
Costa Mesa: Special food truck Tuesday, Nov 24




Next Tuesday night at our SOHO TACO HQ stop we will be giving away #ElTacoMestizo for FREE! Click here for more information
It’s the Inaugural San Diego Music & Sports Combine a Music + Sports Festival
Location: NTC Liberty Station – Ingram Plaza, 2640 Cushing Road at Liberty Station in San Diego.
Experience Ultimate Disc with the San Diego Growlers professional Ultimate Disc team; as well as WAKA Kickball & Social Sports’ challenges and multiple games; Live Music party with a broad selection from soul, jazz, rock and reggae includes a diverse lineup of music by The Devastators, Sure Fire Soul Ensemble and The China Clippers with special DJ Peter James!
Games: We are excited to feature sports that you can play on-site (individuals or form a two-person team) — right on the spot includig Ultimate Disc Skills Challenge and Contests with San Diego’s own professional Ultimate team, the San Diego Growlers! You’ll love the elegance of the game as a spectator or player!
Features include:
-Ultimate Power play and tips from some of San Diego’s Finest Ultimate Disc Players
-Ultimate Accuracy Challenges
-2 v 2 Spike Ball
-Disc Golf
-Cornhole and Giant Jenga
-Plus WAKA Kickball featuring games and prizes
-Yoga Demos and Mini-Classes featuring Yoga Munkey and Effulgence Yoga Instructors
-Charity Challenges supporting some of our favorite community organizations!
Craft Beer and Wine Garden: Samplings in the beer/wine garden between (12:00-4:00 p.m.) and sales on-site.
Food Trucks: Choose from a selection of gourmet food trucks offering delicious meals for purchase.
Exhibitors: Massage, sports gear, yoga demos, acupuncture and more! Your entry includes access to these amazing pros in our community.
21+ All Access Ticket Includes: A concert featuring three great bands; 8 Samplings from the Beer/Wine Garden; Sports, Games and Opportunity Drawing entries — all while supporting local organizations.
More info at www.musicsportscombine.com
Please Note:
Beer/Wine Garden: Must be 21+ with a valid ID. No one will be allowed into the beer garden who is under 21 or who doesn’t have valid I.D.
Join us for our 5TH ANNIVERSARY OPEN HOUSE & CLIENT APPRECIATION DAY at The Barkley® Pet Hotel & Day Spa & VCA Westlake Village Animal Hospital
Register to Attend & You’re Entered to Win Fabulous Prizes!
Please register to WIN here: http://conta.cc/1MwMizF
Saturday, November 14, 2015 from 10:00AM – 03:00PM
At The Barkley Pet Hotel & Day Spa & VCA Westlake Village Animal Hospital | 31166 Via Colinas, Westlake Village, CA
This is a FREE pet-friendly event happening Saturday, November 14th at our 50,000 sq. ft., state-of-the-art pet care campus. Bring the whole family and your friends!
• Exclusive, behind the scenes tours of The Barkley Pet Hotel & Day Spa and VCA Westlake Village Animal Hospital
• Get to know our Doctors and staff with educational talks and Q&A
• Raffles & Prizes • Grooming Demonstrations & Free Pet Stencils
• Face Painting & Mock Surgery for Kids • Meet Celebrity Dog “Little Bear”
• Food Trucks • Holiday Pet Photos
If you get here early, gift bags will be handed out to the first 100 guests!
We hope to see you there where everyone is a VIP every day!
FAQs
What are my transport/parking options getting to the event?
There is street parking available.
What can/can’t I bring to the event?
This is a fun family event. Bring the whole family, friends and pets. Note that although this is a pet-friendly event outside and inside our lobbies, pets will NOT be allowed on the “guided tours” due to safety, vaccination and temperament standards. We may have limited staff assistance to hold your pets for you, however, please plan on bringing a friend or family member to watch your pet while you enjoy the guided tour.
Where can I contact the organizer with any questions?
Call VCA Westlake Village Animal Hospital Event Committee at 805-497-4900 or email at westlakeanimal@vca.com.

Get a jump on your holiday shopping and select original art pieces make by local artists.
Spend the day enjoying local arts and craft vendors as you watch them create in their artisan booths at the Telemark Plaza on the corner of Telephone and Market in Ventura. More than 100 fine artists and crafts persons display and sell their original work amid a street festival atmosphere filled with holiday flair and more. This is the first year of the holiday festival after 10 successful Spring events and we hope to make it the must see holiday event.
Coming from throughout the western portion of the country the Festival artists’ original works cover the gamut of creative visual categories including painting, sculpture, photography, jewelry, ceramics, folk craft, glass, leather, metalwork, wearable art, woodwork, mixed media (2 and 3 dimensional). Paint Ventura features only original work and our original artists are all present on-site to greet festival attendees.
Fun food trucks, holiday music and warm friends make this Saturday a fun day.
Live Painting
Watch as the artists create their work in their booths. Artists will be working to create paintings from scratch throughout the day, giving the public the opportunity to see who an artist bringing a blank canvas to life.
