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Los
Patios is Rated Best of Orange County By OrangeCountyCABusinessDirectory,
Best
of San Clemente
by SanClementeCABusinessDirectory

Welcome to
Los Patios, Where you can relax and be served: The Best Authentic
Aztec-Mex Food
LUNCH, DINNER and for
LATE NIGHT : " MEXI-SNAKS
"

We ARE FAMOUSE FOR OUR: Award Winning Salsa,
Flaming Fajitas, Bigg Burritos, and Carnitas

Our purpose is simply to provide great
tasting, high quality Mexican food and beverage in a fun and
friendly atmosphere, for people who crave authentic Mexican
cuisine, full of flavored Aztec Mex Style (Big
Portions)

Blending Mexican and Aztec (Spicy) flavors

Quoted Best Mexican Food Restaurant in San
Clemente Orange County

With our family secret recipes and cooking according to those
traditions we skillfully prepare all our food every day. Nothing
goes better with our chips than our famous #1 award winning
salsa! It too is made fresh daily with only the freshest tomatoes,
onions, and chilies.

Freshness is also the secret to the unforgettable flaming
sizzling fajitas. Flames will jump from the plate, don't say
we did not warn you! We start with fresh tender chicken breast
and juicy steak as our main ingredient. Ahhh the terror of
a fantastic Mexican food!
BUILD YOUR
OWN BURRITO, OR CHOOSE FROM OUR MENU!

.:: Healthy Natural
Mexican Food
.:: Best Salsa San Clemente (1st Place Winner)
.:: Big Portions, Flaming Fajitas, Voted Best Burrito

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The only way to have
a friend is to be one
- Ralph Waldo Emmerson
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CALL US FOR
COUPONS
While
the
Craziness lasts!
Free
Dinner Anyone?
San
Clemente 92672, 92673, 92674,
San Juan Capistrano 92675, 92690, 92691, 92692, 92693,
92694
THE HOT SPICY TASTY
THINGS WE DO!
BUILD YOUR OWN BURRITO
SAN CLEMENTE MEXICAN BREAKFAST
SAN CLEMENTE MEXICAN LUNCH
SAN CLEMENTE SALSA
SAN CLEMENTE BURRITOS
SAN CLEMENTE TACOS
SAN CLEMENTE ENCHILADAS
SAN CLEMENTE FAJITAS
SAN CLEMENTE NACHOS
SAN CLEMENTE CARNITAS
SAN CLEMENTE MEXICAN BUFFET
SAN CLEMENTE CORONA
SAN CLEMENTE CHEESE CHESADILLA
SAN CLEMENTE TAQUITOS
SAN CLEMENTE GUACAMOLE
SAN CLEMENTE FLUTAS
SAN CLEMENTE PESCADO
SAN CLEMENTE TACO SALAD
SAN CLEMENTE TORTILLA SOUP
SAN CLEMENTE MENUDO
SAN CLEMENTE ALBONDIGAS
SAN CLEMENTE FISH SOUP
SAN CLEMENTE CARNE ASADA
SAN CLEMENTE CHICKEN BOWL
SAN CLEMENTE BEEF BOWL
SAN CLEMENTE CAMARONES SHRIMP
SAN CLEMENTE TUNA SANDWICH
SAN CLEMENTE PHILLY CHEESE STEAK
SAN CLEMENTE JAPALENOS
SAN CLEMENTE TAMALES
SAN CLEMENTE STEAK PICADO
SAN CLEMENTE RELLENO
SAN CLEMENTE CHICKEN EN MOLE
SAN CLEMENTE TOSTADAS
SAN CLEMENTE RANCHEROS
SAN CLEMENTE CHIPOLTE
SAN CLEMENTE CRAB ENCHILADAS
SAN CLEMENTE DOS EQUIES
SAN CLEMENTE MARGARITAS
SAN CLEMENTE WINE
SAN CLEMENTE FLANS
SAN CLEMENTE TORTAS
SAN CLEMENTE TECATE
SAN CLEMENTE BUD LIGHT
SAN CLEMENTE MILLER LIGHT
SAN CLEMENTE SANGRIA

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Anaheim 92801, 92802, 92803, 92804, 92805, 92806, 92807, 92808,
92809, 92812, 92814, 92815, 92816, 92817, 92825, 92850, 92899, Brea
92821, 92822, 92823, Buena Park 90620, 90621, 90622, 90623, 90624,
Costa Mesa 92626, 92627, 92628, Cypress 90630, Fountain Valley 92708,
92728, Fullerton 92831, 92832, 92833, 92834, 92835, 92836, 92837,
92838, Garden Grove 92840, 92841, 92842, 92843, 92844, 92845, 92846,
Huntington Beach 92605, 92615, 92646, 92647, 92648, 92649, La Habra
