Now Open in Newport Beach: Code

Edwin Goei • OC Weekly • November 12, 2008
Code has opened. If you remember, this is the place that took over Fury in Newport Beach. Done by the people behind Tentation, Ten Asian Bistro, Mosun G, and others, the interior looks as impressive as its exterior; which, by the way, seems like...
The full article can be read on the OC Weekly website.

Related Articles

14 places to pick up a picnic for the Hollywood Bowl

Stephanie Breijo, Jenn Harris, Lucas Kwan Peterson • Los Angeles Times • June 2, 2022
Few Los Angeles experiences feel more idyllic, more summer-quintessential, than a picnic and a show at the Hollywood Bowl. As the sun sets over the hills peeking out behind the venue’s iconic dome, world-class musicians, screenings of classic...

Vegetarian and vegan restaurants to try in L.A. this year

Jenn Harris, Stephanie Breijo • Los Angeles Times • January 13, 2022
Metropolitan Los Angeles is one of the most creative, pluralistic places in the world to eat, and that goes for vegetarians and vegans, who can choose from an astonishing array of restaurants. Whether you’re already a plant-forward person or...

Ditch your pumpkin spice latte and warm up with dizi instead

Jenn Harris • Los Angeles Times • November 28, 2022
I will never understand the pumpkin spice craze, or the need to associate a season with a specific flavor. I enjoy cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg and clove separately and in my pumpkin pie. I don’t need it in a latte, Spam or Cheerios. This week, I have...

Spring 2021 L.A. restaurants: Best outdoor dining amid COVID

Bill Addison, Jenn Harris • Los Angeles Times • May 14, 2021
Presented by The scope of Los Angeles’ dining culture has never been simple to characterize — “diverse” doesn’t begin to describe its overlap of communities, cuisines, street foods and glittering rooms, triumphs and struggles — but it’s fair to...

5 new pantry essentials for easy meals

Jenn Harris • Los Angeles Times • March 30, 2022
I have a confession to make: The pandemic has turned me into the real-life version of the Condiment King, the most excellent, most underrated villain from “Batman: The Animated Series.” Instead of hoses that shoot powerful streams of ketchup and...