The new Moby Dick
Several years ago, Karl Hutterer, president and CEO of The Stearns Wharf Company decided to make it his personal mission to rebrand and rejuvenate the forgotten Wharf eatery, Moby Dick, into a seafood culinary destination that Santa Barbara’s harbor has always needed.
Says Hutterer, “I envision Moby Dick to be a culinary delight that offers superb seafood and craft cocktails, locally sourced and sustainably produced, and a place that delights guests with programs that not only feed the body but also the soul.”
He started by remodeling the front of the restaurant into a first-class oyster bar and then hiring two locally seasoned pros, chef Alberto Torres, formerly of Boathouse Restaurant and Bluewater Grill, and Amado Simon, formerly of Beachside Café, to make the transition happen. The duo quickly fashioned a four-star oyster menu that offers a wide assortment of oysters from the best of the East and West coasts, including Vancouver’s Fanny Bay and Prince Edward Island’s Malpeques.
Chef Torres brought his years of talent to the raw bar experience with his personal scallop and tuna crudo recipes, as well as his halibut and tuna ceviche. Other plates include steamed clams and mussels, peel-and-eat shrimp, shrimp and chips, and his raw-bar platter for sharing that includes 10 oysters, six clams, six mussels, eight peel-and-eat shrimp, and a lobster cocktail. Torres says he works daily with local fishermen to bring the freshest and most sustainable seafood menu possible. A menu that finally matches the million dollar Pacific Ocean view. Moby Dick has been reborn.
As for the cocktails, Simon has taken command of this area with his own specialty offerings that include Moby’s Mai Tai, a concoction of orange and pineapple juice, orgeat, dry Ferrand curacao, and dark Whaler’s rum served on the rocks. He says it’s better than anything you’ll find in the Islands. Simon also recommends his Mezcal Basil Mash with fresh basil, mezcal, fresh lime, and tajin to give it the spice.
Simon notes the bar also includes local brews from Draughtsmen Aleworks in Goleta and adds that about 95 percent of the wine list is sourced from Santa Barbara County and the Central Coast.
Torres and Simon both agree that the process is ongoing and that the menu will keep getting better with the addition of prime-grade meats and local in-season spiny lobster. Torres says to keep an eye out for his special twists on surf & turf. Updates to the back portion of the restaurant are coming, too, to better accommodate the upscale dining feel. “We’re going all out on everything from our happy hour (they call it “Oyster Hour”) to regular wine pairing dinners,” says Simon. “Come for the crafted food and drink and stay for the million-dollar views!”
—Phil Kirkwood
Moby Dick is on Stearns Wharf. Oyster Hour is 3pm to 7pm Monday thru Friday with live music featuring local talent from 6pm to 8pm on Thursday. www.mobydicksb.com
More Dining Out Articles
Gracie Wows in the Waterfront
Gracie, occupying the former Breakwater Restaurant space, has brought fresh energy to the Santa Barbara Harbor since opening in September.
Belmond’s bellissima ‘Bossa Nova’ Brunch
Stunning Views and Dining at El Encanto’s Bosa Nova Brunch
The Perfect Bite
Scarlett Begonia offers the perfect bite…
bouchon
bouchon Santa Barbara
Ethiopian lunch at Petit Valentien
The special Ethiopian menu at Petit Valentien
A nod to the journey
Barbareño: Cuisine of California’s Central Coast
Sip + Sushi:
Doug Margerum is at it again, this time with a gem of a new tasting room in Santa Barbara Wine Country’s charming Los Olivos. The spot offers a new twist on wine-pairing: a bento box with your vino tasting.
Margerum has been raising his glass to customers and friends for over 40 years in Santa Barbara’s hospitality trade, as a restaurateur and winemaker. Known for impeccable wines that he fashions for his own label, as well as consulting gigs to budding and wannabe winemakers, his talents have consistently set a high bar and earned respect for his Santa Ynez Valley estate wines.
A natural winner
The first step to success is often failure. Failures like Walt Disney, Thomas Edison, and J.K. Rowling all agree on that. And you can add Kelly Brown to that list.
For Brown, the watershed night was May 7, 1993. “I screwed up,” he recalled.
Restaurant Roy: Santa Barbara’s arty eatery turns 30
This summer marks the 30th year that chef-owner Roy Gandy has operated his eponymous Restaurant Roy (restaurantroy.com) at its location on West Carrillo Street in downtown Santa Barbara. A fixture in the community since its opening in 1993 with a menu offering soup, salad, and an entrée for $10, the eatery that feels like a comfortable combo of neighborhood bar, cool nightclub, and corner diner continues to thrive.
Gandy carved out a niche early on with his approachable prices, live music, and late-night dining. “We’re open until midnight,” says Gandy. “We get a lot of people after a show or a movie, or checking in late at a nearby hotel.”
Squaring up at Bossie’s Kitchen
by Jeff Miller Among other things, the corner of Milpas and East Canon Perdido streets has long been famous for a cow. Not just any cow, but the beloved plaster “Old Bossy,” on her proud perch atop the 1939 building since the creators of the Live Oak Dairy put her...













