San Diego Magazine's Happy Half Hour Titelbild

San Diego Magazine's Happy Half Hour

San Diego Magazine's Happy Half Hour

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The weekly guide to San Diego's food + drink scene, hosted by award-winning food writer and Food Network host Troy Johnson and San Diego Magazine's culture brain, Jackie Bryant. Field notes and perspectives on restaurants, bars, and chefs—including dishes and drinks you gotta try, restaurant openings and closings, events worth your time, and laugh-cry interviews with chefs, restaurant owners, farmers, brewers, and makers who make San Diego's food + drink scene hum.All rights reserved Kochen Kunst Lebensmittel & Wein Sozialwissenschaften
  • Where to Get a $12 Ribeye in San Diego
    Feb 19 2026

    Terra chef Jeff Rossman spills secrets of the catering world and we name our favorite farm-to-table restaurants

    One of the absolute best deals in San Diego recently? A $12 ribeye from one of the better chefs in the city. A $10 pasta dish he made for a wedding. Jeff Rossman was one of the first local chefs to cook modern farm to table with his restaurant, Terra. Opened it in 1998 with his dad, who had run a restaurant in Mission Valley called Pam Pam.

    Last year, he started getting so much catering business that he converted his restaurant in College Area to a catering hub. The secret about catering? When you order steak or a pasta or some elaborate farm to table dish for your big life event, the caterer cooks an "overrun"—15-20 percent more food than they think will be needed based on the amount of guests.

    Nothing worse than running out of food at a wedding.

    Usually, the unused overrun goes to staff or is donated—both of which Rossman does. But now he's started something called "Zero Waste Gourmet," where he sells those dishes at his restaurant space the day after for some ridiculously low price. A ribeye in a bordelaise sauce with some smashed potatoes and glazed local farm carrots for less than $15 (I'm making this up now, because it always changes based on the event).

    Rossman makes his food costs back as a business owner, and those in the know get a screaming deal on big-day meals.

    Rossman comes into the HHH studios to talk about the ins and outs of the catering world. We also hail the magic of Sushi on a Roll, and name some of our top farm to table restaurants in the city—the ones really doing it right and working with farmers, ranchers, growers, makers. And doing it well. From Nine-Ten to Callie to Market and others.

    Follow Terra American Bistro HERE. Follow Jeff HERE.

    Discover more at San Diego Magazine.

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    51 Min.
  • Naming the Best Soups in San Diego at Coco Maya
    Feb 12 2026

    At Coco Maya, try chef Phil Humphrey's skirt steak with chimichurri, his big-knuckle lobster tacos, and a damn phenomenal coconut shrimp (the '80s classic will be slandered no more).

    What's your favorite soup in San Diego? The one that rearranges your DNA into a dumb, smiley emoji?

    On this episode of Happy Half Hour we do a fantasy soup draft of our 12 favorites in the city—from the corn piñon soup at Wolf in the Woods to the pozole at Super Cocina and pho at Pho Hoa.

    We set up shop in the Yucatan rooftop wonderland that is Coco Maya and get the story from co-owner Rob McShea, who tells us how he went from working as a door guy at Thrusters in PB to opening up his first restaurant (Miss B's Coconut Club, which is still kicking so he did OK) despite having absolutely no clue how to run one, searching out the best damn chef in New Orleans and convincing him to move to San Diego to open Louisiana Purchase, and then finally taking the big gamble in the restaurant big leagues of Little Italy.

    And, we drink copious amounts of Bebemos. It's "Bebemos Golden Hour" with co-owner and lifelong San Diegan Preston Caffrey—our citywide search for the best dishes to pair with the tequila of San Diego. Follow Coco Maya HERE.

    Please listen responsibly.

    Discover more at San Diego Magazine.

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    1 Std. und 7 Min.
  • A Per Se Alum Opens a Bodega and Ozempic is Bumming Out Restaurant Culture
    Feb 5 2026

    #419 You've barely touched your fries. Why do you look hungry and not hungry at the same time?

    The big discussion on this week's episode: Ozempic is the wobbly, wet-gremlin Yelp commenter who wants to rain on America's happy restaurant parade. We re-air the interview you probably skipped the first time we had it a year ago because it sounded like tinfoil-hat conspiracy theory stuff.

    But now, the Ozempic effect is real. Almost every restaurateur who talks to food editor and Happy Half Hour host Troy Johnson is expressing the same thing. Makes sense. If 10, 8, or 1,000 percent of Americans are on a diet drug that makes them eat or drink less, it stands to reason it's going to affect businesses who sell eating and drinking.

    In food and drink news: San Diego's most iconic restaurant buildings in North Park sat vacant for seven years. Now a chef who trained at Jean-Georges is opening the first San Diego location of Bacari in the former Urban Solace space.

    In La Jolla, you're getting Jaybird Superette, a bodega and pastries and snacks and wine and cheese shop from a baker from Thomas Keller's three-star Michelin, Per Se. San Diego legend George's at the Cove has completed its rooftop dining remodel and reopens this week for a new era from chef Trey Foshee.

    And two of the city's top young chefs—multiple Beard Award nominee Tara Monsod (Animae/Le Coq) and David Sim (Kingfisher) are trading places (kind of) for a special two-week collab.

    Is the Ozempic effect real? Listen to what great San Diego reporter Claire Trageser found in her research. Follow Claire HERE.

    Discover more at San Diego Magazine.

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    57 Min.
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