Rusty Pelican still flying after 30 years
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Young Chang
The Rusty Pelican really did start with a pelican.
A former Newport Beach man named Pete Siracusa wanted to start a
business. He was sitting on the beach one day thinking up names for a
restaurant when he saw a pelican on a jetty in the distance.
“That’s how he came up with the name Rusty Pelican,” said Jim
Dufault, director of operations for the restaurant’s parent company,
the Bubba Gump Shrimp Co. “Basically he was looking for some type of
endeavor to keep himself occupied.”
The restaurant opened in April of 1972, but Siracusa is now
retired and lives in Hawaii.
The Newport Beach restaurant, on Mariner’s Mile, has been
celebrating its 30th anniversary all year. Here’s what the Rusty
Pelican was like three decades ago.
The biggest change involves the sort of fish that was and is
caught and served. In the early days, fresh fish including swordfish
was caught from local waters and brought into the restaurant’s back
doors. Today, fisherman capture their meat from waters off of the
coasts of the Hawaiian islands, South America, Alaska and the South
Seas.
“It’s changed drastically,” said Dufault, who was also manager and
general manger of the restaurant in the nineties. “That we can get
purchased fish from the South Pacific and get it into our back door
in a day and a half ... the efficiency has increased tenfold.”
The most popular dish 30 years ago was the coquille, a
shrimp-and-scallop number in a light cream sauce that was baked with
parmesan. Today, it’s the swordfish Cajun malia, which features an
oyster brandy marinade.
Prices then for entrees ranged from $8.95 to $10.95. Prices now
are $15 to $25.
The restaurant also attracted celebrities, as did much of Newport
Beach in earlier decades.
Chick Hearn, Bob Hope and John Wayne were among the famous
patrons.
Other customers included a lot of old regulars.
“The Newport elite would gather and have their martinis off to the
corner and light up their cigars,” Dufault said. “The upstairs area
was smoking ... that was allowed back 30 years ago.”
Some of what has stayed the same at the restaurant include the
casual uniforms -- deck shoes and Reyn Spooner shirts -- and the
overall casual environment.
“I think what the Rusty Pelican has done is it has offered ... a
place of gathering for local clientele to really enjoy each other’s
company as they watch the sunset over Newport Bay,” Dufault said.
* Do you know of a person, place or event that deserves a
historical LOOK BACK? Contact Young Chang by fax at (949) 646-4170 or
e-mail at [email protected].
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