review: Hearth in the Cottonwoods

January 13, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Food

 

Los Alamos

Los Alamos

I try to eat as organically and sustainably as possible.  I shop carefully at the market, my husband goes to the Farmer’s Market biweekly, and he’s even started a garden so we can have fresh fruits and vegetables right in our own backyard.  We’ve improved our cooking so that we can have friends over and serve edible, and sometimes even delicious, organic meals.  However, we don’t want to turn into hermits and do find the occasion to eat out once and a while. We eat at variety of places, but had yet to find a restaurant that was truly all about organic and sustainable food.  That was, until I discovered Hearth in the Cottonwoods.

Hearth in the Cottonwoods is about two hours north of Los Angeles, in Los Alamos, California.  The restaurant is housed in the Full of Life Flatbread production facility, which produces organic flatbread pizzas throughout the week.  It is rustic, warm and thoroughly inviting.   This is the kind of “organic” restaurant you can take a Velveeta-eating friend to without scaring them.  They don’t take reservations and you don’t need to worry about your attire.  It is casual and all about the food.

Their explanation about their flatbread and menu is simple: “Food made by hand and without pretense or fashion.”  They are open for dinner only Friday, Saturday and Sunday evenings.  Friday and Saturday feature a simple menu of soup, salads, flatbreads and desserts to choose from.  Their “Sunday Supper” features a different menu, which offers a more varied selection and can include appetizers and non-flatbread entrées. 

I recently visited Hearth in the Cottonwoods on a Sunday.  I had reviewed the menu before we got there, and was very excited.  My husband was ecstatic.  We weren’t disappointed.  We split several dishes, but the standouts were the tomato sauce and cheese flatbread, squash ravioli, and a rich and delicious brownie with vanilla ice cream.  The flavors in the squash ravioli were vibrant and rich.  When we inquired about the ingredients in the sauce, as it was so delicious, we were told it was simply yellow tomatoes, olive oil, and salt.  I think this is testament to the quality and freshness of the ingredients.  The ravioli also contained nettles, which was a unique touch.  We took a few pieces of our flatbread home, which inspired us to purchase the frozen version at our local Whole Foods on our next trip to the market.  It was good, but definitely not a substitute for a fresh flatbread right from the hearth.

This truly was the kind of meal I had to tell everyone I knew about.  I blogged about it, I emailed friends the website, we discussed having my husband’s birthday there.  That was the kind of impression it made on us!   I get so tired of all the over-hyped Los Angeles restaurants.  I mean, most buy in bulk from suppliers such as Sysco, not farmers, even the so-called “fancy” restaurants.  If you want to go for purely “organic” fare, you’re mostly stuck with some sort of specialty vegan or rawgeterian joint, which really isn’t what I’m into.  This is why I feel Hearth in the Cottonwoods is such a find.  They not only serve one of the best restaurant meals I’ve had in a long time, they do it by cooking with organic ingredients sourced from local farmers and craftspeople.  

My only negative comment on this restaurant is that I wish it were closer!  Why can’t more Los Angeles area restaurants mimic the local, organic, sustainable approach taken by Hearth in the Cottonwoods and Full of Life Flatbread? 

For more information about Hearth in the Cottonwoods and Full of Life Flatbread go to their website.

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Comments

One Comment on "review: Hearth in the Cottonwoods"

  1. Clark Staub on Tue, 20th Jan 2009 2:43 pm 

    Thank you so very much for visiting my restaurant here in Los Alamos.

    Being from Los Angeles originally myself, I was put in my place some years ago when I was building our little corner of nirvana here. One day I was entering a local café. I was new in town and building our stone hearth oven (which seemed to perplex everyone). Then there was the concept that I was going to be using organics (forget that they were from neighboring farms! I was in pesticide-riddled territory and a very red part of the state)… In any event as I started to enter the café an elderly woman was exiting and I held the door open. Tall, regal, and very beautiful with striking gray ponytails down to her waist she thanked me gracioulsy. To top it all off she had spurs on her dusty cowboy boots! Someone introduced me and informed the woman what I was doing at the other end of the small town (a few hundred yards away). When she asked where I came from I nervously commented that I had moved to “Little LA” (Los Alamos) from “Big LA.” Immediately the woman responded in a harsh tone “I left Smell-A 50 years ago and this is no ‘Little LA.’” I stood corrected.

    I never saw that woman again but have grown to know some of what she expressed to me that day. While we do not have the cultural options that urban residents have, we are surrounded by wonderful farms and wonderful people and deep, fertile soils. Locations, people, and resources, that we must not let be overtaken by development or “flipped” in some short-sighted real estate lambrythine scam. Many of the people who have dedicated themselves to farming (and fishing) in this area do so by farming in the “shadow of the city.” Farmers, ranchers, and food artisans, make the long weekly journey to LA (to the Santa Monica and other Farmers’ Markets or to sell in Whole Foods and Gelsons and other retailers – which is what we do) to generate income that ideally pays for their businesses and livlihood.

    Thank you for your compliments on the food we prepare here and please, spread your desire for other LA area restaurants, and food purveyors, to make the same connection to your own ‘local’ farmers – be they local in that they drive down from here and sell at the Farmers’ Markets – or that they have carved out a niche of land somewhere in LA and grow their crops there. It is not easy (for consumers or restaurants) and it is not convenient but the end result – the commitment to food that has integrity – will shine.

    Thanks for coming up! Hope to see you soon.

    Clark Staub
    Owner – Full of Life Flatbread

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