LAReview
Included In
It’s no secret LA loves a good theme. After all, we invented the tiki bar and our most-visited attraction is a mall with fake snowstorms during the holidays. And that’s to say nothing of a little place called Disneyland. These places are ingrained into our city’s culture, and because of that, we’ve trained ourselves to believe that any place with even the slightest motif has been manufactured for our enjoyment. And for the most part, it has been.
Which is why The Old Place, a saloon/restaurant in the Santa Monica Mountains, feels so special. During the late 1800s, it was a general store and post office, so its dusty, dimly lit bar isn’t some set piece from an old Western. In the 1970s, it was a blue-collar clubhouse for local outdoorsmen and outlaw celebs like Steve McQueen, so its denim-clad clientele aren’t underpaid actors in rental costumes. Everything here is real, and when you add in the high level of food coming out of the kitchen, it’s an experience everyone really needs to have at least once.
Whatever time you plan on eating at The Old Place (it’s open for lunch and dinner on the weekends), plan to arrive at least an hour early to check out the surrounding town of Cornell. There’s an antique store selling Italian limestone fountains, a coffee shop built into the back of a farm truck, and merchant tables lining the sidewalk. Needless to say, it’s a joyously strange place. But where you’ll want to spend the majority of your time is at Cornell Winery & Tasting Room, directly next to The Old Place. Grabbing a few glasses of Malibu-grown wines inside this giant barn while you wait for your table is one of the great dinner-and-a-drink combinations in LA. When your name is finally called - with new friendships intact and chardonnay coursing through your veins—you’ll already be sold on this whole experience... and you haven’t even had dinner yet.
But hold tight, the best is still to come.
photo credit: Jakob Layman
Even if the majority of The Old Place’s comfort food-laden menu was merely passable, we’d still come here simply for the escape. The fact that everything goes toe-to-toe with the best comfort food spots in LA makes this tiny roadhouse a place you escape to - and never want to return from. Whether it’s chicken pot pie with mashed potatoes, bleu cheese potato salad, or an oak-grilled 18 oz. ribeye that puts every La Cienega steakhouse to shame, this is food that sticks to your ribs and your soul. We’ve woken up several nights in a row craving their noodle and cheese bake (basically the greatest mac and cheese in existence) and have drifted off mid-conversation because mentally, we’re back at The Old Place’s wooden bar, staring at a giant cheese-covered mushroom skillet, listening to a guy play Creedence Clearwater Revival on a banjo, in a room that looks like the first level of Westworld.
That scene is the very definition of an Old Place experience, and it’s one that simply doesn’t exist in LA proper (and if it does, it’s at Universal CityWalk). But why pay for something manufactured when you can drive to the Santa Monica Mountains to experience the real thing? Authenticity is a much more enjoyable theme anyway.
Food Rundown
photo credit: Jakob Layman
Noodle & Cheese Bake
Steak Sandwich
photo credit: Jakob Layman
“Old Place” Steamed Clams
photo credit: Jakob Layman
Mushroom Skillet
photo credit: Jakob Layman
Chicken Pot Pie
photo credit: Jakob Layman
Bone-In Oak-Grilled Ribeye
photo credit: Jakob Layman