Soon, the answer will be tacos
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Paul Clinton
After 27 years dishing out fresh pasta and sauces, the proprietors of
What’s Cooking Bistro are closing their restaurant, after the Irvine
Co. declined to retain them at the Newport Hills Center.
The Italian eatery’s owners have planned a farewell party for
Saturday.
“It’s so sad that [the Irvine Co.] will not renew our lease,” said
Lucy Luhan, who started the restaurant in 1976. “They have a taco
place coming in. Family establishments are being replaced by fast
food places because they make more money.”
In early 2004, Mexican eatery Taco Rosa is expected to open at the
same location. The upscale cantina-style restaurant is being launched
by the Calderon family, which owns Taco Mesa in Costa Mesa.
Mayor Steve Bromberg honored Luhan and her family at Tuesday’s
City Council meeting with a proclamation. Bromberg said he was sorry
to see the community lose a longtime and popular eatery.
“It’s absolutely a shame,” Bromberg said. “There are so few locals
places, as I like to call them.”
Luhan first signed a lease with the Irvine Co. in October 1975 for
a space in the center. She began offering more than 50 types of
pastas and 10 different varieties of sauces. What’s Cooking was also
notable for printing the caloric count of its dishes on its menu for
health-conscious diners.
Luhan’s mother, Mary Vallera, now 89, continued to make fresh
pasta from scratch each day, even after Luhan turned over the
day-to-day operation of the eatery to her two sons in 1999. Luhan
moved to Italy at the time to open a bed and breakfast. She had been
running B&B; of Tuscany until last week, when she returned here to
close the restaurant.
Negotiations between Luhan’s son Jorge and the Irvine Co. began
earlier this year to keep the eatery at the Newport Hills Center.
However, the company elected to remove What’s Cooking because they
were six months behind on the rent, Irvine Co. spokeswoman Jennifer
Heiger said.
“The most serious issue we faced was the restaurant’s inability to
pay its rent,” Heiger said. “The failure to pay rent was a persistent
problem that dated back several years.”
While sales from the center’s other stores has risen 15% in the
past two years, sales at What’s Cooking were “consistently down,”
Heiger said.
Jorge Luhan disputed those claims, saying the restaurant was only
“two to three months” behind in rent.
“We were doing well,” he said. “We were making money.”
* PAUL CLINTON covers the environment, business and politics. He
may be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
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