Best breakfasts in L.A.
Akasha
Caterer and cookbook author Akasha Richmond has made a successful career of plying finicky celebrity eaters with her organic cuisine. At her new
M Café de Chaya
The macrobiotic fare at this
Comme Ça
What a difference the morning makes at Comme Ça when light streams in the French windows of this handsome bistro from Sona’s
Anisette On Wednesdays and Saturdays, breakfast at Alain Giraud’s
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Rustic Canyon
On Saturday mornings, with an eye to catching the lazy morning crowd and folks who’d like to hang out after the farmers market, Rustic Canyon serves a splendid breakfast. Pastry chef Zoe Nathan starts baking at 3 a.m. and keeps it up all through the morning. The goods are all laid out on the bar -- glorious crumbly maple-bacon biscuits with cream cheese and chives, croissants stuffed with Valrhona chocolate, pretty galettes filled with grapes and plums, frittata embellished with fennel and sausage, and tall wedges of old-fashioned coffee cake. Don’t forget the chalkboard that lists the hot dishes. That’s where you’ll find the French doughnuts, a bowl of what looks like doughnut holes rolled in cinnamon sugar. Inside, they’re soft and custardy, irresistible. Also recommended: the fried-egg sandwich outfitted with Niman Ranch bacon, Gruyère, wild arugula and a dab of aioli. Early birds get the best tables. Rustic Canyon, 1119 Wilshire Blvd.,
Breadbar
A Century City shopping mall seems an unlikely place for breakfast, but Paris boulanger Eric Kayser’s Breadbar is open every morning with a full array of pastries and breads. The croissants are no match for the ones at his Paris shop, but they’re better than most. The pecan-raisin scones are terrific, though, and the basket of bread for two offers plenty to munch. Cooked dishes are excellent too. Perfect sunny-side eggs are served with a fresh jalapeño salsa, ripe avocado slices and buckwheat toast. Ham and Gruyère omelet doesn’t come loose and runny as ordered, but the flavors are classic. The best deal is “Two by Two,” two eggs any style with two slices of raisin-walnut bread. Breadbar, 10250 Santa Monica Blvd., Los Angeles; (310) 277-3770; and 8718 West 3rd St., Los Angeles; (310) 205-0124; www.breadbar.net. Breakfast served 8 a.m. to noon Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. (Ricardo DeAratanha / Los Angeles Times)
LA Mill. On the east side of town, this Silver Lake coffee boutique turns out a polished breakfast designed by Providence’s Michael Cimarusti. Vegetarian-hen eggs come either softly scrambled or baked in an earthenware cocotte (small dish). My vote goes to the wild-mushroom cocotte with lardons of Niman Ranch bacon and a sprinkling of fines herbes. Instead of oatmeal, there’s stone-ground polenta swirled with butternut squash and pecans. There’s house-made granola with Marcona almonds, hazelnuts and dried sour cherries and some of the best coffee (roasted at LA Mill’s own plant) anywhere. Choose your method: French press, Chemex or the entertaining Japanese siphon presentation in which your coffee rises from one glass chamber to another and then falls back down, perfectly brewed. LA Mill, 1636 Silver Lake Blvd.,
Gordon Ramsay
Britain’s celebrated tow-headed chef offers a proper hotel breakfast in the posh new London Hotel. The Japanese bento box includes grilled salmon and whitefish, green tea noodles and buckwheat soba, a dipping sauce, beautiful rice and Japanese pickles. Some other dishes could use more attention to detail. Juices aren’t squeezed to order as you’d expect at these prices, and while toast served in a silver-plated toast rack is lovely, what’s up with the eggs Benedict? The English muffin is supermarket quality, toasted on one side only; however, the hollandaise is silky as can be and the eggs are impeccably poached. English breakfast features quite ordinary sausage, crisp delicious bacon, a grotty-looking wedge of portabello mushroom and, in my case, perfect sunny-side-up eggs for $24. Citrus French toast is cloyingly sweet and, oddly, comes with sweetened butter for another sugar rush. Scottish smoked salmon is luscious, though the bland soft scrambled eggs and undercooked potato blini that come with it leave something to be desired. Still, the setting is swell, service is attentive and it’s quiet enough to talk, just not the top-notch experience you’d expect from a chef of this caliber. Gordon Ramsay at the London, 1020 N. San Vicente Blvd.,
-- by S. Irene Virbila
(Frazer Harrison / Getty Images)