Masters of Taste 2026 host chefs Vanessa and Thomas Tilaka Kalb. | Photo by May S. Ruiz / Hey SoCal
After being sidelined last year by the Eaton and Palisades Fire, Masters of Taste returns to the Rose Bowl for the eighth time on a glorious afternoon on April 19. It’s a wonderful day to enjoy culinary delights and beverage offerings from over 200 participating restaurants, pastry shops, breweries, wineries, and beverage producers.
From its inception, Masters of Taste has been a sold-out event that attracts over 3,000 guests and garners media attention throughout Southern California and beyond. Over 100 culinary masters and restaurants present their finest fare and L.A.’s top sweet masters prepare delectable sweets.
Attendees patiently waiting for Masters of Taste to open. | Photo by May S. Ruiz / Hey SoCal
Leading beverage masters feature signature handcrafted cocktail tastings from over 25 spirit brands and bars, a premier 50-yard-line cocktail bar featuring top mixologists from L.A.’s most distinguished drinking destinations, select wineries, local craft breweries, cold-pressed juices, cold brew coffee. From 3 to 7 p.m., a deejay provides live entertainment while attendees eat and imbibe.
Every dollar raised at Masters of Taste benefits the work of Union Station Homeless Services to end homelessness. Since its inauguration, the event has donated millions of dollars to help countless families and individuals find a secure and welcoming place to call home.
Mini chocolate chip cookies and donuts from RicoRico Snack Bar in San Diego. | Photo by May S. Ruiz / Hey SoCal
Thirty minutes before Masters of Taste opens, the Rose Bowl’s parking lot starts filling with cars and a queue forms at the VIP line. A few minutes before 3:00 volunteers walk down the queue to put colored paper bracelets on our wrists and ask us to show a picture ID to make sure we’re old enough to drink alcohol. And another gives us clear plastic cups inscribed with the event name for our beverage.
We enter the Court of Champions where there are participating food trucks, and a few food and beverage vendors. We are immediately attracted to the warm mini chocolate chip cookies and donuts from RicoRico Snack Bar in San Diego. Joel, who is happily offering sweets, tells us this is the first time they’re participating.
Masters of Taste participants on the Rose Bowl field. | Photo by May S. Ruiz / Hey SoCal
As we munch on the sweets, we make our way onto the Rose Bowl field. We secure a table and begin our gastronomic journey. There are so many tantalizing foods and sweets and refreshing drinks that it’s difficult to decide which ones to sample.
Granville is offering mac & cheese, which is always a crowd-pleaser. Mark Dix, the Food and Beverage Director for the California-based Granville Restaurant Group, informs us that they’ve been participating since the Masters of Taste began. He says this is a fun way to donate to a worthy cause.
Chaaste Family Market serving lumpia and turon. | Photo by Brianna Chu / Hey SoCal
Sushi Roku is a first time participant in the event. Joe, who is giving out baked lobster rolls, declares Masters of Taste is doing a great job in making it something that people look forward to.
Christian Esteban of Chaaste Family Market, a local Filipino store that sells products imported from the Philippines as well as freshly cooked dishes, informs us this is their first time at Masters of Taste and they’re enjoying it thoroughly. They brought a sound system and his brother is playing Filipino music and talking about their store. Chaaste has been serving the Filipino community in the western San Gabriel Valley for the past 40 years.
Short rib pasta from Marina Restaurant. | Photo by Brianna Chu / Hey SoCal
An array of cheeses from Agnes Restaurant and Cheesery. | Photo by Brianna Chu / Hey SoCal
Along the end zone of the Rose Bowl’s 50-yard line is the large tent occupied by Agnes Restaurant and Cheesery where there is a dizzying amount of cheese on the tables. Vanessa and Thomas Tilaka Kalb, this year’s host chefs, gladly chat with us.
“Agnes opened five years ago and this is our fourth time at Masters of Taste,” Vanessa says.
Photo by May S. Ruiz / Hey SoCal
Adds Chef Tomas, “It’s our first time being the host chefs and it’s been so fun! We got 13 cheese makers from across the country to donate hundreds of pounds of cheese. We have a fondue fountain, raclette station, and mac & cheese station. I said that we were going to transform the Rose Bowl into a field of cheese – if you build it, they will come!”
At the raclette station a server carefully and meticulously scrapes melted cheese onto the crackers on our plate. The mac & cheese looks too tempting to ignore. And we sample a variety of cheese.
Mini chocolate and red velvet cakes from Lark Cake Shop. | Photo by May S. Ruiz / Hey SoCal
Volunteers are going around handing out bottled water even as we continue to enjoy the delicious bites. But we can only eat so much and we reluctantly give up; we’re simply too full to go on. However, we stop at the Lark Cake Shop table to get one last sweet – a red velvet cake.
It’s the perfect finish to a thoroughly enjoyable afternoon of gustatory delights at Masters of Taste. And it’s all for a worthwhile cause.
