bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of San Diego.
California Senate President pro Tempore Toni Atkins announced an $8.26 million state grant to Balboa Park to restore its Botanical Building and House of Pacific Relations International Cottages.
In only the team’s second season, the San Diego Legion made it to the Major League Rugby championships at USD’s Torero Stadium.
The Port of San Diego green-lighted the development of Chula Vista’s $1.3 billion waterfront resort and convention center.
San Diego’s Stories of 2019
Sir Paul McCartney | Photo: Shutterstock
Sir Paul McCartney, age 77, played at Petco Park for two hours and 46 minutes straight, no intermission.
San Diego’s Stories of 2019
Serẽa at Hotel del Coronado | Photo: Justin McChesney-Wachs
Hotel del Coronado opened its new restaurant, Serẽa, and began serving a $150 cocktail.
The day after a 6.4 magnitude earthquake—the largest in Southern California in two decades—a second one measuring 7.1 occurred. Centered 200 miles north of San Diego, it was felt all the way in Tijuana.
News broke that Vacation Isle mainstay Paradise Point Resort & Spa will be turned into a Margaritaville Island Resort. Maybe now we’ll finally find that lost shaker of salt.
The city of San Diego turned 250, and the Junípero Serra Museum celebrated with a moving ceremony that finally added the Kumeyaay Nation flag to the top of Presidio Hill, alongside those of Spain, Mexico, and the United States.
PwC reported that venture capital firms invested $808 million in San Diego companies in the second quarter of 2019.
UC San Diego surpassed its $2 billion fundraising goal three years ahead of schedule, becoming the youngest university in the country to complete a $2 billion campaign.
San Diego’s Stories of 2019
Claudette Zepeda-Wilkins | Photo: Paula Watts
After just one year in business—during which it was the only San Diego restaurant nominated for a 2019 James Beard Award—El Jardín closed for rebranding without Claudette Zepeda-Wilkins as its head chef.
Arizona-based Times Media Group bought San Diego CityBeat. The alternative weekly’s editor, Seth Combs, was laid off on August 30.
A 30-foot slab of sandstone fell from the bluff at Grandview Beach, killing three related women with ties to Encinitas.
Animal Planet debuted the docuseries The Zoo: San Diego, a spin-off of a successful similar show about the Bronx Zoo. No pandas in ours, but we’ve got the first southern white rhino conceived by artificial insemination (born July 28).
Representative Duncan Hunter and his wife, Margaret, were indicted on charges of illegally using more than $250,000 of campaign money to float personal expenses, like vacations, shopping trips, and airfare for a pet rabbit.
San Diego’s Stories of 2019
San Diego Symphony
San Diego Symphony broke ground on its permanent outdoor Bayside Performance Park.
Gina Champion-Cain, CEO of The Patio Group restaurants, was charged with fraud by the Securities and Exchange Commission. The federal agency alleged that she stole $300 million from investors in a liquor-license loan scheme.
The Windmill Food Hall opened in Carlsbad. Pea Soup Andersen’s may be long gone, but the windmill keeps turning.
The New York Times published an article about San Diego’s sudden glut of electric scooters.
Waters off of Scripps Pier warmed to 78 degrees, the highest September temperature ever recorded at the 103-year-old pier.
San Diego soccer team 1904 FC played their first official match, against the LA Force. 1904 FC is part of the National Independent Soccer Association and will be playing their home games in SDCCU Stadium.
San Diegan Jenna Evans, 29, swallowed her 2.4 carat engagement ring while dreaming about jewelry thieves.
San Diego’s Stories of 2019
President Trump | Photo: Official White House Photo by Shealah Craighead
President Trump held a private fundraiser at The US Grant before visiting the border in Otay Mesa.
Del Mar’s music festival, Kaaboo, sold to Virgin Fest. But this won’t affect its partnership with the Padres (announced just three days before), and it’s still moving to Petco Park in 2020.
