Playa Vista Direct Jun 2019

Page 43

L ef t si d e :

Frito pie served in a bag with a margarita is one of the many comfort foods at HomeState

A b o ve L ef t:

HomeState owner Briana Valdez next to a wall of art celebrating her celebrity-inspired tacos

A b o ve R i g h t:

W

All tortillas are handmade at the restaurant

hen self-proclaimed “Texpat” Briana Valdez moved from her native Texas to California, she never imagined she’d open a restaurant, let alone three. “I’m a terrible cook but I love food,” the owner/chef of HomeState admits. “After moving here in 2000 right after college with a business degree, I didn’t know what to do. I found myself missing food from home and I couldn’t find it. As the years went on, it made me really homesick and frustrated. I kept waiting for somebody to make a HomeState but no one did. I decided one day that maybe I should try.” Despite having neither a culinary nor operations background, Valdez went to work for Thomas Keller for four years, learning everything she could from the famed chef/restauranteur. And while her mentor specialized in French fare, Valdez focused on the Tex-

Mex dishes she ate growing up: tacos, migas (eggs scrambled with crispy corn strips), queso, and of course, Frito pie – and HomeState was born. Described as “a Texas kitchen in Los Angeles,” Valdez just added a Westside location in addition to Hollywood and Highland Park. Back in 2014, Valdez closed down the Hollywood location for a day to do a SXSW event in Playa Vista. Once again, she saw an opportunity. “I was looking around and thought, “there’s so many people here and nothing to eat,’” Valdez recalls. “There were a couple of taco trucks. There was so much density of young people, young professionals, and I thought, ‘Where do they eat lunch? Where do they go?’ I thought HomeState should open here because it could be a really nice refuge for people to get quality food.” After scouting locations for several years, Valdez wrangled a lease on Wa-

terfront Drive in 2017. The building was a new construction – a departure from HomeState’s prior locations. “This is the nicest, shiniest HomeState we’ve ever had,” Valdez jokes. “It is much different than anything we’ve ever done in terms of building type. We’ve been in older buildings with a lot of character and old charm, the historical district. Obviously, this is a brand new.” In order to infuse the modern space with a neighborhood warmth, HomeState Playa Vista incorporates lots of wood and textures, and the restaurant’s signature blue wallpaper. It’s a departure from the tech companies that surround it – YouTube, Fullscreen, and IMAX, to name a few – but Valdez hopes HomeState will attract the young professionals and families that have flocked to Silicon Beach. (Continued on page 44) Playa Vista Direct | June · July 2019 43


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.