90631, 90632, 90633, La Palma 90623, Los Alamitos 90720, 90721,
Orange 92856, 92857, 92859, 92861, 92862, 92863, 92864, 92865, 92866,
92867, 92868, 92869, Placentia 92870, 92871, Santa Ana 92701, 92702,
92703, 92704, 92705, 92706, 92707, 92708, 92711, 92712, 92725, 92728,
92735, 92799, Seal Beach 90740, Stanton 90680, Tusin 92780, 92781,
92782, Villa Park 92861, 92867, Westminister 92683, 92684, 92685,
Yorba Linda 92885, 92886, 92887Aliso Viejo 92653, 92656, 92698,
Dana Point 92624, 92629, Laguna Hills 92637, 92653, 92654, 92656,
Laguna Niguel 92607, 92677, Laguna Woods 92653, 92654, Lake Forest
92609, 92630, Mission Viejo 92675, 92690, 92691, 92692, 92694, Newport
Beach 92657, 92658, 92659, 92660, 92661, 92662, 92663, Rancho Santa
Margarita 92688, San Clemente 92672, 92673, 92674, San Juan Capistrano
92675, 92690, 92691, 92692, 92693, 92694 Ladera Ranch 92694, Coto
De Caza 92679 Anaheim Hills 92807, 92808, 92809, 92817 Dove Canyon
92679 and San Diego 92101, 92102, 92103, 92104, 92105, 92106, 92107,
92108, 92109, 92110, 92111, 92112, 92113, 92114, 92115, 92116, 92117,
92118, 92119, 92120, 92121, 92122, 92123, 92124, 92126, 92127, 92128,
92129, 92130, 92131, 92132, 92133, 92134, 92135, 92136, 92137, 92138,
92139, 92140, 92142, 92143, 92145, 92147, 92149, 92150, 92152, 92153,
92154, 92155, 92158, 92159, 92160, 92161, 92162, 92163, 92164, 92165,
92166, 92167, 92168, 92169, 92170, 92171, 92172, 92173, 92174, 92175,
92176, 92177, 92178, 92179, 92182, 92184, 92186, 92187, 92190, 92191,
92192, 92193, 92194, 92195, 92196, 92197, 92198, 92199 |
LOS PATIOS HAS A FANTASTIC SELECTION
OF TASTY MEXICAN SPECIALTIES:
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Wonderful Enchiladas |
Cheesy
Quesadillas |
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Tender
Chicken Tacos |
Spicy
Tamales |
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Delicious
Steak Tacos |
Awesome
Nachos |
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Fresh
Fish Tacos |
Fresh
Pescados |
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Award
Winning Chips and Salsa |
Wonderful
Guacamole |
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Huge
Burritos |
Crispy
Taco Salad |
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Build
Your Own Burrito |
Delicious
Menudo |
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Flaming
Fajitas |
Spicy
Taco Soup |
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Flavorful
Winning Carnitas |
Excellent
Chicken Bowl |
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Delicious
Beef Bowl |
New
Mexican Sandwich |
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Savory
Shrimp Camarones |
Fresh
Tuna Salad |
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Tasty
Philly Cheese Steak |
Hot
Japalenos |
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Yummy Chili Relleno |
Crisp
Tostadas |
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Incredible
Margaritas |
Romantic
House Wines |
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Customer
Reviews for Los Patios in Yahoo Travel
By
A Yahoo! Contributer, 09/01/08
Great Fajitas and great service. Some of the best Fajitas
I've had in Orange County. Good Margaritas also, but disappointed
they couldn't make a cadillac one with Grand Marnier, oh
well. Staff is really nice and a pleasent atmoshpere. Kind
of hard to find - off of Palizada behind the Blue Danube
restuarant. you should go there!
