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Food & Drink JUNE 2, 2020

Black-Owned Restaurants to Support in San Diego

Here is an evolving list of black-owned small businesses to support

Black-Owned Restaurants to Support in San Diego

We tell the stories of our city’s restaurants. It’s what we do. We’ve been asked by multiple readers for a list of black-owned restaurants people can support. This is that list. From juicy brisket to golden fried catfish to spicy stews with warm injera bread to vegetarian soul food—have it for dinner tonight. And maybe lunch tomorrow. It’s a small, tangible way to support our black community while working toward larger, more significant changes.

This is an evolving list of restaurants that are currently open, with our editors adding to it. If you have a black-owned restaurant that you’d like included in this list, please email Marie Tutko ([email protected]). We have also added wineries, wine shops, craft breweries, and distilleries.

Also check out this list by travel writer Gabby Beckford, which she started last year and is constantly updating.

Ackee Tree

Named after the tree that bears the national fruit of Jamaica, this El Cerrito eatery has saltfish with ackee or callaloo for breakfast in addition to jerk chicken, curries and beef patties.

5712 El Cajon Blvd., El Cerrito

 

Addis Restaurant

The derek tibs (chunks of spiced lamb), dero wot (chicken stew served with hard-boiled egg), and kitfo sandwich (stuffed with finely chopped beef) are popular dishes at this Ethiopian restaurant. They also have a breakfast menu—start the day with injera and a cup of rich Ethiopian coffee.

3643 El Cajon Blvd., Normal Heights

African Caribbean Market

This small store is jam-packed with staples for West African dishes: yams, gari (cassava powder), plantains, palm oil, foufou mix, egusi (ground seeds) and dried sorrel. The frozen section has goat meat, salted fish, and okra, and there’s jerk sauce and soursop tea imported from Jamaica. Ask if they have suya (skewered beef seasoned with peanuts and peppers) available that day for a quick snack.

4811 El Cajon Blvd., City Heights

 

AJ’s Creole Cuisine & West Coast Smokehouse

This food truck stops throughout San Diego County, bringing jambalaya, beignets, and the Holy Trinity Slider—pulled pork with mac n’ cheese sauce on butter bread—to communities from East County to the coast and Rancho Bernardo. They are commencing delivery service on June 19, 2020 and are taking orders online.

 

Altipiano Vineyard and Winery

Denise Clarke is the only black female winemaker in San Diego, and she co-owns a boutique vineyard in Escondido with her husband, Peter. They founded the winery in 2008, and planted 2,600 Brunello Clone of Sangiovese Grosso vines, 640 Barberra vines, and 500 Cabernet Sauvignon and Petite Sirah vines. Their award-winning wines are available online, and they are currently offering curbside pick-up.

20365 Camino Del Aguila, Escondido

 

Awash

The beloved Ethiopian restaurant also has a small grocery store connected to it. Find berbere spice mix, seasoning for shiro (chickpea stew), clarified butter, whole bean coffee and beers from Ethiopia, and teff to make injera (Ethiopian flatbread). No time to make injera yourself? They bake it daily.

2884 El Cajon Blvd., North Park

 

Bankhead Mississippi Cooking

This small restaurant tucked away in a strip mall in Spring Valley has an expansive menu of Southern staples. Fish can be ordered fried or baked Mississippi-style, four different preparations of chicken are offered, and specials include meatloaf, gumbo, and oxtail stew. Load up on side dishes like candied yams and red beans and rice (each entrée comes with a choice of two), and there’s peach cobbler for dessert.

8300 Paradise Valley Road, Spring Valley 

 

Blendees Smoothie & Juice Bar

Build your own fruit-and-veggie smoothie or select one from the menu such as mango, pineapple and banana. There’s also acai bowls, teas (try the iced ginger) and infused water.

1297 E. Main Street, El Cajon

 

Bonnie Jean’s Soul Food Café

A San Diego institution, the no-frills restaurant is known for the honey-pecan glazed fried chicken, smothered pork chops, and sweet potato pie. Family-size meals are also available to go.

1964 54th St., Oak Park 

 

Bowlegged B.B.Q.

Owned by a family from East Texas, this barbecue joint near Mount Hope Cemetery serves brisket, brisket sandwiches, full and half racks of baby back ribs, and barbecued chicken. Brisket dinners come with a choice of sides, which include collard greens, cole slaw, barbecue beans, green beans, potato salad, and yams.

4255 Market Street, Chollas View

 

Boutique Vino 

Attorney Justus Benjamin and his wife, Michelle, own this East Village wine shop that sells bottles from small estates throughout the world. “Social distancing survival packs” are available for curbside pick-up or delivery.

923 E Street, East Village

 

Breakfast Bitch

Not for the humorless, this restaurant from husband and wife team Tracii and Derrell Hutsona in Hillcrest is an ode to the bitches who brunch. You’ve got your “Main Bitch” menu with dishes like The New Yorker (Philly cheese steak with grilled onion, scrambled eggs, garlic aioli on croissant) and the crowd favorite Daygo (sauteed onion, sweet peppers, broccoli, mushrooms, spinach, tomato, cheese, avocado, eggs, on a croissant). Then you got your Skinny Bitches (vegan cakes, avocado toast, hummus, smoothies, etc.) and Basic Bitches (create your own pancakes, hash browns with turkey gravy, etc.).

3825 Fifth Ave., Hillcrest

 

Cane Patch Kitchen

Located in Liberty Public Market, this is a collaboration between two Southern natives whose family recipes were hits at San Diego farmers markets. Ebony Broadway started by taking her family’s recipes and tweaking them into healthier vegan and vegetarian soul food. Tony Smalls won over people with his desserts, specifically the trademark sweet potato pie. They came together for Cane Patch Kitchen, serving jambalayas and po’ boys and gumbos.

Liberty Station, 2820 Historic Decatur Rd., Point Loma 

 

Chula Vista Brewery

The craft brewery—one of the few black-owned breweries in San Diego—recently celebrated its third anniversary. They’re currently offering limited sit-down service at the tasting room in downtown Chula Vista, and also have bottles and cans to go. Try the award-winning Papa’s Pils pilsner.

294 Third Ave., Chula Vista

 

Coop’s West Texas BBQ

Out in Lemon Grove, Brad Cooper and his family have run one of the city’s top Texas-style barbecue joints in San Diego for a decade. He was a registered nurse, selling his brisket to local shops on weekends before getting his brick and mortar and smokers and cranking out daily bounties of brisket, pulled pork, and ribs.

2625 Lemon Grove Ave., Lemon Grove

 

Da Chicken Coop

It’s the second concept from pitmaster Brad Cooper and located right across from Coop’s West Texas BBQ. It specializes in fried chicken, waffles, and wings. There’s also fried fish sandwiches, catfish nuggets and chicken chips.