Animae, a $5.5 million pan-Asian restaurant from Brian Malarkey, opened in the glitzy Pacific Gate condo complex in the Embarcadero.
San Diego County began offering free preapproved floor plans for granny flats, saving homeowners about $30,000 a pop in design and permitting fees.
The median home price in San Diego fell to $584,000—the first such drop in seven years.
San Diego’s Stories of 2019
Cross Border Xpress | Photo: Official White House Photo by Shealah Craighead
The Cross Border Xpress pedestrian bridge to Tijuana International Airport opened a California Welcome Center. (The bridge saw a 30 percent increase in traffic from July to September 2019.)
A listing for a 200-square-foot glorified shed in University Heights made national headlines. Why? The rent: $1,100 a month. (No pets, no on-site laundry; credit score verification required.) As of press time, the unit appears to have been rented.
After 20 years representing California’s 53rd Congressional District, Susan Davis announced that she will not seek reelection next year.
Brand-new music director Rafael Payare conducted the San Diego Symphony’s dramatic season opening concert. He kicked it off with Mahler.
San Diego breweries continued their reign at this year’s Great American Beer Festival, amassing a whopping 18 medals—more than any other county and more than the entire state of Texas. Pizza Port and Lost Abbey were the big winners. Cheers!
Credit card industry billionaire T. Denny Sanford gave $350 million to National University—the largest individual or family donation in San Diego County history. It was renamed Sanford National University in his honor.
The city council’s housing committee approved the installation of movable tiny houses (halfway between a trailer and a granny flat) in backyards.
California effectively banned private prisons once their current contracts expire, and became the first state to ban privately run immigrant detention centers. Just two days earlier, a man died in ICE custody at the only such facility in San Diego, Otay Mesa Detention Center. Its contract expires in 2023.
According to ESPN, Padres minor league pitcher Jacob Nix was arrested for allegedly breaking into a Peoria, Arizona, home through the doggie door.
San Diego’s Stories of 2019
Almost Famous | Photo: Neal Preston
Almost Famous, a stage adaptation of San Diego native Cameron Crowe’s hit film, debuted at The Old Globe.
Fashion Valley celebrated 50 years. Now they’re starting a major renovation.
The San Diego City Council adopted a $1.9 billion Community Action Plan on Homelessness.
San Diego State University publicly proposed to buy 132 acres of land in Mission Valley, including SDCCU Stadium, for $68.2 million. Two weeks later, the university increased the offer by almost $20 million.
San Diego’s Stories of 2019
Jessica Meir | Photo: NASA
UC San Diego alum and astronaut Jessica Meir conducted her first spacewalk, to do repairs on the International Space Station—and since she was with fellow astronaut Christina Koch, it made history as the first all-female spacewalk.
The third Tijuana pipeline break in less than 30 days released 9.2 million gallons of wastewater across the border.
SeaWorld and Sesame Workshop announced they’re building a Sesame Street theme park in Chula Vista, to open in 2021 as “Sesame Place.”
Voice of San Diego reported that California Attorney General Xavier Becerra charged South Park’s Dr. Tara Zandvliet for writing kids vaccine exemptions for illegitimate reasons.
The Padres named 38-year-old Jayce Tingler their new manager.
SDG&E cut power to 8,000 customers in East County as Santa Ana winds increased the risk of wildfires. That number jumped to nearly 19,000 the following day, as the Miller Fire burned 37 acres in Valley Center.
The San Diego Convention Center turned 30.
Competitive sponging is back! The first National Bodyboarding Festival took place in Ocean Beach.
PARTNER CONTENT
Wonderfront Festival premiered downtown.
We ask the city's best food photographers to choose their favorite pics and share their secrets to capturing a drool-worthy pic
Food is a notorious diva to photograph. The wrong lighting can make José Andrés’ paella look like a jaundiced grain bowl. You could be staring at the best sandwich of your life, but shoot it from above and—hey, congrats on that abandoned piece of lettuce bread. A cottage meme industry has been built around the hilariously bad photos on review sites that make Michelin-star food look like Michelin tires.
