Restaurants next level at promenade
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Alicia Robinson
As homes sprout up along the bluffs overlooking Pacific Coast
Highway, a shopping center also is coming of age.
Three new sit-down restaurants will help mature the Crystal Cove
Promenade, which opened in 2002 and boasts a slowly growing number of
boutique shops and some “fast casual” dining spots such as Pacific
Whey Cafe.
Sage on the Coast, Mastro’s Ocean Club and Modo Mio Cucina Rustica
are all slated to open in the next year at the center. Restaurateurs
said they picked the center because of its idyllic location on the
coast and the growing community of homes nearby, which give it a
neighborhood feel.
Coming in August is Sage on the Coast, which will be similar to
the existing Sage restaurant in the Eastbluff shopping center, Sage
co-owner Rich Mead said. The restaurant will offer contemporary food
made with fresh, seasonal ingredients, and it will feature a garden
by the patio like the Eastbluff location.
The new venue, however, will offer more small plates of foods
people can share as well as the regular entrees, which Mead said is a
trend in dining today.
“People are deconstructing meals and splitting a lot of stuff, so
people are getting a lot of different tastes,” he said.
Modo Mio is also expected to open this summer. It will be the
second restaurant for owner Gianfranco Bertolino, who also owns a
Modo Mio in Pacific Palisades.
The restaurant’s specialty will be fine Italian cuisine with a
varied menu that includes pasta and risotto dishes as well as
seafood, veal and free range chicken. Designed for comfort, the
restaurant’s feel will be a “home away from home,” Bertolino said.
Seafood and steaks will be served at Mastro’s Ocean Club, which is
slated to open in early to mid-2005, with construction expected to
start this summer. The masculine feel and large portions of a
steakhouse will be tempered with elegant furnishings to create a
sexy, vibrant restaurant, Mastro’s spokesman Oliver Badgio said.
Patrons will be able to enjoy the location by the sea in an indoor
courtyard with live trees and a glass window system that will let in
the outside air.
That sea air, and view, was one of the attractions to Crystal
Cove, the restaurateurs said.
“We actually saw Crystal Cove in 1999 and we were so thrilled with
the location,” Badgio said. “It was really what we thought was just a
very unique opportunity that we couldn’t pass up.”
The growing community of nearby homes is expected to furnish
clientele for the restaurants.
“One of the main reasons was certainly the fact that it has that
Crystal Cove residential community right behind it,” Bertolino said.
“I really like the idea that people can just walk down.”
In the center now is a mix of smaller shops and a few chain
stores, and the new restaurants should mesh well with that, said
Jennifer Heiger, spokeswoman for the Irvine Co., which owns the
shopping center.
“We expect that the restaurants will really round out what the
center has to offer and it will really be a complete package at that
point,” she said.
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers business, politics and the environment.
She may be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
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