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Some of the best beaches, wine regions, and natural landscapes are just a short drive or plane ride away from San Diego
Choose Your Adventure:
Water | Nature | City | Foodie | Family | Desert
Weekend Getaways: 23 Reasons to Get out of Town
Chileno Bay Resort & Residences
Cabo San Lucas, Mexico
This year-old resort is modern, sexy, and sleek. But it’s not just about cool cocktails and the taco bar by the beach. It’s a water wonderland. Start at the three-tiered infinity-edge pool, a 150-yard stretch that’s separated into kid, family, and adult segments, with plenty of cabanas along the sides. If you’re craving a drink, a bartender is in the pool (not by the pool—in the pool) every afternoon with a floating bar.
A comprehensive water sports center, called the H2O Cave, is carved into a bluff and loaded with complimentary equipment for stand-up paddleboarding, snorkeling, and over-water biking. They can also arrange sunrise paddleboard yoga and kayak tours.
Once you’re ready to get on dry land again, check out the 18-hole championship golf course, or fitness classes like Reformer Pilates and TRX that rival those at boutique studios. At the spa, save time before your treatment for the salt inhalation room, aromatherapy steam room, and hydrotherapy pool. Your little ones won’t mind if you take a little “me time”; they can run wild at the Pescaditos Kids Club, a babysitter-equipped facility with an aquarium, painting station, and cooking classes.
Even with all these attractions, we won’t judge you if you stay put in your room. They’re spacious— 885 square feet in all 60 guest rooms, or up to 11,000 in the 32 villas—and all have floor-to-ceiling windows, private balconies, soaking tubs, and outdoor showers.
From $675; Travel time: 2 hours by plane
Catalina Island, California
It’s the quickest way to get to the Italian Riviera—or a look-alike 26 miles off the coast of Dana Point. Start your getaway at this hotel’s lush courtyard with breakfast in the morning or wine when the sun goes down. The new Catalina Aerial Adventure is a ropes course with five trails of balance beams and zip lines suspended over a canyon. On the other side of the island in Two Harbors, settle into a palapa at the revamped Harbor Sands resort.
From $191; Travel time: 1 hour by car + 1 hour by boat
Weekend Getaways: 23 Reasons to Get out of Town
Pavilion Hotel
Maui, Hawaii
The most oceanfront of all Maui luxury resorts just got a $100 million facelift, which includes a new playground for the little ones. Wailea’s Nalu Adventure Pool has a 325-foot waterslide, splash zones, and a food truck serving poke and shaved ice. Or hop into four other pools on the property, like the adults-only Maluhia with plush cabanas or two new oceanfront infinity edge options. Other notable revamps include a kids’ club and a restaurant from celebrity chef Roy Yamaguchi.
From $519; Travel time: 6 hours by plane
Newport Beach, California
Beyond three outdoor pools, a splash pad, and a waterslide, the hotel also offers water guns and beach kit rentals with a pail, shovel, and other toys. It’s a five-minute walk to Back Bay for kayaking, stand-up paddleboarding, and even bird-watching—it’s one of the top spots in the country to spot peregrine falcons. Or hit the Back Bay Loop Trail, a 10.5-mile path for walkers and cyclists.
From $199; Travel time: 1.5 hours by car
Weekend Getaways: 23 Reasons to Get out of Town
Sunrise Springs
Santa Fe, New Mexico
True, after landing in Albuquerque, you have to drive an hour to get to Santa Fe. But once you check into Sunrise Springs, you’ll be sequestered in high desert serenity. It’s basically summer camp for health-minded grown-ups: You make kombucha, cook with ancestral ingredients, navigate your chakras, cleanse in the sweat lodge, paint, meditate, do yoga, and garden. But for the mic drop of healing, sign up for Animal Interactions, where you literally play with puppies—from teaching them basic commands and preparing future assistance dogs for duty to taking them through agility courses. (Or just rubbing their bellies.)
Even walking around the property’s 70 verdant acres is therapeutic. There are trails, gardens, a saltwater pool, 32 garden-view rooms, and 20 higher-end casitas each with a private courtyard and gas fireplace. All accommodations are minimally furnished with Native American textiles and can be booked à la carte or lumped into themed packages, like a girlfriend getaway or couple’s retreat.
The spa menu is appropriately luxe—there’s the Kokopelli Prenatal Massage, named after a Native American god of fertility, a cannabidiol oil (CBD) treatment, and a blue corn and prickly pear salt scrub to slough off all the dryness. There’s also an integrative doctor on site who hosts one-on-one tea talks with guests ($79 for 25 minutes). She can talk wellness goals, diagnose sleep issues, and more.
From $205; Travel time: 1.5 hours by plane + 1 hour by car
Park City, Utah
Just 1.5 miles from downtown, this skiers-only resort (sorry, snowboarders) still feels like a quiet retreat. There’s a cap on the number of daily tickets, so slopes typically aren’t crowded. All the better to enjoy the exclusive ski-in and ski-out access on the well-groomed terrain, which has beginner, intermediate, and expert tracks. They’ve launched new packages, including a bobsledding experience with Olympians and a group ski excursion with Paralympic Hall of Fame skier Chris Waddell.
