Showing posts with label Ricky's Fish Tacos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ricky's Fish Tacos. Show all posts

12.31.2012

Top 10 chomps of 2012

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2012 seems to have just flown by!  It's been a pretty busy year for me of eats and travel.  So busy that I have yet to post my 2012 travels to India, Thailand, and Cambodia (to be posted soon)!  Unlike 2011's indulgences, this year has been full of eats that are more homey and casual - who knows what 2013 will bring...

My 2012 chomps (in no particular order):



Levain bread and jam from Outerlands (San Francisco, CA).  Sometimes the best thing can be just as simple as toast and jam.  The freshly made fluffy bread is topped with probably the freshest berry jam I've tasted in SF.  Another great thing is you can buy the loaf at the counter and attempt to replicate it at home.

Check out the original post on Outerlands ( HERE)

Fried fish tacos from Ricky's Fish Tacos (Los Angeles, CA).  Miles away from any type of large body of water, in a narrow driveway, a block away from the bustling Hollywood Blvd, who would have ever thought something so magical could exist?  From the perfectly fried to order fish, the cold, crunchy slaw, and the absolutely magical sauces, its the best fish taco I've had.

Check out the original post on Ricky's Fish Tacos ( HERE)

Nem Kaow (rice ball salad) at Champ Garden (San Francisco, CA).  Little crispy bits of rice and other simple ingredients make up this ridiculously memorable dish.  You won't stop thinking about it after its long gone.

Check out the original post on Champa Garden ( HERE)

The Rebel Within at Craftsman and Wolves (San Francisco, CA).  It was a  delight for all the senses as I bit into the savory muffin with a head scratching puzzling surprise inside.  Innovative, creative, and down right tasty.   

Check out the original post on Craftsman and Wolves ( HERE)

Meatball with fried egg sandwich (#13) at Banh Mi Ba Le (Oakland, CA).  When you eat banh mi, who eats anything, but the the combination (dac biet) or the bbq pork?  Not me, but at Banh Mi Ba Le I'm a #13 meatball and fried egg banh mi believer.  The most perfectly runny egg with flavorful meat and the best banh mi bread in Northern California.  Yes, the best banh mi sandwich in the Bay Area is a meatball one.

Check out the original post on Banh Mi Ba Le ( HERE)

Foie sandwich at Naked Lunch (San Francisco, CA),  2012 was the goodbye to foie, but hopefully not forever (see Chicago's foie ban history).  I didn't know how much I loved it till it was gone.  This year we've seen many preparations of foie, from fancy foie to foie in chocolate, but the one whose memory still lingers on the tip of my tongue is Naked Lunch's foie sandwich.  Thick slabs of foie sandwiched with lettuce and tomatoes.  Somehow the combination of it all just works. 

Check out the original post on Naked Lunch ( HERE)

Chicken Arepa from Mr. Pollo (San Francisco, CA).  Perfectly juicy and flavorful chicken in a crispy package.  This dish started my obsession with arepas and may possibly lead to spending my 2013 hunting more of these down.

 Check out the original post on Mr. Pollo ( HERE)

Cannele at Keiko a Nob Hill (San Francisco, CA).  I always love a new sweet treat I've never heard of, especially one with such a history.  The slightly waxy exterior gave a crisp shell to a custardy tasting center.   

Check out the original post on Keiko a Nob Hill ( HERE)

Hurache nopales at El Hurache Loco (San Francisco, CA).  Living in California, you think you've had all types of Mexican food before the age of 30.  Then you tastebuds meet el hurache.  Where have you been all my life?   California fresh ingredients only heighten what is already a  perfectly constructed piece of food art.

Check out the original post on El Hurache Loco ( HERE)

Shredded pork bowl at Daikokuya (Los Angeles, CA).  So its a ramen house, but the winner here was the chicken rice bowl.  From the crispy bits to the fatty juicy pieces, all covered in a sweet sauce, atop some beautifully fluffy white rice. Asian comfort food in its finest moment.

 Check out the original post on Daikokuya ( HERE)

Not to be left out!  My best meal of 2013 was at State Bird Provisions (San Francisco, CA).  Only a place like State Bird Provision could make something as kitchy as dim sum carts work.  Innovative dishes, concept, and tastes make it my clear winner for best meal 2013.
 
Check out the original post on State Bird Provisions HERE.

For my 2011 Top 10 Chomps check it out HERE



             

9.05.2012

Ricky's Fish Tacos

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My first food stop on this LA trip was finding this fish taco spot.  I can't really say that before this I've had a life changing fish taco.  In the Bay Area my #1 fish taco spot is The Taco Shop at Underdog's (see post HERE), which is beyond amazing, but the fish tacos at Ricky's far exceeds it.  It's been a couple days and I'm still thinking about their fish taco!
  Pitched under a couple of tents, they fry up some might fine fish, lobster, and shrimp here.  Its set up almost in the middle of a driveway so it can be easily missed from the street.  Parking is somewhat of a horror and surprisingly its one of the few spots in LA that there is no valet, yet.  I suggest going when they first open, which is around noon.  I arrived a little after and still had to endure a decent wait time.            
At almost 30+ minute wait for your order, the 90 degree heat definitely tested my bay area born and bred I-can-only-surive-between-65-and-80-degrees self. 
Ricky's only serves three things here:  fish taco, lobster taco, and shrimp taco.  I almost prefer food spots this way, where they focus on a couple of things and make them well.  At first glance, I was a little uneasy that the batter on the fish was really thick, but braced myself that I had to get something for sustaining through this LA heat.
Usually I'm not one for sauces on my tacos.  A squirt of lime and I'm good to go, but they don't offer limes here.  Instead, they give you the option of four types of sauces.  From right;clockwise: creme fresca (which is more like a mayo + sour cream), spicy, medium, and mild.  I actually individually tasted all of them before I put any on my tacos.  All of them were so delicious that I added all of them to my tacos, which is unheard of for me.  The sauces here were super flavorful with a good peppery kick.  Even better than La Vic's orange sauce.  I would almost say that the sauces might even be better than the tacos itself, but the tacos were fantastic as well.  The sauces just heightened the already phenomenal tacos.
After being dressed with cabbage, diced tomatoes, jalapenos, and onions, both the lobster and fish taco look almost the same, but the taste is completely different.  The fish taco is made of a flaky white fish that has a mild, but fresh taste.  The batter was seasoned well, but not too overpowering that it covered the fresh taste of the fish.  Even though the lobster taco was delicious, I think the fish taco was my favorite of the two.

In hindsight I should have gotten the shrimp taco too, but I was saving room for other eats I had planned for the day.  The lobster was sweet and succulent, but I think I preferred my lobster without batter and not deep fried, especially at $8 for one, I need the taste to last a little longer.


Address:               Ricky's Fish Tacos
                              1400 N. Virgil Ave.
                              Los Angeles, CA
 
Type:                     Mexican/seafood

Popular chomps:   fish taco
                               lobster taco
                               shrimp taco

Chomp worthy:      fish taco
                               lobster taco