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Our annual guide to the best new food, drinks, shops, and activities in San Diego, plus pandemic pivots and stories of communities coming together
Best of San Diego – main
It’s been a long road, but we’re seeing brighter days ahead. Our annual guide to the best new food, drinks, shops, and activities San Diego has to offer is here, with unique pandemic pivots and stories of communities coming together in between. Ready, set, celebrate!
“It warms my heart to see you all here. COVID’s almost over, we got nothing left to fear. The last year sure was a hell of a fright, but it gave us strength, and made the human spirit fight. Summer’s almost here and the sunshine is comin’.Here at Monarch we preach love, respect, and a whole lotta lovin’. We thank you all for our amazing start. It’s all of you that fill the Monarch heart.” —Erik Sloan
At Del Mar Plaza, Monarch Ocean Pub takes sunset toasts to a whole new level. Past the beachy, open-air design and dragon fruit margaritas, the pub’s real magic lies in the nightly poem read by their bar lead, Erik Sloan. At sunset, Sloan rings a cowbell, hops on the bar, and silences the room before reading a poem he wrote that day. The ritual began as a moment to observe hope during a dark time—the pub opened last fall—and has blossomed into a way to reflect on how the pandemic has changed our lives.
“We all got a second chance,” Sloan explains. “And no one should take that for granted.” Sloan wraps up every poem with a toast the whole pub joins in on: “Cheers to me, cheers to you, and here’s a toast to a hell of a view.” While the lobster rolls and the boozy slushies are a big draw, it’s this barman’s poetic tradition and moment of gratitude that truly unify and elevate the room.
1555 Camino Del Mar, Del Mar
Enjoy the sweet life with Lutchi and Mary’s version of the Filipino halo halo dessert. Halo halo (which means “mix mix” in Tagalog) is a traditional confection from the islands, but this San Marcos eatery serves it up with a twist. The dessert includes shaved ice, fresh fruit compote, and ube ice cream on a decadent leche flan. Trust us: It’s just as good as it looks.
844 West San Marcos Boulevard, San Marcos
Best of SD – Dliteful
Learn more about European chocolates at D’liteful Chocolat at Lake San Marcos. Owner and chef Dayleen Coleman is a Le Cordon Bleu alum who’s sharing all her best secrets for creating fine chocolates, truffles, and more. Coleman offers weekly lessons for budding students of all ages. Aside from her chocolate classes, Coleman is serving up a new brunch menu and afternoon tea times, and she often partners with local breweries and wineries for chocolate pairing events.
1030 La Bonita Drive, San Marcos
Best of SD – Fairmont bees
Fairmont Grand Del Mar got its buzziest guests yet in the form of two honeybee colonies who settled near the fourth hole of their well-manicured golf course—which is ripe for pollination thanks to nearby Los Peñasquitos Canyon Preserve. With help from local beekeepers at Bee Leaf USA, the resort now provides a safe sanctuary for these bees to thrive. The Grand’s Bee Sustainable program harvests honey produced by the hives (up to 200 pounds a year) and incorporates it into food and cocktails served on site. A raw, natural superfood with healing properties? Sounds like a sweet deal to us.
5300 Grand Del Mar Court, Carmel Valley
When owner Anne Chao was looking for a new treatment to bring to her Del Mar spa, she turned to the past. Her Wood Lock Medicated Balm Treatment builds on a tried-and-true remedy to smooth out muscle aches and tension knots, enhancing the most incredible deep- tissue massages in her soothing oasis—perfect for routine self-care. This old-timey ointment, made with wintergreen oil and menthol, has been recommended by grandpas in Hong Kong for centuries.
12925 El Camino Real, Carmel Valley
Best of SD – Legoland
These days, we could all use a little positivity, even if it comes from an animated Lego character named Emmet reminding you that “Everything Is Awesome.” The Lego Movie World is Legoland California’s largest-ever addition, featuring brand-new rides. Take the family to experience Emmet’s Flying Adventure, a 4-D animated thrill ride on a triple-decker flying couch, or Unikitty’s Disco Drop, which puts a spin on the typical drop tower rides by “tossing” riders upward.
1 Legoland Drive, Carlsbad
Best of SD – Graves House
Dessert with a view? Count us in. The historic Graves House, aka the Top Gun House, was relocated to the newly opened Mission Pacific Hotel and is undergoing renovations to open up as a charming dessert bar for beachgoers and hotel guests in search of a sugar fix. The 140-year-old Victorian was rechristened “Charlie’s” after Kelly McGillis’s Top Gun character, who lived there. While you wait to satisfy your sweet tooth, check out the 3D elevator art on your way to the top of the hotel, where Valle de Guadalupe chef Roberto Alcocer serves up street-style eats and cold craft brews at this “après-surf ” rooftop scene.
201 North Myers Street, Oceanside
This new boutique hotel was over 20 years in the making, and it’s absolutely worth the wait. The eco-friendly property perched on the cliff above South Ponto Beach was built from sustainable materials and plans to achieve zero waste in five years. The hotel has also partnered with local businesses like Lofty Coffee, Vuori, Surfin Fire surf school, Electra Go! Bikes, Aaron Chang Ocean Art, and the Rob Machado Foundation—for the latter, to set up water stations to replace single-use plastic bottles. Stay in the chic, modern accommodations, then enjoy craft cocktails and locally inspired cuisine by chef Claudette Zepeda at Vaga (her nickname, Spanish for “wanderer”).
2100 North Coast Highway 101, Encinitas
Praise be! San Diego has a Serena & Lily. The casual coastal furniture retailer opened its newest design shop at One Paseo this spring, outfitting the space inside and out with the beach-chic decor we’ve come to love from the brand—furniture in white and rattan finishes, light-colored textiles, and seaside accessories. There are also design professionals on hand to draft up mood boards for your next home project or to offer complimentary swatches and styling tips.
3720 Caminito Court, Carmel Valley
Best of SD – Child of Wild
Considering Child of Wild’s affinity for all that glitters, it’s only fitting that their shop would be a true hidden gem. Nestled in low-key Leucadia, the quaint brick-and-mortar is a pared-down offering of their edgy accessories and an eclectic assortment of home decor. Owner Eileen Lofgren put her designs on the map—or online, to be exact—in 2014, beginning with bejeweled cow skulls. Today, Child of Wild boasts 300 original jewelry designs, some of which have graced the pages of Glamour, Vogue, and Sports Illustrated. Our favorite facet of the shop is the charm bar, where you can design your own jewelry with interchangeable charms and chains.