BEST
SERVICE IN CALIFORNIA!
By endofsilence21361, 07/31/07
I started coming here about 3 months ago. These guys are
great. They are very detail oriented when it comes to your
order, they get everything correct, they are extremely polite
and seat you right away, and their food is EXCELLENT! What
more could you want when going out to eat? The place is
also very eclectic and keeps it's old world Mexican charm.
We go here at least once a week for the $1.00 enchiladas
and it is just great! Best service I've ever had in Southern
California! Keep up the good work Los Patios - we love you!
Nice
little Mexican food place
By A Yahoo! Contributer, 08/14/05
My wife and I ate here for the
first time the other night. We had noticed it before, because
it is in the same little plaza along with the New Mandarin
Garden and Adele's, two places we like here in town, but
we had never tried this restaurant. Well, there was a two-for-one
coupon in Clipper magazine, so we figured we would give
it a go. The atmosphere is very casual, which suits me fine.
I liked the unique artwork at each table (we sat at the
moon table). The salsa was good, although there is a lot
of ground black pepper in it, which my wife did not prefer
but I didn't mind. For dinner, we both got the combination
plates (because that is what the coupon was for. I had a
beef taco and a beef enchilada. My wife had a beef enchilada
as well. My only complaint is the beef was a little too
well-done, which didn't suit the enchilada very well. After
dinner, the chef (or the manager, or maybe he is both) came
out and asked us if we enjoyed our meal, which was a nice
touch. Overall, I wasn't wowed by anything, but I would
go back and try something other than the beef.
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SAN
CLEMENTE TIMES RESTAURANT REVIEW
Restaurant
Review:
Los Patios November 30, 2006
From:
Vol. 1, Issue 36, November 30-December 6, 2006
Compiled by Christina Scannapiego
4 1/2 Stars
111 W. Avenida Palizada, Suite 17
San Clemente, CA 92672
949.492.0162
Genre/Style: Mexican
Los Patios, located in the Old City Plaza near Adele’s Café,
has always been a Mexican restaurant of some kind. But when
Carlos Frutos took over the spot in 2003, he revamped the
entire place. What some used to describe as “Mexican take-out”
became completely renovated, redecorated and doubled in
size. Now, the family-run business offers extensive inside
dining-room seating as well as outdoor patio seating and
caters receptions and events. Dollar Tacos are the special
all day on Tuesdays, and Thursdays offer $1 enchiladas all
day. Regulars stand by their seafood dishes like Alida’s
Favorite: chicken breast and shrimp with a garlic chipotle
sauce, rice and veggies. Portions are huge—and that includes
the margaritas. Breakfast burritos and huevos rancheros
are popular among the morning crowd. And interestingly enough,
lunch guests can even find a Philly cheese-steak sandwich
with jalapenos. A live acoustic guitarist plays every Thursday
night.
Reservations:
Accepted but not necessary
Payment methods: Visa, MasterCard, Discover, American Express
and cash
Hours: Monday–Thursday, 11 a.m.–9 p.m.; Friday–Saturday,
10 a.m.–10 p.m.; Sunday, 10 a.m.–10 p.m.
Details: Patio and inside dining. Catering. Private parties.
Tastiness: 4 1/4 Stars Menu selection: 4 1/2 Stars
Ambiance: 4 1/4 Stars
Service: 3 3/4 Stars
Value: 4 1/4 Stars
About our reviews: We don’t claim to be expert food critics,
so instead of faking it for a free meal, we ask five real
customers about their dining experience, then share that
with you. All of our reviews are unannounced and unbiased.
This information is intended to be useful and is obviously
not scientific. Five stars is the maximum score available.
