Besties, the steamed burger and fish joint that took over for Mother Hubbard’s diner in late 2017, closed last Friday.
In a Facebook post, owner Kade Mislinski hinted at plans to find a new location on North Fourth Avenue and reopen sometime in the fall.
In a phone call Monday, he said that for now he likely will open Besties as a pop-up concept on the back patio of Cafe Passe at 415 N. Fourth Ave., where he is lead cook and kitchen manager for owner Jenny Rice.
He and Rice this summer will add a late-night dimension to Passe, which operates as a restaurant from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily and a bar — Bar Passe — from noon to 2 a.m. daily. In the next month, they will launch nighttime dining with Bistro Passe, whose menu will be inspired by the cuisines of southern France, northern Italy and the Mediterranean. The menu is still a work in progress but could include coq au vin, fondue, ratatouille, soups, sandwiches and salads.
Mislinski opened Besties after Mother Hubbard’s closed in November 2017, ending a nearly 50-year run at the Grant Stone Shopping Center, 14 W. Grant Road. His menu included steamed burgers and fries and fish and chips with housemade hushpuppies.
“Everyone loved the concept and the food. That was never the issue,” said Mislinski, who said road construction and renovation projects at the Grant Stone center hampered business. “It was hard to be consistent in that location because there was no access. ... The location wasn’t working and I was tired of working so hard.”
Besties was the second restaurant concept that Mislinski closed in the past year. Last July, he pulled the plug on Classic Spaghetti Western Steakhouse at 1535 N. Stone Ave., saying the restaurant had succumbed to the financial hardships of a Tucson summer.
Mislinski has been a fixture in Tucson’s restaurant scene since 2000 and has opened or been involved in 17 Tucson restaurants including downtown’s popular Hub Restaurant & Ice Creamery on East Congress Street and Saguaro Corners Restaurant & Bar on the far east side.
Tucson restaurants that closed in 2019
10 Tucson restaurants that shut their doors in 2019
Casa Valencia — 2660 N. Campbell Ave.
UpdatedCasa Valencia closed its Campbell location, which was the second location for the seafood bistro.
The Campbell location opened in 2016. The original location is at 1825 W. Valencia Rd.
Casa Valencia officials could not be reached for comment when contacted on April 2. The restaurant made no announcement of the closure on its social media.
Prep & Pastry plans to move into the space, which is much larger than the breakfast eatery's current location.
Read more here.
Cushing Street Bar & Restaurant — 198 W. Cushing St.
UpdatedCushing Street Bar & Restaurant temporarily closed for renovations in 2018 but announced their permanent closure in 2019.
Cushing Street Bar was born in 1972 when Betsy Rollings’ parents, Kelley and Sally, joined three other couples in the venture. Betsy Rollings ran the decades-old restaurant from 2002 until it recently closed, according to Arizona Daily Star archives.
The Coronet, a popular eatery at 402 E. Ninth St., off of North Fourth Avenue, will move into the space this summer.
In a note posted on its website, The Coronet said it would continue serving at its Ninth Street location through June 2 and will “reopen at Cushing after the monsoon.”
Read more here.
District Tavern Eatz — 1535 N. Stone Ave.
UpdatedNearly four years after Tucson's quintessential downtown dive bar the District Tavern shuttered, it came back to life in 2018, before closing again in 2019.
The reincarnation included food, according to a Facebook post announcing the 2018 grand opening.
The new digs were several miles from the District's original home at 260 E. Congress St.
The Fix, Arizona’s Mac n Chz Headquarters — 943 E. University Blvd.
UpdatedThe Fix closed after nearly seven years in business in the University of Arizona area.
The Fix was known for its mac and cheese concoctions — pizza, surf and turf, jalapeño popper, Hawaiian barbecue, enchilada and loaded baked potato, to name a few.
Owners Mike and Sandy Lanz cited several reasons for the closure, including construction of a hotel near the restaurant, the increase in minimum wage and retirement. The Lanzes took over the business in 2013.