Masters of Taste 2026 host chefs Vanessa and Thomas Tilaka-Kalb of Agnes. | Photo by May S Ruiz / Hey SoCal
Masters of Taste, Southern California’s premier food festival held its media preview night on Wednesday, March 25 at the Rose Bowl’s Court of Champions. In a departure from previous previews, the event was staged outdoors directly beneath the Rose Bowl sign instead of in the locker room.
Guests were treated to a selection of food and drinks that will be served at Masters of Taste 2026 when it returns to the Rose Bowl on April 19. We mingled with other food writers and chatted with the chefs who were serving a sampling of food and beverage purveyors pouring alcoholic and non-alcoholic drinks.
Masters of Taste media preview held at the Rose Bowl’s Court of Champions. | Photo by May S. Ruiz / Hey SoCal
Local Masters of Taste participant and Pasadena native, Christian Esteban – son of the founders of Chaaste Family Market on Allen Avenue – happily invited attendees to try Filipino favorites lumpia (spring rolls) and turón (deep fried slices of banana in a crepe-like wrap). The Tilaka-Kalbs of Agnes Restaurant and Cheesery on Green Street in Old Pasadena greeted us warmly and offered fried cheese curds with a dilly ranch dip. Dennis Cruz of STK Steakhouse in Santa Monica served beef bone marrow, which Filipinos call “bulaló,” topped with a smidgen of caviar, toast crisp, and microgreens. We downed all the delicious fare with non-alcoholic sparkling water slightly flavored with hops from LA-based beverage company HOPWTR.
Christian Esteban of Chaaste Family Market. | Photo by May S. Ruiz / Hey Socal
There wasn’t time to indulge in other delectable fare and refreshing beverage because we had to head over to the dinner tables. After guests were seated, the program began as servers brought out the different courses and drinks that evening. Participating chefs and beverage producers were introduced and they described each succeeding dish or drink we were enjoying.
Midway through dinner, attendees were reminded of the reason we were there: to promote the event that benefits Union Station Homeless Services (USHS). Katie Hill – who was named CEO of USHS merely weeks before the Eaton Fire – quite literally had a ‘baptism by fire’ and was thrown headlong into the center of activity. USHS’s Adult Center was converted into a central hub for donated essentials and hot meals for the thousands of Altadenans and Pasadenans who became homeless overnight.
USHS CEO Katie Hill. | Photo by May S. Ruiz / Hey SoCal
When Hill took the stage that evening she reiterated USHS’s mission – to end homelessness through housing, supportive services, and connection to community. Last year the organization served more than 4,200 people. It helped over 1,200 individuals and families move into permanent housing and another 2,200 people stay in housing. It also assisted nearly 2,000 to find safety through shelter or outreach. At the same time, USHS served over 700,000 meals.
“These are big numbers, but every one of those numbers is a person, a family, a story,” Hill clarified. “But here’s the reality – homelessness is becoming part of us all; it’s reaching more people. And we’re seeing it affect people who never thought they would face it: people who lost their home through fire; people who are working full time, sometimes multiple jobs, and still can’t afford the rent; seniors on fixed income who have been priced out of the community they’ve lived in for decades. This is no longer something that affects someone else. It affects our neighbors, our co-workers, sometimes our own family and friends – people who did everything right and still found themselves without a safety net.”
Masters of Taste media preview menu. | Photo by May S. Ruiz / Hey SoCal
“So we took a hard look at where we are and where we can make the biggest impact,” continued Hill. “Over the past year, we’ve built a new three-year strategic plan for our staff, our partners, and the people we serve. It’s focused, it’s practical, and it’s centered on five priorities – preventing homelessness before it starts, integrating behavioral health in housing, expanding workforce development and job pathways, strengthening food access, and increasing affordable housing – because these are what would solve homelessness.”
“As a result of that planning, I’m excited to share that we are launching a new initiative that brings together two of those priority areas: food access and workforce development,” Hill disclosed. “It’s a culinary workforce program that will be operated out of our brand-new commercial kitchen and will allow us to do two things at once – feed more people as the need continues to grow in our communities and create real job pathways for the people we serve. Participants who earn food safety certifications will work in our commercial kitchen and build the skill they need to enter into the workforce.”
2026 Masters of Taste restaurateurs and beverage purveyors. | Photo By May S. Ruiz / Hey SoCal
And Hill announced the plan that received the biggest applause. “This is where THIS community stepped up in such a powerful way. Many of the chefs and restaurant partners involved in Masters of Taste have committed to hiring our graduates.”
“We are absolutely thrilled that our first cohort of graduates will work with our Union Station Food Services team as they are featured this year at Culinary Masters,” Hill added. “This is not just training, it’s not just food, it’s a direct bridge from homelessness, to employment, to long-term stability.”
Masters of Taste at the Rose Bowl. | Photo courtesy of Masters of Taste
“And that’s why Masters of Taste matters,” emphasized Hill. “Yes, it’s one of the top food events in L.A. but it’s also one of the most impactful. Every ticket, every sponsor, every story shared helps fund housing, food programs, and workforce development. Events like this help us fill that kitchen, train more people, serve more meals, and move more people into stable housing.”
