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Red Medicine (restaurant)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Restaurant in Beverly Hills, California
Red Medicine
Restaurant information
Established2010 (2010)
Closed2014 (2014)
Previous owner(s)Jordan Kahn, Noah Ellis, andAdam Fleischman
ChefJordan Kahn
Food typeVietnamese cuisine,Nordic cuisine
LocationBeverly Hills, California

Red Medicine was a fine dining restaurant inBeverly Hills, California. It was opened in 2010 and originally servedVietnamese cuisine before changing toNordic cuisine. It closed in 2014.

History

[edit]

Red Medicine was opened in 2010 by chef Jordan Kahn, Noah Ellis, andAdam Fleischman.[1] Its name was a reference to the 1995 albumRed Medicine by punk rock bandFugazi.[2] Its opening was delayed due to difficulties during construction.[3]

The restaurant was involved in various controversies, including the use ofHo Chi Minh in its original logo,[4] and its practice of making posts on Twitter with the names of guests who made reservations and never arrived, criticizing their behavior.[5][6][7][8]

In December 2010, Ellis refused service toLos Angeles Times food critic Irene Virbila and photographed her, later posting her image onTumblr with the comment that she was not welcome at the restaurant. Virbila had previously maintained her anonymity for 15 years as a food critic, and the publication of her image created controversy.[9] In an interview withEater in 2012, Ellis said that they had always intended to refuse Virbila service because she had criticized Kahn's desserts at his previous restaurant.[3]

In May 2014, the restaurant was included on food criticJonathan Gold's list of the 20 best restaurants.[10] The restaurant was closed on October 31, 2014 and was sold to another set of restaurateurs.[11][12]

Description

[edit]

The restaurant was built with exposed concrete walls and incorporated wood taken from barns.[13] It featured high ceilings andindustrial style interior design.[2] It was known for being open until 2 a.m. and having a large cocktail menu.[13]

The restaurant originally servedVietnamese cuisine with modern European influences, which was described as "neo-Vietnamese"[1] or "vaguely inspired by the flavors of Vietnam".[14] The menu featured platters and tasting menus with traditional ingredients and modern plating.[15] Kahn was heavily influenced byNordic cuisine,[16] and incorporated Nordic influences from the start before shifting to become a neo-Nordic restaurant.[17]

The restaurant was also noted for its atmosphere and management ethos, which was described as "slightly punk rockish" in a review by theLos Angeles Times,[17] and "a cocky frat-boy attitude" byTime Out.[14]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abLAT - HOLD Archive."Red Medicine to close at the end of October".latimes.com. Archived fromthe original on 2014-09-25. Retrieved2026-01-05.
  2. ^ab"A Taste of Red Medicine - CBS Los Angeles".www.cbsnews.com. 2011-01-04. Retrieved2026-01-05.
  3. ^abOdell, Kat (2012-01-26)."Noah Ellis Thinks Back Over One Year at Red Medicine".Eater LA. Retrieved2026-01-05.
  4. ^"High-End Beverly Hills Vietnamese Restaurant Red Medicine Closing Its Doors".LAist. Archived fromthe original on 2014-09-26. Retrieved2026-01-05.
  5. ^Forbes, Paula (2013-03-25)."LA Restaurant Outs No-Shows on Twitter".Eater. Retrieved2026-01-05.
  6. ^"Red Medicine's call-outs: Do two wrongs make a right?".Los Angeles Times. 2013-03-26. Archived fromthe original on 2019-11-19. Retrieved2026-01-05.
  7. ^ROGERS, BY JOHN."Beverly Hills eatery gives no-shows Twitter roast".Lubbock Avalanche-Journal. Retrieved2026-01-05.
  8. ^News, A. B. C."Restaurant Tweets Names of No-Shows".ABC News. Retrieved2026-01-05.{{cite web}}:|last= has generic name (help)
  9. ^"Restaurant critic S. Irene Virbila photographed and kicked out of Red Medicine".Los Angeles Times. 2010-12-22. Archived fromthe original on 2022-11-29. Retrieved2026-01-05.
  10. ^"Jonathan Gold's 101 Best Restaurants: The top 20".Los Angeles Times. 2014-05-17. Retrieved2026-01-05.
  11. ^Kang, Matthew (2014-11-07)."The Flats, The New Eatery Going Into Red Medicine's Former Space in Beverly Hills".Eater LA. Retrieved2026-01-05.
  12. ^DeJesus, Erin (2014-09-25)."LA's Influential Red Medicine to Shutter on October 31".Eater. Retrieved2026-01-05.
  13. ^abMiller, Jeff (2010-12-09)."Red Medicine".Thrillist. Retrieved2026-01-05.
  14. ^abJohnson, Brad A. (2012-09-17)."Red Medicine".Time Out Los Angeles. Retrieved2026-01-05.
  15. ^room34 (2013-03-26)."Red Medicine".Andrew Zimmern. Retrieved2026-01-05.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  16. ^"New Nordic Cuisine Draws Disciples (Published 2011)". 2011-08-24. Archived fromthe original on 2025-02-02. Retrieved2026-01-05.
  17. ^abTimes, Los Angeles."Review: Red Medicine, a little like punk rock and splendid in its own way".latimes.com. Archived fromthe original on 2014-05-06. Retrieved2026-01-05.
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