2605 Lemon Grove Ave., Lemon Grove

 

Extraordinary Banana Pudding

A man so once loved pudding so much he devoted an entire shop to it. San Diego native Toran Grays is the Ben and the Jerry of small-batch pudding. It started with his great grandmother’s banana pudding recipe that got passed down generations, then expanded from there, with French vanilla, chocolate, pistachio, cheesecake, lemon, coconut, red velvet, butterscotch, chocolate banana, and white chocolate—25 flavors in all. He is the pudding king.

8257 El Paso St., La Mesa

 

Faridas Somali Cuisine

Try the chicken suucqar, a finely diced marinated chicken that’s quick-fried, topped with onions and bell peppers, and served with a side salad and spiced rice called bariis iskukaris; kaykay, a hearty dish of sliced beef, onions, and bell peppers, served atop strips of japti, a flatbread similar to Indian chapati.

1754 Euclid Ave., Oak Park

Felix’s BBQ with Soul

Owner Felix Berry hails from Alabama, and the menu here is a mix of Cajun and Southern specialties. At lunch and dinner there’s fried okra, gumbo, and Andouille sausage, baby back ribs, and tri-tip slow cooked in a hickory-wood pit. They’re also known for the sweet potato Belgian waffles served at breakfast.

3613 Ocean Ranch Blvd., Oceanside 

 

Flavors of East Africa

Kenyan native June Owino got his start when someone in his apartment complex smelled the food coming out of his kitchen and paid him to make extra meals. From there he hit the farmers markets with his jerk chicken, “jungle fries” (hand cut fries with seasoned ground beef and African salsa), and staples like wali (yellow rice with African spices), dengu (lentils in garlic, onions, curry and coconut milk).

2322 El Cajon Blvd., University Heights

 

Gihon Ethiopian Kitchen

The owner, known simply as Mercy, was the only one of her 11 siblings to immigrate to the U.S. from Ethiopia. She and her mother opened Gihon in North Park 22 years ago (they celebrated the anniversary this week), and all of the spices used in their dishes are hand-picked and dried by her brothers and sisters in Ethiopia, and mailed to San Diego. Their signature entree is called tibs, with your choice of meat (chicken, lamb, salmon, ribeye, filet mignon), cubed and sauteed in spices with onions, jalapenos, and Ethiopian spiced butter. They also have a vegan portion to the menu, including a platter of slow-cooked chickpeas in berbere sauce (shekla shira), stewed red lentils (misir), roasted eggplant, you name it. They also do a coffee ceremony with beans from Yirga Chefe (a town in Ethopia, considered the birthplace of coffee) alongside lightly sweet popcorn. For dessert, try the vegan baklava.

2432 El Cajon Blvd., North Park

 

Hammond’s Gourmet Ice Cream

They carry ice cream and sorbets from Tropical Dreams in Hawaii, and flavors range from light and fruity like POG (pineapple, orange, and guava) to rich Kona coffee and white chocolate ginger. Ice creams are decadently handmade with 18 percent butterfat, but there’s also vegan options. Order a flight if you want to try several different flavors. The company is under new ownership–AJ Williams, a San Diego State alum, purchased Hammond’s in the fall of 2019.

3077 University Ave., North Park; 3740 Sports Arena Blvd., Suite 6, Point Loma

 

Hanna’s Gourmet

Chef and owner Hanna Tesfamichael’s University Heights cafe is a beloved neighborhood spot and has been on Adams Avenue for over ten years. Hanna’s recently reopened offering family dinners to-go for curbside pick up. The globally-inspired menu changes every week, and can include dishes such as Peruvian roasted chicken, Indian spinach and dal curry, and Moroccan tagine. You can order a meal kit (that involves no prep work on your part) or mix and match a la carte dishes. Order online by Thursday evening for a Sunday pick up.

2864 Adams Ave., University Heights

Island Spice

This Jamaican restaurant has been serving island favorites in Rolando for almost 30 years. Aside from jerk chicken, diners come for the oxtail, brown stew chicken and whole fried snapper and plantains.

6109 University Ave., Rolando

 

Le Parfait Paris/Belgian Beer & Waffle 

Guillaume Ryon, who grew up in Côte d’Ivoire and Paris, co-owns these businesses with his wife, Ludivine. The couple met in France and moved to San Diego to attend college, and they opened Le Parfait Paris, a bakery and cafe, in 2014. Belgian Beer & Waffle is their second venture, which serves Belgian street food like beer waffles, fries, and desserts.

Le Parfait Paris, 555 G Street, Gaslamp; Belgian Beer & Waffle, 2899 University Ave., North Park

 

Maya’s Cookies

Maya Madsen couldn’t find any vegan-friendly cookies that she enjoyed, so she decided to make her own. Her chocolate chip cookies became so popular that she was baking dozens of them for friends and clients, and she decided to launch her own business. Her cookies are now sold at farmer’s markets and cafes throughout San Diego, and can be ordered online.

(858) 265-9957

 

Muzita Abyssinian Bistro

One of the great Abyssinian bistros in the city, where the only utensils are the spongy-delicious flatbread known as injera. Use that to swipe up heaps of spicy stews like berbere (peppers, garlic, onions, spices) and mitmita (even spicier, with cumin). They’ve also got sambusas (savory stuffed pastries), fitfit (lentils with toasted flaxseed), kitfo (minced beef with spice), and vegan and vegetarian options.

4651 Park Blvd., University Heights 

 

Nomad Donuts

The menu of freshly made donuts changes monthly at this popular North Park shop, and the flavors are inventive: green apple sage, haupia (a Hawaiian coconut pudding), key lime and prickly pear. There’s also classic vanilla, chocolate, and custard-filled donuts, along with Montreal-style bagels. Order online in advance for pick-up.

3102 University Ave., North Park

Omi Picnics 

Inspired by the picnic celebrations she put together in college, owner India Pierce knew she wanted to keep creating special moments. Omi Picnics is a luxury picnic business that brings both customization and relaxation to your setting of choice. The Posh package includes a chic, cozy set up and offers artistic charcuterie boards, mini sandwiches, and tasty desserts to make finger food feel like fine dining.

One Love Island Cuisine

North County residents can get a taste of tropical cuisine at this Jamaican restaurant in Oceanside. Known for their spicy jerk chicken and coconut curry chicken, they also serve fish cooked escovitch style—in an acidic mixture with fiery peppers.

4225 Oceanside Blvd., Suite K, Oceanside

 

One World Beat Cafe

The organic eatery at the World Beat Center at Balboa Park just re-opened for delivery service on weekends. Everything on the menu is vegan, popular items include the jerk rasta burger, shiitake mushroom cheeseburger, and the Costa Chica Chili with soyrizo.

2100 Park Blvd., Balboa Park

 

Rafikiz Foodz

The farmers’ market vendor serves traditional Kenyan cuisine along with vegan dishes. They’re known for sambusas–an East African spin on samosas, the Indian fried pastry–that are stuffed with everything from chicken to beef, lentils and coconut and cream cheese. They will be at the Leucadia Farmers’ Market on Sunday, June 7.