Especially in a visual modern media world, food culture depends on great photographers capturing the painstaking work in equally deserving ways. We asked four of San Diego’s top food photographers for their favorite shot from another year of documenting what we eat.

Getting this kind of shot takes a bit of yoga. Asana yourself into the corner, hold your breath, pray that a chef on the move doesn’t back into your light stand.
“You’re stepping into someone’s workspace during their busiest moments, so it’s a balance of being present to get the shot and being invisible to not slow anything down,” Kimberly Motos says.
The subject here is the Birdman sandwich from Chick & Hawk—hot fried chicken thigh, tangy slaw, kimchi comeback sauce, sweet and spicy pickles, potato brioche bun—getting a hearty dousing of its difference-maker seasoning. Motos captures the parts of the process that diners don’t usually see: the chaos behind something that looks so simple.

“I love this image because it feels like a moment you want to step into,” says Lucianna McIntosh. A warm, sunny day at The Fishery in PB with oysters, caviar, and martinis. Yes, please.
The little details—the glass sweating a little, the direct afternoon light creating stark shadows, the oyster glistening on the tray—are the main characters. Instead of trying to overly control the setup, McIntosh “followed the light and lines that draw you in more,” she says. “This was one of those moments where everything lined up on its own for a second. I love it when the shadows end up being just as important as the food itself.”

La Jolla native Eric Wolfinger—who won a James Beard Award for Tartine Bread, one of the most stunning bread books of all time—says he doesn’t have a signature style. His style is a conduit.
“I see my job is to translate the chef’s point of view into something you can feel,” he says.
For this shot, Fleurette chef Travis Swikard had one directive: cuisine du soleil (“cuisine of the sun”). With a spread of leeks vinaigrette, herb-roasted golden chicken, and beets, Wolfinger wanted to create a scene that felt straight out of the French Riviera, relaying the light, bright style of Swikard’s new spot.
Some bonus additions here: Extra lights—to add lots of warmth—and a clipping from an olive tree.

Timing and light are everything in food photography. In Lucien—La Jolla’s tasting-menu-only restaurant with moody ambiance—a single strobe flash creates the ideal spotlight.
Dee Sandoval says she uses the “natural, just-plated energy” of the dish to “create a portrait of moment and craft.” That’s why this Mostra Ghost Bear espresso ice cream—with San José dark chocolate mousse, soy-miso caramel, and koji shoyu chocolate sauce—looks like it might dissolve halfway to your mouth.
Emma Veidt is an editor at San Diego Magazine. She earned her bachelor's and master's degrees from the Missouri School of Journalism. She loves running, hiking, and rock climbing, but really, she mostly loves encounters with the street cats around North Park.
As NASCAR lands in San Diego this weekend, a recently burgled dad is irregularly excited
My 15-year-old daughter tried to steal our car this week, so I’m ready to become a NASCAR dad. It would be appropriate discipline. We just relocated to a nice suburb within walking distance of her high school. The suburbs are like living in a Tesla commercial. I am pretty far from the wealthiest dad in this neighborhood (I am the least wealthy dad in this neighborhood), more than a few engineering degrees short of being in the running.
I’m fairly certain watching NASCAR is a violation of our HOA and a violation of my daughter’s emotional HOA. But NASCAR hits San Diego this weekend and I have a fever I’ve never felt before. I want to watch 111 drivers do dangerous things in cars and trucks on an active military base in the ocean. Since my lifelong exposure to NASCAR is limited to Talladega Nights and every single iteration of the movie Cars, I can only base my plan of attack on oafish stereotypes.
So while other neighbor dads are sizing bubble jackets for their golf simulators, I’m gonna grow a Ricky Bobby, run the extension cord for the TV out into the carport we share with six other condos, fill a cooler with a proper 80-20 split of Hamm’s and Mountain Dew, treat a lawn chair like an ADU, and spend a few hours yelling ohsheeeit as if it’s a single, nine-syllable word.
