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  • - We are back!

  • It's your host Steven lim driving.

  • But also, we have another host driving,

  • Andrew Ilnyckyj.

  • - Adam, whose car are you in?

  • - I think I'd rather be in Steven's car.

  • - What!

  • - Dang, get wrecked! - I'm a great driver.

  • And why are we in two cars today, you might ask?

  • It's because we're going on a picnic.

  • - That's right, today on "Worth It."

  • We're going to be trying three picnics

  • at three drastically different price points

  • to find out which one is the most worth it at its price.

  • - That's why we're all driving separately,

  • it's because we're all meeting at our picnic location.

  • Picnics are having a little bit of resurgence right now.

  • It's a great way to meet up with people,

  • to dine outside in a responsible socially distanced manner.

  • This will be taking place over three days.

  • - Whoa, whoa, whoa!

  • We're about to picnic for three straight days?

  • Is this like Picnic-chella?

  • - Sure.

  • Our three picnics are not all strictly picnic-specific food,

  • but they will be foods that travel well

  • and are convenient to eat outdoors.

  • - All right, Andrew,

  • what is the first restaurant

  • that we're going to be enjoying today?

  • - First, we're going to see Manager Jana

  • at Zhengyalov Hatz.

  • An Armenian restaurant

  • that specializes in one dish only.

  • And the name of the dish is Zhengyalov Hatz.

  • (gentle music)

  • - Zhengyalov Hatz.

  • The translation is "bread with herbs."

  • It's a national dish.

  • We have few restaurants in capital of Armenia, Yerevan.

  • Same name, same dish. Here in Glendale,

  • we have a lot of Americans who love it as vegan food.

  • The dough is very simple.

  • It's flour, water, salt.

  • And the filling,

  • we have usually 12 different types of herbs.

  • Whatever we do in Armenia,

  • it's exactly same what we do here.

  • We don't use any machine,

  • everything goes by hands.

  • And to open the dough very thin,

  • it's not too easy.

  • That's how this restaurant was made,

  • to show customers the process of making the dish.

  • and we like it, we appreciate.

  • Because the dough so thin, it's not oven.

  • It just stove, flat stove.

  • It takes like 30-40 seconds.

  • One and another side

  • and it's ready.

  • I have a lot of customers,

  • Friday, Saturday, Sunday,

  • people take like 10, 20 breads by going outside

  • because it's nice and easy,

  • you don't get dirty, no greasy.

  • People who grew up in Armenia,

  • they grew up with this dish.

  • I have customers who come say,

  • "Oh, it's so good you open here, it brings back memories."

  • So it's a simple and it's a healthy dish.

  • - We're back, picnic season.

  • - Been a while since I've seen you in person.

  • Have you gotten stronger?

  • - I have, thanks for noticing.

  • - Yeah, you got a little buffer today.

  • - Not just today.

  • (both laughing)

  • We have a yogurt drink.

  • - I've had like the Asian yogurt drinks,

  • is this gonna taste like that, you think?

  • - I'm not sure, I've never seen this before.

  • - Cheers.

  • - (laughs) Wow!

  • - I thought I was gonna get milk or yogurt

  • and I got neither.

  • - It really has the same sort of like mouth drying

  • and puckering as Greek yogurt.

  • We're starting off with something very simple.

  • - Oh, but this is perfect picnic food.

  • Comes in a box, you could pick it up with one hand.

  • (classical music)

  • That is delicious!

  • - It's really good.

  • - Reminds me of the chive dumpling we had in Taiwan.

  • It's so dense with green vegetable.

  • - You know what is surprising about this?

  • It's kind of juicy

  • in a meat kind of way.

  • - To be honest, when I saw it I was like,

  • "Oh, I kind of feel like I'm gonna be disappointed

  • when I bite into that."

  • Just because I'm so precondition to like

  • order things with meat,

  • but this is very satisfying.

  • - We should have a picnic-ability.

  • Like, how much does it picnic?

  • - Reclined position, one handed.

  • - Does it picnic?

  • - This picnics.

  • - This picnics.

  • - There's also dessert

  • - [Jana] It's just dessert with walnuts and honey.

  • - Oh my goodness,

  • look at the inside!

  • Oh God!

  • This is a fire hose of deliciousness into your mouth.

  • - I think this might be the most comfortable

  • we've ever been. - Asked me if I picnic.

  • - Steve, you picnic?

  • - Oh, I picnic. (Andrew laughs)

  • Adam, do you picnic?

  • - We're now in our second day of picnicking.

  • Now on day two we're really getting into

  • the elongated picnic mode.

  • But before we get there-

  • - [Steven] Picnic fact!