 

Red Sea Ethiopian

This City Heights establishment is one of the oldest Ethiopian restaurants in San Diego. Try the zizil tibs–beef simmered in garlic, butter, and Berbere sauce–lentils in red pepper, or tej, a honey wine. Order the “rainbow platter” to try a variety of meat and vegetable dishes, along with the injera bread. They are currently offering takeout.

4717 University Ave., City Heights

 

Rhythm’s Chicken and Waffles

What started as a food truck selling chicken and waffle sandwiches topped with bacon and cheese is now a brick-and-mortar spot in Pacific Beach. The original sandwich is still on the menu, along with chicken and waffle plates, chicken tenders, chili cheese fries, and hot dogs. Look for the red building with the walk-up window.

1136 Garnet Ave., Pacific Beach

 

Rock Steady Real Jamaican Restaurant

Jerk chicken and goat slow cooked in a Jamaican curry sauce are the stars here. A special beef and red kidney bean stew with Jamaican spinners (dumplings) is available only on Saturdays.

2820 Market Street, Grant Hill

 

Sabor Piri-Piri

Piri-piri is a pepper native to Mozambique, and a tangy sauce derived from it is a popular condiment and marinade throughout southern Africa. Try the piri-piri chicken to get a taste of the region or the chicken peanut curry. Vegan dishes are available, and they are taking orders for delivery on Sundays.

8630 Clairemont Mesa Blvd., Kearny Mesa

 

Shadow Ridge Spirits Company

Sean Hallman’s longtime hobby is homebrewing, which he started while working as a surface warfare officer in the Navy. His passion led to earning a professional brewing certificate and opening a small distillery with his wife, Lisa. Shadow Ridge now produces a line of six whiskeys and rums, including a single-malt whiskey distilled from peated barley. Spirits can be ordered online for pick up or delivery.

3044 Industry Street., Suite 107; Oceanside

 

SIP Wine & Beer

Cassandra Schaeg grew up in Temecula, and her shop and tasting room in downtown Escondido was set up as a fun place to learn all about wine. Schaeg promotes wines and spirits produced by women and minorities, and she’s currently offering pick-ups for wine to go by appointment.

131 S. Orange Street, Escondido

 

Smack’n Guamanian Grill

The founder’s grandson, Christian, now runs this eatery devoted to Chamorro cuisine from Guam. There’s island-style barbecue chicken and pork ribs, lumpia and chicken kelaguen, which is similar to ceviche. Order a combo plate if you can’t decide.

9506 Miramar Road, Miramar

 

Spacebar Café & Wine Bistro

This café has been a neighborhood spot in La Mesa for over ten years, hosting open mic and comedy nights. Aside from coffee, teas and kombucha on tap, there’s grilled paninis, breakfast bagels, smoothies, a tapas menu, and wine.

7454 University Ave., La Mesa

 

Spoiled Vegans Café

The decadent waffles and plant-based breakfast sandwiches will surprise even the most ardent carnivore. They are currently taking orders for curbside pick-up on Saturdays, and are working to fully re-open the cafe.

440 16th Street, East Village

 

Streetcar Merchants/Suckerfree/Shotcaller

Owners Ron Suel and RaVae Smith did it right, a big hit right out of the gate in North Park with creative riffs on Southern classics like fried chicken (all free-range, available in Nashville hot, buttery maple, honey-dipped), grit fritters (with pickled peppadews), chicken skin chicharrones (with strawberry jam), salted watermelon (with toasted peanuts, basil, fennel salad), sweet tea and organic cucumber-mint lemonade, and then a ton of cakes (pomegranate cheesecake, salted-caramel cheesecake, Oreo cookie “bash,” banana swirl bread, molten chocolate cake, etc.). It’s Southern food for the food obsessed. They also own SuckerFree in the Gaslamp with mac ‘n’ cheese flights, fried green tomatoes, brisket melts, fried chicken, low-country boils, you name it. Their third concept, Shotcaller Street Soul Food, has a fun and eclectic menu with items like the Soulritto–a burrito stuffed with mac n’ cheese, collard greens, tater tots and either pulled pork, chicken, shrimp, or catfish.

Streetcar Merchants, 4002 30th St., North Park; Suckerfree, 751 Fourth Ave., Downtown; Shotcaller, 220 Euclid Ave., Suite 180, Lincoln Park

 

Sunnie’s Ocean Beach

Breakfast tacos, breakfast burritos, and tortas are served all day at this Mexican café located just a couple of blocks from Sunset Cliffs. There’s also waffles, breakfast plates, espresso, and gluten-free options.

4723 Point Loma Ave., Ocean Beach

 

Surf & Soul Spot

After working 13 years as a chef for Hyatt, Sarajevo Petty started her own pop-up in a local church with fried catfish and shrimp and grits and cornbread. The food floored San Diego native Sergio Bailey, who partnered with her to open Surf & Soul Spot in La Mesa in 2019. Now they change the menu every week. The first half of the week is mostly “surf,” with that catfish and shrimp and grits, south east dirty smothered fries (smoked turkey gravy, white cheddar, red pepper ranch, scallions, sour cream, spicy tomato relish). On Friday and Saturday they switch to “soul,” where you can choose your meat (fried pork chops, catfish, or pork chops), sides (bay rice and smoked turkey gravy, baked mac n cheese, sweet candied yams), and desserts (sweet potato cupcakes, cookie crunch banana pudding).

7229 El Cajon Blvd., La Mesa

The Vegan Lion

The Vegan Lion is a one-woman operation that serves up flavorful comfort food with a healthy twist. Completely plant-based, gluten-free, and 95 percent organic—you’ll find top sellers like savory gumbo and the Lion Wings Meal, complete with air-fried oyster mushrooms, vegan mac ‘n’ cheese, and red potatoes. Pick up and delivery are available, as well as weekly meal prep options.

1100 N Magnolia Avenue, Suite D, El Cajon

 

Tropical Savor Bar & Grill

This colorful restaurant in the Gaslamp serves Latin-Caribbean cuisine. Try mofongo, a Puerto Rican dish of pickled and fried plantains, coconut red snapper, and majarete, a Dominican corn pudding.

729 4th Ave., Gaslamp

 

Trust/Fort Oak/Cardellino/Rare Society

Chef-owner Brad Wise is no longer a rising star of the city’s food scene, he’s completely arrived. First with his wood-fired restaurant, Trust, then his wood-fired restaurant Fort Oak, his steakhouse Rare Society, and now with his all-day Italian-ish eatery, Cardellino. Simply one of the great restaurant groups in San Diego.

