We can be forgiven for surmising that something's up at Lukshon, can't we? Because we are at a Sang Yoon restaurant, nobody has tried to tackle us on the way to our (reserved!) table, and we are drinking Singapore Slings or a Beaujolais-style Canary Islands wine called Listan Negra instead of garagiste ale bitter enough to kill a half-acre of lawn.
3239 Helms Ave.
Culver City, CA 90232
Category: Restaurant > Asian Fusion
Region: Culver City
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Lukshon, tucked next to Father's Office in the Helms Bakery complex, is Yoon's most completely realized concept yet, an edgy, grown-up restaurant serving an Asian-ized, farm-centered, technique-oriented small-plates menu, very much on the path blazed by places like Animal, Lazy Ox and Red Medicine: the new taste of Los Angeles cuisine.
So when you order beef tartare, the lozenges of raw, chopped meat come out resembling the Isaan tartare called koi soi, a raw-beef salad seasoned with citrus, ground rice and herbs, although not, I suspect, with the requisite beef bile, and the slivered Spanish mackerel with green papaya and coconut vinegar is a riff on a traditional Filipino ceviche. I've never had anything quite like the dish of tiny bulbs of squid stuffed with fermented ground pork, but I've stared at recipes for it in Vietnamese cookbooks; the sauce, a kind of pesto made with the pungent Vietnamese herb rau ram and Malaysian candlenuts, is from a fantasyland where Liguria meets Kuala Lumpur. Smooth, cool cubes of foie gras "ganache," dusted with powdered carob and sprinkled with nuggets of what resembles Rice Krispies treats, probably could be sold as fancy chocolates in Beverly Hills. You may know roti canai from the few Malaysian restaurants that serve the floppy fried pancakes with tepid curry, but Yoon's version — crisp, small and layered with lamb sausage, pickled vegetables and a kind of deconstructed chutney — is like a Malaysian pizza. The rice plates — black rice with Chinese sausage and a fried egg; jasmine rice with homemade X.O. sauce and a fried egg — are closer to Roy Choi's rice bowls at Chego than they are to simple side dishes.
Lukshon would have made a great contrast to the late Beacon, just around the corner, which was run by the chef behind L.A.'s first wave of Asian cooking. Welcome to the neighborhood.
LUKSHON | 3239 Helms Ave., Culver City | (310) 202-6808, lukshon.com
Most likely, the reason you have (at this writing) 0 comments is because your new commenting software is so lousy that it fails a significant part of the time. For example, I submitted a comment to the current post yesterday, and it got through for a while, then later it was not on the site, then there it was again, and now it seems to have disappeared into the bit bucket. Is the corporate IT staff working on this problem? It's frustrating for readers who spend time and effort trying to post helpful (or humorous) comments. -SB
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