1114 North Coast Highway 101, Leucadia
Best of SD – Candles on Tap
Pour your own candle? Makes scents to us! You can pour over 90 scents at Candles On Tap in Encinitas, San Diego’s self-described “first candle bar.” They have specialists on hand to walk you through every step of choosing and pairing candle scents, which range from traditional to adventurous—like Campfire, Cannabis, and Santa’s Pipe. The soy candles are a favorite, but there’s also the option to create a flameless reed diffuser.
687 South Coast Highway 101, Encinitas
Think of Solana Beach’s Cedros Avenue, and Bixby & Ball, interior designer Betsy Bracken’s home decor shop, is most likely one of the first places that comes to mind. In fact, the shop is housed in the first cottage ever built on Cedros Avenue, and today it brims with Southern California–inspired home goods spanning furniture, lighting, wall decor, kitchenware, bath products, and more. The interior design maven has even opened a second Solana Beach location right down the street for her consultations. Sign us up!
143 South Cedros Avenue, Solana Beach; 214 South Cedros Avenue, Solana Beach
Best of SD – Finest City
COVID couldn’t keep Finest City Improv down. The feisty Hillcrest theater, founded in 2012 by Amy Lisewski, lost several revenue streams when quarantine forced it to cancel classes and performances. Things looked bleak when an unsympathetic landlord issued a pay-up-or-get-out ultimatum.
In the “Yes, and…” spirit of improvisational comedy, Lisewski and general manager Skyler Lee went to work on a Save Our Theater fundraising campaign. Local media put out the story of their impending demise, and the arts community stepped up. Students, house performers, and the general public all chipped in, and that crowdsourcing, along with grants and a PPP loan, helped the improv theater hang on for one more act.
Meanwhile, Lisewski and Lee used the downtime wisely to pivot and expand the theater’s offerings. They now have a beer-and-wine license. In April, they built a sidewalk patio. Along with improv drop-ins, their outdoor shows have included stand-up comedy, musical stylings, and trivia nights.
Now that the restrictions on indoor gatherings have been lifted, the hope is that the pulse of improv performances will quicken in the newly reconfigured indoor theater. If and when the audience for stand-up comedy and other entertainment returns, Finest City Improv will have emerged from the pandemic stronger, funnier, and more cathartic than ever.
3746 Sixth Avenue, Hillcrest
Best of SD – Wonderbus
San Diego’s music scene had to get creative in the past year. There were livestreamed performances and drive-in shows, but nothing was as creative as seeing a double-decker bus with a live band on top making the rounds through the streets of San Diego. Wonderbus’s “concert on wheels” brought live music back in a souped-up bus complete with a full sound system. The bus changes its route every weekend and hosts local bands in a variety of genres. Wonders never cease!
Locations vary
Already known for wellness offerings like massage, meditation, and energy and sound therapies, holistic health club Saffron & Sage has added IV therapy and vitamin injections to its list of services. Now, clients can get an intramuscular boost of vitamins including B12 or D, or a customizable IV injection to promote energy, sleep, immunity, or muscle recovery. By delivering nutrients directly to the bloodstream and bypassing the digestive system, IV therapy is purported to provide better absorption and quicker results. We say it’s worth a shot.
2555 State Street, Bankers Hill
Community came first for Barrio Logan’s Liberty Call Distilling Co. when they put their opening on pause to produce sanitizer during the onset of the pandemic. Now they’ve finally reopened their doors as the distillery restaurant they were meant to be. Stop in for small- batch spirits, like their Special Reserve Doublewood Bourbon, and stay for the tapas-style menu to pair with your drinks.
1985 National Avenue, Barrio Logan
There’s a dearth of places to grab a drink and a bite on the south end of Fifth Avenue near Balboa Park, so when Tom Logsdon turned the former Tin Can Ale House into a cocktail bar that served good burgers, he gained a loyal following. After five years in the neighborhood, he closed the restaurant last summer because of the pandemic. But nearly one year after closing, The Balboa got a second, arguably better life. This spring, Logsdon’s landlord asked him to return to Fifth Avenue and reopen the restaurant in the same location, and even offered him the chance to expand into the space next door. The Balboa is now back in full swing, with more seating and space. Cheers to their return (and to their landlord)!
1863 Fifth Avenue, Bankers Hill
Best of SD – Da Nang
If you travel from Saigon to Hanoi, you’ll discover that the deliciously complex flavors of Vietnamese pho change dramatically by region. Owner Quynh Nguyen brings scrumptious Central Vietnamese cuisine to Convoy at Da Nang Corner. The kitchen is run by her father, who was a chef in Da Nang for nearly 20 years. Try the bun bo hue, a spicy beef noodle soup, or mi quang, a yellow noodle soup with frog or chicken marinated with fresh turmeric, a Da Nang specialty.
4428 Convoy Street, Kearny Mesa
It was out with the old and in with the new for the historic Red Fox Room. After 60 years, the iconic eatery and piano bar left its longtime home at The Lafayette Hotel… to move right across the street. The new spot opens this summer on the other side of El Cajon Boulevard, sporting the same cozy, intimate interiors the city fell in love with—including the 400-year-old wood paneling from the original building in Surrey, England—and a new sign, door, and seating. Sing us a song, piano man!
2200 El Cajon Boulevard, University Heights
Best of SD – Holding Company
Ocean Beach’s trilevel, 7,000-square-foot beach hangout has the perfect drink to match its “go big” vibe: 90-ounce cocktail towers. You can turn a variety of drink orders into one of these mega concoctions, like spicy mules, margaritas, passion fruit mimosas, or vodka Red Bull. Kick back on the rooftop for sunset views of the OB Pier and live music, or head downstairs to dine on Asian-, Californian-, and Mexican-inspired dishes by owner Scott Yeng of OB Noodle House. Bottoms up!
5046 Newport Avenue, Ocean Beach
Best of SD – Fit Tacos
This meal-prep business started by friends is now a successful food truck parked at Societe Brewing, serving up healthy tacos that are built on a thin-sliced jicama tortilla that is sweet, juicy, and doesn’t fall apart. If you prefer your taco deconstructed, try the Fit Bowls filled with Mexican brown rice, veggies, and your choice of Soyrizo, grilled shrimp, pollo adobado, or carne asada.
