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Restaurant Review:

Try Wahoo’s if you haven’t yet

June 18, 2009|By John Reger

I thought Wing Lam, one of the three brothers who owns Wahoo’s Fish Taco, was going to quit golf right then and there and take me to one of his restaurants.

It had been about eight years since I had moved to Orange County, and I had never been to a Wahoo’s.

We were playing Pelican Hill Golf Club several years ago with a mutual friend and when I learned who he was I mentioned I hadn’t eaten there.

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He couldn’t believe it. To continue the round of golf, I promised him I would go to a Wahoo’s. I did, and have been going back regularly ever since.

What makes this place so appealing is the ingredients’ freshness and the innovation used to create some of the dishes.

When the three brothers, Wing, Ed and Mingo, moved with their parents from Brazil to Orange County in 1975, they adapted quickly to the surf lifestyle.

Like in Brazil, the three worked in the family restaurant, but on free days they were at the beach and soon they ventured down to Mexico. It was there they discovered the fish taco.

They combined that love of Mexican food with their Asian and South American roots and devised a menu that integrated all three countries.

The premise is simple. Pick a filling, grilled or blackened fish (mahi-mahi) or chicken, carne asada, carnitas, shrimp, or vegetables, which include mushrooms. Then figure out what you are going to put it in. The restaurant has tacos, enchiladas, burritos and bowls.

What I like is that they don’t look at you funny if you order something unusual. I had a request once of a carne asada and shrimp quesadilla. No problem, the woman at the register said. I have ordered combination plates in the past that aren’t on the menu, just improvising as I stand in line.

On one visit I had a burrito and had them mix blackened chicken with vegetables. That was extremely good; the mushrooms were cooked in Cajun spices and really added to the already zesty flavor.

When I am in the mood for rice and beans I order the combination plates. There are five of them and the most expensive is just under $8.

The surfer mentality of quantity and low price is evident with the combinations. There are burrito and taco combinations, or tacos and enchiladas, or any of them can be ordered by themselves.

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