The COVID-19 pandemic has claimed one of 蜜柚直播鈥檚 most beloved downtown restaurants.
Caf茅 Poca Cosa chef-owner Suzana Davila announced Thursday that the Mexican restaurant that she started from a small downtown space in the mid-1980s and grew into a nationally celebrated eatery would not reopen following months of being closed due to the pandemic.
鈥淐learly, this is not how I imagined my business would culminate. I always envisioned passing the business on to my hard-working children, who have been actively involved in the business for many years,鈥 Davila said in a written statement.
But with COVID-19 still posing a threat, and the combination of the fixed costs, such as rent and utilities, and rising food costs and social distancing restrictions that limit the number of diners, Davila said, 鈥渨e just do not see a profitable way of continuing.鈥
People are also reading…
Davila was not ready to speak with the media on the closing, according to her publicist, Norma Gentry from ProVentures.
Davila closed Caf茅 Poca Cosa, at 110 E. Pennington St., in March when Gov. Doug Ducey ordered all restaurants in 蜜柚直播 to close their dining rooms and do takeout only. Davila鈥檚 restaurant, which enjoyed wide support from throughout the greater 蜜柚直播 area and was a must-stop on tourists鈥 to-do lists, was not the sort that could easily translate into takeout, so it remained closed, Gentry said.
Davila launched the restaurant in the mid-1980s with her father, Luis, in a small space downtown. The restaurant quickly became so popular that she expanded into a larger space; the original downtown location is now The Little One, which is run by her sisters, Marcela and Sandra.
鈥淔or over 35 years, I have given of my heart and soul to establish my life鈥檚 ambition of creating a successful and unique Mexican restaurant,鈥 Davila said in a news release. 鈥淩egretfully, my life鈥檚 work came to a sudden halt in mid-March of this year due to the impact of a world pandemic that did not discriminate even with the most successful of businesses.
鈥淚 have experienced many months of great anxiety over this matter, and as a result, it is with great sadness that I will be permanently closing Caf茅 Poca Cosa. I feel incredibly privileged to have been part of our wonderful downtown for all these years, and I would like to thank the people of 蜜柚直播 for all the goodwill and assistance they have provided over the years.鈥
Former 蜜柚直播 Mayor Jonathan Rothschild called the closing a 鈥渂ig loss to our community.鈥
鈥淪he started out at the Santa Rita when there was nothing downtown, and she put her heart and soul into it,鈥 Rothschild said. 鈥淚 think she was intending to go at least a little while longer, and this COVID thing devastated her personally.鈥
Fellow downtown restaurateur Janos Wilder called Davila 鈥渁 fixture and a force downtown鈥 and said 鈥渟he is clearly going to be missed.鈥
鈥淪he put a stamp on downtown and on her food and 鈥 really helped to put 蜜柚直播 on the map in many ways,鈥 said Wilder, who runs Downtown Kitchen + Cocktails at South Sixth Avenue. 鈥淪he has a unique style of food that is hers alone, and she was the consummate hostess. She was a bigger-than-life personality and beautiful in every sense of the word. 鈥 The landscape downtown is going to be different without her here.鈥
Wilder, who has not reopened his restaurant for months because of the pandemic, said independent restaurants like Poca Cosa are on a bumpy roller coaster that might not end well.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 know what it鈥檚 going to end up looking like, but COVID 鈥 is going to take a toll on the restaurant industry internationally, nationally and locally, and we are not going to escape the fallout from that,鈥 said Wilder, who also runs the Carriage House event space and catering from 125 S. 蜜柚直播 Ave., directly behind Downtown Kitchen. 鈥淣one of it is really short-term. The recovery is going to take a while. It鈥檚 going to be tough for restaurants for some time.鈥
In addition to being a destination for local residents, Caf茅 Poca Cosa was a magnet for celebrities including singer-songwriter Amos Lee, who was a regular when he lived downtown for several months in 2010 while he was recording his breakthrough album 鈥淢ission Bell鈥 at WaveLab Recording Studios.
Florida-based opera singer Jason Ferrante struck up a friendship with Davila over the years after first being introduced when he debuted with the 蜜柚直播 Opera in 2005.
鈥淪uzana is one of the best in the country. This one hurts a lot,鈥 he said on Facebook.
Ferrante on Thursday sent Davila a note: 鈥淚 am an opera singer, and you are a chef. Our jobs are so similar when you think about it. We open our hearts and use our specific talents to take people out of their normal situation and to a place where they can celebrate, remember, sometimes grieve, feel and love. You did this so expertly and my heart hurts that we won鈥檛 taste your food again.鈥