8262 Clairemont Mesa Boulevard; Kearny Mesa
Best of SD – Mystic Mocha
After operating for well over a decade in University Heights’ residential area, this humble café came under new ownership just last year and got a facelift—hello, bright yellow exterior!—and a refined menu. The breakfast menu, served Thursday through Tuesday, skews Mexican and includes chilaquiles, burritos, and tamales, nearly all with vegan, vegetarian, and gluten-free variations. Of course, the cafe’s namesake are the real draw. Its mochas are named after notable heroes, like John Wick (honey and lavender), Wonder Woman (peppermint and chocolate), and Frida Kahlo (Mexican chocolate).
2105 Mission Avenue, University Heights
A flower concept doesn’t get more adorable than that of Best Bud Florals. Owned and operated by former Native Poppy employees Kathleen Dore and Grace Kinney, this flower cart pops up at Little Italy’s Home Ec boutique on the second Sunday of the month, stocking prewrapped grab-and-go blooms. When they’re not carting around flowers, you can contact Dore and Kinney for made-to-order arrangements and floral design for events. They’re the best of buds.
2355 India Street, Little Italy
It’s like a pedal wagon, but on the water. Paddle Pub, which has five other locations in the US, started making waves in Mission Bay last summer with its pedal-powered pontoon boat. While it seats up to 16 people, there are 12 pedal stations total, and only seven pedalers are required to power the vessel. Meanwhile, non-pedaling partiers might want to captain the sound system. Rent out the whole pontoon for a large group or purchase an individual ticket and mix and mingle with fellow booze cruisers. Whatever floats your boat!
1441 Quivira Road, Mission Bay
You can do a lot with 40,000 square feet. And in Barrio Logan, four businesses banded together to make the most of one property, creating a food-and-drink compound that caught the eye of not only locals, but Forbes. The Acre of Awesome comprises Sideyard BBQ, serving up sizable plates of meats and sides (don’t skip the brisket); HottMess Wood Fired Pizza; a newly opened tasting room for Kové, the world’s first hard yerba maté tea; and ReBru Spirits, a distillery that upcycles craft beer into hard liquor.
1735 National Avenue, Barrio Logan
After temporarily closing due to COVID-19, Nativo is up and running again in a new space with revamped inventory to show for it. Think of the boutique like an Anthropologie with an authentic Latin American twist, including ceramics and textiles handmade in Oaxaca, as well as accessories like hats and crossbodies. It’s proof that there’s indeed light at the end of the pandemic for our retail industry.
2146 Logan Avenue, Barrio Logan
Two local buddies, Justin Frank and Devin Gneiting, are committed to sharing their love of all things cheesy. Their East Village specialty shop is located within Ale Tales Taproom, on the ground floor of Shift Apartments. These gourmet grilled cheese sandwiches are Comfort Food 101. Crunchy sourdough bread is filled with melted cheddar, provolone, pepper jack, or Swiss. Feed your inner dragon with a salami-stuffed Burn-a-Nator, or go vegetarian with the red-peppers-and-arugula-laced Cali Gold.
1520 J Street, East Village
Best of SD – Tribute pizza
When restaurants had to convert to takeout service only, Matthew Lyons and his team quickly came up with a contactless curbside pickup system. They instructed customers to drive up and call, and a server would place the food in the trunk of their car or on the hood. Lyons even gave away the restaurant’s stock of toilet paper during the shortage. They’ve been running a solid takeout business for over a year now, and Lyons released a statement earlier this summer that he and his team wanted to improve the overall operation before they welcomed diners again (they recently reopened for in-person dining).
3077 North Park Way, North Park
Best of SD – Roxys Tacos
Get lured in by the deep pink sign near downtown’s trolley tracks, stay hooked by the food and friendly ambience at Roxy’s Tacos. From behind the counter, owner Roberto “Junior” Bermudez amiably chats up customers who come for legit street tacos. Junior marinates his meat for 24 hours with a secret recipe of seven spices. Top off your order with his mom’s version of hot sauce, made from fresh toasted tomatoes.
815 C Street, East Village; 619-349-4839
Best of SD – Rollin Roots
Avonte Hartsfield shows that vegan food can be indulgent, satisfying, and—most importantly—affordable. He slings Buffalo “chicken” po’boys (made with oyster mushrooms), deep-fried mac and cheese, and loaded fries topped with jackfruit out of his food truck in Kearny Mesa, and it became a hit even with carnivores. During the pandemic he gave free meals to help people who’d been laid off, and offered patrons the option to pay a meal forward. A “pay what you can” special is now a permanent part of the menu. His efforts haven’t gone unnoticed: This June, he won a $25,000 grant from Guy Fieri to open a full-scale restaurant.
8040 Armour Street, Kearny Mesa; 8665 Miralani Drive, Miramar
Neighborhood’s redo is the latest ostrich feather in the cap of Consortium Holdings maestro Arsalun Tafazoli. He’s never met a rule he couldn’t bend or break. The revamped space is noisily intimate, with fewer seats but double the number of speakeasies. Come for the familiar craft beers and elevated bar food (the crispy potato is not to be missed), but stay for the eye-catching new decor—cowhide bar stools and a black-and-white photo of Alice Cooper meeting Colonel Sanders, to be specific.
777 G Street, East Village
Best of SD – Shell
The San Diego Symphony’s long-awaited $85-million facility opened this month at Embarcadero Marina Park South, becoming its first permanent outdoor venue. More than 40 concerts are planned between August and November; pop highlights for 2021 include Grammy winner Jason Mraz, cellist Yo-Yo Ma, Motown icon Smokey Robinson, The Who’s Roger Daltrey, and Beach Boys cofounder Brian Wilson.
200 Marina Park Way, Embarcadero
Best of SD – Birria Kings
The beef birria from this food truck has been a hit ever since it opened on E Street in Chula Vista. Founded by Albert Calderon, Birria Kings serves the spicy stewed meat in a variety of fun ways in addition to traditional tacos and consommé, and hungry diners have been happily lining up for the birriamen (with ramen noodles), quesadillas, burritos, and the birria-stuffed pizza. Calderon expanded with a second truck on Oxford Street this year, and soon the eatery will have a permanent home at 2333 Highland Avenue in National City, where he plans to serve beers and micheladas along with the current menu.