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Restaurant
Review Los Patios
- Not Your Typical Mexican Restaurant.
by
Bill Koelzer
The
first thing 30-year-old Carlos Frutos did in July,
2003 when he bought the Los Patios Mexican Restaurant
in Old City Plaza … was to shut the restaurant
down for six months.
He explains, “I’d worked in restaurants
since I was 14 - back when Adele Lux, (owner of nearby
Adele’s Café) was a waitress at La Siesta and
I was a busboy there - and I’d always had a
vision of what my very own place should look like.
The tiny 12-seat, very traditional Mexican restaurant
I bought wasn’t that, so I invested six months
of labor and much money in making it just what I wanted.”
Los Patios now seats 55 people in a luxurious Mexican-motif.
It also does extensive outside catering for wedding
receptions, corporate and governmental events, often
serving 300-plus attendees. But the biggest improvement
was in the food.
Carlos says, “All the Mexican restaurants in
this area offer pretty much the same basic lunch and
dinner menu - -tacos, tortillas, burritos, tostadas
and so on. But people told me that they were ready
for a different Mexican food experience so I set about
creating it. Now we offer a basic menu, yes, but far
more choices, a wide, wide upper caliber array of
Mexican food in a matching upper caliber setting.”
Some traditions remain: Tuesdays are dollar “Taco
Tuesday”; Sundays are dollar enchiladas. Always
the promoter, Frutos remarks that if someone takes
this entire article into Los Patios, he will give
them 15% off their meal price.
Regarding food quality, Carlos reveals, “I’m
the chef and I cook all the food myself. We don’t
cook with lard; we use olive oil instead whenever
possible. We make our own salsas and chips. We actually
try to be different from other area Mexican restaurants,
while retaining the essence of Mexican food. Nonetheless,
everything here is cooked the healthiest yet tastiest
way possible.”
“For
example, take our al pastor tacos, which can include
your choice of steak, carnitas, chicken or beef,”
Frutos declares. We marinate the meat in pineapple
juice, special chilis, garlic, cilantro and more,
and offer either large or palm-sized taco tortillas
for those who eat sparingly. The rich full taste is
so far beyond normal meat flavor that customers beg
us for the recipe. They also love it that our meal
platters overflow their plates, yet our prices stay
a real value.
”
Carlos says that he did not, oddly enough, create
the two most popular menu items. His wife, Alida,
created: Alida’s Favorite – Grilled chicken
breast and shrimp in our garlic chipotle sauce served
with Spanish rice and steamed vegetables - $13.95.
And Susan Murphy, head waitress, created: Susanita
Special – A delicious 9 oz. rib eye steak with
four large shrimp, a side of chipotle garlic sauce,
served with rice and vegetables - $16.95
Completely renovating the old Los Patios, Frutos modernized
the kitchen, tiled the floors with red pavers, painted
the walls and ceilings vibrant colors, and added dozens
of stunningly bright Mexican fabrics, artwork and
paintings in a flamboyant, yet, symphonic array of
comfy earthy tones. He installed elevated TVs for
“the big games,” but since they seem extraneous
with the décor, they are seldom on.
During non-busy hours Los Patios is often inhabited
by business people in hushed across-the-table meetings,
or couples enjoying an out-of-the-way place for a
tête-à-tête. The large dining room is often used for
corporate or non-profit group meetings and can be
segmented from the front part of the restaurant.
When is a Mexican restaurant way more than a typical
Mexican restaurant? When its owner and chef is Carlos
Frutos, with his revolutionary über-Mexican food and
decor. That’s when!

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ALL
ABOUT MEXICAN FOOD
Mexican
food is a style of food that originated in Mexico. Mexican cuisine
is known for its intense and varied flavors, colorful decoration,
and variety of spices.
When Spanish conquistadores arrived in the Aztec capital Tenochtitlan
(the ancient city on which Mexico City was built), they found
that the people's diet consisted largely of corn-based dishes
with chilis and herbs, usually complemented with beans and squash.
