Sunday, August 2, 2009

Surviving Hard TimesI received a call from chef Maegen Loring at the Park at 5 p.m. Tuesday, July 14, telling me her SLO restaurant would be shuttered after the following night’s service. I was floored by the sad news. “We’ve been barely eking along and after the first of the year, doing a month-to-month contract with the landlord and C.O.D. on orders,” she admitted candidly. “It’s been six-and-a-half years and I always woke up looking forward to coming here in the morning. The night we told the employees, we sat here until three in the morning crying. We were like family.”
I was totally bummed out but she had already moved on, focusing on the positive. She discussed her plans to build up her catering business which has always been popular. She was considering the new Los Angeles trend of creating a mobile business, possibly featuring her wonderful “Wednesday hamburger night” theme. Then she could tweet her customers with news of where she would be parked around SLO County. For Loring, it was simply the end of a special time in her life. “I’ve always felt I lived a charmed life, and I still do.”
The recession is tough on everyone, but especially so for local restaurants. Dining out is the first thing most of us cut from the budget during a recession, understandably. But consider this: more of our mom-and-pop places, be it restaurants, wine shops, or our favorite specialty food producers, will fail without our business. Most of us can keep dining out affordable simply by cutting back on our order. As a restaurant veteran, I know that even in good times it’s tough to survive. Which begs the question, how do restaurants stay viable in a recession while food costs rise and customer sales sink? I called three excellent SLO County restaurateurs to ask, what’s the key to survival?
At Et Voila (SLO) chef Jose Dahan said pointedly: “I have to work harder than ever while keeping the place open with a minimum of staff. I don’t cut corners or waste food, and I keep creative as much as possible.” Dahan believes the key is not to panic and to improve the offerings; the worst thing a restaurateur can do is focus on the economy. He explained it’s important to keep menu prices as low as possible and remain consistent. Fortunately, his catering business helps him through the slow weeks at his restaurant. The most important part, he said, is giving the customer what they want. “Customers want to see you when they come in. You need to be happy to see them, and take care of them all of the time. I want them to think of me when celebrating something in their life and knowing we’ll make it special.”
Patty and Bill Carpenter, who own and manage Corner View Restaurant (SLO) , saw a significant drop in sales during June. “We planned an untimely trip to Spain, and discovered it’s slow in Europe. I don’t know what the answer is; I wish I had one for all of us,” she admitted. Noting that no one wants to see a competitor close, she said she had to ask her staff to cut a shift weekly. “The more good restaurants we have, the more people will come out to eat.” The Carpenter’s hired a new chef, Matthew Beckett, formerly at the SLO Country Club, who plans to introduce his new menu in two weeks. “We’ve cut shifts, hired a chef, and we’re looking at costs, value and the excitement factor,” she explained. “I’m a firm believer that if you throw enough at it, something’s got to stick.”
Longtime local chef Ian McPhee, founder and chef of McPhee’s Grill in Templeton and Avila Beach, answered honestly: “I don’t know what the key is; you’ve got to have a certain amount of luck. I’ve made enough adjustments in labor to handle it, and I’m riding this out.” As owner of his building in Templeton, he said he’s happy he’s not a slave to his bank. The practical businessman explained during the good times he made double mortgage payments. For McPhee it’s a matter of being flexible in your business. “A lot of people get into the business because they love to cook and don’t set themselves up. Then they become slaves to their business.”
McPhee, like Dahan, believes the customer has to come first. “If you’re not doing the best job you can, you’ll lose customers. My byline is: ‘dedicated to great food and great service,’” he noted. “When you come to McPhee’s you know what you’re getting.” With his service staff, McPhee said there’s only a certain amount of labor you can give up. If you only have one waiter on and the restaurant fills up, it can kill your reputation. “It’s my business and my name is on it. I train my staff personally so I know they’re not over-charring the meat. If worse comes to worse and I had to go back to the (cook’s) line, I’d do it,” the savvy chef stated. He recalled his early years when he cooked every night, yet always found time to go into the dining room to greet his customers. “Everybody wants to feel special and if you’re not there so the customers can see you, they won’t come back.”
I’m confident SLO hasn’t lost chef Maegen Loring, she’s passionate and focused. “I have no regrets. It’s not that we didn’t succeed, we chose to get out safely,” she concluded. “A new restaurant is very likely in our future.”

Thursday, May 7, 2009




When people find spare money tough to come by, entrepreneurs quickly become creative at finding ways to make you decide you can spare a little change. And indeed that’s what chef Maegen Loring and her partner and husband Jeff Loring have done at the Park Restaurant. They’re offering an excellent reason for going out for a great time. If you’ve already received President Obama’s stimulus tax cut you’ll find these outstanding events worth spending a few dollars on for some good wines and good eats.

Hamburger Wednesday at the Park

Hamburgers at the park, mind you, has nothing to do with eating fast food on a blanket in a park surrounded by trees and buzzing insects. This is a special offering at the outstanding Park Restaurant where you’ll feast on the best hamburger you’ve ever sunk your teeth into. Chef Maegen Loring appreciates good food, be it foie gras or ground beef patties. When tough times hit she decided to offer a gourmet treat at a discount price. And since she never cuts corners when it comes to quality, the hamburger was a natural addition to her menu. You can only get it, however, on Wednesdays.