Read more here.
Harvest on River — 5605 E. River Road
UpdatedAfter nearly four years on Tucson’s far east side, Harvest on River, the sister of the popular Oro Valley restaurant Harvest, closed in March.
In an email to longtime customers, owners Reza and Lisa Shapouri blamed the closing on a disagreement with their landlord over terms of renewing their lease. Reza Shapouri said the lease terms were “just unacceptable. There is no responsible way for me to sign that lease.”
Meanwhile, the couple, whose flagship Harvest Restaurant in Oro Valley is one of the most popular restaurants on the northwest side, will open a wood-fired pizza restaurant sometime this summer in the Oro Valley Marketplace, 12155 N. Oracle Road at West Tangerine Road.
Read more here.
Lerua's — 2005 E. Broadway
UpdatedLerua’s was one of the last businesses to vacate the area where the city plans to widen Broadway to six lanes starting at Euclid Avenue to Country Club Road.
“We’re trying to be the last to go. Moving a restaurant is not like moving an office,” Mike Hultquist said in December 2018, before the closure deal with the city was approved.
Hultquist, whose family had owned the restaurant for years, said that the deal was a decadeslong process that began in 1987. But the offer fell far short of what he said he would need to relocate the restaurant that had been in his family since his mother, Carmen Maria Borgaro Hultquist, bought Lerua’s in 1961.
Lerua’s, popular for its green corn tamales, stood on that corner since Tony Lerua opened it in 1922.
Read more here.
Lotus Garden — 5975 E. Speedway
UpdatedFor 51 years, the Wong family opened the doors of their East Speedway Chinese restaurant to three generations of Tucson diners. They closed in the end of May.
The restaurant was one of Tucson’s oldest family-run Chinese restaurant.
“It’s time,” said chef-owner Dan Wong, the son of Lotus founders Dan and Lillian Wong. “My mom is 87 so we thought it was time to close.”
Serial Grillers, the Tucson-born burger, pizza and craft beer chain, will take over the space when it moves its flagship restaurant from 5737 E. Speedway. The new location will double the restaurant’s capacity, said Travis Miller, who owns Serial Grillers with his brother William.
Meanwhile the Millers are teaming up with Red Desert BBQ & Catering to open a barbecue concept at Serial’s original location. Both restaurants are expected to open in October.
Read more here.
MiAn Sushi & Modern Cuisine — 88 E. Broadway
UpdatedTucson's upscale Asian-fusion restaurant MiAn's quietly closed in the beginning of June, but its owner said he plans to return in the fall with a new concept.
Bin An shuttered his MiAn Sushi & Modern Asian Cuisine, on the ground floor of the nine-story Tucson Electric Power building. The Asian-fusion restaurant that borrowed from Japanese, Chinese and other Asian cuisines had been open just over two years.
Read more here.
Shot in the Dark Cafe — 121 E. Broadway
UpdatedShot in the Dark Cafe closed in January after more than 14 years in business.
Pam Lopez, one of the restaurant’s 10 employee owners, said they were notified on Jan. 1 that they had until the end of the month to leave the space, despite renewing their lease in September 2018. The letter from Pam Keiser, who represents the trust that owns the building, said the lease was canceled.
Lopez said the group renewed the lease in September and agreed to rent hikes that took their rate from $1,100 a month to $4,400.
Keiser said the group of employees that owns and operates the restaurant has never really had a lease. The decision to evict came following a visit in fall of 2018, soon after the cafe failed a Pima County health inspection.
In a Facebook posting, the restaurant’s owners said they were being squeezed out as part of the gentrification of downtown that has forced several neighboring businesses to close.
Read more here.
Three Wells Distilling Company — 3780 E. 44th St.
UpdatedThree Wells Distilling Company closed after five years in business.
"We are so humbled by the amazing support Tucson, and AZ has given us over the years," the company said in a Facebook posting announcing the closure. "The relationships we have gained, and the awesome people we have gotten to know make the whole thing worth it!"