
What we’re about
Time to tempt your palate with all the pleasurable flavors that LA, and beyond, has to offer!
Join Pleasure Palate as we do culinary adventures exploring of restaurants (both high-end & holes-in-the-wall), food & beverage tastings, and more. From savory to sweet, spicy to tangy, ethnic to All-American, we'll taste it all! Come along and let us take your taste buds on the ride of their life!
Because we want to burn off some of the calories that we eat, many of our events will have both a dining and physical activity paired together. We do many day trips and weekend adventures that combine the best of both dining and experiencing what LA, SoCal and beyond has to offer in terms of dining options and points of interests.
Pleasure Palate has been around for over 13 years now and in that time we have had over 2,000 events. We offer at least 8 events per month for our members to choose from. This is a very active MeetUp group.
We will focus on various aspects of urban, suburban and rural life, ranging from architectural to cultural, historical to quirky and/or a combination of any of the above to help give you a better appreciation of where we live. Oh, and bring your camera because we encourage all our members to take photos and share their experiences with us on the event pages.
MeetUp charges over $200 each year to maintain the Pleasure Palate site. In addition, it costs a lot of money to maintain memberships to historical societies, newspaper and magazine subscriptions - all to get ideas for future events. So we ask for a voluntary $12.00 annual donation to help defray the costs that MeetUp charges. Members who donate $12 per year get Plus Member status which allows them to bump off a Regular member for a event which is already full. Plus Members can't bump off other Plus members.
To learn more about Pleasure Palate, check out the links below:
Membership and Guidelines
Attendance Policies & 3 Strikes Rule
Upcoming events (4+)
See all- Inglewood: Tour of Intuit Dome & Brunch at Two HommesIntuit dome , Inglewood , CA
Please note: Read the directions carefully below BEFORE you RSVP "Yes" for this event.
- This is a 2 part event - we will first tour the Intuit Dome and then have lunch at Two Hommes.
- The goal is to get the 11 AM tour on May 18th: Intuit Dome Tours - Universe
- After the tour, we will have brunch at Two Hommes: menu
- Bring at least $40 in CA$H for brunch.
Ever since I saw it completed last year, I have been wanting to tour LA County's latest sports venue, the new home of the Clippers. I think it cost a billion plus to build and even from the outside, it looks quite impressive. So come join me as we tour the Intuit Dome and then have brunch nearby at Two Hommes, a pan African restaurant.
- Memorial Day Weekend Getaway: Kinetic Race, Eureka, Arcata & More!Super 8 by Wyndham Arcata, Arcata, CA
Please Note: Read the directions carefully below BEFORE you RSVP "Yes" for this event.
- This is a 3 day Memorial Day weekend trip to Humboldt County with multiple stops.
- I will only allow those members who have attended at least several PP events in the past. If you are a new member and have never attended an event before, you will not be allowed to join me on this adventure.
- There will be multiple stops for meals and visiting various sites all over the Humboldt County including Eureka, Arcata, Crescent City this holidayweekend. So you must be used to a FULL DAY's worth of activities, because there will be A LOT of walking and hiking involved.
- I am not getting paid to host this event, so you must be DRAMA FREE and LOW MAINTENANCE and in decent shape for this event. Whne I say decent shape, be able to hike 10 to 12 miles in way at a slow but steady pace.
- I will be renting a vehicle that we can carpool in and we will evenly divide the bill for the rental including gas. If we get more than 6 people, then we will need another designated driver and I can rent more than 1 vehicle if needed.
- We will be flying to Sacramento and from there driving to Eureka. Because driving from LA to Eureka is at least a 12 hour drive which I have done before and don't want to do again. I'll provide my flight itinerary later but for now focus on your motel/hotel booking.
- We will be having breakfast lunch and dinner on Saturday and Sunday and breakfast and lunch on Monday at various restaurants.
- The total estimated cost for this weekend getaway for meals, transportation and hotel lodging is estimated around $600 to $700 per person.
- I booked a room here: Super 8 by Wyndham Arcata, Arcata (updated prices 2025)
- If you are unable to book a room at Super 8 by Wyndham Arcata, then choose a place less than 2 miles away from it, because I am not your chauffer.
- You must be a dog lover or tolerate dogs, because I just might bring along my two pomeranians, TimTam and Cacao, to this road trip.
- A preview of the Kinetic Race: Kinetic Sculpture Race | CROSSING THE BAY | Humboldt 2024
About 10 years ago, I organized a trip up to Arcata to experience the Kinetic Race and visit the Redwood forest and other points of interest and it was so much fun and memorable that I have been wanting to return and witness the race again, but also visit other sites as well.
So in addition to the Kinetic Race, we will hike the James Irvine Trail: James Irvine Trail, California - 1,871 Reviews, Map | AllTrails
We will hike the magnificent Fern Canyon in the Redwood State park: Fern Canyon Is California's Best Family Friendly Hike
We will ride teh Skunk Train at Fort Bragg: We Rode The Historic Skunk Train in Fort Bragg, California 2023 and visit the botanical garden
There will be many other stops along the way in this adventure as well. So come join me this Memorial Day weekend for a fun filled adventure in the Northwestern Corner of CA!
- East Hollywood: Family Style Lunch at Kurrypinch - Sri Lankan CuisineKurrypinch, Los Angeles, CA
Please Note: Read the instructions carefully below BEFORE you RSVP "Yes" for this event.
- This is a family style dining event, meaning we will order as a group and divide the bill evenly excluding beverages.
- You cannot have any dietary restrictions for this event.
- Because this is a limited seating event, I am requiring a non-refundable $25 deposit to cut down on flakes and No Shows. The deposit will be applied to your share of the bill during our meal. You can send me the $25 via Zelle/Venmo/Paypal - my account is under rjhemedes@gmail.com and phone number 714-658-4099. The name is Robert Hemedes
- If you sign up for the event but don't pay the deposit, you will be placed in the Wait List.
- The estimated cost per person for this meal is between $35 to $45. Here is their menu and pricing: Kurrypinch, Sri Lankan Modern Cuisine | Daily Menu
From LA Times article:
There’s no shortage of delicious things to eat in East Hollywood: herbaceous lamb kebabs at Saffy’s; garlicky prawns at Kuya Lord; the entire spicy-sweet-salty pantheon of Thai Town. But until recently, there was nowhere to try kottu roti, lamprais or string hoppers. That is, until Kurrypinch came along.
Located in the former home of a vegan pizza joint on Hollywood Boulevard, Kurrypinch is one of just a handful of Sri Lankan restaurants scattered across the Southland and the only one in Central L.A. (Most of the others are in the Valley, and there’s an outlier in Westwood.) Chef-owner Shaheen Ghazaly has big plans to introduce the cuisine — and his own personalized take on it — to as many Angelenos as possible.