From $699; Travel time: 2 hours by plane
Weekend Getaways: 23 Reasons to Get out of Town
St. Regis Deer Valley
Big Sur, California
This New Age sanctuary may have clean, summer-camp-like digs, but they’re known for their transcendent workshops. This month the roundup includes “The Path to Forgiveness,” “Creating Mindful Sexual Experiences,” and “The Craft and Art of Effective Memoir Writing.” There’s Wi-Fi at the lodge, though it’s turned off during mealtimes, and there’s no cell service. You won’t miss it when you’re soaking in the cliffside sulfur springs.
From $420 for a sleeping bag during weekends to $900 for a double-accommodation house for weeklong sessions; Travel time: 9 hours by car or 1.5 hours by plane + 1 hour by car
Mendocino, California
There’s the Pacific to the west, redwoods to the east, and wildflowers everywhere in between. At this two-year-old resort located on a private 2,000-acre preserve, you can hike 20 miles of trails, soak in a hot tub atop a water tower, and feast on organic meals. There are also cute shops and wine tastings in town. It’s ideal in the spring, when the whales are migrating close to the coast and the summer crowds have yet to descend.
From $350; Travel time: 2 hours by plane + 2.5 hours by car
Weekend Getaways: 23 Reasons to Get out of Town
Proper Hotel
San Francisco, California
Leave it to designer Kelly Wearstler to create an Elle Decor–worthy hotel. Open since September, the Beaux-Arts-style property set in a flatiron building has all the detail and color you’d expect from the award-winning Wearstler. It also has a trendy address in the Tenderloin, a neighborhood in the midst of renewal. (As with any emerging part of town, expect some sketch alongside the progressive development.)
The lobby feels like your cool friend’s living room, with local artwork and midcentury modern furniture. What the 131 rooms lack in size (this is San Francisco, after all) they make up for with style—think urban sophistication meets Old World grandeur. We don’t condone stealing, but there are Aesop products in the bathroom, so save space in your suitcase.
Villon, the ground-floor restaurant led by James Beard–nominated chef Jason Franey (ex–Eleven Madison Park), serves avocado toast for breakfast, falafel and foie gras torchon for lunch, and a $120 ribeye for dinner, plus a cocktail menu that’s 49 drinks deep. The restaurant is sometimes flooded with locals, but you can head to Charmaine’s, the open-air garden rooftop where hotel guests have priority access. Cheers to that.
From $400; Travel time: 8.5 hours by car or 1.5 hours by plane
Weekend Getaways: 23 Reasons to Get out of Town
Germantown Inn
Nashville, Tennessee
Opened in December 2016 a half mile from downtown, this boutique getaway in a historic 1865 building was once the home of Nashville’s most famous shoemaker. Now it has six rooms, a courtyard, a private rooftop, and funky design. Each suite is named after and takes design inspiration from a former US president. For instance, The Jefferson contains a swivel chair, one of that president’s inventions, and is geared toward the business traveler.
From $249; Travel time: 3.5 hours by plane
West Hollywood, California
LA can be a day trip, but we recommend an overnight bag for this one. Kimpton’s newest has 105 rooms, a panoramic rooftop, and in-room bottle service. And just when you thought no one walks in LA, it’s a short stroll to Verve Coffee Roasters, upscale vegan Mexican at Gracias Madre, and Au Fudge, a kid-friendly restaurant stylish parents can get behind.
From $450; Travel time: 2.5 hours by car
Seattle, Washington
Originally called Roosevelt Hotel and built in 1929, the art deco Theodore is a revamped take on the downtown landmark. On display are photos, drawings, and artifacts like Amazon’s first Kindle, curated in collaboration with the city’s Museum of History & Industry. Each room comes with a pair of rain jackets because, well, Seattle.
From $165; Travel time: 3 hours by plane
Weekend Getaways: 23 Reasons to Get out of Town
Bruma
Valle de Guadalupe, Mexico
One of the West Coast’s most exciting wine regions is just a hop, skip, and jump across the border. Valle de Guadalupe, two hours south of downtown, touts over 150 wineries pouring mostly red blends, and the restaurants and hotels are now commanding just as much attention.
One of the buzziest is Bruma, an inn started by eight childhood friends. Last May it opened its own restaurant, Fauna, which is decked out in communal tables, floor-to-ceiling windows, and an open kitchen led by chef David Castro Hussong, who previously worked at Noma in Copenhagen and New York’s Eleven Madison Park. The seafood-heavy menu—you can order à la carte or prix fixe—has modern riffs on traditional ingredients, like nopales tostadas, asparagus-seaweed gazpacho, and duck sopes. There’s wine, beer, cocktails, and mezcal, or you can head next door to their winery. It’s a showstopper designed by famed Mexican architect Alejandro D’Acosta, with a 300-year-old oak tree at its center and a recycled tree trunk that doubles as a bar table.
D’Acosta designed the accommodations, too. Dubbed Casa Ocho, the eight rooms incorporate Valle’s natural environment, with live-edge wood furniture, bedrooms built into boulders, and large windows that let in natural light. The common areas include a pool and a lobby with an honor-system bar.
Next for 2018? An equestrian club, spa, wine cellar, and mountainside villas.
