Crispy skin
Joodooboo, Litquake, Central Sonoma dining, Ah Ma’s Kitchen, Parker Palm Springs, MORE
Later this month, we’re debuting the FOUND 45, our new, definitive list of FOUND’s favorite Bay Area restaurants. Care to respond to this email and tell us yours? There’s still time to influence the Subscriber Favorites part of the list.
WORK • Friday Routine
Wide awake
GABRIEL CORTEZ • educator & organizer
Neighborhood you live in: North Oakland
It’s Friday morning. What’s the scene at your workplace?
My mornings usually start at about 715a. I roll out of bed, brush my teeth, crack open a book, and work on some writing. Or if I’m really behind on emails, crank out some admin in the living room. We have an office, but my wife Tasha has been using it more often than me lately. It’s perfect for her: it has an east-facing window, all our plants love it there, and most importantly, it’s usually the warmest room in our apartment. But I like the living room, where there’s a bit more foot traffic by the window, and where, when the TV’s on and a DJ’s playing something boom-bap off of YouTube, it feels less like work.
What’s on the agenda for today?
I’m starting my MFA at Saint Mary’s this fall so this summer I’m trying to write a page a day and read at least one poetry collection each week. I usually read in the morning. Then, when inspiration hits, I put down the book and see where the writing takes me. I’ll do this, going back and forth between reading and writing until about noon. Around lunchtime, Tasha and I eat, maybe sip some tea, and put something on TV. We’ve been watching a lot of Dropout and love how they have a profit-sharing model with their creators. In the early afternoon, I’ll try to hit the gym or go on a run to get back in my body and give my head a chance to reset. Then, when I’m back home again, I’ll return to the morning’s writing, lesson plan if I’m teaching, or work on administrative tasks until I’m off at about 6p.
Any restaurant plans today, tonight, this weekend?
We often make the rounds between Cafe Colucci, Shangri-La Vegan, Cholita Linda, Joodooboo, Mezzo, Zachary’s, Nick’s Pizza, Smokehouse, and Sideshow Kitchen. For something decadent, I recommend the nigiri combo at Mujiri. For beers, you can find us at the parklet outside Hoi Polloi but if you want a mixed drink and a big outdoor patio where you can bring your own food, there’s Prizefighter right up the street.
How about a little leisure or culture?
I’m excited for Litquake this fall. This year, I’m helping plan an event with a few of my favorite poets, Ladan Khoddam-Khorasani, Dora Prieto, and our brilliant teacher, aracelis girmay. We’re hoping to make this show a bit more experimental, thinking about how our work intersects across translation, performance, grief work, and collective authorship. I’ll break out my beat machine and share an excerpt from my one-person show. There will be, in all likelihood, a large cloth that audience members contribute writing to and will be read by the end of the night. This kind of show is something new for all of us and we’re excited Litquake is down!
What’s a recent big-ticket purchase you love?
I just copped an MPC Live III Retro Edition. Baby was not cheap! But she is very very pretty. For my first one person show, I’m bringing together narrative, poetry, and live sample-based sounds to tell a story of Black diaspora across the US and Panama. I’ve had a pre-owned MPC One for a few years but wanted something a bit more portable that I could more easily haul around as I practice finger drumming around the apartment and eventually bring it up with me on stage. My show, “Between Two Rising Seas,” debuts at MACLA Fall 2027.
What store or service do you always recommend?
Gotta shout out Medicine for Nightmares in the Mission. It’s a beautiful bookstore and gallery space owned by a badass duo of artists, historians, and community organizers, Josiah Luis Alderete and Tân Khánh Cao. They run a bunch of events, stay open late, and are often the easiest place to grab a local writer’s book. If you are lucky and you come around enough, they might offer you a shot of mezcal.
Where are you donating your time or money?
I support the Bay Area Book Festival and I encourage you to do so as well! In a moment when activists are facing life sentences for printing zines and books by queer, trans, Black, and Indigenous writers are being banned throughout the US, I love being part of a collective that’s able to say, “fuck that” and then put resources behind it, bringing some of the most amazing and imaginative authors to the Bay each year. One of my favorite events from the 2026 festival was Hope is a Time Traveler, with Rebecca Solnit in conversation with Saul Williams. Beyond the annual festival, we’re also starting to do author events throughout the rest of the year and Affinity Lit Collectives, which organize activities by and for women, LGBTQIA+, and mixed-race folks. Get involved! Become a member today!
