A spicy American dream
- Share via
HUMBERTO CASPA
Is there a secret to Wahoo’s success? Ed (Eduardo) Lee, Renato
“Mingo” Lee and Wing Lam, owners of Wahoo’s Fish Taco, say the answer
often revolves around their restaurant’s exquisite and healthy menu.
I’m sure most of Wahoo’s patrons would agree with them, as their food
is simply some of the best of its kind.
However, the more I’ve learned about the three brothers, and more
information I got from them during a brief meeting at their
headquarters in Irvine, the more convinced I am that their biggest
secret lies in their family background. The restaurant business runs
in their blood.
“My parents tried many times to get us out of this business
because they knew how difficult it is to run it,” Ed said.
Like most parents today, Cheong Lee, their father, and mother So
Ching Lee sought more traditional professions and hence a safer
ground for their children. Perhaps having a lawyer or a doctor in the
family made more sense to them than having someone following in their
footsteps.
Luckily for the couple, their two oldest sons, Young Lee and
Yong-Tsun Lee, received medical and law degrees, respectively. They
wanted such futures for the “Wahoo” brothers. But getting the three
of them on such a track became as challenging as getting them out of
Orange County.
How can you ask someone who was literally born in a restaurant not
to be a restaurant owner? Yes, Ed and Mingo were born in their
parent’s house, which also operated as a restaurant in the city of
Presidente Prudente, about eight hours away from Sao Paulo, Brazil.
Their parents had migrated from mainland China to Japan, and then
they moved to Brazil seeking a better life.
Although the parents weren’t the center of our conversation, their
names often flew back and forth during the meeting. Despite all the
successes found in Brazil, especially after establishing a reputable
restaurant, Cheong Lee always wanted to come to America.
“We were fine in Brazil, but it was my dad’s thing to come to
America,” Ed pointed out.
And in Orange County the Lee brothers and their parents found
their ultimate dreams. First, the entire family settled in Costa Mesa
in 1975. After that Mr. and Mrs. Lee opened a Chinese restaurant in
Newport Beach, Shanghai Pine Gardens, where the legendary John Wayne,
among other famous entertaining figures, used to have weekly lunches
and dinners.
For Mingo, moving to California wasn’t as shocking as it was for
Wing and Ed, the older brothers.
“I was simply too young to understand what was going on back
then,” Mingo said. “Besides, going straight to Whittier Elementary
School in Costa Mesa helped me out.”
But for Wing and Ed, the change was harder. Both of them had to
adjust to a new language and to a new cultural environment.
In the end, however, Costa Mesa turned into a field of dreams for
the three brothers. Today, all of them are college educated. Wing
graduated from San Diego State University, Ed from Vanguard
University, and the youngest, Mingo, from UC Irvine.
All three went separate ways after finishing college,
experimenting with other kinds of businesses with little, if any,
success.
A law career didn’t pan out, so the three regrouped in 1988. They
were ready to take their ultimate venture, perhaps the last one with
their parent’s assistance. They bought a pizza place on Placentia
Avenue in Costa Mesa and eventually turned it into one of the most
successful restaurants in the area.
But success didn’t come as easy as most people might have
suspected.
“There was a point in which we were getting ready to pack our
stuff up because we had no business going on,” Ed recalled.
Luckily for the young entrepreneurs, Wahoo’s Fish Taco took off as
soon as people in the area, particularly surfers and other
beachgoers, began to recognize it as the ideal place to hang out.
Today, their famous cuisine, an eclectic mix of Brazilian, Mexican
and Asian flavors, appears in more than 30 Wahoo’s restaurants across
the nation. Most of them are located in California, but the chain is
expanding into Colorado, Texas and soon Florida.
Their restaurant chain is now functioning as a franchise company
for individuals wanting to share a lucrative business with them.
None of the brothers like to take the credit for their success.
They feel that without their parents’ guidance and support they would
have never achieved what they have earned today.
“We haven’t done anything yet, compared to what my parents
accomplished in Brazil and also in this country,” Ed said.
This attitude only leads me to believe that the future for the
“Wahoo” brothers is wide open, as they are ready to take on other
challenges.
* HUMBERTO CASPA is a Costa Mesa resident and bilingual writer. He
can be reached by e-mail at [email protected].
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.