From $295; Travel time: 2 hours by car
Healdsburg, California
After last fall’s wildfires devastated the area, it’s your oenophilic duty to support the wine region’s local economy. And at this five-acre property, it’s not just farm-to-table; it’s outside-your-window-to-table, with orchards, greenhouses, olive trees, beehives, and chicken coops on site. There are five rooms; breakfast for two is included, and dinner here is an 11-course extravaganza. Pack stretchy pants.
From $800; Travel time: 2 hours by plane
Weekend Getaways: 23 Reasons to Get out of Town
SingleThread Farms
Los Alamos, California
Forty-five minutes north of Santa Barbara, this hipster lodge from the team behind Ojai Rancho Inn has 21 rooms with a charming wine bar and a picnic-friendly communal area where guests often convene at night. It’s also a short walk or drive to Los Alamos’s burgeoning food scene. Sip biodynamic wines at Martian Ranch & Vineyard, dig into artisanal loaves at Bob’s Well Bread Bakery, and try the seasonal menu at Full of Life Flatbread.
From $119; Travel time: 5 hours by car
Cabo San Lucas, Mexico
With five excellent restaurants on site—one led by two-star Michelin chef Sidney Schutte—this resort takes all-inclusive to the next level. The luxury chain’s newest venture, situated on the coast just north of Cabo San Lucas, prides itself on being able to accommodate any dietary restriction without compromising culinary quality. Bring your vegan and gluten-averse friends.
From $548; Travel time: 2 hours by plane
Weekend Getaways: 23 Reasons to Get out of Town
Graduate Tempe
Tempe, Arizona
Unless you went to college in a big city, a revisit to your alma mater usually means staying at a nondescript chain hotel. That’s what Graduate Hotels wanted to change when they launched in 2014. Their niche is creating cool, quirky boutique properties in college towns geared toward students, families, and alumni. Think millennial-cool versus Marriott.
Each location honors the town’s history, culture, and ties to its university. Graduate Tempe, the brand’s inaugural property, pays tribute to Arizona State’s impressive life sciences and human origins work. There’s a digital print of Darwin’s Origin of Species in the lobby, Native American pieces sourced by the university’s art department, and a large-scale ant farm created in partnership with ASU’s Social Insect Research Group.
You’ll find Southwestern-appropriate oranges, pinks, reds, and yellows, along with a retro diner and a poolside Mexican cantina. There are 141 rooms, all with patios facing either the campus or the neighborhood (for a quieter stay), and interior design that’s bold and colorful. Perks include free bike rentals and a shuttle into town, and there’s no room charge for four-legged friends. In fact, your pup will get a complimentary BarkBox gift package as well as a bowl and blanket for the stay.
From $129; Travel time: 5.5 hours by car or 1 hour by plane
Cambria, California
This low-key getaway is set on Moonstone Beach, a relatively untouched area two hours north of Santa Barbara with tide pools, a boardwalk, and water sports. There are also Linus Bike rentals at the hotel, and it’s a short drive to Hearst Castle and other landmarks. Don’t miss a visit to Piedras Blancas, a protected beach that’s home to a rookery of elephant seals in late winter and early spring. Mating season peaks around Valentine’s Day… enough said.
From $179; Travel time: 6 hours by car
Weekend Getaways: 23 Reasons to Get out of Town
Cambria Beach Lodge
Mammoth Lakes, California
What used to be a sleepy mountain town has morphed into a full-blown, family-friendly venue with 300 days of sunshine a year. These cozy chalets in the woods are individual slope-side ski-in ski-out cabins with full kitchens and fireplaces. Make sure to visit Woolly’s for snow tubing, the upscale Mammoth Rock N Bowl alley, and the great ski school program at the main lodge (worth the hefty price tag).
From $255; Travel time: 7 hours by car or 1.5 hours by plane
Monterey, California
From this nautical-themed hotel, it’s a five-minute walk to Fisherman’s Wharf and 1.5 miles to the famed Monterey Bay Aquarium, with plenty more for kids to do in between. The hotel’s Portola Pirates Program for kids includes a self-guided treasure hunt throughout the property, and an Aquarium package bundles tickets, accommodations, and breakfast.
From $169; Travel time: 7.5 hours by car or 1.5 hours by plane
Weekend Getaways: 23 Reasons to Get out of Town
Colony Palms
Palm Springs, California
Just a block from the main drag of North Palm Canyon Drive sits this charming 57-room hotel fresh off a $2 million renovation. It’s Palm Springs—Spanish Colonial architecture and looming mountains in the distance—without the Palm Springs scene. No Coachella crowd here. It’s a mix of couples, girlfriend getaways, and four-legged friends. (They’re known for frequently having more canines than kids.)
First opened in 1936, the property was owned by the Purple Gang of Detroit, who ran illegal gambling and alcohol shenanigans in the basement. Nearly 20 years later it was taken over by Robert Howard (son of Seabiscuit owner Charles Howard) and his wife, Oscar-nominated actress Andrea Leeds Howard. The Hollywood glitterati came pouring in. Frank Sinatra lived here part-time.
Today, nearly every inch of the three-acre property has been spruced up, from in-room furnishings—the tile work circa 1930 remains intact—to the Purple Palm, a farm-to-table restaurant with Moroccan-inspired design. Every Saturday night you can listen to live Spanish guitar by the pool. And at the spa, book the 90-minute Desert Rain Moisture treatment, a hydrating massage, facial, and scalp combo ($235) that’s a savior after the dry-as-bone Santa Ana winds.
