El Milagro incorporates family recipes, fresh food

Cloverdaleā€™s historic Owl CafĆ© building is no longer sitting empty ā€” itā€™s now home to El Milagro, a restaurant that focuses on Mexican food made with family recipes that emphasize fresh ingredients.Ā 

El Milagroā€™s opening was a long time in the making. The restaurantā€™s three leads, Marco Zamora, Alan Valverde and Julio Vazquez, are all veteran workers in the restaurant industry and had always dreamed of teaming together to open up their own place.

ā€œWeā€™ve been working in restaurants for a long time,ā€ Zamora said, estimating that he met both Valverde and Vazquez around 20 years ago. ā€œFrom that time, we dreamed to open our own restaurant.ā€

The group chose the name El Milagro (which means ā€œthe miracleā€) because the restaurant was ā€œlike a miracle that came into our life,ā€ he said.

While none of the men are from Cloverdale, Valverde stumbled upon the space and never looked back.

Valverde discovered Cloverdale while he was visiting his niece who lives in town, and was immediately struck by the area.

ā€œWe were like, ā€˜Wow, this place is beautiful.ā€™ All of the vines and the hills,ā€ he said. ā€œWe thought we should move here. We met the owner of the building and we were like, ā€˜maybe thatā€™s our chance.ā€™ Here we are.ā€

Soon after, Valverde moved to town and the trio decided to jump on the opportunity to open up shop.

While the original Owl CafĆ© is gone, its imagery still holds an integral role in El Milagroā€™s identity. The owl has been incorporated into the restaurant’s logo, and when patrons walk in theyā€™re greeted with a painting of it on the back of the bar wall.

ā€œThe owl is part of Cloverdale,ā€ Zamora said. ā€œWe thought we should keep the owl as part of the logo because itā€™s part of Cloverdale ā€” you have the Owl CafĆ©.ā€

ā€œIt has a lot of history, itā€™s been here a long time,ā€ Valverde added.

According to Zamora, El Milagro is based around a ā€œMexican-modernā€ concept that incorporates more of a Mexico City feel.

When it came to defining the menu, Zamora said that theyā€™re trying not to focus on the same kinds of Mexican food thatā€™s already readily available in the area. Rather, theyā€™re using their own backgrounds and family recipes to inform whatā€™s served.

ā€œ(Alan) is from Mexico City, Iā€™m from close to Mexico City, Julio is from really close to Mexico City, but different states,ā€ Zamora said. ā€œWe focused on that area, on bringing that to Cloverdale. To bring something different, we decided to make fresh tortillas, we decided to make what we really eat in Mexico.ā€

Vazquez is in charge of the kitchen and while he said that likes everything that El Milagro offers, his favorite thing to make is the fajitas.

Looking forward, Zamora said that restaurant-goers can expect a menu that cycles through to adapt to the seasons. In the winter theyā€™ll focus on serving warmer food like soups and stews, and in the summer the focus will be on ingredients like seafood.Ā 

Theyā€™re also interested in having El Milagro play more of a role in the community, Zamora said, suggesting that they eventually want to support schools by opening for fundraisers or holding similar community-minded events.

ā€œWeā€™re very thankful of all of the people from here,ā€ said Valverde. ā€œWeā€™re really, really happy to be here.ā€

El Milagro had a soft opening earlier this month, but opened full time on Jan. 13.Ā 

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