Sponsored message
Logged in as
Audience-funded nonprofit news
radio tower icon laist logo
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Subscribe
  • Listen Now Playing Listen
  • Listen Now Playing Listen
Sponsored Content
This content was paid for by a sponsor. The LAist news team was not involved in its creation. Learn more about LAist's editorial guidelines.

Sake In The Park

A colorful illustration over a light blue background with a purple arch flanked by two brown palm trees with green fronds. The trunks of the palm trees have ivy circling them and two trees at the base with brown trunks and green canopies. "Sake In The Park" is written in purple letters inside the purple arch in between the two palm trees. Above the title is a small illustration with a yellow sun and blue waves and the year 2024. Above the arch in the top left is info about the event - Friday, July 26 from 7-10 PM. 16th Annual Sake and Food Tasting Event. Grand Park in Downtown Los Angeles. In the top right of the image in blue letters, it reads "A Fundraiser for Little Tokyo Service Center" with the organization's logo. On the ground are two red flowers in the shape of daisies, and there are illustrations of three small white clouds in the sky.
Sake In The Park 2024
(
Little Tokyo Service Center
)
Friday, July 26, 2024
7:00 PM - 10:00 PM
  • Gloria Molina Grand Park
    200 N. Grand Ave.
    Downtown L.A. 90012

Little Tokyo Service Center’s 16th annual fundraiser “Sake in the Park” is a cultural and culinary showcase of assorted Japanese spirits complemented with delicious food.

Guests enjoy a lovely evening in Grand Park sampling sake from over 20 breweries from Japan and the US and small plates from Los Angeles’ top restaurants.

Sake in the Park raises funds for Little Tokyo Service Center’s vital programs and services throughout Southern California, fueling much-needed mental health care, affordable housing, homeless services, cultural preservation and multilingual social services.

About the sponsor:
Little Tokyo Service Center was originally founded in 1979 and today serves the Little Tokyo neighborhood, the Japanese American community in Los Angeles, and the Asian and Pacific Islander and low-income communities surrounding downtown Los Angeles. It provides a safety net of supportive services to help fill the gap and empower people to live healthier, more self-sufficient lives.