Trust, 3752 Park Blvd., Hillcrest; Fort Oak, 1011 Fort Stockton St., Mission Hills; Rare Society, 4130 Park Blvd., Hillcrest; Cardellino, 4033 Goldfinch St., Mission Hills

Gihon Ethiopian Kitchen

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Food & Drink JULY 17, 2026

Chula Tacos Is Opening a New Ocean Beach Location

The fast-growing taqueria will open its third restaurant on Newport Avenue after a viral social media moment fueled its rapid expansion

Chula Tacos Is Opening a New Ocean Beach Location
Courtesy of Chula Tacos

When Rigo Munoz opened a weekends-only taco stand on Market Street in 2018, at first, he was just hoping to sell his tacos to however many customers he could. That low-key, word of mouth approach worked well for a couple years. Very well. 

“Then, the line started,” he laughs. He began to double his sales week after week, until an influencer from Tijuana paid them an undercover visit in 2024. Munoz was hanging out in his backyard the next Monday when his phone started pinging and ringing off the hook. “So I go onto my social media and there, lo and beyond, the video already had 10,000, 12,000 views in like, less than an hour,” he says. The next day, there was a line of customers waiting for him before he opened at 5 p.m. The Chula Tacos revolution sparked there. 

Now, he’s ready to open his third location on August 1 at 4994 Newport Avenue in Ocean Beach. It wasn’t an easy or straightforward path—the city shut down his original location citing too much noise and traffic. But Munoz was looking ahead, already in talks with a restaurateur to take over his space at 1719 Palm Avenue in the Nestor neighborhood of southeast San Diego. From the time he got shut down to getting the keys of his first brick-and-mortar was less than two days. 

The second location in Chula Vista caught fire on Valentine’s Day and is slated to reopen later this fall (689 H Street). Munoz says he also plans to open a fourth location somewhere between the Ocean Beach and Morena Boulevard areas, but has aspirations for more.

“I’d like to become the In-N-Out of tacos,” he says. He’s actively looking for places that could support either a drive-thru or the typical fast-casual taqueria style, but no matter what, he’s going to keep his menu simple. 

Each location has the same menu, except labio, which are ox lips, and beef intestines. They’re top-sellers at Palm Avenue, but might not translate as well to the OB crowd, he says. But guests can still get their fix of vampiro tacos, tacos de trompo, and from-scratch horchata and jamaica. 

Chula Tacos is best known for its kekas (pronounced keh-kuhs), which are extra-large quesadillas stuffed with your choice of meat. “It’s a hefty thing,” Munoz promises. It’s such a trademark that he filed for a patent, which is still pending. 

Building a taco empire has been a long time coming. Munoz first started making tacos at age 12, and has operated a number of cafes, delis, and other businesses on both sides of the border ever since. “We’re a family business,” he says. He’s been trying to hit that mother lode for years—and all it took was one video to light the fuse.

The newest location of Chula Tacos opens August 1 at 4994 Newport Avenue, Suite A in Ocean Beach. Hours of operation are 11 a.m. to midnight daily.  (Opening date subject to change.) 

Courtesy of Oceanside Sustainable Food Festival

San Diego Restaurant News & Food Events

Beth’s Bites

  • Everyone (clap) watches (clap, clap) women’s sports! (Thunderous applause!) San Diego’s first women’s sports bar, One of Us, opened this week in the former URBN Pizza space in North Park. I stopped by the preview and can confirm the Big Ass Fan is still there, but now there are tons of TVs lining the walls ready to broadcast women’s soccer, basketball, volleyball, and all the other sports events you could ever dream of. (And yes, they’ll be showing the men’s World Cup on Sunday, because I guess people watch men’s sports, too.) 
  • Rolando’s ears must have been burning, because a month after interviewing chef Coral Strong of the now-closed Garden Kitchen, Campus Burgers announced plans to turn the formerly hyperlocal farm-to-table restaurant into a spot for affordable smashburgers. I’m sure the local college kids will appreciate the $1.99 smashburger special—although let’s face it, in today’s expensive times, everyone is ready for a wallet-friendly outing. 
  • A few months ago, I gave Navore Market’s farm-to-front door delivery service a try and as a longtime former CSA subscriber, I have to admit it felt nice to leave the produce purchasing to the pros. But as of July 12, you can now head to Navore’s second community pickup hub at Mission Valley YMCA (5505 Friars Road) every Sunday from noon to 4 p.m. Having a centralized drop-off point makes it easy for farmers, and buyers don’t have to commit to a subscription—sounds like a farm-to-table win to me. 
  • Keeping on with the farm-to-table news, the 4th annual Oceanside Sustainable Food Festival is scheduled for July 25 in downtown Oceanside, bringing 50-plus vendors together for a day of global food and drink, artisan products, home goods, live music, and more. The event usually draws in a couple thousand people, so might I suggest arriving close to the 11 a.m. kickoff for the best chance at maximizing your nom?

Listen Now: The Latest in San Diego’s Food and Drink Scene

Have breaking news, exciting scoops, or great stories about new San Diego restaurants or the city’s food scene? Send your pitches to [email protected].

Beth Demmon

About Beth Demmon

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.

Food & Drink JULY 14, 2026

5 Must-Try Meals in San Diego Right Now

SDM's staff shouts out our favorite food finds this month including bites Stake Chophouse & Bar, Valentina, and Steady State

5 Must-Try Meals in San Diego Right Now
Courtesy of Stake Chophouse & Bar

There’s a place in heaven for a steakhouse that remakes chicken nuggets but uses Jidori instead of whatever glum bird is proffered in the children’s section. And then they top it with caviar. That, plus an editor with an obsession-level ranking of chai in Carlsbad, and a whole fish from one of San Diego’s OG top chefs who has mercifully returned to the kitchen. These are the very best things we’ve found from another month of eating professionally in San Diego. Go get some.

Stake Chophouse & Bar

Caviar Chicken Nugget

One of my favorite experiences at Stake in Coronado is that—if the patio is chilly enough to warrant heaters—they’ll surround you with towers of flame. Paired with the retaining wall of heat against the glass railing overlooking Orange Avenue, there is so much surrounding fire that it feels like dining in a much nicer version of the Elmo meme, in which the nasally puppet’s whole world has amusingly arsoned.

Three things you have to get here: first, the Wagyu popcorn (kernels popped in melted Wagyu beef fat, salted with paprika); second, the Snake River Farms Wagyu skirt steak (its Gold grade means incredibly high marble), one of the best steaks in the city; third, the Jidori chicken nuggets with herbed crème fraîche, pickle, and a perm of caviar. A childhood food, deliciously adulted. —Troy Johnson

Flying Pig Pub & Kitchen

Tri-Tip Sando

It’s been 15 years since married folk Aaron and Roddy Browning opened Flying Pig Pub & Kitchen in a hidden south Oceanside hovel—using vinyl records as placemats, the decor an assortment of welded metal weirdities. One thing has always remained: Pork is their native tongue.

