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BROILER'S ENTREE LIST SHORT, SWEET AND KOREAN.


Byline: Larry Lipson Restaurant Critic

If beef and/or chicken, served with rice don't often make it to the top of your food mood list, then the Healthy Broiler broiler

a young (about 8 weeks old) male or female chicken weighing 3 to 3.5 lb.
, billed as Korean, should not be of great interest.

Just east of Laurel Canyon on Ventura Boulevard in Studio City, it's one of those mini-mall, counter-order, fast-food purveyors.

But if you were expecting a lengthy list of Korean culinary exotica ex·ot·i·ca  
pl.n.
Things that are curiously unusual or excitingly strange: such gustatory exotica as killer bee honey and fresh catnip sauce.
, forget it.

The Healthy Broiler features a simplified menu of boneless Bone´less

a. 1. Without bones.

Adj. 1. boneless - being without a bone or bones; "jellyfish are boneless"
 beef or chicken prepared a mere handful of ways, served separately or together with steamed rice.

And everything is priced under $6.

It's really more of a takeout than a dine-in cafe.

The accent being Korean, it's no surprise that the most expensive item happens to be kal-bi ($5.95) the traditional sweet, soy-glazed, barbecued shortribs paired with steamed rice, vegetables and Korea's kimchi kim·chi also kim·chee  
n. pl. kim·chis also kim·chees
A Korean dish made of vegetables, such as cabbage or radishes, that are salted, seasoned, and stored in sealed containers to undergo lactic acid fermentation.
.

The Healthy Broiler's kimchi is described on the menu as ``a chilled Korean spicy salad.''

Actually, I think peppery pep·per·y  
adj.
1. Of, containing, or resembling pepper; sharp or pungent in flavor.

2. Vigorously sharp-tempered: a peppery sales clerk.

3.
 pickled cabbage might fit better.

The menu tells us that its kimchi contains Chinese cabbage, salted baby shrimp, anchovy anchovy: see herring.
anchovy

Any of more than 100 species of schooling saltwater fishes (family Engraulidae) related to the herring. Anchovies are distinguished by a large mouth, almost always extending behind the eye, and by a pointed snout.
, red pepper, green onion, ginger, garlic and salt.

But Koreans often refer to kimchi more generically than just the cabbage.

Other pickled and salted condiments can evidently be called kimchi.

Here, the Healthy Broiler juliennes carrot and daikon dai·kon  
n.
A white radish (Raphanus sativus var. longipinnatus) of Japan, having a long root that is eaten raw, pickled, or cooked. Also called Chinese radish, Japanese radish, Oriental radish.
 radish radish, herbaceous plant (Raphanus sativus) belonging to the family Cruciferae (mustard family), with an edible, pungent root sliced in salads or used as a relish.  for one little condiment accompaniment. Daikon strips soaked in a sesame oil marinade provide another. Cold, cooked spinach makes an appearance. There is also a beansprout salad. But these are all considered vegetables, not kimchi here.

As for the meaty end of things, I like the bool-goki (sometimes called bulgogi, $5.55) which is thin-sliced marinated beef, best.

In many Korean restaurants, the bool-goki comes to the table raw, allowing the customers to cook it on an inset hibachi.

Here, it's done for us and joined with steamed rice, vegetables and kimchi.

Beef, also marinated, but broiled broil 1  
v. broiled, broil·ing, broils

v.tr.
1. To cook by direct radiant heat, as over a grill or under an electric element.

2. To expose to great heat.

v.
 as smallish cut-up, curly pieces, is served with a rice mixture with vegetables, kimchi and a daub of spicy chili paste as ``bibim bahp'' ($5.25).

This, I find preferable to the barbecued beef, slightly stringier in what are termed ``combo plates'' ($4.79 to $5.29), although the barbecued chicken version in combo orders is moist and quite tasty.

The same beef and/or chicken seems more amenable in bowl form ($3.59 to $3.99 each) mostly served over steamed rice.

And the chicken easily tops the beef in three skewered options ($4.99 to $5.29).

A healthy portion of Caesar salad - enough for two and no worse than most sit-down, full-service restaurant offerings - is a steal at $2.99 as a meal accompaniment or starter.

There are a couple of kiddie-size bowls available at moderate price and sides, and extras here run from $1 to $1.75.

So why call it healthy?

The healthy aspect could be that nothing is fried.

Also, the menu tells us that no MSG MSG: see glutamic acid. , lard, microwaves or oil can be found here.

Perhaps the owners intend this to be a Korean version of Baja Fresh Mexican Grill.

And there's no doubt about it, this is definitely light eating.

Don't expect fish, tofu tofu

Soft, bland, custardlike food product made from soybeans. Believed to date from China's Han dynasty (206 BC–AD 220), tofu is today an important source of protein in the cuisines of East and Southeast Asia.
 or noodles, though.

It's beef, chicken and rice.

THE FACTS

The restaurant: The Healthy Broiler.

Where: 11935 Ventura Blvd., Studio City.

When: Open for lunch, dinner and snacks from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Saturday, from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday.

Recommended items: Bool-goki (thin-sliced roast marinated beef), bibim bahp (rice with vegetables and beef), barbecued chicken (plate, bowl or skewered), Caesar salad.

Children's menu: Kid's beef or chicken bowl ($2.89) with vegetables, steamed rice and small beverage.

How much: Everything under $6.

Our rating: Three Stars for food; Three Stars for value.

CAPTION(S):

Photo

PHOTO Bool-goki (thin-sliced marinated beef) served with steamed rice, vegetables and kimchi costs $5.55 at the Healthy Broiler.

Phil McCarten/Daily News
COPYRIGHT 1999 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1999, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Title Annotation:L.A. LIFE
Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Article Type:Restaurant Review
Date:Jun 25, 1999
Words:656
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