The quality parents in our neighborhood seem highly attuned to the sound of any vehicle breaching the 6 MPH threshold, so I should gather a crowd pretty fast. They may come over with strongly worded emails in their hearts, but one glimpse of Shane van Gisbergen and hometown hero Jimmy Johnson guzzling the last remaining drops of gasoline on the planet in a dazzling display of carmanship—they’ll join my NASCAR pop-up party.
By the time my daughter brings her friends over, we’ll have a real welcoming committee.
Because, like I said, my daughter tried to steal my car.
She wasn’t going to Mexico. But while Claire and I were off doing businessy stuff to afford my teen’s skincare rituals, she and a friend decided to teach themselves stick shift. She’s never driven a stick before. I’m not saying she has, but if she has driven a vehicle at all—it would have been done in a remote, abandoned parking lot where the only possible thing she could destroy was the concept of driving itself.
But a couple TikTok videos later, she and her friend felt a certain level of mastery had been achieved, and they gave it a go. They backed our VW Bug out of the garage with a series of stalls and transmission seizures, and managed to get it into the carport, attempting to do “donuts.” That’s when I got a call from a resident, who had taken an active interest in this experiment.
Which got me wondering about the power and might of vehicles. Turns out, even at carport speeds there exists a bit of potential fireworks. A garage door could become not a garage door anymore. At 145 MPH on Naval Base Coronado this weekend (don’t worry, they slow down to 100 MPH for turns), NASCAR drivers are essentially doorbell ditching gods. I didn’t register the temperature after my daughter’s trial run, but the track at NASCAR races usually hits a cool 130-150 degrees, enough to lightly sear some Nikes (the tires themselves hover in the 200 degree range).
And that is at least part of our fascination with NASCAR (the other fascination is the legendary pit parties, which either set humanity back a few evolutionary links, or advance it by the same amount of links). These drivers do something all of us do every day in a very efficient, boring way—drive a car—and take it to its extreme impulse. Grace and precision at the thunderous edge of shit going terribly wrong. Most of us have looked at San Diego home prices and felt a burning desire to see how fast our Honda Pilot could make it to our new home in Vegas. So NASCAR drivers are acting on our own wildest impulse.
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.
In a sport obsessed with prestige, a San Diego–born golf brand is betting on something more fun and less fussy
Music drifts across the fairway. Someone’s in flip flops. The Pacific flashes in the distance. Sun peeks onto shoulders through the palm trees. It’s spring, technically, but the air reads suspiciously like summer. At the par-3 course at Liberty Station, the longest hole barely stretches past 120 yards, and no one looks particularly interested in becoming the next PGA legend.
This is where Sunday Golf was born.
“I got dragged to a par-3 course in 2019 —The Loma Club—and it was way more my jam,” says Ronan Galvin, CEO and co-founder of Sunday Golf, a company that makes lightweight golf bags for players who’d rather carry less and laugh more. “It was a lot different than the stereotypical ideas you have about golf where it’s kind of long, uptight, and exclusive.”
Galvin spent over a decade in the golf industry working in product development, sourcing and manufacturing. But he didn’t grow up swinging clubs. Basketball and football were more his speed. What clicked for him was a simpler, more relaxed kind of play: shorter rounds and weekend games built for fun rather than formality. The kind of golf that resonated for him felt accessible, effortless, and surprisingly his lifestyle.

He noticed something else, too.
On a course where five clubs do the job, players were still lugging 14. So Galvin built something smaller. Lighter. A bag designed specifically for par-3 rounds, the Loma Bag is sleek, functional, and refreshingly unfussy. It’s practical minimalism in a sport known for excess.
Sunday Golf was slated to launch in January 2020. Then, COVID hit. Shipments stalled; lost at sea. The future felt shaky. But the series of catastrophes for the young company turned out to be anything but: By the time inventory arrived that August, golf had become one of the few activities people could safely do.