The conquistadores eventually combined their imported diet of
rice, beef, pork, chicken, wine, garlic and onions with the indigenous
foods of pre-Columbian Mexico, including chocolate, maize, tomato,
vanilla, avocado, papaya, pineapple, chile pepper, beans, squash,
sweet potato, peanut, fish and turkey.
Most of today's Mexican food is based on ancient traditions, such
as the Aztecs and Maya, combined with culinary trends introduced
by Spanish colonists. Quesadillas, for example, are a flour or
corn tortilla with cheese (often a Mexican-style soft farmer's
cheese such as Queso Fresco), beef, chicken, pork, and so on.
The indigenous part of this and many other traditional foods is
the chili pepper. Foods like these tend to be very colorful because
of the rich variety of vegetables (among them are the chili peppers,
green peppers, chilis, broccoli, cauliflower, and radishes) and
meats in Mexican food. There is also a sprinkling of Caribbean
influence in Mexican cuisine, particularly in some regional dishes
from the states of Veracruz and Yucatán. The French occupation
of Mexico also yielded some influences as well: the bolillo (pronounced
bo-lee-yo), a Mexican take on the French roll, seems to reflect
this. There is also a minor Filipino influence as well, due to
the Manila-Acapulco galleon trade, which lasted from 1565 to 1815.
Mexican food varies by region, because of local climate and geography
and ethnic differences among the indigenous inhabitants and because
these different populations were influenced by the Spaniards in
varying degrees. The north of Mexico is known for its beef production
and meat dishes. Southeastern Mexico, on the other hand, is known
for its spicy vegetable and chicken-based dishes. Seafood is commonly
prepared in the states that border the Pacific Ocean or the Gulf
of Mexico.
Common dishes found on a national level are:
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...APPITIZERS
- Pancakes
- Arroz amarillo
- Arroz con lima
- Arroz Español (Spanish rice)
- Arroz Verde
- Bolillos
- Calabaza (squash)
- Camote, Mexican sweet potato
- Dry soup, sopa, typically pasta with flavoring of meat or
tomato consomme
- Consomme, broth, either made from drippings of meat roasted
for barbacoa, or dry bouillon cubes and powder (usually known
by its most common brand name, (Knorr-Suiza)
- Curtido
- Elote
- Ensalada de fruta, fruit salad
- Fideos, noodles
- Frijoles pintos, pinto beans
- Frijoles negros, black beans
- Frijoles charros
- Frijoles
- Guacamole
- Jicama
- Lentejas, lentil beans
- Refried beans (frijoles refritos)
- Nopalitos
- Pambazos
- Papas (potatoes)
- Pico de gallo
- Salsa
- Yuca Cassava
- Iris
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MAIN COARSES
- Albóndigas
- Arroz con camarones
- Arroz con pollo
- barbacoa
- birria
- bistec picado
- burrito
- caldo, soup, (generally considered an entree rather
than an appetizer) which has many variations, such as
- caldo de pollo, chicken soup
- caldo de res, beef soup
- caldo de queso, cheese soup
- caldo de camaron shrimp soup, typically made from
dried shrimp
- carne en su jugo, meat and beans in a meat broth
- caldo de mariscos, seafood soup, similar to the
Italian dish zuppa di pesce. Popularly supposed to
be an aphrodisiac.
- Also see Menudo and pozole
- carne asada
- carnitas
- cecina
- cemitas sandwiches
- chapulines and escamoles
- charaes, small fish, basically a type of smelt
- chicharrón and chicharrones
- chilaquiles
- chiles en nogada
- chiles rellenos
- chilorio
- chilpachole de jaiva
- chimichangas
- choriqueso
- chorizo
- churipo
- cochinita pibil
- cocido
- cóctel de camarón and other seafood cocktails
- coyotas
- huaunzontles
- empanadas
- enchilada (red or green)
- flautas
- fritadas de camaron
- gorditas
- glorias
- gringas
- huevos divorciados
- huevos motuleños
- huevos rancheros
- lengua
- longaniza
- machaca
- mancha manteles
- menudo
- milanesa
- mixiotes
- mole
- molletes
- moronga
- nachos
- parilladas
- pasties, a speciality of Cornwall, adopted as comida typical
of Pachuca
- Pejelagarto asado
- picadillo
- Poc chuc
- pollo asado
- pollo picado
- pollo rostizado
- polvorones
- pozole
- pulpo, octopus
- quesadillas
- rajas con crema
- romeritos
- sopes
- sopa azteca
- sopa de pollo
- sopa de tortilla
- sopa tarasca
- tacos
- tamales
- taquitos
- Tortillas
- Tortas (sandwiches)
- Tortas de...., Small omelettes similar to egg foo
yung patties. See also romeritos.
