|
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...
|
Martinez โwho also runs San Agus & LV Marโsays bringing his staff back is โone of the best feelingsโ heโs ever had.

The Six Fiftyโs Restaurant Week Interviews are a series of talks with restaurant owners and chefs participating in the first-ever Peninsula Restaurant Week. For more info, visit peninsularestaurantweek.com.
This weekโs Q&A features Manuel Martinez of La Viga Culinary Inc.(which includes La Viga Seafood & Cocina Mexicana and LV Mar Tapas in Redwood City, as well as San Agus Cocina Urbana in Palo Alto).

For readers who might not be familiar, tell me a little bit about you and your restaurants.
Iโve been in the industry for the last 25 years, working as a cook, an assistant chef and then as a chef. After that, I began opening restaurants for other people, and then opening places for myself. The last nine years Iโve spent working for myself.
Iโm currently operating three restaurants that I own here on the Peninsula โ two in Redwood City and one in Palo Alto. Iโm a chef by trade, but Iโm also the mind behind everything here. Each restaurant has their own chef, so they do the kitchen operations, and I oversee them.
Tell me about the year behind us โ whatโs been the trajectory of your restaurants?
The last year has been a rough year. Itโs nothing like Iโve seen before. I was in the industry during the housing market (crash), worse than the dot-com boom, and this has been worse than those. Iโve been through a lot, but never a pandemic before. La Viga has been open nine years, LV MAR will turn eight this year. Itโs been a year since we opened San Agus.
Officially we have opened and closed the restaurants a couple of times, the first time being back in March of 2020, and then again in mid-December. Iโve opened and closed LV Mar at least four times, because we experienced some COVID cases there, and the first thing we did was close and make sure everybody was safe. Ultimately, we were shut down twice, but we closed on our own another two times during the pandemic.

With vaccinations increasing and Californiaโs daily case counts way down, does it feel like weโre seeing the light at the end of the tunnel?
I hope so, although after being through all of this, Iโm preparing to wait and see, because anything could happen tomorrow. It could be another shut down, or changing gears and operating at 25%, or that weโre allowed to open at full capacity. Itโs pretty unpredictable.
Tell me about the biggest challenges youโd say youโve faced as a restaurant owner as it pertains to lockdowns.
I would say itโs the uncertainty โ that you donโt know whatโs coming. I hope that weโre on our way to opening up fully the economy, and to making our businesses stronger. But itโs not up to me, unfortunately. There are things that I can do: have good food, serve it right and grow the business. And if the government lets me do business, I will do business. But unfortunately when they shut you down, and you canโt do anything other than to do food to go, itโs not good. That is basically tying your hands and your legs.
Are there moments or experiences youโve had this year that youโve drawn upon to keep you going?
Definitely my employees and my guests coming in and chipping in every day, trying to increase the volume of the business so we can bring another person back to work. Right when we closed the first time, we had like around 50 or so employees between our two restaurants. After we closed, we went down to four.
Opening the restaurants and bringing staff back โ thatโs one of the best feelings Iโve ever had. I thought everything would be lost, but weโve brought people back. Then seeing the customers come back โ some customers that you havenโt seen for months, or even a year, now.

Has the pandemic forced any kind of innovation or revelation in the restaurant space youโre excited about?
Definitely. I think the first one would be teamwork. We work as one now. Itโs not any more, โIโm a server and I only know how to serve people,โ or โIโm a dishwasher.โ Itโs everyone working together to achieve our daily goals. My team has been the highlight (of this year).
I discovered some of the restaurants are better at doing food to go than others. LV MAR is a pure service-driven restaurant; people go there because they like the space, they like what they get and they want to be served and get together. La Viga and San Agus are also service-based, but the type of food we serve there can be served well to go. So weโve been exploring that.
What should customers know about supporting local restaurants during Peninsula Restaurant Week?
Iโm a service-driven chef and owner. I mean, weโre no one without our customers. All that I ask is to be able to be open so I can serve them, and we can shine again. Customers want to go out and enjoy themselves, they want to go out with their friends, and drink, and eat. I would ask them to be patient with us, and to be ready to support your local restaurants. This is a hard time for a lot of people. Some restaurants thought they would survive, and they didnโt; some closed for a year, and now theyโre trying to reopen again, and everything is so different. The business is nothing like before.
(Reopening) might be overwhelming for a lot of restaurants, either because they are short people or resources. The industry is upside down, I think. Iโd thank our customers for coming back, but I do ask for their patience and their continued support, because we need them. Weโre looking forward to a much better year, but patience is key while restaurants get back to โ well, not normal, but the new normal, whatever that is.

Stay up to date with other coverage from The Six Fifty by subscribing to our weekly newsletter, featuring event listings, reviews and articles showcasing the best that the Peninsula has to offer. Sign up here!