“It introduced and brought so many people back to the game,” Galvin says. “It created a habit for a lot of people, which is a big reason golf is on its growth trajectory.”
It turns out Americans can’t get enough of golf. Forty-eight million of them swung clubs last year, a 41 percent jump since 2019, and the National Golf Foundation says the total could top 50 million by the end of 2026.
The brand rode this unlikely momentum. Since 2021, Sunday Golf has expanded into larger lightweight bags and continues evolving from there. A major reason for the company’s success is its approachability, a value so central that it’s literally written on the office walls in the form of the company’s guiding mission: “Get 500,000 golfers having more fun by 2027.” This goal is measured, fittingly, by golf bags sold.
Sunday Golf has already passed 300,000 bags sold.
But the numbers aren’t the point.

“To remind the world that life is meant to be enjoyed,” Galvin says of the brand’s why. In an era dominated by screens, golf offers something analog. “People are outside, touching grass with their friends. A golf bag is a golf bag, but our products are vehicles to help support that.”
Unlike legacy golf giants promising proximity to Rory McIlroy-level greatness, Sunday Golf leans into what Galvin jokingly calls “diet golf” or “golf light”—weekend rounds, driving range sessions, company scrambles. The bags are built for the casual golfer, and the fit feels obvious.
That philosophy resonates across Southern California, where year-round sunshine means golf courses never really hibernate for winter. As Galvin puts it, “the laid-back lifestyle of San Diego kind of seeps into everyone’s veins.”
Sometimes the validation arrives via email: a 76-year-old customer is able to walk the course again because their golf bag is lighter. Parents are able to take their children out with Sunday Golf’s kids line.
For Galvin, that’s the real win. Not perfection. Not prestige. Just more people outside, enjoying themselves. In San Diego, that might be the most natural mission of all.
Isabella Dallas is a freelance writer for San Diego Magazine and the Arts and Culture Editor at The Daily Aztec in her final year at San Diego State University. She previously worked as an editorial intern for SDM, but when she’s not writing, you can find her trying the best coffee spots in SD, devouring the latest rom-coms, and indulging in anything and everything pop culture.
Stake Chophouse & Bar brings contemporary classics and old-school service to the heart of Coronado
Stake Chophouse & Bar isn’t your average steakhouse. Blue Bridge Hospitality’s Coronado outpost is a modern interpretation of a big-city steakhouse nestled in the heart of the small coastal community. The team at Stake has reimagined the whole steakhouse experience. By prioritizing a seasonal farm-to-table sourcing philosophy, a personalized guest experience, and unique service touches, like a formal steak presentation and a bespoke knife selection process, Stake distinguishes itself in a sea of steakhouses.
Exceptional steaks, including Wagyu from Japan, Australia, and the U.S., and fresh seafood flown in daily form the core of Stake’s culinary identity. The menu features a five-course omakase-style steak experience highlighting house favorites, plus an array of cuts, and classic steakhouse staples—think a wedge salad, baked potato, or pasta carbonara—refined for a contemporary palate without losing their traditional appeal. Stake focuses on seasonal sourcing from the region’s best family farms and specialty purveyors, and incorporates intentionally unexpected touches to create something truly unique.
“I challenge our chefs and myself to take it a step further in sourcing,” says Chef Ronnie Schwandt. “It’s important to us to highlight different farms, unique one-off farms—whether it’s cattle, strawberries, a local fisherman or from anywhere in the United States, we’re always trying to find that niche.”
Beyond the menu, Stake emphasizes outstanding service, says Vinny Spatafore, Director of Hospitality Operations. Staff maintains detailed notes, allowing them to remember guests by name, recall previous orders such as a favorite martini (also memorable for the customer since it’s served in an extra tall, distinctly-shaped glass), and celebrate special occasions like birthdays and anniversaries.
“When you have those points of topic that you remember about a guest, they appreciate that,” he says. “Our servers are really good with that—we have a couple servers who have been here since the beginning and they’ll remember somebody from years ago, their name, their kids’ names, where they live. I’m really thankful to have a great front of house staff.”
