Hot pot spots you can’t miss
Little Sheep, a Mongolian hot pot specialist in San Gabriel, is know for letting diners choose two broths, presented side by side, yin-yang style.
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The exterior of Little Sheep in San Gabriel.
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Diners gather around a self-cook station/table at Little Sheep in San Gabriel.
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A closer look at at a dual hot pot at Little Sheep in San Gabriel.
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Yuxiao Yang dines at Little Sheep in San Gabriel.
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A steaming hot pot at Little Sheep in San Gabriel.
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A cornucopia of ingredients ready for the hot pot at Little Sheep in San Gabriel.
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Meat and vegetables, ready and waiting at Little Sheep.
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At Kagaya in Little Tokyo, a table is set for Japanese shabu shabu.
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At Seoul Garden in Koreatown, prime beef and greens is encircled by pan chan plates and ponzu dipping sauce, at right.
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Prime beef and a plate of greens and other veggies, ready to go into the hot pot at Seoul Garden in Koreatown.
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Prime beef and vegetables are prepared at Seoul Garden in Koreatown, which specializes in Korean hot pot.
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A gruel, or porridge, is prepared in the remains of a prime beef hot pot at Seoul Garden in Koreatown. The final stage of the hot pot meal, the porridge includes rice, dried seaweed, an egg and sesame oil.
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Exterior of OC & Lau in Garden Grove, specialists in Vietnamese hot pot.
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The Nguyen family prepares a fermented fish hot pot, a traditional Vietnamese dish, at OC & Lau in Garden Grove. It comes with a boiling pot of broth, the raw fish and vegetables and noodles.
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A plate of escargot with peppercorn at OC & Lau in Garden Grove.
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Chilean sea bass at OC & Lau in Garden Grove.
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Chilean sea bass is ready for the hot pot at OC & Lau in Garden Grove.
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Chilean sea bass hot pot at OC & Lau in Garden Grove.
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OC & Lau’s Chilean sea bass hot pot.
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Chilean sea bass at OC & Lau in Garden Grove.
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Suki Time, a Thai restaurant in Lomita that serves hot pots.
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Two broths at Suki Time: tom yum on the left side of the pot and Thai herb broth with prime beef. The hot pots come with broth, a plate of raw meat, cabbage and other vegetables, and rice.
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The tiger sauce is one of the many sauces on the condiment bar at Suki Time.
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Two broths, the tom yum with pork belly, left, and Thai herb broth with prime beef at Suki Time in Lomita.
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The menu at Boiling Point, a Taiwanese hot pot spot, which has several locations, including .
(Barbara Davidson / Los Angeles Times)
Diners at the Boiling Point.
(Barbara Davidson / Los Angeles Times)
Boiling Point serves a House Special hot pot - with sides - which comes with Napa, fermented tofu, sliced pork, enoki mushroom, kamaboko, pork meat balls, clam, quail egg, pork blood cake, pork intestine, nira, preserved vegetables, tomato and cilantro.
(Barbara Davidson / Los Angeles Times)