The City Bakery - Los Angeles


You can now purchase my handmade candy bars and marshmallows at http://www.bonbonbar.com/
City Bakery Sign

Note: I have since revisited City Bakery Los Angeles.
I have so many thoughts about The City Bakery Los Angeles that I’ll have to start out with the most important aspects and ramble on and on until perhaps I am the only person still here. BUT if you’re still with me by the end of the post, then add The City Bakery to Wild Flour Bread as a place that is worth-jumping-on-a-plane-for…. New York or Los Angeles (your choice!).

Pretzel Croissant

So, pastries first. Maury Rubin opened The City Bakery in NYC in 1990, and he is especially known for tarts and pastries– having even authored The Book of Tarts. The Pretzel Croissant epitomizes the City Bakery ethos — considering a classic (French) form and organically innovating it into a new (American) sensation. The croissant dough is salted (perhaps through salted butter?) and sprinkled with sesame seeds, and it is finished by crossing the ends of the croissant, which simply integrates pretzel engineering. It’s also partially whole wheat, so it turns out flaky but still a bit squishy. A perfect balance of croissant and pretzel. It works, too, that there aren’t big salt crystals on the outside–it would ruin the chew–so I consider the sesame seeds a masterstroke.

Melted Chocolate Cookie

If it hadn’t been so bright in Brentwood, this Melted Chocolate Chip Cookie would be its actual lusciously deep chocolate color. Akin to a brownie cookie, it’s a galaxy of ganache-like chocolate interspersed with chunks of chocolate and some undissolved sugar crystals for extra texture. The outside is just firm enough to contain the gooey goodness inside… but in my attempt to my break off a piece of the center, my fingers only emerged coated in fudgy chocolate. Spectacular. When I ate the leftovers later in the day, though, the cookie had solidified a bit.

Lemon Tarts

Lemon Tarts. Perfectly puckery with a softening sweetness, and creamy besides. The only hesitation was eating the Pacman-ish face on these. We overcame that. These were the only tarts on offer, but I’m hoping that their other tarts, such as milky way, blueberry coconut, cranberry-almond-caramel, and MANY MORE find their way to LA soon. They are all made in round flan rings, with minimalist–though organically creative–designs.

Choc Chip

Their chocolate chip cookie… well… rules. Chewy, flavorful, great chocolate, great dough (it also has slightly discernible sugar crystals when you chew). This cookie was more on the bready side, as opposed to the sugar-y/butter-y side that their East Coast cookies have had. This could be a factor of: choice, the air (temp or humidity), the quirks of the maker of the batch, or the flour (which are often regionally different). The batter is available in some stores as Maury’s Cookie Dough to bake at home. I hope that their white chocolate chocolate cookie turns up in the LA store, because I liked that one best in NY.

Scone
Soy Muffin

For fun, I also tried a berry scone and a miso morning glory muffin (with carrots). They check out. And yes, you will taste the soy in that muffin. Coincidentally, the muffins have a wide flat bottom that reminds me of the flan rings shapes used for the tarts.
We did eat lunch first, and we both went for the trademark salad bar, which ends up something like this.

CB Buffet CU

CB Plates

We piled up cornmeal-crusted catfish, roasted fennel, beets with mint, spinach/asian pear/black sesame salad, soy molasses salmon, radicchio/chickpea salad, spicy thai eggplant, roasted brussel sprouts, and breaded chicken with cilantro sauce. The sweet, tender catfish and the roasted fennel stood out as especially delicious while the thai eggplant stood out as being really slimy.

We also got a side of sharp and creamy macaroni and cheese. It tastes like a mix of cheddar, asiago, and fontina to me, but could just be a really great cheddar. I got the lovely puce prickly pear lemonade, and Chad got the regular lemonade.

CB Mac Cheese

Sigh…. that mac & cheese in its full glory.

We also got a chili cheddar boule. I liked the cheese feet created by the melted cheese off the bottom sides. It was fantastic with the Turkey White Bean Chili that we made at home that night.

CB CHeese Bread

And so went our meal.

There was also a lunch counter where you could get pressed sandwiches, egg scrambles, sandwiches, and the like. It was mostly savory, but I especially wanted to try the date and walnut w/ fresh ricotta pressed sandwich and the guava and cream cheese sandwich.

I’ve never been the type to rush to a new restaurant when it opens, but I think that the City Bakery in Brentwood shows its youth right now. It’s only been open for about two weeks. The pastry counter and salad bar were a bit bare — it was about 1:00 when we left and a lot of NY stalwarts weren’t out there–no peanut butter cookies, no homemade marshmallows, no marinated tofu w/ chili sauce, only one type of tart. Certainly, there was plenty to binge on, but not so much in comparison to NY.

At the same time, though, there were offerings that I don’t remember seeing in NY (I was last there in November)… the bread bar (though the sign wasn’t clear about who bakes it — it might be all shipped from Zingerman’s in Ann Arbor, Michigan)…

Bread Bar

The clothing display….

T-Shirts Area

I’m still torn between this t-shirt….

CB T Shirt

and that sweatshirt….

CB Sweatshirt

That reminds me. They DID have the amazing trademark hot chocolate on offer. I just knew I couldn’t fit that rich and creamy molten chocolate into me that day. They are supposed to have a cold hot chocolate soon. I can also only hope that The City Bakery Hot Chocolate Festival makes its way to LA, too.

