Saturday, March 15, 2025

Chef Philip Pretty takes sandwich game to new heights with Heritage

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Note: All pictures were photographed using social distancing standards. Chef Pretty was asked to remove his mask for a photo before putting it back on.

It has been a distinctly difficult three years for Chef Philip Pretty: The man who introduced Long Beach to the SoCal bistro through his work at Restauration watched that spaceĀ damaged by a fireĀ nearly two years ago. He handled insurance companies and investors forĀ nearly a yearĀ before finallyĀ reopening, only to find himself wanting to take a massive step away from the restaurant space to find his own path.

That path has led to Heritage, his first formal solo project (along with sister Lauren) post-Restaurationā€”and, if anything, he not only gives Long Beach a sandwich shop it deserves but also churns out some of his most quality comfort food since the beginning days of Restauration.

Chef Philip Pretty of Heritage. Photo by Brian Addison.

Heritage sandwich shop fulfills a sandwich-shaped hole in Long Beach’s food scene.

The sandwich scene in Long Beach, for lack of a less belittling term, is middling. Surely, there are plenty of decent Italian shops and delis: Old-school vibrations from Sante Fe Imports, Angeloā€™s and Modicaā€™s have kept the city content while Chef Jason Witzlā€™s attempt to turn Ellieā€™s Deli into a casual deli/sandwich space that is on equal footing with its fine-dining sister, Ellieā€™s, has been valiant but still needs definitive fine tuning.

With Pretty, we are watching a chef whose food has been largely in-and-out due to both destruction and depression, the latter of which is important to point out: I have talked about ā€œhappy foodā€ before and there is no question that Pretty has been handling a weight that could easily bring down the strongest of culinary minds. In-house battles with partners, a kitchen that can be as freeing as it can be stressful, and an instability in wanting to create more are common battlegrounds for chefs everywhere. Add onto that equation being shut out because of a fire and then once again being shut out because of a health pandemic, and it is easy to understand how cooking can seem uninspiring for a chef.

heritage long beach
The brisket sandwich once served at Heritage when it was a sandwich shop. Photo by Brian Addison.

On that same level, as a food writer, the pandemic has introduced its own set of complexities and frustrations, often leading me to stray away from reviews and direct talks of food and focus on the macro-picture of what is going on with food.

It is safe to say that what we get at Heritage is nothing short of Prettyā€™s happy food and, from me, happy food writing in which I get to enthusiastically encourage people to enjoy food that can lift oneā€™s spirit out of the quarantine ditch.

Keeping the Heritage sandwich shop business-smart.

Heritage is a business-smart decision on behalf of the Prettys: Avoiding excessive refinement while elevating comfort food, Pretty and his crew have created a sandwich shop that Long Beach has long deserved. Tucked into what looks like a former house, patrons are invited to sit at picnic tables along a grass-lined edge and dig in simple food that is deceptively complex and fulfilling.

The wedge salad from Heritage. Photo by Brian Addison.

I am talking thick cuts of brisketā€”smoked for hours on end in the tiny-but-mighty smoker in the backā€”whose deep smokiness is sliced with house fermented pickles, a hefty-but-not-mayo-y slaw and a slather of aioli on buttery bread slices. It is a monster of a sandwichā€”drippy, messy, gooeyā€”that is held together with the wonder of Long Beach cottage baker Jesse Hellen Llyodā€˜s masterful leavening work.

I am talking the BLT you thought you wouldnā€™t need but discover that it makes you rethink the power of pork and carbs: A braised-then-confited slab of pork belly sits in the fat until hitting room temperature, before being slapped onto a scorching pan and stuffed between that wonder of a bread and stacked with heirloom tomatoes, a pepper-meets-tomato jam, pickled onions, and hefty strokes of aioli.

The deviled eggs from Heritage. Photo by Brian Addison.

Even the sides are solid.

Even in the sides, an accessible bunch of variants, Prettyā€™s sense of playfulness comes out: Pickled eggsā€”some of the best in the cityā€”are topped with with perfectly crisped chitterlings and a fermented hot sauce that makes for a salty-meets-sour combination that is both new and comforting. His wedge salad, a masterful ode to the power of Humboldt Fog cheese and the underrated, yes-it-is-tasteless simplicity of iceberg, is the precise type of things that is wonderfully basic but incredibly satisfying (especially with details like pickled soft-boiled egg bits).

In other words: Pick up or take a seat at the picnic table at Heritage because it mightā€”it just very well mightā€”make you feel a sense of calming comfort.

Heritage Sandwich Shop is located at 2032 E. Seventh St. and is open Wednesday through Sunday, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Brian Addison
Brian Addisonhttp://www.longbeachize.com
Brian Addison has been a writer, editor, and photographer for more than 15 years, covering everything from food and culture to transportation and housing. In 2015, he was named Journalist of the Year by the Los Angeles Press Club and has since garnered 30 nominations and three additional wins. In 2019, he was awarded the Food/Culture Critic of the Year across any platform at the National Arts & Entertainment Journalism Awards. He has since been nominated in that category every year, joining fellow food writers from the Los Angeles Times, the New York Times, Eater, the Orange County Register, and more.

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