When the restaurant closed in 2001, it was a momentary regret that I had never eaten there, just because of what it was, not for the food it served.
Now Puck, one of the first celebrity chefs, has incorporated and has set up more restaurants with a touch of the Spago philosophy.
I am not going to pretend that the Wolfgang Puck Café at South Coast Plaza is anything like his flagship restaurant, but there was a certain amount of anticipation when I went there last year.
Then I saw the closed for remodeling sign and thought I would never get to eat at one of his places.
Of course if I had waited this long, so what was another six months to a year?
It turned out to be good and for a chain had some significant touches with the menu that make it distinctive.
The café’s management gets several of its items from organic local farmers and Puck’s philosophy of good food with touches of inventiveness is certainly prevalent.
The ruby beet and goat cheese salad is a good example of the marriage between simple food dressed up with creative thought.
The beets are roasted and placed with fresh tangy goat cheese on a bed of spinach.
The candied pecans give it a sweetness, balanced out by a slightly tart citrus vinaigrette.
That dressing is also used on another solid salad, the chopped rotisserie turkey. Romaine lettuce is used with fresh locally grown green beans, corn and tomatoes.
Though the pizzas have always been a signature item for Puck, I instead tried one of the main course entrees.
The 10 dinner selections are varied and each are a reliable cuisine with a surprise, like the bacon-wrapped meatloaf that comes in port wine sauce or the tandoori-style chicken that has a cucumber-mint raita.