A new Mexico City reality at Taco Rosa
Greer Wylder
Childhood memories of cascading chocolate fountains, sweet agave
nectar, homemade churros and flavorful bocadillos fueled the
inspiration for a new Mexican restaurant in Newport Beach called Taco
Rosa. Its owners, brothers Ivan and Marco Calderon, along with
partner Rene Fuentes, grew up in Mexico City.
“We wanted a place that reminded us of the places my mom and dad
used to take us,” Marco Calderon said.
To recreate the past, they first took over the former What’s
Cooking? location at Newport Hills Shopping Center. Then they
transformed the Italian bistro into a cantina-style restaurant. The
new design features authentic Mexican clay tiles, exposed beam
ceilings, rough plaster-finished walls, rustic pine furniture and
perforated tin sombrero lights. Upbeat Latin pop music adds to the
lively ambience.
To complete their reality, they installed an oval-shaped bar that
features freshly-made margaritas, an exhibition kitchen, a tortilla
station and enough seating for 140 guests. The restaurant also has a
large front patio seating area and a common area outside Pavilions,
where families gather and bring their dogs on the weekends.
“Customers who come here feel like they’re somewhere besides
Newport Beach,” Calderon said.
The trio of owners has a wealth of restaurant experience. After
working for Larry Cano -- founder of El Torito Restaurants, Inc. --
for more than 20 years, Ivan and Marco Calderon opened Taco Mesa in
1992, a chain of casual Mexican restaurants in Orange County. Taco
Mesa was top-rated by Zagat’s guide for value and location in Costa
Mesa. It offers gourmet cuisine at a low cost, specializing in
authentic, spicy and healthy food. Rene Fuentes opened Laguna’s most
popular Mexican seafood restaurant, Las Brisas, in 1978 and has 30
years’ experience working for El Torito restaurants.
A Mexican-theme restaurant isn’t unique to Newport Beach, yet Taco
Rosa presents a different dining style and has original touches other
restaurants don’t offer. Taco Rosa is both a quick-casual and a
fine-dining restaurant.
“No one else is doing this,” Calderon said. “At the door, we ask,
‘What would you like to do?’”
Guests have a choice. They can come in and order an a la carte
lunch or dinner for $5 or spend $30 to $40 on a memorable meal.
Orders can be placed at a counter, or guests can be attended to by a
waiter. Taco Rosa, like its casual sister restaurant Taco Mesa,
concentrates on creative dishes that use only fresh, authentic
ingredients. And Taco Rosa borrows 30% to 40% of Taco Mesa’ most
popular specials.
Its exceptional specials include the pescado para dos (for two or
more) -- a fresh whole tilapia fish that’s been marinated and
charbroiled, served with fresh guacamole, arroz del dia, refried
apazote black beans, pico de gallo, escabeche and fresh chile ancho
corn tortillas ($30). The enchiladas de cangrejo are crab enchiladas,
topped with tequila lime cheese sauce and avocado and served with
apazote refried black beans, arroz del dia and a sweet corn tamalito
($15). The tamale de langosta is a green corn tamale, gently steamed
in banana leaves and topped with lobster and zucchini sauteed in
garlic butter and tequila lime cream sauce, also served with arroz
del dia and epazote refried black beans ($16).
Other innovations at Taco Rosa include homemade sweet and sour mix
for its outstanding margaritas.
“We make margaritas from scratch,” Calderon said. “Nothing’s
frozen. It’s all fresh. We only use hand-squeezed juices.”
For the drink’s sweetness, they weren’t content using sugar. They
chose aguamiel, a precious honey-like liquid that’s excreted from the
inside of an agave plant. It’s organic, kosher and doesn’t have the
same lingering aftertaste as sugar. Seven margaritas are blended with
aguamiel, including the bar’s favorite tamarindo margarita, which is
flavored with fresh tamarind pods, and its house SenoRita margarita
with blue agave margarita and orange liquor. Other refreshing
specialty drinks include seven Caribbean cocktails, five Zona Rosa
“martinis” (tequila-based cocktails), plus classic martinis and
chocolate drinks. Taco Rosa also offers an exclusive Latin wine list.
“This is a wine oriented community,” Calderon said. “A whole room
was devoted to wines at What’s Cooking? Our wine sales are doing a
lot better than expected.”
Their wine list excludes California; it’s a collection of Chilean,
Argentinean, Italian, Spanish and Mexican wines. Instead of setting a
standard basket of chips and salsa at each table, Taco Rosa serves a
complimentary revolving mix of handmade bocadillos. The 10 appetizer
selections change daily.
Taco Rosa appeals to all ages. Kids are fascinated by the churro
machine, a station where freshly-ground masa is formed into tortillas
and the multi-level chocolate fountain. The fountain isn’t just for
display. Taco Rosa installed it as a tribute to chocolate’s Latin
America roots -- the cacao tree is indigenous to an area between
southern Mexico and north of the Amazon. The warm chocolate is served
with postre (each $6); churros colonieles, a fritter dusted with
cinnamon and piloncillo (Mexican brown sugar); traditional
sopapillas, puffed pastries served with agave nectar and vanilla-bean
ice cream; and chocolate-covered strawberries served with vanilla
bean ice cream.
Taco Rosa also employs kid-friendly la loteria cards (based on a
national pastime in Mexico) as order tickets. The loteria cards, with
symbols and bilingual words, are placed on placemats. They’re
collectible for prizes, free meals and gift cards.
“And it’s fun, they can learn Spanish words from the pictures,”
Calderon said.
Taco Rosa offers take-out and catering. Breakfast will be
available soon on Saturdays and Sundays.
* BEST BITES runs every Friday.
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