Kurrypinch chef-owner Shaheen Ghazaly creates and fine-tunes his own spice blends and custom curry mixes.

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But first, he’s trying to define his version of the rich, spicy Sri Lankan food that bears some resemblance to its South Indian neighbors but is very much its own thing. “I’m still trying to figure that out myself,” he says. Ghazaly walks me through the vast lineup of herbs and spices in his open kitchen: finely chopped ginger and garlic, mustard seeds (“Those three ingredients go into basically every dish,” he notes), chile flakes, paprika, turmeric, fried curry leaves, two different types of his own custom curry powders.
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There are tubs of brick-hued chile sauce and garlic oil, both made in-house, and a sheet tray overflowing with burnished tangles of fried onions, awaiting their role as garnish. Coconut is everywhere too, in fresh, shredded and milk form; Ghazaly uses it as the base for many of his curries. (Rice and curry, he explains, is a staple of Sri Lankan cuisine: “Without it, we are nothing,” he says solemnly.)

Wrapped in banana leaves: The lamprais at Kurrypinch is a traditional dish of basmati rice, eggplant and potato curry, seeni sambol (sweet-spicy caramelized onions), sautéed shrimp, fried hard-boiled egg and mackerel croquette.## Hoppers and rotis on the griddle
An entire subgenre of “deviled” dishes is heavily spiced with chile and garlic, and fried snacks like fish fritters and spiced chickpeas make great drinking food. And, of course, hoppers (rice flour pancakes), string hoppers (rice noodles) and rotis underpin many meals — the latter two Ghazaly cooks on the griddle, spatulas clanging in a rhythmic blur.
Ghazaly makes his own curry blends and chile oil; eschews the use of soy sauce, black pepper and MSG; and doesn’t use any dairy as a thickener. All of his produce is fresh, including curry leaves gifted from a customer’s tree. “This is how I grew up cooking,” he says.

Ghazaly with his coconut roti made with grated coconut and his coconut chickpea curry served with lime rice.
With a majority Sinhalese population that’s mostly Buddhist, a smaller Tamil contingent who are primarily Hindu and a smattering of Muslims and Christians too, it’s impossible to neatly define the cuisine of the island nation — which also bears the influence of Dutch, Portuguese and British colonialists. But if there’s a throughline, it’s that most Sri Lankan food is boldly, brightly flavored with a riot of contrasting tastes and textures that makes it nothing short of thrilling to eat.
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The L.A. metropolitan area has the second-largest Sri Lankan population in the country (behind New York) with an estimated 7,000 people, many concentrated in the San Fernando Valley near Reseda and Tarzana.