The chef prefers Hearst Ranch beef when it comes to the straight-up hamburger, and from experience I agree their ground beef ranks among the finest. But she also makes this casual dish fun with her creative burgers, like the Vietnamese pork burger or Thai fish-burger. There’s also a vegan burger made from a mix of veggies with garbanzo beans and/or potatoes. But it’s not just the patty that’s special here. Everything from the mayo and ketchup to the fresh buns baked just before they open are made by Loring and her team.



They offer four burger choices with beef and turkey patties featured each week, and two other choices blended by this uber-talented chef. These excellent burgers are priced between $12 and $15 each with choice of fries, fried in duck fat (yummy) or olive oil, or that night’s special salad. My husband Dan and I both add Hearst Ranch beef with different “add-on” and loved them. Big as they are we ate the whole thing, and the fries and that night’s salad of romaine and Roquefort salad. For dessert the panna cotta with fresh strawberries and kumquats was a satisfying conclusion.

“It’s become a who’s who of wine industry people on Wednesday nights,” chef Maegen admitted. “There’s a great buzz going on in here and it feels great.” We saw several people we know and enjoyed dinner with winemaker Stillman Brown of Red Zeppelin, his siren Alexis Louise Fontenot, and his son Jake Brown. The 2008 Pink Zeppelin was delicious with the burgers, as was the 2006 McPrice Meyers Grenache.

The usual menu is also available on Hamburger Wednesday, as are her full selection of wonderful house-made desserts. The Park has limited seating so reservations are strongly advised. Whenever Dan and I are celebrating a special moment, the Park is always among our first choices for dining in San Luis Obispo County.

The Park Restaurant
1819 Osos Street
San Luis Obispo, CA
Call: 805-545-0000
www.theparkrestaurant.net


For the rest of this week’s Cuisine column, please visit New Times’ website at www.newtimesslo.com. I’m celebrating 13 years of covering the wine and food scene for New Times in June 2009.

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Mexican cuisine -- I Can Only Wish for It

When I say Mexican cuisine, and then start ranting and raving about Central Coast Mexican food, I have to admit I was simply being kind to the fine foods of Mexico. And I've had many a great Mexican meal, be it from Rick Bayless's outstanding cookbooks, the killer tacquerias in San Francisco's Mission District, or at La Supra Rica in Santa Barbara. I've only been to Ensenada, Mexico once but we didn't find great food there, either. I didn't really expect it in a town designed for drunken students and cruise ship tourists.

Here in the otherwise ideal living conditions in San Luis Obispo County, when I visit a new Mexican restaruant, no matter how much other critics or friends rave about it, I have always been totally disappointed. Like my visit to a new place in Arroyo Grande, the grand ditch as one visitor once described it to me, where I couldn't even get a decent tin pan of frijoles. The slop on my plate with a cheap sprinkle of so-called cheddar cheese reminded me of the mud pies I made when I was 5-years-old. The salsa, so loaded with garlic I thought they had bastardized a cheap can of marinara sauce, was inedible. I don't get it. As much as I love Mexican foods, I should be able to find a damn good restaurant serving it in a community with a rather large Mexican community. When I filled my entire Cuisine column with my crazed complaining about this subject, they received more letters to the editor than I'd ever received in 13 years of writing that column. And they didn't publish them!!! If these restaurants were actually advertising, maybe I could see why. But they're not. Imagine this, I had named the Mexican eateries that disappointed me and they took the names out of the story. I heard from on editor, however, the editorial team was divided on the issue and many supported my column challenging the restaurants to step up to the plate and improve their batting average. Alas to no avail, so that's one reason I've started this blog.

The oddest thing was that most people wrote to me to support Taco Temple in Morro Bay, which I like very much. Yet it's not a Mexican restaurant, it's California fusion, which the place states in a huge sign above the front door of the restaurant. I still support Taco Temple but it's not what I'm talking about. So for now, I'll just continue to eat the best Mexican I can find around here, the dishes I prepare in my kitchen!

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

The awesome Peggy Bojduj

Living the Good Life on the Central Coast



I was motivated today to think about all of the things in life for which I am extremely grateful: my soul mate Dan who is a great and loving husband, and my best friend who understands my moods -- he is the best thing that ever happened to me. I also love my wonderful and talented friends in the food and wine industry, telling their stories, sharing their wine or dining in their restaurants. I feel quite fortunate to live on the Central Coast where we have a wealth of great foods and wines. And lastly I’m totally appreciative of Kennedy Fitness Center where incredibly motivated people, like fitness instructor Peggy Bojduj helped me become an athlete again. When times are tough, be it stress, tight budgets, or things just not going as I planned, I find comfort and drive by remembering all that I’m grateful for in my life.

Monday, February 16, 2009

Becoming one with the world wide web


My own blog at last, and I'm excited about it. I've longed to publish my wine and food columns, add photos by the talented Dan Hardesty, and write about my great finds in food and wine everywhere I travel. And though I've been telling these stories for the last 13 years, my readership was pretty much restricted to the Central Coast of California. Now I can share the news of this outstanding wine and culinary center with the world.