642 E Street, Chula Vista; 635 Oxford Street, Chula Vista
At this Chula Vista pop-up, your daily coffee order can help make a difference. Owner Carmen Saucedo opened Pau’s Place in honor of her late daughter, Pauline. The nonprofit churns out mochas, blended coffee, baked goods, and more to raise money for low-income locals of any age to visit Disneyland (her daughter’s favorite place) for the first time.
225 Third Avenue, Chula Vista
Best of SD – Hellote
The story of Emmanuel Favela’s career pivot is one for the books. A trained designer who studied at the New School of Architecture, he worked for collectible figurine maker Funko, and then at architecture firms. After he was laid off in 2020, he found himself unsure of his next step when Tony Haro, a local architect, presented him with a business opportunity in a fi eld where neither of them had any experience. What resulted is Hellote, an outdoor eatery serving elotes (Mexican street corn) in Chula Vista.
Haro (pictured, right) found an empty lot on Main Street and saw its potential. He and Favela (pictured, left) pondered opening a café—neither of them owned a restaurant before— but Favela felt it wasn’t the right move. That’s when he considered the elote. “Corn is very humble. You don’t think much of it, you just see the guy with the cart,” he says. “We wanted to take it to the next level.”
Favela came up with the name, and Luis Cardenas, a chef from Valle de Guadalupe, developed a menu of elotes served both on and off the cob, with a twist: Along with the traditional preparation of roasted corn topped with mayo, lime, salt, and spices, some inventive options include elotes topped with chicharrones and black ash mayo (mayo mixed with the ashes from charred habanero peppers), crushed Flamin’ Hot Cheetos, or serrano sauce and grilled nopales (cactus). There’s also “monster nachos,” baked potatoes with arrecherra (grilled skirt steak), and dessert tamales.
In just a few weeks, they transformed the lot into a space made for hanging out. Diners are greeted by yellow marquee lights that spell “Hellote for the heart” in Spanish, comfy seating areas, games, and a sound system. Corn roasters from Texas cook the ears on-site. Hellote has been a hit since it opened in late 2020, and Favela and Haro are already looking for a second location.
3124 Main Street, Chula Vista
Best of SD – Sun Outdoors
The Chula Vista Bayfront Project got a kick-start in April, when this mixed-use vacation property set up shop. Sun Outdoors has a lot going for it: There are 197 fully equipped RV rental sites, 49 beachy vacation cottage rentals, a swimming pool, and courts for basketball and pickleball. But the main draw is its proximity to Living Coast Discovery Center just across the street, where you can walk the trails and plan a private animal encounter.
825 E Street, Chula Vista
Best of SD – Grasshopper
Chula Vista’s fi st cannabis dispensary lit up this spring, stocking its shelves with flowers, prerolls, edibles, topicals, and more. Shop popular California brands like Camino and Almora Farm. Grasshopper offers delivery options in select regions south of I-8 and in the Imperial Valley, and aims to ingrain itself in its local community by giving back a portion of its daily sales to cultural arts programs in San Diego.
376 Trousdale Drive, Chula Vista
Summer is for camping! Just south of the Tijuana River, pitch a tent at this 79-acre campground that has views of the valley and over 20 miles of trails to explore. There are traditional campsites to choose from, but it’s the first campground in the county to also provide yurts, which sleep six to 10 people. Elsewhere on the grounds you can find a nature center, an amphitheater, and a community garden. There are restrooms and showers, but no RV hookups, and reservations can be made online.
1942 Monument Road, San Ysidro
Best of SD – Mujer Divina
This new café is the second business for chef Priscilla Curiel, who owns Tuétano Taquería in San Ysidro and received national acclaim for her birria tacos topped with bone marrow. Curiel is a coffee lover who always wanted to start a café, and at the end of 2020 she and her husband decided to convert a deli he owned in National City into Mujer Divina. Start the day at the cheerful shop with a café de olla (a Mexican coffee flavored with cinnamon and cane sugar), a snack-size breakfast burrito (the machaca ranchera is popular) or a latte combo that comes with a colorful conchita (shell-shaped pastry) or scone. If you want to beat the morning rush or sleep in, it’s open until 2 p.m. every day.
310 East Eight Street, Chula Vista
Best of SD – Greg Cox Park
The county’s second-ever bike park pedaled into Otay Valley Regional Park earlier this summer, opening up more trails and terrain to tackle on two wheels. The 3.2 acres have paths fit for both beginning and intermediate riders, including a jump line and modular pump track larger than any other in California. Start in the beginner’s zone, then work your way up to the more challenging tracks—there’s also a rest area on-site for when you need to take a break from breaking a sweat.
325 Rancho Drive, Chula Vista
Chula Vista’s new luxury development, Millenia, added another green space with the opening of Millenia Park in June. It’s the largest recreational area in the project—which is slated to have off ice space, retail, dining, six parks, and bike paths among its 3,000 residences—spanning 3.6 acres with a soccer field, athletic courts, and a jogging path along the exterior. Families with kids will also want to take advantage of the picnic areas and community space for gatherings, and check out the two play areas for the little ones.
1902 Millenia Avenue, Chula Vista
In 1999, brewing legend Patrick McIlhenney put unincorporated East County on the map when he created Alpine Beer Company, which achieved cult status by helping establish the hop-forward style now called West Coast IPA. He sold the brand in 2014, but this May, he and son Shawn (an influential brewer in his own right) launched a new family brewery from the original Alpine Beer location. Once again, beer is the top reason to visit Alpine.
2363 Alpine Boulevard
Best of SD – Chandelier
White tablecloths, green plants, and a baby grand piano add to the charm of this laid-back fine dining spot. Caterer Georgina Marquez’s initial opening was paused by the pandemic, but now it’s back in full swing with beer and wine, Sunday brunch, and live music on weekends. Lunch stays casual with hot sandwiches and burgers, while dinner entrées include steaks, fish with lobster sauce, and lamb chops all under a winsome assortment of mismatched chandeliers.
13881 Campo Road
Best of SD – Hamlett
Coffee, wellness, community—they’re just a few of Shacole and Zachary Hamlett’s favorite things. It takes courage to open a business around your favorite things while the world is on fire, but that’s exactly what the siblings did when they brought their multipurpose coffee and apothecary shop, The Hamlett, to life.
“All of the protests and discussions on race last year really hit home for our family,” Shacole says. “We had a lot of conversations about what we could do to support our Black community, and a few major points were the importance of self-determination, ownership, and economics. We don’t get to shop in that many Black- owned businesses. So we thought, ‘How can we create opportunities for business owners to support themselves?’ And our answer was to open up The Hamlett.”