“I’ve had this talent since I was very young where I can taste something, recognize its ingredients and mimic it,” says Ghazaly, whose father introduced him to cooking.
In 1952, the Immigration and Nationality Act repealed certain measures aimed at excluding Asian immigrants, and the following year the first Sri Lankan immigrant to the U.S. under said act, 19-year-old Rajah Rutnam, arrived in L.A.
Rutnam’s brother, Jayam, the co-founder of the Sri Lanka America Assn. of Southern California says that chain migration and later a lottery system encouraged more Sri Lankans — often fluent in English due to the British schooling system — to arrive in subsequent decades.## The first Sri Lankan restaurant in California
“In the ’60s, ours was one of the few families here, and the only reason we came was to visit my brother,” Rutnam says. “But we got here and we immediately liked everything about California.” It’s worth noting that Rajah Rutnam, who died in 2010, founded the first Sri Lankan restaurant in California, dubbed Rajah’s Elephant Walk, in Hollywood.
Ghazaly, 49, took a slightly different path. Born in Karachi, Pakistan, he moved to Sri Lanka at 8. As a child, Ghazaly took an active interest in the kitchen, and his single father encouraged his son to become familiar with different spices and ingredients. “I’ve had this talent since I was very young where I can taste something, recognize its ingredients and mimic it,” he says. As a young adult, he joined his father’s merchant shipping line and spent a dozen years crisscrossing the globe on cargo carriers, docking across Asia, Africa and Europe, exploring the local cuisines in each port.
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Ghazaly adds chickpeas to his curry in the Kurrypinch kitchen. Then, a creamy drizzle of coconut milk.
He moved to Los Angeles in 2006 to pursue a career in IT, while spending his off-hours cooking elaborate Sri Lankan dishes to woo the family of his now-wife, a childhood friend who had immigrated a few years before. Friends and family who tasted Ghazaly’s home cooking encouraged him to go pro, and in 2018, he opened a small storefront in Van Nuys, doing a brisk takeout business.
Sri Lankans from across Los Angeles county sought him out, and in 2022, he moved his operation, dubbed Kurrypinch, to a larger location in Tarzana, just down the street from longstanding Sri Lankan destination Apey Kade.
With COVID-19’s impact on businesses and a landlord considering demolishing the building, Ghazaly closed the Tarzana location in February of last year. He considered taking a break from restaurants entirely, but when one of his former customers, Dr. Nimesh Rajakumar, offered to invest in a space in East Hollywood, Ghazaly knew it was an opportunity too good to pass up.## “I didn’t want to call it ‘authentic’”
The new Kurrypinch, designed by Jennifer Nielsen, trades the strip-mall coziness of some other Sri Lankan spots in exchange for a more modern, streamlined aesthetic, with cool concrete floors and rustic flourishes throughout. There are 26 seats, including a six-seat chef’s counter with a partial view of the kitchen, where Ghazaly holds court, experimenting with new dishes for the most adventurous diners.

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The menu is a mixture of more traditional “Sri Lankan Signatures” — like kottu roti (chopped roti stir-fried with an aromatic blend of eggs, meat and vegetables) or string hopper (served in pilau form with curry leaves and spices) — and the “Chef’s Signatures,” where Ghazaly’s creativity shines, with what he describes as riffs inspired by global dishes — a coconut milk risotto with mahi-mahi inspired by shrimp and grits, or seared salmon atop a creamy curried kabocha squash puree.
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Fried papadum with Ghazaly’s seeni sambol, spicy-sweet caramelized onions.
Ghazaly is attempting to strike a balance between satisfying the Sri Lankan customers who come in seeking the highly spiced flavors they grew up with, and the majority non-Sri Lankan guests who may be trying the cuisine for the first time. “That’s one of the reasons I didn’t want to call it an ‘authentic’ Sri Lankan restaurant, because everything has a different kind of spice blend and a different way of cooking,” he explains. So far, however, feedback from all parties has been positive (even if the Sri Lankans sometimes ask for extra chilies or more gravy on the side).
Kurrypinch opened at the end of February and is still fine-tuning operations. Ghazaly is currently focused on getting the restaurant open for lunch service and outdoor dining, and expanding his wine list with specific pairing options. It’s all part of his overarching goal to introduce people to the complexities of his cuisine.
“Whenever people ask me, ‘Hey, is Sri Lankan food like Indian food? Is it like Chinese food?’ I say, sure, we’re similar — but Sri Lankan is better,” he says, laughing.