In the nearby Uptown Design District, try smoothies and grain bowls at Mid Mod Cafe, or visit Workshop Kitchen + Bar for a chic dinner with ingredients like dehydrated bougainvillea powder.
From $298; Travel time: 2 hours by car
Paradise Valley, Arizona
Renovations just wrapped at this boutique resort three miles from Scottsdale. The design is Palm Springs meets the Southwest, with midcentury-inspired decor, in-room cocktail carts, and Hollywood history (The Monkees filmed here). You can hit the links at their par-3, 18-hole course, or take a complimentary Tesla to nearby Camelback Golf Club.
From $239; Travel time: 5.5 hours by car or 1 hour by plane
Weekend Getaways: 23 Reasons to Get out of Town
Mountain Shadows
Borrego Springs, California
This serene desert oasis has 44 poolside rooms, 19 casitas, and a location surrounded by Anza-Borrego Desert State Park, where stargazing is world-class. The vibe is elegant but laid-back—a definite upgrade from a campsite. When you’re not hiking the trails, the hotel has five lighted tennis courts, two pickleball courts, three pools, and a spa.
From $129; Travel time: 2 hours by car
Palm Springs, California
Modernism Week returns to Palm Springs February 15–25 with home tours, seminars, parties, and other events for architecture and design geeks. At the Palm Springs Art Museum, more than 250 Andy Warhol prints, including Campbell’s Soup I: Tomato and Marilyn Monroe (Marilyn), are on display March 3 through May 28.
PARTNER CONTENT
Travel time: 2 hours by car
From San Diego’s coastline to Los Angeles stadium and fan zones across the region, here’s how to experience soccer’s biggest event
When three nations and 16 cities come together to host the FIFA World Cup 2026, the scale stops feeling like a tournament and starts feeling like geography. A continent becomes the stage as borders soften into corridors. And Southern California—shaped by migration, sport, entertainment, and constant movement—sits inside that landscape with all eyes on it.
San Diego and Los Angeles have always felt connected. Hop on the Pacific Surfliner, and the trip unfolds in one continuous stretch of coastline, passing beach towns, neighborhoods, and city centers.
Traveling from San Diego, everything still feels slightly suspended as the Pacific Surfliner follows the coast north with ocean on one side and a slow suburban blur on the other. San Diego stays in exhale. Los Angeles is already building toward something louder.
This summer, Los Angeles will host eight matches of the FIFA World Cup at Los Angeles Stadium, including the US Men’s National Team opener on June 11, while the region stretches into 39 days of programming across stadiums, parks, transit hubs, beaches, and neighborhoods. Instead of one massive fan hub, Los Angeles is embracing a citywide celebration, with fan zones spread across its entirety.
But this pattern has been rehearsed here for decades. In 1994, Southern California became one of the defining stages of the World Cup, when matches at the Rose Bowl placed global attention on the region and turned local stadiums into international landmarks, confirming its ability to hold the world at scale.
What distinguishes Southern California is not just infrastructure, but cultural permeability. Fashion, music, film, art, and sport constantly overlap here, creating an environment where identity is flexible and always in motion. From the Venice boardwalk, where skate culture shaped modern street style, to global soccer stars rubbing shoulders with Hollywood celebs, to authentic Spanish cuisine moving up and down the I-5 corridor, everything circulates.
The World Cup is not introducing anything new here, it’s showing up for the summer and showing out, revealing what this city has always known about itself. What follows is a look at the fan zones and how Los Angeles turns itself into a city-wide stage for the tournament, one neighborhood at a time.

As the heart of Los Angeles, Union Station is an official Fan Zone June 25-28 during the World Cup, but in practice it never really stops being one.
It is the city’s circulation point, its meeting ground, its pressure valve. Commuters, travelers, match-day crowds, and everyday Angelenos all move through the same space, and everything mixes, overlaps, and scales in real time. In a way, this is where the World Cup stops arriving in Los Angeles and starts moving through it.
The Pacific Surfliner from San Diego to Los Angeles makes that shift feel almost too easy. No stress or gridlock anxiety, just a straight line up the coastline with ocean on one side and everything slowly becoming more built on the other. It’s one of the rare ways into LA that doesn’t feel like arrival as friction. You can sit with a laptop, watch the Pacific drift past, grab coffee from the café car, and let the city come to you in pieces.
That’s the beauty of arriving at Union Station. Instead of feeling like you’re on the edge of the city, you’re immediately surrounded by it. And, inside, the station already reads like a World Cup nerve center: banners, movement, multilingual energy, the sense that something global is about to funnel through this exact point. The Heart of the City Fan Zone only sharpens that feeling, with simultaneous match screens, DJ sets, meet and greets, and immersive activations built around marquee games like USA vs. Türkiye.
From there, the city splits outward.
ROW DTLA feels like the first exhale after arrival. A converted industrial campus turned creative district where restaurants, retail, and open-air courtyards form a self-contained ecosystem. If you’re looking for the perfect first meal in LA, make it lunch at Pizzeria Bianco. The thin-crust pizza is reason enough to go, but the space leaves just as much of an impression.
