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Apr. 24th, 2004 06:45 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I ate lunch, before my visit to the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, at a strip mall restaurant named Vegan Tokyo Teriyaki. This is the kind of vegetarian restaurant I love, and rarely find. It doesn't go out of its way to tell you about the spiritual and nutritional benefits, if there are any, of a meat-free diet--there are a couple of pamphlets promising Immediate Enlightenment and a bumper sticker that urges "LOVE ANIMALS DON'T EAT THEM," but it's hard to think that they might be part of the restaurant's mission.
Instead, it's just a run-of-the-mill teriyaki shop, except that all the chicken and beef and shrimp happen to be pretend. Or as an orphaned footnote on the wall-size plastic menu says: "All of our food made from vegetable." And it's cheap, and it's just fine. Although I can't recommend the sushi.
What I can recommend is the museum's current exhibit, L.A.: light/motion/dreams, a much more poetic thing than I'd ever expect to find in a natural history museum.
Instead, it's just a run-of-the-mill teriyaki shop, except that all the chicken and beef and shrimp happen to be pretend. Or as an orphaned footnote on the wall-size plastic menu says: "All of our food made from vegetable." And it's cheap, and it's just fine. Although I can't recommend the sushi.
What I can recommend is the museum's current exhibit, L.A.: light/motion/dreams, a much more poetic thing than I'd ever expect to find in a natural history museum.
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Date: 2004-04-24 07:41 pm (UTC)