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April Bloomfield Closes Her Los Angeles Restaurant Hearth & Hound

Bloomfield posted the announcement as dinner guests were still ordering, and offered no reason for the closing. The post showed pictures of her and smiling employees, who number nearly 100. “I’m so proud of what we accomplished in our short time,” she wrote. (The restaurant was open for just 15 months.) “I thank our guests, friends and supporters for the warm welcome during a tumultuous last year.”

Bloomfield did not respond to phone calls and text messages seeking further comment and declined to speak to a reporter who approached her during dinner service Saturday.

The large restaurant was packed, inside in the dining room and bar, and outside on the patio. Fires were still blazing in the open kitchen, where Bloomfield was cooking in a blue shirt and apron. She paused occasionally to greet regulars; as diners hugged her, she teared up and wiped her eyes.

Dishes that were praised by Los Angeles Times restaurant critic Jonathan Gold in his January 2018 review, like roasted squash with greens and hanger steak with beets and horseradish, were still on the menu.

Gold, who died in July, made his review of Hearth & Hound one of the first to wrestle with the question of whether to write about, or patronize, a restaurant whose owners had a history of sexual-harassment problems.

The restaurant opened in December 2017, just days before The New York Times published a report in which many current and former employees said Friedman had sexually harassed them physically and verbally; some said they had complained to Bloomfield, and she had failed to stop the abuse.

Bloomfield has said she was unaware of the extent of the harassment of employees by Friedman and chef Mario Batali, but her long silence drew criticism. She first addressed the scandal at length in an October interview in The Times.

Friedman has said he disputes the details in the Times report but apologized for behavior he said “can accurately be described at times as abrasive, rude and frankly wrong.” He did not respond to a text message and a phone call seeking comment.

The partners had poured years and millions into transforming the indoor-outdoor space, which since the 1980s had been occupied by a raffish British-style pub, the Cat and Fiddle.

The space was available when the partners were looking to open in Los Angeles and expand their empire. At the time, they owned or ran six restaurants together: the Spotted Pig, the Breslin, the John Dory Oyster Bar, White Gold Butchers and Salvation Taco in Manhattan, and Tosca Café in San Francisco. Friedman told LA Magazine that he was enamored of the Sunset Boulevard location’s architecture, outdoor space and rock ‘n’ roll history.

The pub’s original owner, British bassist Kim Gardner, had played with bands such as the Birds, and made the Cat & Fiddle a music industry haunt, known for its relaxed smoking policy and proper English pints.

Friedman, who grew up in Los Angeles and worked in the industry for years before branching out into restaurants, said he had spent “a few debauched mornings” at the Cat & Fiddle in the 1980s.

He is now the sole owner of the Spotted Pig in the West Village of New York, where several women say they were subjected to sexual misconduct by him and by Batali, a regular and investor. Batali was the subject of an New York Police Department investigation into accounts of sexual assault in the restaurant’s private party space. The investigations have been closed for lack of evidence, a department official said this month.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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