A new riot on Sunset

http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/la-et-night10-2009apr10,0,2729543.story

By Elina Shatkin, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
April 10, 2009

Los Angeles is a city rife with symbols of cultural evolution, or if 
you prefer, gentrification. (Take vast swaths of downtown, for 
example.) But nowhere is the contrast between L.A.'s anarchic rock 
'n' roll past and its slick, upscale present thrown into starker 
relief than on the Sunset Strip, where the onetime Continental Hyatt 
House, a.k.a. the Riot Hyatt, has reemerged as the Andaz West Hollywood.

Jimmy Page won't be throwing champagne bottles out of windows, but 
you might find a quote from him printed on a floor-to-ceiling window 
in one of the guest rooms. "It's all about very subtle hints to the 
past," says Michel Morauw, the hotel's general manager. Morauw's 
right -- but not in the obvious way.

It's not the area's hippie heyday that the Andaz recalls. Before the 
curfew riots of the mid-'60s, before the Summer of Love, before it 
was a nexus of hippie counterculture, the Sunset Strip was a 
playground for gangsters, writers and Hollywood players who noshed 
and guzzled their way through the 1930s and '40s at legendary clubs 
such as Ciro's, the Trocadero and the Mocambo. This new incarnation 
of the 46-year-old hotel is decidedly vintage.

The centerpiece of the hotel, just to the right of the entryway, is 
RH (in honor of the Riot Hyatt nickname), a bar and restaurant with 
floor-to-ceiling windows that make you feel as though you're sitting 
on Sunset Boulevard -- without any of the hassle of walking among the 
washed and coiffed masses.

Bathed in the glow of an electronic billboard that manages to 
penetrate the bar from across the street, you can peruse conveniently 
placed Taschen art books while waiting for your cocktail. The Mr. 
Plant (named after Robert Plant, who was standing on the balcony of 
Room 905 when he said the famous line, "I am a golden god") is an 
unexpectedly addictive concoction of No. 209 Hendricks Plymouth gin, 
tangerine juice, agave syrup, soda and muddled cucumber slices.

"Our first focus is the local clientele more than the hotel guests," 
Morauw says. "We do that in many hotels around the world. First, the 
hotel bar has to be attractive to locals. When people travel, they 
want to go where the locals drink and eat. We like to be that 
neighborhood place."

Perhaps if you live in the hills above the Andaz West Hollywood, 
you'd expect your local pub to serve $16 martinis and $35 burgers. RH 
is striving to be a neighborhood bar, but that's a pretty rarefied 
neighborhood.

On the other side of the bar separated by a floating wall of Pop art 
bubble mirrors, the restaurant has one of the most open kitchens 
anywhere in Los Angeles. White marble countertops surround an island 
of stoves constantly bustling with activity. Floor-to-ceiling, 
refrigerated glass cases display fresh produce while a leg of jamón 
ibérico sits prominently on the counter.

Designed by executive chef Sebastien Archambault, who has worked 
under Alain Ducasse, Jean-Francois Rouquette and Guy Savoy, the menu 
emphasizes market-to-table, local produce. So much so that it comes 
with a confusing addendum called the Market Menu, which allows diners 
to choose any combination of the restaurant's nine proteins, 14 
vegetables and 11 sauces and chutneys to create a made-to-order meal.

Atkins devotees should be pleased. But they'll probably want to avoid 
the complimentary mini-loaves of crusty French bread that arrive 
before dinner. That's fine. The bread is merely a carrier device for 
organic butter.

If the concept of choosing your own meal seems too tedious, RH also 
offers dishes such as seared scallops, chicken breast stuffed with 
house-made foie gras and a double-thick pork chop topped with pancetta cubes.

But the menu's signature item is the RH burger, a hunk of black Angus 
beef topped with morels and foie gras. What does a $35 burger at the 
RH offer you that a $14 burger at any of L.A.'s other top eateries 
doesn't? The knowledge that you're the kind of person who can afford 
to spend $35 on a burger.

"In Hindi, 'andaz' means 'personal style,' " Morauw says. "That's 
what the brand is after. We're not trying to serve all the customers 
in the same way. There's a market for a more young-at-heart 
clientele, someone who is not set on the traditional form of hospitality."
--

RH at the Andaz West Hollywood

Where: 8401 W. Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood
When: Bar: 11:30 a.m. to midnight Sundays through Wednesdays, 11:30 
a.m. to 1:30 a.m. Thursdays through Saturdays; restaurant: 6:30 a.m. 
to 11 p.m. daily
Price: beer, $7; cocktails, $16; wine: $12-$140; appetizers, $8-$22; 
entrees, $15-$35
Contact: (323) 785-6090, www.westhollywood.andaz.com
--

[email protected]

.


--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Sixties-L" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/sixties-l?hl=en
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to