It was no easy feat. Shacole (pictured, right) is 31 and Zachary (pictured, left) is 19; neither had any previous experience in starting a shop like this, and the process came with its own hurdles—namely, raising money and dealing with two acts of vandalism during construction earlier this year. But the duo had a vision, and even while they await a city permit to open their doors (which they anticipate this month), they’ve gone ahead and launched an online shop for a few of their products.
When the brick-and-mortar does open on Broadway in Lemon Grove, you’ll notice that The Hamlett wears many hats. On one hand, you’ll be able to pick up your morning coffee or shop wellness products made by local artisans of all ages and ethnic backgrounds (their youngest is a 10-year-old). On the other, Shacole and Zachary have created a business incubator program specifically designed for Black entrepreneurs to get their ideas off the ground and onto shelves. Their goal is to create a community hub where people can connect with friends, get inspired, and put their dreams on paper.
“It’s been a really long but exciting process to see The Hamlett come to life,” says Shacole. “We’ve watched this idea morph into something tangible. We’re looking forward to seeing people experience it, and to ultimately see businesses that work with us here, then move on to even greater things in the future.”
7801 Broadway, Lemon Grove
The best sandwich shop in Rancho San Diego is expanding into other parts of East County, beginning with this new outpost near Grossmont. The purveyor of Boar’s Head meats excels at producing California-style subs (avocado, chipotle), though the expansive menu takes its cues from a range of sandwich-making traditions. That includes the famed delis of New York City, whence it found the secret to its success: steaming meats for maximum moisture.
8396 Parkway Drive, La Mesa; 619-303-0943
Best of SD – Smokey
Vintage cars and motorbikes set the scene for barbecue, brews, and flatbreads at this new gathering spot near the shores of Lake Murray. A 1960s Dodge van has been cut into a custom bar, while retro car upholstery is repurposed as bench seating. It’ll make you grateful for the return of in-person dining, but mostly you’ll remember the smoked meats from Alberto Morreale, the chef behind Farmer’s Table restaurants— especially the eponymous brisket.
5465 Lake Murray Boulevard, La Mesa
This OB antique shop moved east this year to settle into La Mesa’s main thoroughfare. Here, you’ll find the same farmhouse- inspired and antique inventory that made The Corner Shop a local favorite, along with some new additions like chalk paint products and workshops to teach you how to use them.
8360 La Mesa Boulevard, La Mesa
Best of SD – Little Miss Brewing
Owners Greg and Jade Malkin have expanded their Miramar-based business to six locations around the county over the past few years, and the Lakeside brewery is now the largest. Find kettle sours, porters, hazy IPAs, and blonde ales on tap, along with special beers made from Australian hops. Cheers, mate!
12245 Woodside Avenue, Lakeside
This all-new puptopia was made to give San Diegans a completely unique place to hang with their dogs. For your four-legged friend, check out the play and training areas, and grooming and boarding services. For you, a beer garden, workspace, and coffee shop await. Varying price packages are available.
6331 University Avenue, Rolando
A weekend by the lake just got a whole lot better. The Santee Lakes Recreation Preserve unveiled its new expanded dining deck and kitchen, run by Tin Fish Restaurant, just in time for the preserve’s 60-year anniversary. While overlooking the water, guests can dig into fish tacos, check out the remodeled general store, and enjoy the 4,000-square-foot deck.
PARTNER CONTENT
89310 Fanita Parkway, Santee
Discover eateries, outings, and shops within this inland North County community
Just south of Lake Hodges near 4S Ranch and Poway, Rancho Bernardo is a suburban community that blends residential neighborhoods with industrial pockets, elevated by a decidedly diverse food scene.
Over 60 years ago, this North County neighborhood was once part of a family ranch. Since that time, big tech companies have taken up residence here, including Amazon, Sony Electronics, Oura Ring, HP, Teradata, and ASML. Rancho Bernardo Inn serves as a community hub, with locals frequently meeting at the hotel’s restaurants, golf course, and spa.
Whether it’s work or a round of golf that brings you to Rancho Bernardo, we’ve taken care of the agenda planning with our guide to the area’s best restaurants, activities, and shops.

Sample ingredients plucked straight from Rancho Bernardo Inn’s onsite garden and served at their signature restaurant Avant. One of the neighborhood’s most upscale dining options, they serve a French-inspired menu with nods to California, including many seafood options. Don’t miss their more casual sister restaurant Veranda for al fresco dining.
17550 Bernardo Oaks Drive
Wood-fired pizzas and handmade pastas are standouts at The Kitchen, Bernardo Winery’s counter-service restaurant specializing in Sicilian flavors. Charcuterie boards and bruschetta make for great starters or snacks while wine tasting.
13330 Paseo Del Verano Norte
Fast-casual and family-owned eatery Bushfire Kitchen recently opened a location in Rancho Bernardo, serving sandwiches, bowls, salads, burgers, protein plates, and housemade empanadas. Bushfire prepares comfort food with healthy ingredients, and offers plenty of vegetarian and vegan options.
11962 Bernardo Plaza Drive, Suite 110
Some might call The Cork & Craft an overachiever. This gastropub has an in-house craft brewery and winery: Abnormal Beer and Wine. The more, the merrier. Their sushi menu is definitely worth exploring, but don’t miss other specialties like garlic noodles, chicken wings, and pork belly.
16990 Via Tazon

You don’t have to leave Rancho Bernardo to get a white tablecloth steakhouse experience. Carvers Steaks & Chops has prime rib (their best seller), filet, ribeye, porterhouse, New York strip, and other cuts, served alongside crab-stuffed mushrooms, wedge salad, French onion soup, potato skins, and other steakhouse specialties.
1940 Bernardo Plaza Drive
This no-frills Burmese restaurant is known for its traditional tea leaf salad that’s topped with sesame and sunflower seeds, garlic chips, peanuts, tomatoes, jalapeños, fried yellow beans, and fermented green tea leaf dressing. Tucked into a nondescript strip mall, Burma Place is a great takeout option when you want to eat garlic noodles, fried rice, chicken curry, and samosas from the comfort of your couch.
16719 Bernardo Center Drive, Suite A
Find authentic Vietnamese cuisine at Phở Ca Dao, including favorites like phở noodle soup, vermicelli noodles, broken rice dishes, and spring rolls. One of eight locations throughout San Diego, this family-owned chain uses robot servers for food delivery.