  • - Woven baskets were the earliest vessel

  • used to transport food

  • because they were light and versatile,

  • but also sturdy.

  • - If there's anything this fact says about humans

  • it's that we were born to picnic.

  • - Weaving in general is, I think,

  • is one of the most impressive inventions.

  • The idea that you're taking a strand

  • and turning it into something with structure and strength.

  • I don't know if prehistoric Andrew

  • would have been able to figure that one out.

  • - I am most certainly sure

  • that prehistoric Andrew would not have figured out weaving.

  • We're now on our way to see Jihee at Perilla LA.

  • Which is not a restaurant,

  • but it's a to-go only business that sells Korean banchan.

  • And this particular business comes recommended to us

  • by our friend.

  • Sorry, a baby squirrel was just walking so slowly

  • across the road.

  • I always slow down for animals.

  • So Perilla LA was actually recommended to us

  • by a friend of the show, Rie.

  • Rie used to work with Jihee.

  • Rie said, "Oh, you're looking for picking foods?

  • "You gotta go to Perilla LA,

  • "it's-"

  • (soft music)

  • - I mean during pandemic,

  • I have a lot of time to think.

  • And I always have this idea of making Korean banchan

  • with the Californian produce.

  • Banchan is the little Korean side dishes

  • that can be eaten with rice.

  • So I grew up in Korea.

  • My grandma started a restaurant, very similar model.

  • They are known for their banchan.

  • I used to work at Rustic Canyon.

  • I learned a lot about how to treat great produce.

  • Basically, it's combination

  • of what I have learned at the restaurant

  • with a flavor that I grew up with.

  • I go to Santa Monica Farmers Market,

  • I have a relationship with farmers.

  • I always check with them

  • and they just tell me what's good in the season.

  • I do marinated okra,

  • that's like one of most popular menu.

  • Okra's not traditionally Korean ingredient.

  • I think it would be nice to add a char flavor.

  • And I use the vinegary soy sauce overnight.

  • And I also have an eggplant dish,

  • which is from my family,

  • that they actually use it even right now

  • at their restaurant.

  • So the only difference, I use serrano chili

  • and my mom probably use Korean chili (laughs).

  • And nori chip.

  • It takes over a day.

  • I use two nori sheets together

  • and add sweet rice porridge,

  • I spread it on top of it

  • and then I dehydrate and then it'd becomes like dry chips.

  • A lot of my banchan,

  • it looks really simple,

  • but I have to wait.

  • Like I ferment a lot of stuff.

  • It's amazing to see how flavor changes.

  • The good thing about my food

  • is you can pick up and then leave in your fridge.

  • A lot of my guests, they told me like,

  • "Oh yeah, I'm picking this up to camping."

  • And I was like, "Oh, that's actually a good idea,

  • "because it hold well."

  • I'm also learning 'cause it's not just about cooking.

  • I have to talk to customer,

  • they have a lot of question.

  • I have to post on Instagram.

  • I started cooking at my old apartment and there's no light.

  • I bought the white box and I took the photo from my iPhone.

  • It's all like learning process and I feel grateful

  • to do that.

  • - [Steven] Picnic day two!

  • - Day two.

  • When it's a picnic day, it's a great day.

  • - Perilla, if you remember our first time eating it

  • on this show, Korean barbecue.

  • - That's right perilla, a type of leaf.

  • Shall we napkin?

  • So Jihee's given us a bunch of different dishes.

  • I think we should start with one of her favorites,

  • the okra.

  • Cheers. - Cheers.

  • That is not okra.

  • It tastes like the word barbecue.

  • The delicious char.

  • - When you bite it, it's like pulling apart

  • and falling apart in your mouth,

  • kind of like the way that barbecue does.

  • - Yeah, I'm honestly shocked by it.

  • - Jihee, what did you do to the okra?

  • - What you're tasting is time,

  • and not T-H-Y-M-E.

  • Okay, chip break.

  • - Chip break!

  • Oh!

  • - Oh my God!

  • - Oh!

  • Bam!

  • - (laughs) Bam!

  • - Hey chicharron, shut up.

  • (Andrew laughs)

  • This chip is in town now.

  • It's seaweed chicharron.

  • - Yeah,

  • this picnics real hard.

  • - So this is cabbage layered with perilla leaf.

  • - That is delightful.

  • - I mean, it's really pretty much exactly sauerkraut.

  • - You know what we do next? - What?

  • - This egg looking thing that I think is egg.

  • - I mean, I never thought I would eat an omelet on a picnic.

  • - It's not just an omelet though, it's like a crepe.

  • - [Andrew] These green beans are catching my eye.