GOODS & SERVICES LINKS: Smoke Soul Kitchen team to open Bayview bookstore • The Record Man celebrated in Redwood City • Slate Auto goes Crayola.
RESTAURANTS • First Person
Chicken champ
In the middle of an orange and pink sunset over Clement Street, a cluster of teens and the elderly gather on an otherwise lonely block. They’re waiting for Ah Ma’s Kitchen to open for dinner. Then, they’ll all order the kiln-roasted chicken. Wrapped in tin foil, swimming in drippings, handfuls of dark meat splendor.
REAL ESTATE • On the Market
Three condos that came to market in San Francisco in the last 30 days.
→ 846 Cabrillo St (Inner Richmond) • 2BR/1.1BA • 1440 SF • Ask: $1.295M • top-floor Edwardian w/ Golden Gate Park views • Days on market: 8 • Agent: Christian Tinoco, Vanguard.
→ 1904 Leavenworth St (Russian Hill) • 2BR/1.1BA • 3496 SF • Ask: $1.499M • remodeled end unit w/ original bay windows • Days on market: 9 • Agent: Daniel Flores, Compass.
→ 1859 Vallejo St Apt 2 (Pacific Heights, above) • 3BR/2BA • 1928 SF • Ask: $2.295M • 1909 build w/ original crown molding, private deck • Days on market: 8 • Agent: Kelly Canady, Sotheby’s.
REAL ESTATE LINKS: 23-story, 201-unit condo tower to rise at 1965 Market St • Telegraph Hill apartment building that housed Frida Kahlo hits market for $8M • Shuttered San Carlos CVS to be replaced by 200-unit development.
GETAWAYS • Palm Springs
Desert oasis
I downed a shot of cucumber vodka after a Swedish massage; learned how to play both croquet and petanque; splashed around in an empty adults-only pool under the stars; sipped wine with a bunch of cheekily dressed guests from Willamette Valley; ate a “Wagner’s Ring” made of watermelon and assorted fruit; and possibly — quite possibly — rediscovered my will to live at the Parker Palm Springs, the sumptuous, immaculately landscaped 13-acre resort ideal for couples and close confidantes.
Located on the former Gene Autry estate, the whimsically Jonathan Adler-designed hotel has been one of the desert’s most sought-after premium lodging options since 2004. In spite of a handful of minor issues, the unbridled emphasis on hedonism is largely intact over two decades later.
The sprawling layout and lush, labyrinthine grounds lend themselves to getting lost on the way back to your room, especially after you’ve had a stiff drink or two. Given the square footage, the 144 guest rooms and suites still manage to feel exclusive and private, especially off-peak. For an over-the-top but excellent breakfast, Norma’s is a favorite among both guests and locals, offering every iteration of pancake, waffle and French toast under the sun, plus plenty of savory options. Next door, mildly sacrilegious wine bar Counter Reformation features a pair of bona fide confession booths and a unique selection of wines spanning Central and Southern Europe, as well as Australia and North America. Within the extremely groovy lobby, the jewel box-like Mini Bar serves as a pre- or post-dinner pit stop for libations like the Melody Ranch, a foamy riff on a pornstar martini, while Mister Parker’s offers maximalist steakhouse vibes.
Given the sheer number of fire pits, public hammock areas, the two swimming pools, the tennis and (relatively new) padel courts, the Palm Springs Yacht Club (PSYC), as well as the aforementioned croquet and petanque areas, I suggest staying at the Parker for the type of vacation where you have zero intentions of leaving the premises. Booking a facial or body treatment at PSYC grants access to the steam room and sauna, but all registered guests can also avail themselves of the spa’s indoor pool, jacuzzi and cold plunge, the last of which came in handy even on an 85-degree (aka temperate for the desert) day in late May. Later this year, the property will also unveil a third outdoor pool and exclusive guest-only performances in the newly built amphitheater, which seats 120. Consider me Parker-pilled. –Patricia Kelly Yeo
→ The Parker Palm Springs • 4200 E Palm Canyon Dr • Rates from $330/summer weeknight.
GETAWAYS LINKS: SFO plots private luxury terminal •Burbank Airport’s new terminal sets Oct 13 opening • New photos revealQantas Airways’ luxe long-haul fleet.
GETAWAYS •The Nines
Dining, Central Sonoma
The Nines are FOUND’s distilled lists of the best in the Bay Area and surrounds. Paid subscribers have access to the complete Nines archive.