11808 Rancho Bernardo Road, Suite 100
It’s all about the sauce at fast-casual Mediterranean restaurant The Kebab Shop. Smothering your chicken shawarma, gyro, or falafels in garlic yogurt, cilantro jalapeno, fire chili, and dill yogurt sauce is practically a rite of passage. The hardest part is deciding whether to order a wrap, bowl, or salad.
11980 Bernardo Plaza Drive
Get a taste of South Asian flavors at Casa Lahori, a Pakistani restaurant noted for its grilled meat kabobs. Other best-selling dishes include beef nihari, chicken biryani, and shahi paneer— best enjoyed with naan bread.
11975 Bernardo Plaza Drive
Grill your own meat on the tabletop at Kangnam Korean BBQ, an interactive, all-you-can-eat experience that’s well-suited for large groups. Marinated beef bulgogi, grilled galbi short ribs, and spicy pork are served alongside traditional banchan dishes like kimchi, japchae glass noodles, and flavorful stews. Weekday lunch specials provide a nice discount on these filling meals.
11828 Rancho Bernardo Road, Suite 117–119

Dig in to your favorite curries and kebabs at Curry & More Indian Bistro. Most entrees are served with a choice of two side dishes, including basmati rice, potatoes with cumin, daal, naan, or mixed greens. Help offset the spice with one of their sweet mango or strawberry lassi drinks.
11808 Rancho Bernardo Road, Suite 123
Kai Oliver-Kurtin is a San Diego-based writer who covers travel, dining, events, and culture. Her writing has been published in USA Today, Condé Nast Traveler, Fodor's Travel, Marie Claire, and HuffPost, among others.
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.
We rounded up the city’s best events, activities, and restaurants to celebrate Dad on June 21
Father’s Day is often the overlooked summer holiday that doesn’t quite get the extravagant brunch treatment or overflowing bouquets that Mother’s Day does. Sure, there’s the annual pair of socks, Padres hat you’re convinced he doesn’t already own, beer subscriptions, phone case doubling as a wallet, plus the classic “Best Dad” keepsakes. But this year, let’s flip the narrative with events, activities, and specials made with Dad in mind.
Whether he wants a quiet dinner, a big screen full of San Diego sports and wings, or a weekend that somehow includes NASCAR, a jazz festival, and a Broadway reimagining, there is something for every dad. Here’s your guide to a memorable Father’s Day in San Diego.
Jump To: Activities | Bars & Drinks | Dining Specials

Nothing says “Happy Father’s Day” like the sound of engines ripping across Naval Base Coronado. NASCAR is turning this into a historic race weekend that feels less like a casual outing and more like a full-scale San Diego moment people will be talking about long after June is over. This is the first time a NASCAR Cup Series race has ever taken place on an active military base, which instantly puts it in “you had to be there” territory.
It’s fast, loud, and very on-brand for a Father’s Day where Dad suddenly becomes an expert on tire strategy, pit stops, and track positions. The bar might be set unreasonably high for every Father’s Day that follows, but that’s a next-year problem, right?
Price: Tickets available on Ticketmaster
Dates: June 19–21 | Weekend Schedule
Address: Naval Base Coronado
At Humphreys, Father’s Day gets a little more sophisticated. Roger Friend and an all-star lineup of jazz musicians bring decades of international experience to the bay, where dads can lean into their musical side with head nods and shoe taps. It’s smooth, layered, and exactly the amount of jazz you didn’t realize your playlists were missing.
Price: Tickets available on Ticketmaster
Time: 6 p.m. – 10 p.m.
Address: 241 Shelter Island Drive, San Diego
Belmont Park is rolling out a Father’s Day lineup that basically turns Mission Beach into a living garage scene, with a free car show featuring everything from polished 1960s Camaros to classic Bel Airs and lowriders. If he has a ride of his own, vintage car owners can join the lineup for $35 per vehicle. After the chrome tour, it’s straight into a Mission Beach classic: boardwalk strolls, fish tacos on the sand, and rides at Belmont Park.
Price: Free to attend | Register vehicle here
Time: 10 a.m. – 3 p.m.
Address: Belmont Park, 3146 Mission Boulevard, San Diego
I think it’s an unspoken rule that dads love Bob Dylan. Mine is already figuring out how he’s getting to San Diego for this. But this isn’t just a Father’s Day activity, it’s a cultural event that happens to land on Father’s Day weekend and immediately becomes the plan. Bob Dylan at The Rady Shell means you’ll be surrounded by city lights sparkling across the harbor, legacy music, and at least one moment where Dad leans over and whispers, “You know, this guy wrote everything.” And honestly? He’s not wrong.
Price: Tickets available on Ticketmaster
Time: 6:30 p.m.
Address: 222 Marina Park Way, San Diego
The San Diego County Fair returns with fried everything, questionable decisions, rides that definitely looked safer in the 2000s, and Dad’s very confident plan to “just walk around for an hour” that somehow turns into an entire day. It’s also the biggest, longest-running community event in San Diego County, running Wednesday, June 10 through Sunday, July 5, with a “Once Upon a Fair” theme. It basically becomes part of the Father’s Day season whether you planned it or not. So, consider this your annual reminder that “happily ever after” can, in fact, involve Cajun honey dogs, cinnamon rolls, a Ferris wheel you swore you wouldn’t go on, and Dad somehow knowing exactly which booth has the best Spam wonton tacos.
Price: Tickets available here: website
Date & Time: June 10 – July 5 (closed Mondays & Tuesdays) | 11 a.m.
Address: 2260 Jimmy Durante Blvd, Del Mar
Isabella Dallas is a freelance writer for San Diego Magazine and the Arts and Culture Editor at The Daily Aztec in her final year at San Diego State University. She previously worked as an editorial intern for SDM, but when she’s not writing, you can find her trying the best coffee spots in SD, devouring the latest rom-coms, and indulging in anything and everything pop culture.
Stake Chophouse & Bar brings contemporary classics and old-school service to the heart of Coronado
Stake Chophouse & Bar isn’t your average steakhouse. Blue Bridge Hospitality’s Coronado outpost is a modern interpretation of a big-city steakhouse nestled in the heart of the small coastal community. The team at Stake has reimagined the whole steakhouse experience. By prioritizing a seasonal farm-to-table sourcing philosophy, a personalized guest experience, and unique service touches, like a formal steak presentation and a bespoke knife selection process, Stake distinguishes itself in a sea of steakhouses.