Award-winning wines, rare whiskeys, special events, and a complementary black car service that provides transportation for guests throughout Coronado add to Stake’s appeal.
Schwandt stresses that Stake offers more than a meal; they aim to give patrons something unforgettable.
“It starts when you walk up the stairs and are greeted by the hostess—that sets the tone for the night. Then you’re greeted by a server, who may know you by name, and can guide you through the menu and curate as they get to know you,” says Schwandt. “Most people leave kind of blown away; they leave feeling like they just had an experience. That’s the goal, right? Whether you’re serving smash burgers or high-end steak, you want somebody to leave thinking, Wow, that was awesome.”
Announcing a partnership between Art & Design District, SDFC Playmakers, and San Diego Magazine
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
SAN DIEGO, CA — [June 15th, 2026] — Art plus story equals culture. Today, three local groups deeply invested in advancing San Diego arts and culture— San Diego FC Playmakers, Art & Design District, and San Diego Magazine—have joined forces to tell its stories.
The initial project will be a landmark September edition of San Diego Magazine—fully dedicated to the people, ideas, and identities of the city’s creative community. After its release, those stories and more will extend across six months of integrated digital, social, and multi-platform coverage. Art & Design District and SDFC Playmakers will serve as co-publishers of the expanded editorial vision.
The Art & Design District is evolving into San Diego’s first home for the performing arts at iconic downtown venues like the Civic Theatre and Jacobs Music Center alongside research and development programs focused on artist live/work spaces, galleries, studios, and New School of Architecture & Design.
“[The Art & Design District initiative] is a long-term investment in San Diego’s creative life and the creative workforce that powers our cultural experiences and creative industries here at home and across the world,” says Jonathan Glus, Prebys Senior Fellow for Art & Design in Residence at Downtown San Diego Partnership. “But infrastructure alone is not enough. The public needs to see, understand, and participate in what’s being built and why. Joining as co-publisher of this issue means helping ensure that the story of San Diego’s creative community—its artists, its institutions, its future—gets told at the level of ambition the moment requires.”
San Diego has entered a defining chapter in how the region invests in its creative community, with civic and philanthropic leaders working alongside artists, brands, institutions, and people to chart a new model of public-private support for arts and culture.
As digital co-publishers of San Diego Magazine‘s arts and culture coverage, SDFC’s Playmakers partnership will include a six-month integrated collaboration designed to sustain the visibility of San Diego’s creative community well beyond a single issue.
“The Playmakers program was built on the belief that the creative community is essential to what makes San Diego, San Diego,” says Sebastian, San Diego FC’s SVP of Brand and Innovation. “Investing in local media that tells those stories—and reaches the audiences who need to hear them—is one of the most direct ways we can support the artists, organizations, and cultural leaders shaping this city’s future. We’re proud to step in as digital co-publishers of San Diego Magazine‘s arts and culture coverage and the founding partner of this new editorial program.”
Under the partnerships:
The partnership represents a new model for regional media: civic and cultural institutions providing the resources required for sustained, ambitious, local editorial media focused on the neighborhoods it serves.
“For 78 years, the magazine has told the story of arts and culture here,” says Claire Johnson, CEO of San Diego Magazine. “But the fragmentation of traditional media has made it harder than ever to cover this community at the depth and scale it deserves. SDFC Playmakers and the Art & Design District have recognized something critical: Media is not separate from the civic conversation, it’s the stage for the conversation.”
San Diego Magazine retains full editorial control over all reporting, features, and original content produced under both partnerships.
“Our role in this ecosystem is to tell the story of San Diego’s culture and provide context for our readers.” says Johnson. “These partnerships give us the resources to do justice to that responsibility—and to extend that commitment well beyond a single issue. Our readers also deserve to know exactly how this work was funded. I’m grateful to our partners, and to the arts and culture community in San Diego for letting us tell this story.”