  • - Each of these you can just grab

  • very easily with chopsticks,

  • just go boom.

  • Done. Alright, so I wanna go to this one next.

  • It's like cucumbers, like kimchi, like pickled.

  • Is that pineapple?

  • - I think it's melon.

  • Picnic. - [Steven] Picnic.

  • Yo yo yo yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo!

  • - Okay, shut it down, this is the best one.

  • - That's got everything going for it.

  • It's pickled, it's a little spice behind it.

  • - Let's go to the eggplant.

  • Cheers, Steven. - Cheers.

  • If you like eggplant,

  • this is like the most eggplanty eggplant you can eat

  • in your life.

  • - If you wanna take a real trip, go back to the okra.

  • Back to where we started.

  • And this is how you picnic,

  • around and around you go.

  • - Sounds like what you're saying is that

  • this food picnics.

  • - This food picnics.

  • (soft music continues)

  • Okay, picnic day three.

  • And Steven and I are just along for the ride in the back

  • because at our last picnic,

  • we're gonna be enjoying some delicious wine.

  • So before our last picnic-

  • - [Steven] Picnic fact.

  • - Most historians agree that the word picnic

  • is derived from the 17th century word "pique-nique,"

  • though at the time it was used to describe

  • a social gathering that was more like a potluck

  • where everyone would contribute a different food item.

  • By 1802, the term and the activity

  • had made its way to London,

  • where a group of Francophiles,

  • people who love French culture,

  • established a "Pic-Nic Society,"

  • at which they were known to eat, drink,

  • and put on small shows and performances.

  • - I love how it was upgraded to a dinner

  • and a show outdoors.

  • - It also feels like

  • it was more of an outdoorsman's kind of club.

  • - Have you ever been part of a food club?

  • - I have not.

  • I guess this show is a little bit of a food club.

  • - All of our millions of viewers,

  • we're part of the "Worth It" club.

  • - This is our own "Worth It" society.

  • - Wait, now I feel like it's a cult.

  • - Speaking of Pic-Nic Society,

  • we're on our way to our last location now.

  • We're going to see Chef Curtis Stone

  • and his new pop up at The Grove called Picnic Society.

  • So at Picnic Society,

  • they have a number of curated baskets.

  • The basket that we're gonna have

  • features an assortment of charcuterie

  • that comes from Chef Curtis' other restaurant, Gwen.

  • - I love how they're paying homage

  • to the original Pic-Nic Society.

  • Kinda like fanny packs,

  • back in style, baby.

  • (upbeat music)

  • - I'm Curtis Stone and were in Picnic Society,

  • which is a pop up by Gwen.

  • Gwen's a butcher shop and a dining room.

  • And the butcher shop is sort of the heartbeat

  • of the dining room.

  • We pulled together a beautiful selection of meats,

  • game, Wagyu,

  • and we make all of our own charcuterie

  • What we were seeing at Gwen

  • was a lot of people were coming in

  • and buying things that would be sort of ideal for a picnic.

  • We sort of just got a little playful with the idea

  • and thought we'd do it as a business.

  • And then we got the opportunity

  • to come over here to The Grove

  • and do a pop-up restaurant.

  • So here we are.

  • We've a beautiful big patio here at The Grove.

  • And then we have a terrace up here on the first floor

  • which we call The Backyard.

  • It's really cozy but still very individual.

  • You know, when you think about a picnic,

  • it's actually a beautiful way to dine

  • because you really linger, you graze on the food.

  • We've got beautiful blankets, lawn games,

  • anything that you could imagine

  • to create the perfect picnic

  • is in this building. So there's a few ways you can go

  • about ordering your picnic basket.

  • You can either build your own

  • or you can let us build it for you.

  • So the Gwen basket

  • really celebrates everything about Gwen.

  • The big highlight is the beautiful selection

  • of cured meats.

  • Teresa is an incredible butcher

  • and she runs the butcher shop over there at Gwen.

  • She's also learned the charcuterie very, very closely.

  • She studied it, she's moved to Italy.

  • Wagyu bresaola, bresaola is air dried beef

  • and we sourced it

  • from Blackmore's Wagyu beef production in Australia.

  • - [Andrew] A couple years ago,

  • we actually went to Blackmore Farms in Australia

  • - [Curtis] Oh, no way! and had a chance to interview

  • Mr. Blackmore. - [Curtis] David, yeah.

  • And if it was a couple of years ago,

  • there's a chance you saw the steer

  • that you're gonna taste today.

  • It's a beautiful product, to start with.

  • And, hopefully, we make it even more special.