This sandwich pries open long-dormant pleasure receptors in most alive human bodies. Brandt Beef tri-tip is rubbed with its “Pig Spice” (hint: good paprika and celery seed do wonders), sleeps for 24 hours, then is seared and rested for an hour—sliced and seared again, placed on a mini baguette wet with fresh chimichurri and smoked tomato aioli, then topped with melted aged provolone, grilled peppers, onions, and gremolata (parsley, garlic, lemon zest). Order two, or be prepared to fight. —Troy Johnson

Valentina

Pan Tomaquet

Pintxos are Basque-country bar snacks, finger foods for Real Sociedad games. The appropriate utensils are a couple of fingers and a toothpick. But Valentina’s in Leucadia are done with just enough culinary school ambition (not too much, fuss has no place in pintxos) from exec chef Enrique Ñol, who worked at the estimable Wrench & Rodent.

Its tomaquet (tomato bread) could be underestimated as a stacked pile of quality ingredients, but it’s undeniably great—toasted pan de cristal (light, airy, Catalan “glass bread”) dressed with tomato, garlic, salt, EVOO, and a layer of one of the world’s greatest meats: Cinco Jotas Iberian jamón. Eat it with a minor winefall of porrón, and ask for Todd—a certified sommelier and one of the most knowledgeable food minds in the local scene. —Troy Johnson

Ironside Fish & Oyster

Whole Fish

Get the whole fish. Doesn’t matter the catch, just trust that chef Jason McLeod’s got you. When CH Projects opened Ironside in Little Italy in 2014, the restaurant group took over the old Farkas furniture store and turned it into a replica of an ocean liner, tapping McLeod (a chef who’d earned two Michelin stars in Chicago) to oversee its menus.

It quickly became a San Diego staple for seafood. After leaving for a few years to help concept and launch some big-name restaurants in Vegas, McLeod is back again getting his hands dirty in the kitchen. And his fish? They come in fresh from local fishermen who he’s established relationships with over the years. So yeah, get the whole damn thing. —Nicolle Monico

Steady State Roasting

Indian Summer

I have a running spreadsheet of chai rankings in Carlsbad. The chai that stays on the highest shelf? Steady State’s gingery, nutmeggy Indian Summer with an almond milk base and fresh nutmeg shavings on top. Juiced ginger gives the drink deeper, warmer notes, but not so much spice that your throat closes on the first sip.

Too often, coffee shops advertise authentic chai, then uncork that carton of sugar-bomb concentrate from an artisanal wholesaler called Costco. This is the real deal; it’s mildly sweet, a little more spicy, and in my opinion, best served hot. If I could order a keg of it, I would. (Can I?) —Emma Veidt

Beer JULY 14, 2026

Award-Winning Ocean Beach Brewery For Sale

What's next for the 10-year-old award-winning destination? Owner Mike Tajran hopes to hand the reins to a local up-and-comer

Award-Winning Ocean Beach Brewery For Sale
Courtesy of OB Brewery

After 10 years of rooftop dining and brewing award-winning beers, OB Brewery is for sale. A local fixture on Newport Avenue, OB Brewery owner Mike Tajran is ready to retire and hand over the reins. “It’s got so much potential,” he says, pointing to the accolades the brewpub has collected throughout the last decade (it’s more than a few).

At the 2017 Great American Beer Festival, OB’s Hidden Gem Dunkelweizen won silver in the German-Style Wheat Ale category, followed by a World Beer Cup silver medal as a South German-Style Dunkel Weizen in 2026. In 2018, GABF named OB Brewery Small Brewpub of the Year, brewer Jim Millea earned Small Brewpub Brewer of the Year, and the B. Right On pale ale nabbed a gold medal in the American-Style Pale Ale category. The Elevator Red IPA also took bronze that year at the San Diego International Beer Festival, and earlier this year, they won gold for Couple’s Therapy chili beer and silver for Rauch Me smoked beer at San Diego County Fair Craft Brew Competition.

It’s a solid foundation for the right buyer, he says—someone with brewing and business chops ready for a turnkey operation in a favorable location a block from the beach on Ocean Beach’s busiest street. (And while he’s letting go of the brewpub business, he’s also open to selling the building as part of the deal.)

Originally from Iraq, Tajran’s family ran restaurants in Baghdad, but “they were decimated by Saddam Hussein,” he explains. Once in the United States, he launched Giant New York Pizza at 5050 Newport Avenue in 1984, which eventually became Newport Pizza & Ale House. Newport Pizza felt long ahead of its time, proudly proclaiming they served “no crap on tap” years before the craft beer craze caught fire in San Diego. 

Courtesy of OB Brewery

When the building’s owners passed away and their son cut his lease short in 2020, Tajran says he was disappointed, but he had a nagging feeling that would happen eventually—which is why he already purchased 5041 Newport Avenue back in 2009 and opened Ocean Beach Brewery in 2016.

“For 42 years, I have been in this location in this area, the same block,” he says with pride. Ocean Beach has gone through some changes since 1984 (the OB farmers market launched in 1992, Starbucks came in 2001 and left in 2022, ADUs crept in, and the iconic OB Pier closed in 2023), but Tajran says the heart of the beachside town has remained the same. 

So has most of his staff. Millea has been brewing since day one, and longtime manager Megan Schuster has worked for Tajran for 19 years, first at Newport, then at OB Brewery. Most of the employees are locals, and Tajran says he doesn’t plan on closing the business until he finds the right buyer to carry on the baton. 

The property itself comes with some unique features for the area—three stories with a rooftop deck and ocean views from every level. And if you’re wondering if those uninterrupted views will remain that way, Tajran assures me they will. Part of his original building purchase included language that prohibits the three buildings between him and the ocean from building up. He also leases space next door, which would allow a new owner to expand brewing capacity with more tanks and fermenters. 

“I just wanted to make sure this goes in good hands,” he says. He and his wife both hope to retire soon in order to spend time with their children. But he’ll make sure his other baby is taken care of first. 

“I love Ocean Beach,” he says. “I can say nothing but thank you, OB.”

OB Brewery is still open at 5041 Newport Avenue. Hours are Sunday through Thursday, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Friday, 11 a.m. to 10 p.m.; and Saturday, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Interested parties should contact Next Wave Commercial.

San Diego Restaurant News & Food Events

Beth’s Bites

  • Along the same vein of iconic businesses, Tribute Pizza is celebrating 10 years in North Park this week with different events every night. Good luck getting a reservation if you haven’t already, but you can still take part in the silent auction on behalf of Feeding San Diego. Owner Matt Lyons’ goal is to raise $100,000 for the nonprofit and is offering some pretty sweet stuff to do so—think a full weekend buyout of Tribute, a private event with Lyons and chef Travis Swikard of Callie and Fleurette, a year of access to a VIP hotline for reservations, and even more. Time is ticking away on your chance to bid, so be sure to make your best offer before time runs out.
  • La Corriente continues its expansion across San Diego with lucky number three coming to Oceanside. Located next to Tanner’s Prime Burgers and PopUp Bagels, a restaurant rep says that at the rate the restaurant is opening new spaces, it wouldn’t be wild to see a few more pop up along the coast in the future. 
  • Kitchens for Good has big plans on the horizon, including their sprawling new Culinary Impact Center coming to Bankers Hill next year. Now, it should be a bit easier to accomplish their (many) goals with the help of a $50,000 grant from the Jacques Pépin Foundation. Kitchens for Good is one of four awardees this year and will receive the funds over the next two years, allowing them to launch their Market Cafe initiative in the new center and continue their mission of hospitality training programs and ending food insecurity across the city. It’s a pretty awesome award, given by a pretty awesome group to another pretty awesome group, so it’s just mega-awesome all the way around. 

