Kelzi Bartholomaei was known to slip into the kitchen of Mother Hubbardโ€™s, which she has owned since 2010. The 47-year-old restaurant will serve its final meals on Nov. 19.

The small Mother Hubbardโ€™s Cafรฉ in the center of the Grant-Stone Shopping Center has been a peculiar holder-on for nearly 50 years.

Businesses have come and gone, some faster than others. Endless construction of Grant Road in recent years has not exactly been a welcome mat, especially for visitors and newcomers.

And yet, for 47 years, customers have navigated around the traffic jams and poor street-front visibility to find the diner dive whose calling card when it opened in 1970 was the daily 99-cent breakfast special.

But all good stories eventually have new chapters and Mother Hubbardโ€™s is about to turn that page.

On Nov. 19, the restaurant at 14 W. Grant Road will serve its last buckwheat pancakes and green corn waffles on roasted green chiles.

Chef-owner Kelzi Bartholomaei, who bought the restaurant in 2010 and transformed it from typical American diner to gutsy regionally-inspired cafe, is walking away from the business, turning Chapter 2 over to her operating partner Kade Mislinksi.

Mislinksi, in a Facebook posting late last week, said that Bartholomaei โ€œwanted to step away permanently and pursue other goals and dreams.โ€

โ€œAnd honestly she was Mother Hubbardโ€™s Cafe along with her amazing staff,โ€ said Mislinski, who owns and operates the months-old Classic Spaghetti Western Steakhouse on North Stone Avenue, a few blocks from Mother Hubbardโ€™s. โ€œWe came to the realization that it was time to close it. It ran its course 47 years later.โ€

Until the last day, Mother Hubbardโ€™s will serve some of Bartholomaeiโ€™s classics with Native American twists and indigenous ingredients, including blue corn, buckwheat, green chiles and agave nectar.

At the end of the final day, the restaurant will undergo a makeover and be closed about two weeks before Mislinksi in early December introduces Flipside Diner, a fast-casual, counter service restaurant whose menu will be anchored by steamed burgers โ€” think White Castle or Tedโ€™s Restaurant in Connecticut โ€” priced at $3.50 and $4.50.

โ€œI felt like I wanted a little faster service,โ€ said Mislinksi, who also owns Saguaro Corners on the far east side and downtownโ€™s Batch Doughnuts & Whiskey. โ€œNo oneโ€™s ever tried ... counter service diner food.โ€


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Contact reporter Cathalena E. Burch at cburch@tucson.com or 573-4642. On Twitter @Starburch