- tostadas
- tlacoyos
- tlayudas
- tripas
- venado, particularly in the Yucatan.
- sopapilla,
- empanadas,
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DRINKS
- Tejate
- Bacanora
- Chocolate Generally known better as a drink rather than a
candy or sweet
- Atole or champurrado
- Horchata
- Mexican beer and soft drinks are very popular and are major
export products.
- Aguas frescas
- Mezcal
- Michelada
- Tepache
- Tequila
- Pulque, a popular drink of the Aztecs
- Jarritos
- Agua De Horchata
- Jugos de Fruta
...DESSERTS
AND SWEETS
Mexico's candy and bakery sweets industry, centered in Michoacan
and Mexico City, produces a wide array of products.
- Arroz con leche, rice with milk and sugar
- Pastel de queso, cheesecake
- Jamoncillos
- Cajeta
- Capirotada
- Carlota de limón
- Coyotas
- Empanadas
- Flan
- Pastel de tres leches (Three Milk Cake)
- Platano
- Alegrías
- Churros
- Dulce de leche
- Chongos zamoranos, a milk candy named for its place of origin,
Zamora, Michoacán.
- Jarritos (spicy tamarindo candy in a tiny pot), as well as
a brand of soda
- Pan dulce, sweet pastries, like American doughnuts,
very popular for breakfast. Nearly every Mexican town has a
bakery (panaderia) where these can purchased.
- Pepitorias
- Obleas
- Glorias
- Pan de Acambaro (Acambaro bread), named for its town
of origin, Acambaro, Guanajuato. Very similar to Jewish Challah
bread, which may have inspired its creation.
- Ice cream. Pancho Villa was noted as a devotee of ice cream.
The Mexican ice cream industry is centered in the state of Michoacan;
most ice cream stands in Mexico are dubbed La Michoacana
as a tribute to Michoacan's acknowledged leadership in the production
of this product.
- Paletas, popsicles (or ice lollies), the street
popsicle vendor is a noted fixture of Mexico's urban landscape.
- chanpurrado,
- rosca de reyes,
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ABOUT
SAN CLEMENTE
San Clemente is a city in Orange County, California, United States.
As of 2005, the city population was 65,338. Located six miles south
of San Juan Capistrano at the southern tip of the county, it is
roughly equidistant from San Diego and Los Angeles. The north entrance
to Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton (known as the "Christianitos
Gate") is located in San Clemente.
HISTORY
Prior to the arrival of the Spanish, the area was inhabited by what
came to be known as the Juaneño Indians. After the founding of Mission
San Juan Capistrano, the local natives were conscripted to work
for the mission. The city of San Clemente was founded in 1925 by
real estate developer (and former mayor of Seattle) Ole Hanson who
named it San Clemente after a town in Spain. As it were, San Clemente
Island was named after the city later since it is directly west
of the coast. Hanson envisioned it as a Spanish-style coastal resort
town, a "Spanish Village by the Sea." In an unprecedented move,
he had a clause added to the deeds requiring all building plans
to be submitted to an architectural review board in an effort to
ensure that future development would retain some Spanish-style influence
(for example, for many years it was required that all new buildings
in the downtown area have red tile roofs). It was incorporated in
1928 with a council-manager government.