What I liked most about ROW DTLA is how quickly it resets you after the train. One minute you are stepping off at Union Station, and the next you are in a space that feels like its own version of LA, a city inside a city with some of the most curated shopping I’ve ever seen.
Bodega hides itself behind a convenience-store front, a sneaker and streetwear space disguised as something ordinary, like LA refusing to make anything feel too obvious. The whole campus moves like that, part retail, part gallery, part neighborhood you are only temporarily inside.
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.
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.
From dedicated line cooks to seasoned bartenders, these are the people making magic happen in city's top restaurants
Chefs have done gobs of thankless, lumbar-breaking work over years to land the role. Restaurateurs put their entire livelihoods on the line, microdosed sleep, took ultimate responsibility for every minor stress. They earned the spotlight they get. But ask one of them, and they almost always defer to a line cook who’s showed up for years, been deep in the thing, and whose absence would bring the kitchen to its knees. Or the bartender with a warmth that draws people whether they’re thirsty or not. Or the noble and spreadsheetable soul in charge of purchasing everything needed for the nightly show.
They call it the “heart of the house.”
Spotlight or not, these are the people who make a food culture hum at its daily core.
For this year’s “Best Restaurants” issue, we asked a handful of the top chefs and one restaurant owner—Tara Monsod (Animae/Le Coq), Jason McLeod (Ironside Fish & Oyster), Ananda Bareño (The Marine Room), Owen Beatty (A.R. Valentien), and Ryan Thorsen (Mister A’s)—who that person is for them.
These are the hearts of houses.

Roger Feria Krile is not only the guy you want to be friends with at work, but also the guy you want to hire: respectful, nose-to-the-grindstone, versatile. And he’ll drop off a fresh batch of cinnamon rolls at your house for the holidays. Born in Tijuana, Krile moved to the US with his mom and sister when he was in elementary school. He saw the sacrifices his mother made to give her children a better life, and he pushed himself to live up to that brighter future.
He came to cooking during the pandemic, asking himself, “What do I really love to do?” His answer: “Bake cakes for friends and break bread with people,” he says. That led to a culinary school degree and a stint in a Michelin-starred NYC kitchen, where he grew to “love and understand” fine dining. Now back in San Diego, Krile’s showing up at Animae in a major way. He does prep work three mornings a week and comes later in the day twice a week for dinner service. Most line cooks do one or the other, but he requested both tours of duty.
“Gotta get my reps, keep my skills sharp,” Krile says, “and I don’t want to miss the rush.” Prep work in the mornings helps him learn how Executive Chef Tara Monsod uses each ingredient to the fullest. Krile’s not just a line cook. One-quarter Filipino (and learning about his culinary heritage from mentor Monsod), he’s building his own Mexican-Filipino pop-up concept. Look for Sarsa—Filipino for salsa—where every dish is a play on words fusing Mexican and Philippine Spanish or Tagalog. He’s already R&D’d a breakfast sandwich, the tortantalong: a torta filled with a signature Filipino eggplant omelette called a tortang talong. Friends in the industry say it’s unexpectedly delicious.
“He shows up every day with a clear goal of one day opening his own restaurant, and that drive pushes him to go above and beyond,” says Monsod. “He is constantly learning, asking questions, and absorbing as much as possible, all while leading by example on the line.”

Ruben Martinez knows every bottle of wine at Mister A’s—not necessarily by taste (though he was on the tasting committee for years), but by where they are in storage and whether they need replenishment. Owner Ryan Thorsen wants the wine list at 100 percent available every night, and Martinez’s job is to make that a reality. He’s been keeping inventory on Mister A’s wines since the 1970s, back when he worked for founder John Alessio. And it’s not just vino: Martinez also procures the ingredients, arriving at 5 a.m. to meet delivery trucks, stock shelves, and alert chefs if anything’s amiss.
Then he hits the dining room for a once- or twice-over to find any imperfections. If a light is out, if the plumbing acts up, if something major happens after he leaves in the afternoon, he’ll fix it all. He’s the best guy to ask, anyway; he knows every inch of Mister A’s. “Before ‘Google it,’ there was ‘Call Ruben,’” Thorsen says.
Martinez started out in hospitality at 17 with his father at Hotel Del. “I thought it would be easy working with my dad,” he says. “But early on, he caught me fooling around with the boys and told me, ‘We’re here to make money for the company. If you’re not willing to work, get out of here.’” That set him straight and set the foundation for Martinez’s lifelong dependability.
He moved to Mister A’s a couple years later, and after over five decades, he’s now the indispensable purchasing manager who worked with Alessio, Betrand Hug, and now Thorsen. Later this year, he’s planning on retiring—though he’s already offered to keep showing up a couple days a week and help out with Thorsen’s new project at Liberty Station.
Thorsen knows this man is a gem. “I don’t think we fully grasp what it will feel like without him,” he says. Last year, he threw Martinez a surprise birthday party in Mister A’s Blue Room, inviting Martinez’s family and a whole cast of coworkers going back to Alessio days. Martinez says he had to leave the room to hide his tears.

There’s an hour most people never see, when a restaurant’s technically awake but not yet accountable, and that’s where Patrick Mattoon lives. He’s been the foundation of Ironside’s prep team for the past five years, quietly guiding the day toward success. He and his team are the first in, and they turn on ovens, check deliveries, catch mistakes before they become problems, and fix everything without ceremony so the chefs and line cooks walk into a day that already works.