Exceptional steaks, including Wagyu from Japan, Australia, and the U.S., and fresh seafood flown in daily form the core of Stake’s culinary identity. The menu features a five-course omakase-style steak experience highlighting house favorites, plus an array of cuts, and classic steakhouse staples—think a wedge salad, baked potato, or pasta carbonara—refined for a contemporary palate without losing their traditional appeal. Stake focuses on seasonal sourcing from the region’s best family farms and specialty purveyors, and incorporates intentionally unexpected touches to create something truly unique.
“I challenge our chefs and myself to take it a step further in sourcing,” says Chef Ronnie Schwandt. “It’s important to us to highlight different farms, unique one-off farms—whether it’s cattle, strawberries, a local fisherman or from anywhere in the United States, we’re always trying to find that niche.”
Beyond the menu, Stake emphasizes outstanding service, says Vinny Spatafore, Director of Hospitality Operations. Staff maintains detailed notes, allowing them to remember guests by name, recall previous orders such as a favorite martini (also memorable for the customer since it’s served in an extra tall, distinctly-shaped glass), and celebrate special occasions like birthdays and anniversaries.
“When you have those points of topic that you remember about a guest, they appreciate that,” he says. “Our servers are really good with that—we have a couple servers who have been here since the beginning and they’ll remember somebody from years ago, their name, their kids’ names, where they live. I’m really thankful to have a great front of house staff.”
Award-winning wines, rare whiskeys, special events, and a complementary black car service that provides transportation for guests throughout Coronado add to Stake’s appeal.
Schwandt stresses that Stake offers more than a meal; they aim to give patrons something unforgettable.
“It starts when you walk up the stairs and are greeted by the hostess—that sets the tone for the night. Then you’re greeted by a server, who may know you by name, and can guide you through the menu and curate as they get to know you,” says Schwandt. “Most people leave kind of blown away; they leave feeling like they just had an experience. That’s the goal, right? Whether you’re serving smash burgers or high-end steak, you want somebody to leave thinking, Wow, that was awesome.”
San Diego’s biggest food and drink festival is back for a week-long celebration of SoCal’s best restaurants, chefs, and wineries from Sept. 30–Oct. 4
Maybe it was when Breaking Bad stars Bryan Cranston and Aaron Paul drank mezcal with chefs from San Diego and Food Network on the cliffs over Blacks Beach. Or the dinner outside under lights with Alex Morgan, celebrating some of the country’s most badass women chefs. Or the celebrity pickleball tournament hosted by NFL Hall of Famer Drew Brees, where the star of It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia made thwacking sounds with locals. Or when Iron Chef winner Beau MacMillan commandeered (some say “stole”) a golf cart and delivered drinks and ice to chefs.
Whatever it is, Del Mar Wine & Food seems to have become the food and wine festival for people who don’t usually like food and wine festivals. The most San Diego thing.

Two years ago, Thrillist named it one of the best food festivals in the country. Last year, 10,000 people came out to experience it, including Guy Fieri. Afterward, the founders spent a couple days trying to put their finger on why it felt so special. They had to name it, lean into whatever that was.
“It all came back to play,” says one of those founders, SDM co-owner Troy Johnson, a longtime San Diego food writer and Food Network judge. “Making world-class bread is serious, but breaking bread shouldn’t be. We gather all these incredibly talented people who take their craft very, very seriously—work their butts off all year to make some of the best food and drink in the country—and then we all just kinda play in the grass. We believe it’s possible to create something of incredible value and make the experience of that thing a laidback, easygoing, unpretentious experience. That’s what this is, and who we are in San Diego. The whole reason we did this was to shine a national spotlight on the people who make our food and drink culture hum.”

The festival dropped its 2026 lineup today.
Headlining the fest are Food Network chefs Jet Tila, Maneet Chauhan, and Aarti Sequeira; Top Chef winner and Michelin-starred Buddha Lo; Iron Chef alum Beau MacMillan; MasterChef winner Kelsey Murphy; MasterChef Latinos winner Michelle Mathelin, chef and Guy’s Grocery Games judge Catherine McCord, chef and former Masterchef Mexico judge Benito Molina, Top Chef alum Jackson Kalb, Michelin-starred chef Drew Deckman, Michelin-starred chef Javier Plascencia, James Beard award-winning chef Brady Ishiwata Williams, and James Beard-nominated chef Mawa McQueen.
The party kicks off on Wednesday, September 30 at Monarch Ocean Pub with Signature San Diego, a walk-around tasting of the city’s greatest bites, from Baja seafood to bold Mexican flavors. From there, the energy carries into a celebrity pickleball tournament hosted by Drew Brees at Barnes Tennis Center on October 2, pairing friendly competition with an all-inclusive tasting experience in support of Feeding San Diego.
The main event is the two-day Grand Tasting at Surf Sports Park on Oct. 3 and 4. The city’s top chefs, food people from TV lands, and local tastemakers gather on the weirdly perfect grass to serve up everything from juicy Wagyu burgers and beef tallow fries to yellowtail tuna tostadas and veggies dressed up in their Sunday best. Wine and cocktail pairings are designed to round out the whole experience, including activations from Aperol Spritz, Hendrick’s Gin, Tequila Ocho, Mezcal Vago, Rioja wines, and Temecula producers.

A VIP lounge offers exclusive access to curated small plates from Michelin-level chefs and pour from some of SoCal and Napa’s finest wineries and drink makers. The Official After Party at Guesthouse La Valle on October 3, a spirited walk-around tasting just steps from the Grand Tasting, where cocktails take center stage through imaginative bites inspired by the smoky, citrus-forward, and bittersweet flavors of classic drinks.
Zones return with activations including the Big Queer Food Fest celebrating queer chefs and queer-owned businesses; the Wellness Zone led by Novo Dia offering a built-in reset with non-alcoholic mocktails, movement-driven activations, and wellness-forward moments. Coastal lifestyle and locally made brands are also integrated throughout the festival.
“We are excited for the fourth edition of the Del Mar Wine & Food Festival this fall, which has quickly become one of the largest food and wine experiences on the West Coast,” says co-founder Chris Finn. “As the festival continues to grow, we are constantly looking to add events, experiences, and partners that will resonate with our San Diego community, and embody the Southern California way of life.”