The September Arts & Culture Issue will be released early September 2026, with digital, social, video, and podcast coverage rolling out through early 2027.
ABOUT SAN DIEGO MAGAZINE For 78 years, San Diego Magazine has been the region’s leading lifestyle and culture publication, reaching approximately 6 million readers monthly across print, digital, newsletter, and social platforms. Owned and operated locally, the magazine has been the connective tissue of San Diego’s cultural conversation since 1948.
ABOUT SDFC PLAYMAKERS The Playmakers program is an ongoing initiative that seeks to identify and showcase the talent of San Diego creatives who are contributing to the culture, substance, and flow of our community. We want to bring the San Diego community together by marrying football and creativity to provide a platform for these Playmakers who are positively impacting our culture by pushing the boundaries through innovative ideas. The goal is to create a program that consistently provides growth and exposure opportunities for San Diego creatives, while shaping an authentic direction for San Diego FC’s brand and community-building process. Through this program we hope to contribute to the creative fabric of our city by providing paid jobs, projects, collaborations, as well as networking opportunities for Playmakers.
ABOUT THE ART & DESIGN DISTRICT The Art & Design District is a Downtown San Diego Partnership initiative, supported by the Prebys Foundation, working to shape a connected, vibrant arts and design district in downtown San Diego. Led by Art and Culture Expert Fellow Jonathan Glus, the initiative convenes artists, cultural leaders, civic stakeholders, and residents in service of a downtown that reflects the creativity, identity, and diversity of the region. Learn more at downtownsandiego.org.
Food writer Beth Demmon names local bites we love—both at the high and low ends of our budgets
We love a mega-fancy tasting menu, but let’s be honest—we’re not all blessed with unlimited Wagyu funds. So we picked some of the breakout dishes of the last year (or couple of years) from the best chefs in the city, reverse-engineered their chief charms (salty, smoky, caramelized?) in the test lab of our mouths, and found some budget-friendly alternatives that hit some of the same notes with an everyday price tag.
Where do delicately plucked marigold blossoms adorn Deer Isle scallops, or ingredients like fermented raspberry precede roasted coffee oil, shiro miso caramel, or bronze fennel in a parade of hit-after-hit dishes? Lilo in Carlsbad, of course. San Diego’s newest Michelin star changes its menu with the seasons, but one stalwart dish has kept tongues wagging since opening day last April: the caviar ice cream. A boat-shaped sliver of orgeat ice cream, smoked celery root bushi, and freshly pressed almond oil are topped with a generous heap of caviar. It’s a dish so good and defining that chef Eric Bost will tire of talking about it for a very long time.
Price: $265 for the tasting menu (before tax, tip, and drinks)
There’s a reason Stella Jean’s s’mores ice cream is part of the local scoop shop’s “always available” menu. Made with fire-roasted marshmallows and coconut ash ice cream mixed with dark chocolate-covered graham crackers and mini marshmallows, its strangely ashen hue dabbled with flecks of tawny brown is a far cry from the wildly vibrant ube and pandesal toffee flavor seemingly made for Instagram reels. But it’s a sensation in your mouth—smoky, toasty, torched, creamy, marshmallowy, coconutty, ashy, and bitter from the dark chocolate. Pro tip: If you really want to DIY Lilo’s ultra-luxe treat, bring your own caviar.
Price: $6.25 for a single scoop
There’s no question what comes first at Lucien. It’s the egg. Chef and co-owner Elijah Arizmendi’s 12-course tasting menu begins with welcome bites under the calamansi tree before moving inside to start the Journey (the actual name of this section of the menu). The first step is one of the most astounding—a perfectly intact, upright, ochre-hued eggshell containing his take on Japanese chawanmushi (egg custard), topped with a dollop of caviar. The accompanying ingredients have ranged from sweet corn and huitlacoche to banana and buckwheat, but each one has precisely demonstrated Arizmendi’s commitment to French technique with California experimentation and global influence.