Mattoon organizes, but more importantly, he owns. There’s no job too small, no detail beneath notice. In a kitchen, bad prep’s the one thing you can’t fix later, no matter how talented of a chef is at the helm.
Five years in, Mattoon still approaches each day with the same care and intensity that he had on day one. He takes every task seriously and sees it through completely—the kind of consistent work that doesn’t draw attention but makes everything else possible. When the restaurant got a soft serve machine, a notorious maintenance nightmare, he taught himself how to clean and run it just to make sure it never broke, not for credit but because that’s just how he’s wired.
“He is a silent leader who has the respect of the entire team due to leading by example,” says Ironside chef Jason McLeod.

Through 23 years, three executive chefs, and a recent kitchen remodel, lead line cook Arturo Celestino is a constant at A.R. Valentien. He’s there at 6:30 a.m. five days a week—sometimes six—for the Lodge’s breakfast service. That means he’s up early prepping potatoes, slicing mushrooms, whisking pancake batter, and stirring sauces “always with a smile,” says Owen Beatty, the restaurant’s new chef de cuisine. “He’s a good leader.”
Celestino shows the younger guys how to make the eggs fluffy, so the omelettes are always perfect (don’t stop twirling the spatula!). He keeps his line in line when their spirits start to naturally droop during the morning shift home stretch when his crew just wants to get out of there. As the lead, he’s also the one chefs turn to when newbies need motivation.
His secret sauce: “mucho talking!” It keeps people happy, and it also helps the chefs retain talent in the kitchen.
Celestino learned to cook out of “necesidad,” he says. He cut his teeth on fine dining at Pacifica Del Mar at the Hyatt and moved to A.R. Valentien in 2003, just a few months after it opened in 2002.
“I’ve had good jefes,” Celestino says of the three executive chefs he’s known at A.R. Valentien: Jeff Jackson, Kelli Crosson, and now Michelin-starred Eric Sakai. Under Jackson—who’s known for pioneering farm-to-table dining in San Diego—Arturo learned to appreciate local ingredients.
“My favorite is basil,” he says, “added to tomato sauce with garlic, it’s mmm.” Fresh basil plays the supporting role in A.R. Valentien’s signature brunch plate, which is also Celestino’s top choice on the menu (to make and to eat), via the Bull’s Eyes: slow-roasted eggplant with sunny-side-up eggs, tomato sauce, and La Quercia prosciutto.
“I love my job,” Celestino says as he flashes that smile. “It’s not just a plate of food. It’s an experience.”

If you’ve been to The Marine Room, you’ve probably met bartender Tony Suarez. With his charming Cuban accent and dapper vest and tie, he makes it his business to regale guests coming and going—even while he’s pouring, mixing, shaking, polishing glasses, and taking orders.
“Over 90 percent of our guests are celebrating a special occasion,” he says. “So I keep up the celebration throughout their whole visit.” He’ll make you a sparkling toast and a customized cocktail, and on your way out, he’ll wish you a happy birthday (again) and invite you back for drinks on him.
“My goal is always to delight the guest,” he says. “I like to discover how you feel and lead you to what you would like to drink.” That spirit of experimentation has led to new signature cocktails, such as the Gerald—crafted for a neighbor who’s a regular—featuring housemade pomegranate puree and bourbon, or the I Drink of You with local Bebemos tequila, Gran Marnier, and Green Chartreuse. You won’t find this anywhere else.
“[Suarez] has mastered the art of the personalized guest experience,” says Marine Room’s Executive Chef Ananda Bareño. “He remembers the small details and favorite orders that make our regulars feel like family.”
Suarez’s tenure at the Marine Room started with a walk on the beach and a knock on the door. He was impressed by the beautiful location, and he asked if they were hiring. He immediately started as a server assistant—right before Valentine’s Day. The bartender took Suarez under his wing, and he took to the books to learn all about spirits.
He’s taken on the bartender role with wisdom and grace, offering a sympathetic ear, a pick-me-up, and a “human to human connection,” he says. Ten years into his career, the surroundings still inspire him as much as they did on day one.
“The Marine Room, the windows onto the ocean, [all] have a healing effect,” he says.
Leorah Gavidor won her first essay contest at age 5. She writes features, news, and non-fiction in San Diego.
The annual event honors middle market companies creating jobs, scaling up, and investing in the region
San Diego is known for its startup culture and innovation economy, but what happens when the company moves beyond its early-stage years? The San Diego Business Impact Awards aim to answer that question, spotlighting the middle market businesses helping drive the region’s economy.
Hosted by San Diego Regional Economic Development Corporation (EDC) and JPMorganChase, the second annual awards celebration takes place on Thursday, July 23, from 4:30 to 7:00 p.m. at Scripps Research Auditorium. More than 200 executives, entrepreneurs, and business leaders are expected to attend the networking and cocktail event honoring some of San Diego County’s fastest-growing companies.
Businesses headquartered in San Diego County that have operated for at least two years are encouraged to submit their nomination by Thursday, June 18 at 4 p.m. Companies across industries—from technology and life sciences to tourism and consumer products, as well as pre-revenue startups—are eligible for recognition.