Listen Now: The Latest in San Diego’s Food and Drink Scene

Have breaking news, exciting scoops, or great stories about new San Diego restaurants or the city’s food scene? Send your pitches to [email protected].

Beth Demmon

About Beth Demmon

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.

Studio S JULY 17, 2026

NOW CFO: Specialized Financial Solutions for San Diego Businesses

NOW CFO provides scalable, on-demand accounting and finance support to companies ranging from pre-revenue startups to billion-dollar businesses

NOW CFO: Specialized Financial Solutions for San Diego Businesses

Entrepreneurs typically launch businesses because they’re passionate about a product or service, not because they want to manage its finances. While working to carve out a niche in their respective industries and drive their companies forward, many business owners find themselves bogged down by day-to-day accounting. Their existing accounting tools don’t provide the necessary visibility or insight, and they don’t have the time or resources to hire additional staff or a chief financial officer. That’s where NOW CFO comes in. 

For more than 20 years, NOW CFO has been pairing businesses across the country with experienced accounting and finance professionals. Its outsourced model allows clients to customize solutions that match their individual needs, size, and financial challenges, whether that’s fractional or interim support, project-based services, or full-time placement. 

NOW CFO’s clients range from startups preparing for rapid growth to established companies that need additional financial leadership without the commitment or expense of building an in-house team. However, many of these companies don’t fully understand their needs until they experience a “trigger” event: preparing for an acquisition or capital raise, navigating a first-time audit, or another period of transition. With a team of over 300 consultants nationwide, NOW CFO can start quickly and match the right expert to the right business. 

“It’s important for companies to have financial visibility, and we can help them avoid a lot of the potholes that companies often run into,” says Mariah Block, a partner at NOW CFO’s San Diego branch. “Roughly half of our clients have an in-house finance person or department, and we’re resourced for more bandwidth when they need an extra set of hands at the staff or senior accountant level, or the controller or CFO level. Some clients use this a few hours a month and others use multiple people close to full-time. Our model is solution-based and customizable. We’re like a faucet you can turn on and off.” 

With NOW CFO, there’s no one-size-fits-all approach. Solutions are based on the client’s individual goals, challenges, needs, and budget, meaning a client never pays for more than they need. Whether it’s a few hours of executive-level guidance or a full accounting team to support daily operations, NOW CFO meets businesses where they are and grows alongside them. 

“We pride ourselves on providing our clients with the right resources at the right rate and being able to evolve as their needs evolve,” says Block. 

And clients appreciate on-demand access to cost-effective support designed to improve performance and profitability.

Luxury car storage service Auto Concierge has partnered with NOW CFO to support growth over the past year. The arrangement began with a staff accountant who covered a leave of absence, but as the client’s needs changed, they also added a controller role. This allowed Auto Concierge to put effective processes in place and navigate operational challenges. Lori Church, Auto Concierge’s chief operating officer, says NOW CFO has been an “outstanding resource” and a “true strategic partner.” 

“From the controller to the bookkeeper, every professional they’ve placed has brought a high level of expertise, responsiveness, and professionalism to our organization. Their team took the time to understand our business of high-profile clients and needs, adapted quickly to our fast-paced environment, and became a trusted extension of our team,” she says. “As Auto Concierge continues to grow, having a reliable financial partner like NOW CFO has allowed us to strengthen our financial and business operations while remaining focused on delivering exceptional service to our clients.” 

Partner Content
Food & Drink JULY 14, 2026

Cellar Hand Is Closing as Pali Wine Co. Moves to Hillcrest

The acclaimed restaurant will shutter after two years, while the family's Little Italy tasting room relocates to the University Avenue space

Cellar Hand Is Closing as Pali Wine Co. Moves to Hillcrest
Photo Credit: Kimberly Motos

San Diego has lost a number of ambitious concepts lately—Vulture and Dreamboat in University Heights, Wildflour Delicatessen in Liberty Station, Deckman’s in North Park, Matsu in Oceanside. All have different reasons for closing (some outgrew their space, some overshot their costs), but none of them suffered for quality. Ditto for the next casualty. On July 19, Cellar Hand in Hillcrest will close its doors. 

Unlike the other closures, there’s actually a silver lining. The Perr family, who owns both Cellar Hand and Pali Wine Co., announced they will relocate Pali’s tasting room from Little Italy to take over the vacated Cellar Hand space.

Cellar Hand opened just over two years ago with a promise to source 100 percent of their produce locally. Ambitious, but admirable. Logan Kendall, the original executive chef, launched with a menu centered around lots of funky fermentation, tinned fish preserved in-house, a bevy of fun dips like labneh and whipped tahini, and a ridiculously fantastic pork chop from Thompson Heritage Farms. Wine Enthusiast named the 120-seat eatery one of the top 50 wine-focused restaurants in the country in 2025—not a shock, considering the mega wine chops behind the project. 

Following Kendall’s tenure, chefs Ashley McBrady and then Sable-Tanya Wentwoord took over the reins, keeping things rolling with expanded brunch offerings, chef’s dinners, and all the usual accoutrements of a hyped spot. Before joining the Pali Wine/Cellar Hand team, Wentwoord worked and staged at multiple James Beard Award–recognized and Michelin-starred restaurants in Boulder, Colorado (Frasca Food and Wine); San Francisco, CA (Coi, Che Fico); Providence, Rhode Island (Persimmon); and Fredericksburg, Tex. (Southold Farm + Cellar). She will continue to head the food program at Pali Wine Co. 

Bad luck or bad timing, the reasons behind closing Cellar Hand don’t really matter. But I, for one, will really miss that pork chop.

Photo Credit: Kimberly Motos

Still, Cellar Hand’s loss is Pali Wine Co.’s gain, or at least a small balm on the sting of closure. The tasting room in Little Italy opened 10 years ago, bringing its Central Coast wine and vibes to an area smack in the middle of a craft beer boom. When it came time to renew the lease, the Perrs say the landlord did the landlord-y thing and tried to nearly double the rent. (Tale as old as time—just ask Wildwood Flour.) 

Rather than suffer a double-whammy, the Perr family instead decided to shift their focus (and finances) to the heart of their businesses: wine. And despite losing a very cool rooftop patio in one sizzling hot neighborhood, they are gaining a pretty prime spot in a different sizzling hot neighborhood with a not-too-shabby patio of its own accord. (One more silver lining: no more jet noise from the airport!)

