Are there any specific Vietnamese or Korean restaurants near Disneyland or somewhere easy to find, say near Harbor? We will have a rental car and plan on spending a few days at the beaches (Huntington, Newport, Laguna, etc) so anything near those would be great. We don't have anything like that here and we are mostly adventurous eaters (not the girls but the boys and I are). But I prefer to try something that comes recommended instead of taking a chance on the first place we see.
Westminster and Garden Grove have huge Vietnamese communities so you can just check the Yelp reviews and pretty much any highly rated place will be decent.
Slightly OT, but Short Order closed yesterday! The restaurant, not the stand. It was one of those, tried it once, intended to go back but never made it a priority places. I second Littlejohn's toffee.Are you driving up to L.A., or staying in Anaheim?
If you're going up to L.A......
I'm a big proponent of the Farmers Market (not just any farmers market, but The Original Farmers Market on 3rd Street and Fairfax in L.A., right next door to The Grove), suggested by SMD above. It's a part of L.A. history and it has a fantastic array of all types of food, all sorts of cuisines, counter service and table service, from both family-run businesses that have been at the Market for decades (Magee's, for example -- great for corned beef), and newer, more contemporary restaurants such as Marmalade Café and Short Order. Du-par's has been there since 1938, and they are known for their pies. Patsy D'Amore's Pizza has been in the Market since 1949. Places like Bob's Coffee & Doughnuts and Littlejohn's, for example, may seem like just your average doughnut and candy establishments, respectively, but they have been cranking out their doughnuts and English toffee for decades and have perfected them. Charlie's Coffee Shop may look like an unremarkable counter service spot, but it was featured on the Travel Channel's show Burger Land as being one of the places in L.A. with a great hamburger.
Also, Canter's Deli -- another part of L.A. history -- is right up the street from the Farmers Market.
I'm going to declare at the beginning of this post that I'm a Texan! I always visualize eating a Cobb salad outside on a patio near the Pacific Ocean in Southern California. For all I know the Cobb salad could have came from Ohio! But doesn't it sound nice???
We are so excited about our upcoming trip to Southern California. So far we are kicking around Mom's Tamales (just because I saw that on diners, drive inns, and dives), street tacos from a food truck, and Cortinas Italian Deli. I still have some planning to go! Of course we will have some meals inside of the parks, too. At first I was looking for a German restaurant, French restaurant, etc. I discovered I was subconsciously planning this weird version of eating around Epcot while in California, so I stopped that!
I need to find a place that has a really good Cobb salad.....
With a really pretty view.......
Slightly OT, but Short Order closed yesterday! The restaurant, not the stand. It was one of those, tried it once, intended to go back but never made it a priority places. I second Littlejohn's toffee.
Hey all, the wife was wondering what type of food is the type of food we need to eat while we're there. The example she gave is that when you go to Memphis or North Carolina, you eat BBQ. When you go to Chicago, you get a deep dish pizza.
(We're already eating at In-N-Out, that's not really what this is about.)
Would it be Mexican food? We're in Oklahoma so we have our share of Tex-Mex (we also have a really good "Cal-Mex" place run by a family who came from San Diego). Any suggestions would be appreciated.