Returning as the festival’s partner is local nonprofit Feeding San Diego. To date, Del Mar Wine & Food has raised $100,000 to support their ongoing fight against hunger across the region.
Stay tuned for additional events hosted by festival partners including Rob Machado, San Diego Wave, San Diego FC, Town & Country, and San Diego Mojo.

The 2026 Del Mar Wine & Food Festival will take place September 30–October 4 throughout San Diego County.
The week culminates with the Grand Tasting at Surf Sports Park (formerly the Del Mar Polo Fields) at 14989 Via De La Valle, Del Mar.
A wide variety of exclusive dinners, drink tastings, and other lifestyle events will be announced soon and available for purchase individually on Del Mar Wine & Food Festival’s website. These festivities include chef-curated dining experiences across San Diego’s hottest restaurants, a celebrity pickleball tournament, wine tastings, and more.
The Grand Tasting takes place this year on Saturday, October 3 and Sunday, October 4.
General admission for the single-day Grand Tasting starts at $185. An Early Access option is also available at $235, which includes an extra four hours before general admission to meet, mingle, and feast. For a two-day pass, General Admission starts at $275, while Early Access is $375.
VIP tickets begin at $425 for a single day, offering access to pre-festival experiences, exclusive food vendors, a dedicated VIP area, and more. For the full weekend in VIP, passes are priced at $765.
Buy tickets today at DelMar.Wine.
Unfortunately, only service animals are allowed at the venue. All attendees must be 21 years or older.
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.
Enjoy the holiday with the city’s best restaurants offering seasonal brunch buffets, prix-fixe menus, and à la carte specials
Consider this your annual reminder that Mother’s Day is not the time to improvise. What’s in: roses, peonies, and a card attempting to summarize a year’s worth of gratitude in three paragraphs or less. What’s out: pretending you “didn’t know it was this weekend.” In a city currently operating at full brunch capacity, San Diego responds as it always does—oceanfront tables, excessive buffet spreads, and sparkling wine refills. Whether it’s waffle stacks, chilled seafood displays, or carving stations doing the most, these San Diego restaurants have you covered.
Brunch Buffets | Mother’s Day Specials & Prix Fixe Menus | À La Carte Brunch

All moms deserve elegance on Mother’s Day. Celebrate a beachfront with a beautifully timeless and tasteful brunch at the Crown Room in Hotel del Coronado. Indulge in options like lemon vanilla pancakes with berry compote paired with crispy bacon, made-to-order omelets or your very own egg benedict station, shucked oysters, whole in-house smoked brisket, Peach Melba Verrine, and more. Guests over 21 can enjoy a complimentary glass of Champagne.
Price: $235 per adult | $125 per child (6 – 10) | Ages 5 and under are free
Hours: 10 a.m. – 3 p.m.
Address: 1500 Orange Ave, Coronado
Reservations: Hotel del Coronado
Mimosas, marina views, and a Mother’s Day where the only thing on the agenda is enjoying it? We’ll cheers to that. Located at the Catamaran Resort, this Mother’s Day brunch literally has it all, from sushi rolls and nigiri to a charcuterie spread stacked with salumi, prosciutto, cornichons, pepperoncini, cherry peppers, and grainy mustard, plus waffle and omelet stations, cedar-planked salmon, and panko and herb-crusted mac and cheese. Kids can also create a bouquet for Mom that’s just chaotic enough to be adorable.
Price: $120+ per adult | $60+ per child (5 – 12) | Ages 4 and under are free
Hours: 10 a.m. – 4 p.m. (last seating at 2 p.m.)
Address: 3999 Mission Boulevard, San Diego
Reservations: Oceana Coastal Kitchen
Mother’s Day at Arlo transforms into an enchanted garden that’s equal parts lush and indulgent: a raw bar, fresh salads, delicate pastries, 12-hour braised short ribs, roasted prime rib, and Szechuan pepper–crusted swordfish from the Santa Maria grill. Spoil moms, grandmas, aunts, and every beloved mother figure with live music, a roaming mimosa cart, floral bouquets, and of course, a little retail therapy courtesy of the Kendra Scott trunk show—necklaces, bracelets, earrings, or, let’s be real, all of the above.
Price: $99 per adult | $40 per child (5 – 12) | Ages 4 and under are free
Hours: 9 a.m. – 3 p.m.
Address: 500 Hotel Circle N, San Diego
Reservations: OpenTable
Forget the CVS roses (respectfully). Rumorosa’s Mother’s Day brunch is back for its third year, pairing complimentary flowers with sun-drenched marina views. It’s coastal-modern meets Baja soul, where the food is bright and very much not an afterthought. Last year’s spread leans into Carrot Cake Waffles, a made-to-order omelet station, Café de la Olla French Toast, Roasted Lamb Tostadas, and other “yes, I’ll have everything” moments.
Price: $90 per adult | $40 per child (5 – 12)
Hours: 9 a.m. – 2 p.m.
Address: 1380 Harbor Island Drive, San Diego
Reservations: OpenTable
A boozy brunch overlooking Mission Bay with Mom? Say less. Celebrated at Tidal with a lavish spread of cheeses and charcuterie, a seafood bar stacked with oysters, shrimp, crab legs, and ahi specialties, and chef-attended carving stations with slow-roasted prime rib. Made-to-order omelets and pancakes, maple-glazed pork belly, roasted Baja grouper, vibrant seasonal salads, and brunch classics round it out, finishing with an abundant mini dessert selection.
Price: $125 per adult | $50 per child (5–12) | Ages 5 and under are free
Hours: 11 a.m. – 3 p.m.
Address: 1404 West Vacation Road, San Diego
Reservations: OpenTable
Mother’s Day at Animae is anything but expected. Tucked into the Marina District, this world-class steakhouse leans West Coast with a playful Asian twist. This year, treat Mom to a dim sum–style experience: a slightly more elevated, endlessly flowing take on the buffet, where indulgent small plates arrive tableside, perfectly complementing the Art Deco interiors and designed to be picked at, shared, and fully obsessed over. It’s less set menu, more choose-your-own flavor adventure.
Price: $104 per person
Hours: 10 a.m. – 2 p.m.
Address: 969 Pacific Hwy, San Diego
Reservations: OpenTable

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.
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.
For more nutrition, wellness, and healthy living tips, sign up for the San Diego Health newsletter here.