By moving Pali Wine Co. to where Cellar Hand used to be, they could at least keep a toehold in San Diego, says Nick Perr, managing partner. His family has made wine in Santa Barbara county for over two decades, with 10 of those years in the San Diego market—an investment they refused to lose. “That’s why it’s impossible to separate our winery from our San Diego community,” he explains, adding that the new location will allow Pali Wine Co. to offer programming designed around the nearby Hillcrest farmers market.

Guests can expect the same wine selection, wine club perks, private tastings, and similar food offerings Pali Wine Co. offers in Little Italy to transfer to Hillcrest. And maybe, if we’re lucky, they’ll bring back the pork chop (please?) 

“We are extremely proud of what we accomplished at Cellar Hand,” said Perr in a statement. “Running an independent restaurant with real values is hard, and we gave it everything we had.”

Cellar Hand will permanently close on July 19. Pali Wine Co. will cease operations at 2130 India Street on July 19 and will move to 1440 University Avenue.

Pali’s new location in Hillcrest will soft open on August 12 with a grand opening on August 22. Operating hours will be Wednesday through Friday, 2 p.m. to 10 p.m.; Saturday, noon to 10 p.m.; and Sunday, noon to 9 p.m. Happy hour will run Wednesday through Sunday (hours to be determined).

Beth Demmon

About Beth Demmon

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.

Food & Drink JULY 10, 2026

San Diego’s Tiniest Cookbook Shop Is Hidden Inside a Garage

Patine packs new and used cookbooks, hard-to-find ingredients, and fresh-baked goods into a one-car garage—and a much bigger storefront is coming soon

San Diego’s Tiniest Cookbook Shop Is Hidden Inside a Garage
Courtesy of Patine

There are two types of people: those whose cookbooks remain clean and crisp, and those whose cookbooks are dog-eared, stained with flecks of oil and butter, and graffitied with handwritten notes scrawled on each page. 

Courtney Geilenfeldt falls in the second group. Sure, it’s easy to go to TikTok or Instagram to figure out what to cook on any given day. “But there’s something about a physical, analog book, where you can see the photos and get pasta sauce splattered on it,” she says. “I just have always loved that.” 

In the spirit of sharing that love, earlier this year Geilenfeldt opened Patine, a cookbook micro-shop and grocery with an itty-bitty selection of curated goods. And when I say micro-shop, I mean it literally—she runs it out of her one-car garage in University Heights that’s too small to even fit her car.

What she lacks in square footage, she makes up for with unique offerings. “If I know that there’s this very specific ingredient in a cookbook that I’ve had to hunt down, then I will try to have that in the shop to just make it a little bit easier,” explains Geilenfeldt. Patine’s shelves are lined with items like specialty beans, a handful of wines, and fresh baked goods like loaves of sourdough, but the main attraction is her collection of new and used cookbooks on cuisines ranging from the Caribbean to Japan. 

Her garage shop is only a placeholder. Later this year, Patine will open as a brick-and-mortar on Fifth Avenue and Nutmeg Street in Bankers Hill, across from Heavenly Bodega. That space will be “much, much bigger,” she promises, with an expanded selection of books and goods, plus space for cooking classes, author events, book club meetings, and other events. 

The educational-plus-retail approach is something she missed from her years in Seattle, where bookshops like Book Larder have been combining the two since 2011. Although Geilenfeldt is a San Diego native, the Pacific Northwest is where she really began to cut her teeth in the world of professional baking. From there, she bakery-bopped to Germany, where she learned the art of European-style baking and embraced the more methodical, slowed-down culture. 

“‘Patine’ is the French word for patina,” she explains. Items only acquire patina, or a polished look of something well-used and cared for, over years. It’s not something you can fake or make new, and it was the idea that inspires her in both baking and business. 

That’s not to say Geilenfeldt doesn’t create new things. Actually, quite the opposite—she’s launched a micro-bakery cottage food business, hosted a supper club series, worked as a recipe writer, food stylist, private chef, pop-up host, book club host, and pretty much every other food-related entrepreneurial route you can think of. And if everything falls into place, Patine’s future storefront will open in August or early fall, bringing people together for the love of food and each other.

Patine’s micro-store currently operates at 4673 Alabama Street in University Heights. Check Instagram for current hours of operation. 

Courtesy of Nobu del Coronado

San Diego Restaurant News & Food Events

Beth’s Bites

  • Neptune may be the tempestuous god of water, but even his famously volatile temper can be soothed with a plate of fresh sushi. (I’m just guessing, I’ve never spoken to him personally.) His namesake restaurant, Neptune Sushi, opens this summer (or maybe fall, you really never know) at 3015 Adams Avenue in the former Tajima space. One of Neptune’s partners, Michael Harrison, says guests can expect a modern interpretation of temaki-style hand rolls with locally caught fish, utilizing influences from Asia and Latin America alongside San Diego. The team isn’t ready to announce many details yet, but the 1,500-square-foot space fits around 60 guests and Harrison says there will be table seating, plus multiple sushi bars. “We do have plans to expand the Neptune concept in the future,” he says, so may the gods be with them.
  • At long last, New Wave Bagel is ready to serve its signature bagels alongside breakfast and lunch sandwiches, open-face toasts, pastries, and full espresso bar starting on Saturday, July 18. Baker and co-owner Cheryl Storms says they’ll finally be able to fulfill one long-requested update: toasting bagels. “We’ve gotten a lot of flack for not being able to toast bagels this whole time,” she says. (It’s a pop-up! There are limits!) “On the 18th, that changes—we will be able to toast all bagels all the time.” New Wave will be open Wednesday through Sunday from 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. with Tuesdays coming soon. 
  • If you can’t wait for Neptune, there’s always Nobu. Nobu del Coronado is one of the best-known upscale sushi chains in the world, and now, you can get a bento box full of goodies for $70. Grab a Summer Bento Box Lunch special between noon and 3 p.m. daily and get a Matsuhisa salad, three pieces of tuna, chef’s choice for three pieces each of uramaki and nigiri, rock shrimp tempura, and the iconic miso black cod, plus steamed rice and vegetables tossed in a spicy garlic sauce. Considering the black cod miso dinner portion costs $65 by itself, this is legitimately a pretty good deal (IMHO). Plus, those Coronado views!

Listen Now: The Latest in San Diego’s Food and Drink Scene

Have breaking news, exciting scoops, or great stories about new San Diego restaurants or the city’s food scene? Send your pitches to [email protected].

Beth Demmon

About Beth Demmon

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.

Partner Content JULY 10, 2026

Health & Wellness Summer 2026

It’s a Self-Care Summer. Because your best self is our favorite self.

Health & Wellness Summer 2026

If you’re anything like us, it can be easy to get so caught up in taking care of everyone else, that your own needs get lost in the ether. But while this may be a cliché, that doesn’t make it any less true: You can’t give your best self to other people unless you’re taking care of yourself.