Kids Interactive Art Activities
Bring your little ones and have them join in the fun and paint their own holiday card or ornament. Lots of fun patterns and ideas to start with.
Join Our Pet Project and Pet Adoptions
Bring your new and used pet products (toys, beds, food and more) for our collection where you can help the dogs of CARL and Cabo Dogz.
Can Tree Drive 
Help us build a can tree for Food Share, we are collecting cans to donate to the Can Tree Drive and are going to go and build a tree to celebrate the season. Any and all cans are great, bring one by the booth and get a free gift from us as a thank you for helping us reach our goal of 400+ cans.
Find the article at OC WEEKLY
As with many of its food-truck contemporaries, Chomp Chomp Nation, OC’s first and only Singaporean food truck, has gone brick-and-mortar. Well, sort of; it’s actually gone “food court.” It now operates as a permanent counter next to other vendors inside the Wholesome Choice in Anaheim Hills.
When you find it, past the nuts and across the aisle from the Persian cookies, you’ll meet Alex, the man Chomp Chomp has installed as its cook and ambassador. Alex is a stocky gent with a thick mustache and burly arms, and he will single-handedly make everything you want to eat here.
I watched him get started on my order of seven dishes without blinking. He grabbed skewers of shrimp to sear on his heated flattop, dropped a few hot wings into the basket of a deep fryer, and broke down a block of compressed rice cake into tinier blocks. “Your order will take about eight minutes,” he said, smiling as he moved about his small kitchen space in a whirlwind of hands, tongs and spatulas.
Seven minutes later, I returned and noticed he was flipping what resembled some sort of grilled cheese on his griddle. “I’m making our toasted s’mores dessert for you,” he winked. “You’re going to like it!”
I thanked him for his generosity. Then I stood in the supermarket checkout line. At home, I found Alex was right about the s’mores. I loved it–even if it didn’t involve marshmallows or Graham crackers. It’s actually a sandwich–a Nutella and kaya coconut jam sandwich on brioche bread, drizzled with sweetened condensed milk and finished with a dollop of whipped cream. If you’re wondering what that kaya part was about, it’s the distinctly Malay coconut cream spread Singaporeans put on toast and eat as breakfast. Chomp Chomp has made it sweeter, pairing it with the chocolate-hazelnut spread and naming the dessert after the campfire staple because . . . well, it does kind of taste like s’mores.
Repackaging Singaporean dishes into American molds has always been Chomp Chomp’s modus operandi. Mostly, it does this with sandwiches. There are ones stuffed with iconic Singaporean flavors such as chili crab and beef rendang–things no old-school pernakan nonya would dare put between a burger bun. Rendang, in particular–the soulful, stick-to-your-ribs slow-braised beef dish aromatic of galangal, coconut cream, pandan leaf and candlenuts–is something you’re supposed to eat with rice. But what does a Singaporean food court vendor in a Persian supermarket located in a majority Mexican area without a discernable Southeast Asian customer base do to sell it? Repurpose it in the guise of a sloppy Joe, of course.
chomp_chomp_nation_egg_rolls.jpg
Delicious!
As for the chili crab–the messy, drowned-in-spicy-gravy dish every guidebook and Travel Channel host would urge you to try if you’re ever in Singapore–Chomp Chomp offers it two ways: as a whole deep fried soft shell or a fat crab cake. Both are tucked into shiny burger buns and dolloped with the same spicy chili crab sauce that would cover your fingers in orange-tinted gunk if you were eating the original dish. Though the crab cake may be the better rendition–exploding with more meat than what you might actually get from prying it out of a real crab in the real dish–there’s just something so primal and satisfying in the act of eating an entire freshly fried soft-shell crab under a bun, crispy appendages and all.
If you want your Singaporean flavors in a red-meat burger, Alex sizzles a good, Indian-inflected ground lamb patty that he adorns with mint and a slather of a curried yogurt raita. There are also two vegetarian burger options: a falafel with more of that curry raita and a grilled tofu with peanut sauce.
For the unadulterated Singaporean dishes, look at the menu’s “Hawker” section. There are huge fried prawns here, rolled as though stogies inside a woven matrix of tapioca noodles that falls into a shower of crispy crumbles when bitten. And there are those fried wings, deep mahogany in color even before they’re shellacked in a cherry-lime-pineapple barbecue glaze–a sauce that makes them taste as though they’re the missing link between sweet-and-sour chicken and char-siu pork.
Most important, you find the chicken satays on this side, served traditionally with cubes of compressed rice cake called lontong. Eaten together, the combo is as essential to Malay and Indonesian cuisine as hot dogs and buns are to baseball games. But the satay and lontong would be nothing if its spicy peanut sauce weren’t up to snuff–and Chomp Chomp’s is. It’s so spot-on, in fact, I had to ask Alex on my second trip if he’s from Singapore. “No, I’m from Mexico,” he said with a grin. Well, of course he is.
Chomp Chomp Nation at Wholesome Foods, 5755 E. La Palma Ave., Anaheim, (949) 637-1688; chompchompnation.com. Open daily, 11 a.m.-8 p.m. Dinner for two, $20-$30, food only. No alcohol.