The recipe is family
Bryce Alderton
HE IS
A primer of pasta sauce and pizza dough
BACK TO HIS ROOTS
Brian McLoughlin cooks, cleans -- does anything to help out his mom at
the family restaurant. He’s been doing it off and on for close to 10
years.
His first job when he was 16 was stirring spaghetti sauce and folding
dough for calzones and pizza at Lino’s Pizzeria on Beach Boulevard in
Huntington Beach.
Since then he’s graduated from UC Santa Barbara with a sociology
degree and moved back to Huntington Beach.
His mother Pat now owns Lino’s, which she bought five years ago.
McLoughlin hasn’t decided what career path he wants to follow. He has
entertained thoughts about working in Los Angeles for an advertising
agency.
Right now he’s trying to save up as much money as possible to move out
and get a car.
“The perks are good -- like the free food,” McLoughlin said as he
stirred pasta sauce in a silver pot.
His day usually begins at 10 a.m. and ends about 4 or 5 p.m., but this
day, he said he’ll probably be there until 10 p.m.
“I just help out whenever I can -- when she needs me,” McLoughlin said
as he rolled dough for two calzones.
IT’S ALL IN THE PREPARATION
For McLoughlin much of the work is in preparing the ingredients when
he gets to the restaurant in the morning.
“You have to make sure all the dough, meats and pastas are ready,
especially for the lunch rush,” McLoughlin said. “There’s nothing really
hard or difficult to make, but when you get a line of tickets everything
gets difficult. It’s all a matter of time.”
Something that doesn’t take McLoughlin much time to make is pizza.
“I can make that with my eyes closed,” he said as he pulled a cheese
pizza from the oven with a wooden board.
The lunch rush lasts from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.
“Then it’s time to clean up the mess we made, do the dishes and get
ready for the dinner rush,” McLoughlin said.
ONLY THE BEST
He will reveal the secret to the lasagna, fettuccine and calzones that
can be found at Lino’s.
“We use the good stuff -- we don’t skimp,” McLoughlin said as he added
pepperoni and sausage to the calzones. “The pizza dough is hand-tossed
and made in the morning. It’s just a special mix of ingredients. I like
garlic in the sauce personally.”
After nine years, he should know what works best.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.