“To everyone in this room – our sponsors and our media partners – you shape how people understand this issue and there are a lot of misconceptions out there. You decide what story gets attention and the stories that matter the most are the human stories – the ones about each person that we’re able to help, each family, each kid whose life has changed because of this work. And that’s what moves people to do something about it. Your work is critical in this effort and we’re so grateful for your partnership,” Hill concluded.
Vanessa and Thomas Tilaka-Kalb. | Photo by May S. Ruiz / Hey SoCal
When Masters of Taste 2026 host chefs Thomas and Vanessa Tilaka-Kalb came on stage, Thomas said they have been eagerly waiting for this opportunity to host the event and promises to make this year the best one yet. And Vanessa said they plan to transform the Rose Bowl into the “field of Cheese.”
The brainchild of Rob and Leslie Levy, owners of The Raymond 1886 and Knox & Dobson in Pasadena, Masters of Taste was a concept Rob adapted from a childhood friend’s organization in Chicago called “Inspiration Café” which delivers sandwiches to the homeless. When the former CEO of Union Station asked him to be on the board, he set out to find a better way to raise funds than asking people to get all dressed up to attend a gala they only felt obligated to attend. Leslie came up with the idea of having chefs gather for an event that was so amazing it didn’t feel like it was a charity affair.
Rob and Leslie Levy (third and fourth from left) surrounded by the Raymond 1886 team. | Photo courtesy of Masters of Taste
On their first year at the Rose Bowl, a spontaneous line dancing broke out on the field – a delightful occurrence that was totally unanticipated. It was when they knew they had stumbled upon a successful endeavor. There was another year when it rained which, incredibly, made it an even better event. Nobody left – 3,000 people on the field stayed through the rain; Levy said it was the most memorable year they’ve had.
Masters of Taste continues to grow bigger every year; it has flourished through the COVID pandemic and the Eaton Fire. This year’s participating restaurants are: Agnes, Alexander’s Steakhouse, Ayara Thai, Bianca Sicilian Trattoria, BOA Steakhouse, Casa Cordoba, Celestino Ristorante, Chaaste Family Market, City Club of Los Angeles, Descanso Restaurant, Dorasti, Emporium Thai, Fitoor Santa Monica, Harold & Belle’s Restaurant, Love & Salt, Marina Restaurant, Paloma, Paradise Dynasty, Pez Coastal Kitchen, Poppy + Rose, Ramen Tatsunoya, STK Steakhouse, Sushi Roku, The Exchange Restaurant (Freehand LA), The Italian Deli Co., The Second Wind, Truffle Brothers, Uchi West Hollywood, Wife and the Somm, and Zira Uzbek Kitchen.
Dim Sum from Lunasia Signature. | Photo by May S. Ruiz / Hey SoCal
Joining them on the Rose Bowl field on April 19 are these beverage sellers: Above Board Liqueurs, Akagisan Sake, All Season Brewing Company, Arts District Brewing Company, Broda Vodka, Broken Shaker, Bücha Whole Fruit Hard Kombucha, Burden of Proof, Empress 1908 Gin, Eever -Tree, Good Intentions Coffee, Knox & Dobson, LA Bay Gin Distillerie Californienne, Lyre’s, Meadows Estate Vineyard and Winery, Navarro Vineyards, Old Hillside Bourbon, Paperback Brewing, Pucker Up Lemonade Company, Sake High!, Savage Rabbit Distribution, Shelter Distilling, Shinju Japanese Whisky, Smoke Lab Vodka, Subourbon Life, Sunright Tea Studio, The Raymond 1886, Ventura Spirits, Warson Wine Company, and Xoloitzcuintle Tequila.
The bakeries and confectioners in this year’s Masters of Taste are: All About the Cinnamon, Bertha Mae’s Brownie Co., Cakes by Chante, Delight Pastry, Id-Éclair, Laderach, Lark Cake Shop, Magpies Softserve, Nothing Bundt Cakes, Pazzo Gelato, Perlas Ice Cream, Porto’s Bakery & Café, Rico Rico Snack Carts LLC, and The Pink Cookie.
STK Steakhouse is one of the many participating restaurants in Masters of Taste. | Photo by May S. Ruiz / Hey SoCal
Major sponsors for this year’s event include: U.S. Bank, AltaMed Foundation, City National Bank, Pepsi, the Rose Bowl Stadium, Smart & Final, Soyfoods of America, Sysco, Vesta Food Service, Westport Construction, and Whittier Trust.
With a vast array of food and beverages to be savored and imbibed, the 2026 Masters of Taste is coming back this April 19 better and more fun than it has ever been. More than an afternoon and evening filled with culinary, beverage, and sweet offerings along the 50-yard line at the iconic Rose Bowl, attendance will help USHS in its mission to end homelessness.