Price: $260 for the chef’s tasting menu (before tax, tip, and drinks)
The biggest difference (besides price) is that while Lucien’s dish changes with the season, Sushi Ota is comfortably predictable. A San Diego staple since 1990, the legendary Sushi Ota has been one of those if you know, you know joints that locals try to keep off the radar. (It hasn’t worked at all.) Known for ultra-fresh fish and ultra-traditional service, the small Pacific Beach restaurant also serves Japanese comfort foods like udon noodle soup alongside sashimi, nigiri, and rolls. But it’s the savory steamed egg custard, called chawanmushi, that really gives you the warm and fuzzies. Add a side of salmon roe (ikura) for a few bucks more, and this dupe is about as good as it gets.
Price: $12 for chawanmushi, $11 for ikura

Enough ink—and tears, I’m sure—has been spilled over Chick & Hawk’s long and arduous journey to opening its doors. But now that the Encinitas eatery is in full swing, chef Andrew Bachelier’s tightly curated menu of fried chicken sandwiches, fries, and bowls command lines of hungry locals and skate-culture loyalists. The Birdman, the signature hot chicken sandwich named for partner and skateboarding legend Tony Hawk, is piled with cabbage slaw and pickles and slathered with a tangy kimchi comeback sauce on a soft brioche bun. Although this Nashville meets California meets Mississippi meets Korea sando doesn’t command a triple-digit price tag, the fact that it’s nearly a $20 chicken sandwich (sans side) has been a topic of conversation. Bachelier—who worked at Addison before opening Jeune et Jolie, then launched SDM’s 2024 “Best New Restaurant,” Atelier Manna—and his team earned that price tag.
Price: $18
It’s hard to beat Koreans at the chicken game. Korean fried wings are defined by a double-fry technique—first at a low temperature to ensure the chicken is cooked through, then at a high temperature to ensure the famed extra-crispy, ear-splittingly crunchrageous magic. At Cross Street, they follow a similar fusion ethos as Chick & Hawk, using inspiration from the American South as well as Thailand, Korea, Vietnam, and more, with flavors like “Seoul Spicy” or “Honey Butter” for whatever you’re feeling that day. Pair it with a cold beer to go full chimaek (a popular Korean combination of pairing fried chicken and beer). Now that’s a combo—and price tag—that’s hard to beat.
Price: $8.75 for five wings

PB&J. Captain & Tennille. Brad Wise and steak. Steak frites ranks among the iconic global duos. And when the holy union of prime cuts and twice-fried carbs comes from Wise and the meat-loving masters at Trust Restaurant Group, it’s a pretty safe bet. À L’ouest—the group’s newest fancy, but not fussy, drippy plant dreamscape of a French steakhouse on the prime corner of 30th and University in North Park—gives guests a choice: 12-ounce New York strip, 8-ounce filet mignon, or 8-ounce Wagyu hanger, topped with sauce au poivre (the classic French pan sauce—peppercorns, shallots, heavy cream, brandy) and served with a heaping pile of 24-hour salt-brined fries and a watercress salad. One bite acts as a transport to a Parisian brasserie, so if you think about the cost in terms of time-space travel, it’s a pretty great deal.
Price: starts at $48
To satisfy the same urge for meat and potatoes, feel at least moderately European while doing so, and save a couple quid, a trip to The Shakespeare in Mission Hills ticks all the boxes. The classic British shepherd’s pie arrives in a piping hot oval au gratin dish, smothered with a thick layer of mashed potatoes. Beneath it lies a hefty portion of marinated ground beef and vegetables in the pub’s secret sauce, and while there are a few choices of sides, the correct order is peas and “proper” chips (a.k.a. chunky, thick-cut fries versus the typically thinner American “French” fries). It’s more tickety-boo than très bien, but it’s immensely satisfying in any language.
Price: $22.95
Beth Demmon is an award-winning writer and podcaster whose work regularly appears in national outlets and San Diego Magazine. Her first book, The Beer Lover's Guide to Cider, is now available. Find out more on bethdemmon.com.
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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