There was also an extensive catering menu available (is that in NY, too?), divided into breakfast, lunch, afternoon snack, midnight snack, and cocktail party. This is a good time to talk about price. As I understand it, The City Bakery is organic. So, that salad bar above will run you $16/lb. Cookies and muffins are $3/ea. For catering, for example, a “breakfast box” of mini muffins, seasonal fruit & fresh squeezed OJ runs $15/person; a half tray of mac & cheese is $40; cornbread with aged cheddar, peach jam, & jalapeno butter is $10/person; and chicken wings are $36/dozen. I like that the $10/person “Assembly-Required Hot Dogs” includes a comic book, among many other things. I believe that it’s worth it, but for me, that would mean enjoying its worth every five years or so… or seeking out an expense account. As for the salad bar, at least spinach leaves are light.

I’ll be traveling to LA a bit this year, and I’m looking forward to seeing how the City Bakery LA evolves. The quality is definitely there, in swoon-worthy proportion, but I wonder which products will find their way to its counters. I was expecting to see Maury Rubin’s take on Los Angeles and its foods, but right now, it very much feels like an LA branch of a NY institution (having only its classic pastries for sale, bagels on offer, references to Manhattan on its catering menu). Of course, it is also winter, so there is time to amp up for spring and summer produce. Rubin, after all, follows a “Chez Panissian” (aka Alice Waters, aka started in California) approach of local foods and seasonal menus, so I expect interesting things to come.

One thing that did feel Californian was its interior design. Unlike the rather industrial silver permeating the NY branch, the one in the Brentwood Country Mart is white, and quite bright–even if it did retain a minimalist core. It’s extremely roomy, especially with only 10 tables and 6 counter chairs for eating, but there is ample outdoor seating at wooden tables w/ umbrellas and lots of room to wander around the shop.

CB Over Shoulder
Salad Bar Wide
CB Middle

And what did I cunningly manage to include in all these photos? Yes, there is a Chocolate Room LA.

CB Choc Room

And although there is an outdoor City Bakery sign for the mall, I can’t remember whether it’s so New York-style or so LA-style to not have a sign on the place itself….

City Bakery Ext

8 Responses to “The City Bakery - Los Angeles”

  1. Jessica Says:

    Thanks for the great report. I’ve read lots of articles and chowhound posts, but none give as clear and in-depth picture of what the new City Bakery branch looks and feels like, and of course, how their goods taste. Going to Brentwood is a pain and I think I’ve been to the Country Mart once in my 20+ years of living in L.A., with Westside friends and all, but I gotta get over there. Maybe wait a little longer until they’ve got their sea legs.

  2. Nina Says:

    Thanks! I’m planning to check up on it every now and then, and will post my findings. I hope that it’ll be at full steam soon–after all, it was slated to open last July. I’m just looking forward to the day when they start selling a new, California-inspired pastry there. And all I can say about that area–as you are probably well aware– is to plan for the parking… Saturday at 11:30, it was fine; at 1:00, it would have been hopeless.

  3. Sweet Napa » Blog Archive » A Tribute to the Pretzel Croissant Says:

    [...] We had a chance to make our own filled croissants on croissant day, so with The City Bakery in mind and in reverence, we went for the pretzel croissant. The originals are partially whole wheat and have a salty dough that is topped with sesame seeds. For the purposes of our class, salt wouldn’t have flown as the only filling, so we filled ours with cheddar cheese, mustard butter, and coarse salt. And they were delicious. And I can’t express why, but sesame seeds look smashing on croissants. [...]

  4. Sweet Napa » Blog Archive » Wild Flour Bread Revisited - Freestone Says:

    [...] My visit to Wild Flour Bread last month changed not only the way that I think about bread, but also the way that I think about my schedule. If I plan on being in LA for two weekends in one month, my first thought is “That’s two weekends I can’t go to Wild Flour Bread.” (Though my next thought, which cheers me up some, is “That’s two weekends I can go to The City Bakery.“) I also think about every Friday and Monday coming up, and whether I can get there to try its pizza, which is served only on those days. I haven’t managed it so far. Anyway, with a lot of excitement and a slight fear that it might not live up to our first visit, Chad and I drove an hour and fifteen minutes on Sunday solely to eat Wild Flour Bread. [...]

  5. Randi Says:

    I grew up in Malibu/Santa Monica and I think I only went to the country mart once or twice. Next time I get back to cali, I’ll have to check it out. Btw, Zingerman’s bread is overrated. My friends live in Ann Arbor, so I get that bread a lot( also took a tour). There pretzel bread is great though.

  6. Nina Says:

    It’s kind of odd — I found out that they only have Zingerman’s rye bread, and the rest is from the Breadbar. I don’t think that I’ve ever bought a loaf of rye, so thanks for the tip so that I’m not tempted to buy it at CB. I’ll let the melted choc chip cookie tempt me instead…. I hope you get there soon! :)

  7. Sweet Napa » Blog Archive » The City Bakery Revisited - Los Angeles Says:

    [...] I went to the City Bakery in Brentwood for lunch again two Saturdays ago, and I was happy to find that it’s come into its own since my last visit. Counters were full with a variety of classic and new (to me, at least) products, and it generally seemed to hum along. I liked that this time, instead of looking for old favorites, I discovered new ones. [...]

  8. Sweet Napa » Blog Archive » The Beer Bar Says:

    [...] This bar still has some development to go through. This version feels like a bit of a cheat because I mixed together so many pre-made things. I’m going to experiment with making my own potato chips, pretzels, and corn nuts. That said… I was impressed that corn nuts contain only three appropriate ingredients: corn, corn oil, and salt. I also used Kettle Chips, and handmade Martin’s Pretzels that I’d picked up at the City Bakery; their only ingredients are flour, water, yeast, salt, and soda. [...]

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