Sometimes, that looks like stopping in for your regular acupuncture or chiropractic appointment. Other days, it means giving your body the fresh, organic fuel it needs to truly feel and function at its best. And some other times still, it involves leaving your responsibilities behind for a weekend to pamper yourself at an incredible resort and spa.

Only you can decide what your truly need. We’re just here to help you find the best ways to get it.

Tommy Bahama Miramonte Resort & Spa

Island living meets desert luxury at the Tommy Bahama Miramonte Resort & Spa in Indian Wells. When you step onto the 11-acre property, you’ll be surrounded by sweeping view of the Santa Rosa Mountains with olive trees and fragrant citrus groves decorating the grounds. In other words, everything about this relaxed but refined resort is primed to help you let go of the stress from home and enjoy easy sun-soaked days and gorgeous starry nights.

The rooms blend calming, woven textures with Tommy Bahama’s signature tropical prints and feature private lanais, making it easy unwind the moment you walk in the door. If you book one of the four Villa Suites, you’ll be treated to exclusive Tommy Bahama furniture and unique personal touches to further that feeling of instant ease.

At the award-winning Spa Rosa, the expert team will help reset and recharge your body and mind using methods and rituals inspired by the desert. The 12,000-square-foot retreat includes outdoor soaking pools, eucalyptus steam rooms, and outdoor cabanas, as well as massages, facials, and body masks—all aimed at creating a day dedicated to you. We’re particularly partial to the Day Long Escape, an indulgent all-day affair of CDBs soaks, renewing scrubs, life changing massages, and transformative facials.

Following your treatment, continue the experience with a meal on the patio at Grapefruit Basil. We love the Hamachi Crudo, a light, citrus-forward dish featuring premium yellowtail, house-made ponzu, creamy avocado, and fresh seasonal garnishes.

Whether you’re strolling the gardens, relaxing beside its saltwater pools, or indulging in a restorative treatment, you’ll be able to escape in style and relax in luxury at the Tommy Bahama Miramonte Resort & Spa.

Healcove Chiropractic

There’s no shortage of ways to stay active in San Diego—but if you really want to enjoy everything the city has to offer, you’ve got to make sure you’re giving your body its tune-ups. Enter: Healcove Chiropractic. The board-certified chiropractors and wellness professionals at Healcove are experts at addressing that stage where you’re not injured, exactly, but you’re not at 100%, either. Maybe you’re feeling a bit tense or stressed out. Or it could be that you’re not quite moving the way you want to. Sometimes, it’s just that the accumulation of days, weeks, or even years of daily strain is starting to take a toll. No matter what stage you find yourself at, the Healcove Chiropractic team can provide integrated, preventative care centered on long-term, science-backed approaches that ensure you can always stay active and live the life you want to live pain-free.

This starts by providing truly individualized care. Every patient can expect a thorough 60-minute consultation session that includes a posture and movement screening. This allows the team to develop a completely personalized plan. That plan might include chiropractic care, acupuncture, or massage therapy, as well as functional fitness training, vibration and sound therapy, and Dynamic Neuromuscular Stabilization, a clinical rehabilitation method that retrains the body’s stabilization systems. Whatever the team recommends, you can be sure that it’s tailored to meeting your body’s needs today and the future.

There’s a reason that San Diego Magazine named Healcove the “Best Chiropractor in San Diego”—don’t wait until you’re struggling with an injury to find out why. Book an appointment today for holistic, integrated care that helps ground and heal your body before it reaches a crisis point. 

Juice Holler

West Coast wellness culture meets the community feel of Southern Appalachia at Juice Holler. Juice Holler’s menu consists of made-to-order smoothies and smoothie bowls, as well as grab-and-go cold-pressed juices, wellness shots, salads, and more. It operates from the blissfully simple premise that fueling up with food and drink that’s guilt-free and good your body should be simple, accessible, and, above all else, delicious. And if you haven’t yet made it out to the Encinitas café, which opened just this year, let us be the first to tell you: Juice Holler delivers on each and every of these fronts.

We love the Supercharger smoothie, a mood-lifting and body-fueling option made with banana, almond butter, blue spirulina, maca, grass-fed whey protein, raw cacao nibs, medjool dates, and coconut milk. We’re also partial to the Thrive Alive smoothie bowl, where avocado, mango, sea moss, spirulina, mint, coconut milk, and agave are mixed and topped with coconut, chia seeds, strawberry, mango, and chocolate drizzle. The wellness shots include the Detoxifier, a cleansing blend of kale, cucumber, lemon and spirulina, plus a shot specially designed to fight inflammation (named, fittingly, Anti-Inflammation). Probiotic overnight oats, lemon turmeric bars, and strawberry shortcake chia pudding are other standouts on the grab-and-go menu.

Much of the vibe feels beachy North County chic—think green tile with orange and pink accents, grounded with greenery and natural wood—but Juice Holler founder Kelly Sergott, a longtime Encinitas local, has also enfused the space with her Kentucky roots. In Appalachia, a holler is small valley between hills and mountains, where nature reigns, community is king, and nourishment comes right from the land. At Juice Holler, Sergott has created a holler for the busy modern times, using local ingredients to create a spot for people to come together and enjoy fresh, fast, feel-good fuel for their day.

Everwell Acupuncture

We’ve all had that experience with a medical professional where we’ve felt rushed, ignored, or misunderstood—and ultimately, like we didn’t get the answers that we needed. But at Everwell, the holistic acupuncture practice located in Solana Beach, the care team wants to transform your understanding of what healthcare can look like.

Patients at Everwell experience care rooted in intentional listening and radical empathy—and trust us, those aren’t just corporate buzzwords. This place actually puts those ideas into practice. You will always be given the time you need to tell your story— initial in-take appointments are two hours long—and you can rest assured that your story will be believed. Every single question and concern will be addressed by a dedicated practitioner who wants to find the specific solutions that work best for you, and you’ll receive care that’s aimed at healing the body, mind, and spirit.

Everwell’s highly trained, doctorate-level practitioners blend evidence-based acupuncture with the practice of classical Chinese medicine. (If you’ve never tried acupuncture before or aren’t sure if the team will be a fit, we’d highly recommended Everwell’s complimentary 20-minute consultations.) Research shows that by stimulating specific points on the body, acupuncture activates a natural healing response in the body, helping to restore balance, regulate the nervous system, and improve overall wellbeing. This allows the practice to address an incredibly wide range of conditions from chronic pain and autoimmune disorders to digestive issues, from stress and burnout to headaches migraines, fertility and postpartum struggles, hormonal imbalances, sleep concerns and more.

At Everwell, you can expect to feel heard, trusted, respected, and cared for. This is a space that doesn’t want to be just another healthcare provider you visit; it wants to provide patients with dedicated partner who will be there for their entire health journey.

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