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Roberto's Taco Shop is a chain of Mexican restaurants in California and Nevada, with locations primarily in San Diego and the Las Vegas Valley. It is based in Las Vegas, [1] and it has 77 locations as of 2020. The company originated with a tortilleria that was founded in San Ysidro, San Diego, in 1964, by Roberto Robledo and his wife Dolores ...
On May 31, 2024, the chain closed 48 stores in California (including 13 in its hometown area of San Diego) [13] out of an original 134 in California, Arizona and Nevada. [14] On June 5, 2024, Rubio's for the second time in four years filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, with plans to sell itself to its lenders. [15]
A significant subgroup of Mexican restaurants in San Diego serves burritos described as "no-frills" and, in contrast to Mission-style burritos, the assembly line is not used. [24]: 165 [34] In the early 1960s, Roberto Robledo opened a tortilleria in San Diego and learned the restaurant business.
Rancho Guajome Adobe is a historic 19th-century hacienda (and now a historic house museum) in Rancho Guajome Adobe County Park, on North Santa Fe Avenue in Vista in San Diego County, California. Built in 1852–53, it is a well-preserved but late example of Spanish-Mexican colonial architecture, and was designated a National Historic Landmark ...
The Roberto-Suñol Adobe, also known as the Roberto Adobe & Suñol House is a historic adobe dwelling located in San Jose, California, within the former Rancho Los Coches. The house was built in 1836 by Roberto Balermino ( Tamien of the Ohlone tribe), fourteen years before California's admittance to the Union .
Sushi Party Tray. Over 100 Redditors had something to say about the Costco sushi tray. Complaints range from calling the rice dry and mealy, to saying they tossed the whole thing in the trash. "I ...
The development of American commercial areas in San Jose extended into this newly surveyed area, just east of the original pueblo site of 1797 (relocated from the 1777 site after major flooding). In the 1870s and mid-1880s, the heart of downtown commercial activity had moved northward along Market Street (immediately west of First Street and ...
The Casa de Estudillo, also known as the Estudillo House, is a historic adobe house in San Diego, California, United States.It was constructed in 1827 by José María Estudillo and his son José Antonio Estudillo, early settlers of San Diego and members of the prominent Estudillo family of California, and was considered one of the finest houses in Mexican California. [5]