  • And what goes so brilliantly with cured meats

  • is wonderful cheeses. And then all of the things

  • that you'd expect to eat really well with that;

  • dried muscatel grapes, some crackers, some paste.

  • We make a chicken liver parfait.

  • I learned how to make it with Marco Pierre White

  • when I cooked in Europe

  • and it reminds me of my childhood

  • growing up in tough restaurants.

  • We make beautiful olive oil and sea salt stecca bread.

  • Dom is one of our incredible pastry chefs here

  • and he bakes that stecca bread

  • as well as making all the beautiful sweet things

  • that you can come and find.

  • Chocolate chunk cookies.

  • So we get big chunks of Valrhona chocolate.

  • I like to think the cookie is just there

  • to hold the chocolate chunks together.

  • Picnic Society, we would like to say

  • you bring your own weather to the picnic.

  • It's very true, you know,

  • like a picnic is meant to be a time that you spend

  • with people you care about.

  • And it's not meant to be rushed.

  • - I'm extremely comfortable.

  • It's not just this deluxe blanket

  • that we've gotten just for this occasion.

  • - What is this?

  • - This is made by Trilby Nelson.

  • And you can buy these Picnic Society

  • because you can buy everything you need for a picnic.

  • Look at this box.

  • - [Steven] It looks like a briefcase.

  • - You ready to pop it open?

  • - [Steven] I'm gonna pop it. - Three, two, one.

  • Okay,

  • so we opted to also buy a bottle of wine

  • and we have a nice Greek rose.

  • - [Curtis] Roses do that really incredible job

  • of still being light,

  • but they can hold up to that beautiful cured meat.

  • - And it matches my blanket,

  • come on!

  • Cheers, Steven. - Cheers.

  • To three picnics.

  • - Yo, that's nice.

  • - Whoa!

  • I just saw the chocolate chip cookie.

  • - That's for dessert, Steven. - Yeah, I know, but it's a-

  • - [Adam] You can start with it, it's a picnic.

  • - A picnic, no rules? - Yeah, true,

  • don't try to throw your rules on me.

  • I'm starting with a chocolate chip cookie.

  • - You wanna start with a cookie,

  • we'll start with a cookie.

  • - Oh my gosh.

  • You can't go wrong with chocolate chip cookies.

  • - It's almost like a chocolate panini.

  • Now let's get to some savory food.

  • I say we kick off the party with a little parfait.

  • - Oh, man,

  • that's good bread.

  • Look at this!

  • I don't think I've ever spread chicken on bread before.

  • My hearing just cut out for a second.

  • (Steven and Andrew laugh)

  • - Okay, so let's do cheese next.

  • So I love a cheese that's just kind of like butter.

  • So this one was a bloomy rind sheep milk cheese.

  • - I love cheese.

  • - We got some dried grapes here.

  • - So in Australia,

  • you remember the Museum Muscadelle?

  • That's wine produced from this type of grape.

  • - These grapes are crazy.

  • I think it's time for a posture change.

  • I'm leaning over.

  • - Steven, are you seeing the sunset right now?

  • Look at these clouds.

  • - Look at the mountains.

  • - It's time for some meat, I think.

  • - So, so good.

  • - It has this incredible like jamminess to it.

  • It's borderline fruit leather.

  • - There's duck speck in here.

  • - Yeah, so that's the darkest one.

  • This duck is the best bacon I've ever had.

  • - I want to pickle now

  • because I've had a lot of really fatty meats.

  • Pickle cheers.

  • - So, Steven, does this meal picnic?

  • - This picnics!

  • And I could do that because I'm outside.

  • That was a picnic trilogy.

  • - I've really developed a new appreciation for the picnic.

  • I think I'm gonna be picnicking a lot more in the future.

  • - It's time to tell me

  • which picnic was the most worth it

  • at its given price point?

  • - I think all three of these truly picnicked.

  • - I think my winner is gonna be Perilla LA.

  • Because I had no concern

  • about taking my time with that food.

  • And I think, for me, that's what's best about a picnic.

  • - You know, I really loved the Picnic Society

  • and those meats were just perfect.

  • But the question today is, "Does it picnic?"

  • And yes, while the Picnic Society does picnic,

  • and while Perilla LA does picnic,

  • Zhengyalov Hatz,

  • they really picnic.

  • You can grab and go, you can bring it to a hike,

  • you could bring it to the beach.

  • Adam, who's your "Worth It" winner?

  • - [Adam] Perilla LA.

  • - All right, that does it for "Worth It Picnics".

  • I'm picnicked out.

  • See you next week.

  • When we do "Worth It" savory pies.

  • Pie!

  • (upbeat music)

- We are back!

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