For EDC President and CEO Mark Cafferty, the event is as much about building connections as celebrating success. “We’ve had a longtime partnership with JPMorganChase; their work aligns with our efforts to support underserved communities and drive talent development,” says Cafferty. “And the networking was invaluable last year. I’m still in touch with people I met at last year’s awards.”

EDC is an independently-funded nonprofit that works directly with San Diego companies to help them grow the local economy, make the region as a whole more competitive, and attract and retain top-tier talent with quality jobs. Through EDC, companies can get help starting or expanding their business with support for things like site selection, permit navigation, and regulatory guidance, plus connections to local resources and potential business collaborators.
The San Diego Business Impact Awards began as an idea with one of EDC’s longtime strategic partners, JPMorganChase. The two organizations share a commitment to San Diego and are dedicated to bolstering middle market businesses.
“We’re blessed with a robust innovation economy and startup community,” says Aaron Ryan, San Diego Region Manager for JPMorgan’s Commercial and Investment Bank and vice chair of the firm’s’ San Diego Market Leadership Team. “But one of the segments of the business community we felt was overlooked was emerging middle market companies—the businesses that are no longer small but not yet large.”
Ryan says supporting those companies is critical as they scale and decide where to invest, hire, and grow.
San Diego’s high cost of living remains one of the region’s biggest business challenges, making talent recruitment and retention increasingly competitive. But local leaders point to the region’s quality of life, climate, and collaborative business community as advantages that continue to attract employers and workers.

“In order to support thriving households, there has to be enough high-quality jobs for people to be able to afford to live here,” Cafferty says. “Once a company grows and excels past that middle market point in their growth cycle, they become much more likely to pay higher wages and compete globally.”
Both Cafferty and Ryan proudly tout the unique collaboration that exists among San Diego County businesses. Bringing together top universities producing high-quality talent, cutting-edge research institutions, a robust military and defense presence, leading ocean science and environmental organizations, and a binational, cross-border identity creates a distinct business ecosystem that defines and strengthens the San Diego region.
Last year’s San Diego Business Impact Awards celebrated nearly 60 honorees from 49 industries, representing a total of 8,232 jobs across eight sectors, including: software and technology, healthcare and life sciences, consumer goods, professional services, finance, construction and manufacturing, defense, and hospitality and tourism. On average, honoree companies doubled their revenues over the previous year, employed more than 145 San Diegans each, and offered an average annual compensation of $192,415.
Top honorees included defense contractor Innoflight, environmental consulting firm Bancroft Construction Services, life sciences startup Element Biosciences, defense technology contractor GALT Aerospace, organic grocery store chain Jimbo’s, and biopharmaceutical company LENZ Therapeutics. During the event, Innoflight Founder and CEO Jeff Janicik held a fireside chat offering his insights on investing in the community and embracing San Diego culture.
This year, organizers hope to continue highlighting the middle market players driving economic impact across the region. Nominations are now open through June 18 at 4 p.m. Get your tickets to the San Diego Business Impact Awards celebration to enjoy drinks by Snake Oil Cocktail Co., light bites, live music, and networking.
After 20 years and thousands of meals as a food critic, San Diego Mag Content Chief Troy Johnson picks the city's top standouts
His ascent has been stealth and humble, which fits the man. When Liberty Station was struggling to convince people it existed over a decade ago, Sicilian chef Accursio Lota’s food at Solare Ristorante was a tractor beam for food people who sniff out hidden talent like truffle dogs. In 2017, he won the World Pasta Championship (a legit competition from global pasta brand Barilla) and struck out on his own, opening his and his wife’s from-scratch pasta trattoria in North Park (Cori Pastificio). Gambero Rosso—the Italian version of Michelin, the most respected source—has clamored for the restaurant since it opened, naming it “New Opening of the Year” and this year giving it their highest award, “Tre Forchette” (Three Forks), only knighted on a handful of US restaurants.
So this year, Lota opened his grandest thing—Dora Ristorante—and it pulls everything together. Steps from San Diego’s world-class theater, La Jolla Playhouse, it’s laden with brass and large-format murals, tile work and mosaics—like the one on the wood-burning oven that blisters, chars, and smokes a good portion of the menu. Their housemade focaccia is a new street drug (try it with the puttanesca, his grandmother Dora’s recipe). The olive oil-cured sardines make “sustainable seafood” and ethics not taste like a compromise. Dora might finally be the one to solve the “where do I eat before the world premiere at LJP” dilemma.

The yuzu-colored building that helped build North Park’s modern food culture is alive again. Years ago, the ornate French Quarter–inspired spot on 30th Street was home to chef Matt Gordon’s Urban Solace (duck macaroni and cheese). Then it laid conspicuous and fallow until a few months ago when Bacari took it on. It’s an LA transplant, but they’re proving forgivable of that trespass. Chef and co-founder Lior Hillel cooked at Jean-Georges before opening the first of this Venetian-style restaurant in 2008 with brothers Danny and Robert Kronfi (Bobby started his food venture with a pop-up dinner series in his college apartment at USC).
