Ma'am Sir
Ma'am Sir Ma'am Sir Ma'am Sir Ma'am Sir Ma'am Sir Ma'am Sir Ma'am Sir Ma'am Sir Ma'am Sir
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99 utilisateurs

#Tags souvent utilisés
#Restaurant #Bar / restaurant #Filipino #FUSION #ASIAN
Ce qu'en disent les utilisateurs

"Ma’am Sir (pronounced “mum sir”) has got to be one of the hottest modern Filipino restaurants in LA, even based on my limited knowledge of the cuisine and area. I barely managed to grab the last open spot at the bar on this packed Thursday evening, where the main dining room was fully booked for the entire night. I quickly found out why – the above shrimp mousse & uni lumpia, along with the sweetbreads pork sisig, were simply mind blowing. Their tropical-influenced cocktails were just as unique, such as this pineapple rum & coconut-banana shrub concoction."

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"It’s all about the Longanissa, but I also recommend pretty much everything else. Try the banana babingka "

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"#39 Rattan-covered light fixtures swaying over the bar; a tropical, leafy pattern in the dining room that resurrects the 1980s with its peach-and-seafoam-green color scheme: The boisterous, beachy decor at this Silver Lake draw sets an upbeat mood for the Filipino glories that follow. Cocktails such as Hala Kahiki (pineapple, mezcal, fernet, tamarind and black pepper) prime the palate for starters like uni-gilded lumpia filled with shrimp mousse and lardo. Sizzling sisig is a tour de force featuring various cuts of pork braised, grilled, chopped and then depth-charged with onion, vinegar, chile and the extra-sour juice from calamansi citrus. Look for the comforting adobo rice bowl overlaid with braised chicken thighs — it’s a nod to Rice Bar, Charles Olalia’s downtown ground-breaker that closed earlier this year. That tiny spot helped set the bar high during a decade that saw Filipino food become one of the nation’s deservingly emergent cuisines. With Ma’am Sir (the name refers to a long-standing, gender-neutral greeting used in the Philippines, particularly in the hospitality trade), Olalia keeps the conversation moving. Full bar. Street parking. Credit cards accepted."

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"Elliot Smith Figure 8 mural remnants"

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"GQ named it one of the best new restaurants in the country"

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Approuvé par 3 partenaires officiels
certified badge Adam Chance

Adam Chance

@theadamchance

1142followers 392places
"It’s all about the Longanissa, but I also recommend pretty much everything else. Try the banana babingka "
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101 Best restaurants of Los Angeles

@latimes

799followers 101places
"#39 Rattan-covered light fixtures swaying over the bar; a tropical, leafy pattern in the dining room that resurrects the 1980s with its peach-and-seafoam-green color scheme: The boisterous, beachy decor at this Silver Lake draw sets an upbeat mood for the Filipino glories that follow. Cocktails such as Hala Kahiki (pineapple, mezcal, fernet, tamarind and black pepper) prime the palate for starters like uni-gilded lumpia filled with shrimp mousse and lardo. Sizzling sisig is a tour de force featuring various cuts of pork braised, grilled, chopped and then depth-charged with onion, vinegar, chile and the extra-sour juice from calamansi citrus. Look for the comforting adobo rice bowl overlaid with braised chicken thighs — it’s a nod to Rice Bar, Charles Olalia’s downtown ground-breaker that closed earlier this year. That tiny spot helped set the bar high during a decade that saw Filipino food become one of the nation’s deservingly emergent cuisines. With Ma’am Sir (the name refers to a long-standing, gender-neutral greeting used in the Philippines, particularly in the hospitality trade), Olalia keeps the conversation moving. Full bar. Street parking. Credit cards accepted."
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