LAReview
Oy Bar
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As with breakfast burritos and Spirit Halloween stores, the best dive bar is usually the one that’s closest to you. The whole allure of them is the convenience of dropping in at a moment’s notice for a stiff drink and grumbling along with the crusty bartender who served you. Going out of your way for such an experience dilutes the point. That is, unless that dive bar is Oy Bar.
The Studio City spot, run by the owners behind Jeff’s Table, isn’t just a great place to snag a solid cocktail and decompress, it’s also home to inventive and delicious bar food. And that alone is worth breaking out of your dive bar bubble to experience.
Nothing about Oy Bar’s dimly lit interior feels particularly remarkable. Dated wood paneling lines the walls, old chipped-up swivel stools dot the bar area, and 1980s-era dropped ceiling tiles hover above everything. In other words, it’s exactly how a dive bar should look. The crowd is a mix of people in their 30s drinking $9 Old Fashioneds and dissecting script pitches, long-time Valley residents reminiscing about The Bar At Oyster House (the previous tenant, hence the name), and college kids home on summer break ripping shots because it’s somebody’s birthday. It makes for an eclectic mix—the scene is one of the charms that draws people in—but it's the food coming out of the kitchen that keeps drinkers in their seats.
photo credit: Jakob Layman
Oy Bar’s elevated bar menu is made up of what can best be described as Jewish comfort classics that did a semester abroad. And perhaps more crucially, they are also the kinds of foods you want to consume while drinking. Take the “Jeff’s Special” quesadilla: a gooey, over-the-top masterpiece filled with smoked pastrami, sauerkraut, and covered with a crispy gruyere-jalapeno crust on the outside. There’s a pickle bento—a nod to the traditional deli pickle tray—but here it’s served in a bento box with various house-fermented vegetables and two different types of sauerkraut. One of the newer dishes, a deconstructed borscht that’s served cold and made with a beet and aji amarillo granita, is basically a frozen dessert. It’s objectively one of strangest dishes we've seen at a dive bar, but considering how sweltering Valley summers get, it’s a welcome refresher.
One item that’s not to be missed under any circumstances is the burger. In fact, if you’re reading this and it’s after 6pm (when Oy Bar opens), just get in your car and go eat it. The juicy beef patty comes topped with hoisin ketchup and an entire herb garden’s worth of cilantro, giving it a uniquely tangy, fragrant flavor—while still delivering the kind of unfussy bar burger experience you want from a place that blasts ‘90s R&B and has “cold beer” listed on their menu. It’s already one of our favorite burgers in LA.
If you live in and around Studio City, congratulations: You’ve got yourself a great dive bar that’ll make friends in other neighborhoods jealous. If you don’t live nearby, make a trip to Oy Bar anyway. We promise your bubble will still be there when you return.
Food Rundown
photo credit: Jakob Layman
Oy Burger
photo credit: Jakob Layman
Crispy Potatoes
photo credit: Jakob Layman
Jeff’s Special Reuben Quesadilla
Pickle Bento
photo credit: Jakob Layman
Wings
Matzo Ball Ramen
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