For dinner, it’s house-baked bread, crudo and shrimp ceviches, Mediterranean street corn, lamb hummus, shawarma, and glazed pork belly. Weekend brunch is bellinis and French toast and burekas (famed Jewish stuffed puff pastry), and chef Noa’s cauliflower (caramelized with chipotle). It’s Italian-ish with a heavy dose of pan-Mediterranean and Middle Eastern. Doesn’t hurt that they left the iconic exterior as is, adding chandelier-farmhouse insides with charm that echoes two of the city’s dearly departed (Jayne’s Gastropub, Cafe Chloe).

Much tolerance for friends who hate mussels because they look too biological. But if they manage to dislike À L’ouest’s—served over ice with vadouvan curry aioli and chili crisp—then you’ve successfully identified your brokemouth friend and should try bicycling or crafting with them to bond instead of eating in public places. It should be on everyone’s short list for dish of the year.
Chef Brad Wise and his team have earned their rep over multiple concepts—Trust, Fort Oak, Cardellino, Wise Ox, Rare Society. But he’s been eyeing this corner of North Park since before he opened his first (Trust, in 2016). North Park has been rising for a while, and À L’ouest feels like the missing piece—an indoor-outdoor brasserie stunner on the marquee spot of 30th and University, which long sat boarded up and vacant like a neighborhood missing a front tooth.
As with his other concepts, woodpile is king; smoldering red oak boosts the flavor of just about everything. Get the spätzle with braised rabbit, maitake mushroom, secret de compostelle (the famed Basque sheep’s milk cheese), and black truffle. Or the chicken liver parfait with persimmon, fennel aigre-doux (sweet-sour), and chives on toast. Or, like everyone else in there—the steak frites.

Chef Travis Swikard’s first solo restaurant, Callie in East Village, proved how details can make the most composed of us blubber a little in fine places—from citrus left in ovens overnight to blacken and transform, to the Scripps Oceanographic Institute saltwater he keeps his spot prawns thriving in until ordered, to the days-long fermentation and stone-ground dukkah that turn carrot shavings into a statement piece.
Now, he’s focusing on French food with a fitter, less buttery San Diego heart. Fleurette is his doubling-down, a SoCal riff on the food he learned under mentors Daniel Boulud and Gavin Kaysen. The French gave us the mother sauces, and Fleurette showcases the lightest and brightest evolutions. Like the anchoïade on his beef tartare, which uses famed Italian anchovy sauce colatura di alici, mixed with cured egg yolks over tiny, uniform-sized cubes of raw, USDA Prime Flannery beef.
There is soubise (onion sauce), a sauce vierge (tomatoes and herbs), and a fennel marmalade on the duck liver and bone marrow pâté. Although the structure is stunningly pure glass, Fleurette’s in a location—an office park on the edge of La Jolla, near UTC—that few chefs would be able to pull off. But Swikard’s Michelin-bound house of saucework pulls hard.

The Escondido taqueria from Rosarito-born-and-trained chef Juan González and farmer Megan Strom took the county by storm this year. The married couple started as a popup four years ago, hosting farmside dinners before taking up residency at Vino Carta in Solana Beach. Strom was working a small, 5-acre heirloom bean farm in Valley Center owned by Mike Reeske (aka “The Bean Man”) when he retired and sold them the plot.
The huge bonus was that the sale included Reeske’s famed collection of beans, curated over 20 years. The couple planted other things and now grow much of what they serve in the form of tacos and burritos at a permanent spot in Escondido: Mesa Agrícola.
The menu’s bone simple: housemade tortillas in your choice of taco or burrito norteños (which are smaller, like burritos de hielera) that change constantly and often topped with guisados (Mexican braises or stews) like lamb and garbanzo, birria, chicharrón, mushrooms al ajillo, rajas, you name it. And, of course, some of the best beans honoring the local legend of Reeske.

San Diego is now the recipient of national food buzz. The dark ages—during which we learned how to sear ahi and asada some carne and called it a day—felt prolonged, and they were. The problem was never ingredients. San Diego County always had the best raw dinner materials (more small farms per capita than any county in the US, seafood right there); it just didn’t have a critical mass of highly trained chefs to do them justice. Easy to understand the chef dearth.
For a very long time, if you wanted to be a serious chef you had to go to the restaurant superplexes of New York, San Francisco, or Chicago (which imported their raw ingredients from places like San Diego). But now—credit farmers or Alice Waters or Dan Barber or Michael Pollain or the reasonable conclusion that food picked right here tastes better than food picked way over there—some of the most talented chefs are moving to the ingredients, not the other way around.
In San Diego, we got Richard Blais, Swikard, and now Elijah Arizmendi, who cut his teeth in Vegas with Joel Robuchon (plus Boulud and Thomas Keller) and was chef de cuisine at NYC’s L’abeille when it got its first Michelin star. His debut restaurant in La Jolla—with partners Brian Hung and Melissa Yang—is a dark, moody multicourse tasting-menu hideaway with one of the best egg dishes in the city.
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.
We asked, you voted, and food critic Troy Johnson chose his favorites—these are the top food and drink people and places in the city
Some keep lists of favorite books, of quotes, of enemies whose time shall come. At SDM we keep vast, nuanced, hotly debated lists of the best food and drink in the city. Menus are our smut novels. From Michelin stars to mom and pops, our list constantly evolves over hundreds of new bites tried every year. Here’s the 2026 list from food critic Troy Johnson and 129,000-plus votes from our readers, who really, really know their food.
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.
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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