Nixon's "Western White House" In 1968 President Richard Nixon
bought the H. H. Cotton estate, one of the original homes built
by one of Hanson's partners. Nixon called it "La Casa Pacifica,"
but it was nicknamed the "Western White House", a term now commonly
used for a President's vacation home. It sits above one of the West
Coast's premier surfing spots, Trestles, and just north of historic
surfing beach San Onofre. During Nixon's tenure it was visited by
many world leaders , including Soviet Premier Leonid Brezhnev, Mexican
President Gustavo Díaz Ordaz, Japanese Prime Minister Eisaku Sato,
and Henry Kissinger, as well as businessman Bebe Rebozo. Following
his resignation, Nixon retired to San Clemente to write his memoirs.
He later sold the home and moved to Park Ridge, New Jersey. The
property also has historical tie to the democratic side of the aisle;
prior to Nixon's tenure at the estate, H.H. Cotton was known to
host Franklin D. Roosevelt, who would visit to play cards in a small
outbuilding overlooking the Pacific Ocean.
Surfing legacy San Clemente catches swells all year long.
Going from South to North, they include Trestles (technically just
south of the city line), North Gate, State Park, Riviera, Lasuen,
The Hole, Beach House, T-Street, The Pier, 204, North Beach, and
Poche. San Clemente is also the surfing media capital of the world
as well as a premier surfing destination. It is home to Surfing
Magazine, The Surfer's Journal, and Longboard Magazine, with Surfer
Magazine just up the freeway in San Juan Capistrano. The city has
a large concentration of surfboard shapers and manufacturers. Additionally,
many world renowned surfers were raised in San Clemente or took
up long-term residence in town, including Hobie Alter, Jr., Shane
Beschen, Gavin Beschen, Matt Archbold, Christian Fletcher, Mike
Parsons (originally from Laguna Beach), Colin McPhillips, Rocky
Sabo, Colleen Mehlberg, Greg Long, Dino Andino, Chris Ward, and
many, many others. San Clemente High School has won 6 out of 7 most
recent NSSA national surfing titles.
Education
The city is served by Capistrano Unified School District. Within
the city, there are 5 elementary schools, 3 middle schools, and
1 high school. Elementary Schools: Concordia Elementary, Truman
Benedict, Vista Del Mar, Las Palmas, and Lobo Elementary. Middle
Schools: Bernice Ayer, Shorecliffs, and Vista Del Mar. High Schools:
San Clemente High San Clemente High School is the only high school
in San Clemente. Ranked in the top 1.3% of schools nationwide,
San Clemente also has an IB (International Baccalaureate) Program,
a vast number of AP Courses. The music program also boasts a nationally
recognized Vocal Arts Program with award-winning Madrigals, Women's
Ensemble, and A Cappella choirs. San Clemente's IB students rank
in the top 3% of the World for their IB scores and the program
has expanded vastly in the past few years under the direction
of Patrick Harris and Kathleen Sigafoos, the IB Coordinators of
the School.
* City of San Clemente
official website
* The San Clemente
Sun Post News, the town's oldest newspaper
* San Clemente Times
community newspaper
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ABOUT
ORANGE COUNTY
Orange
County is a county in Southern California, United States. Its
county seat is Santa Ana. According to the 2000 Census, its population
was 2,846,289, making it the second most populous county in the
state of California, and the fifth most populous in the United
States. The state of California estimates its population as of
2007 to be 3,098,121 people, dropping its rank to third, behind
San Diego County. Thirty-four incorporated cities are located
in Orange County; the newest is Aliso Viejo.
Unlike many other large centers of population in the United States,
Orange County uses its county name as its source of identification
whereas other places in the country are identified by the large
city that is closest to them. This is because there is no defined
center to Orange County like there is in other areas which have
one distinct large city. Five Orange County cities have populations
exceeding 170,000 while no cities in the county have populations
surpassing 360,000. Seven of these cities are among the 200 largest
cities in the United States.
Orange County is also famous as a tourist destination, as the
county is home to such attractions as Disneyland and Knott's Berry
Farm, as well as sandy beaches for swimming and surfing, yacht
harbors for sailing and pleasure boating, and extensive area devoted
to parks and open space for golf, tennis, hiking, kayaking, cycling,
skateboarding, and other outdoor recreation. It is at the center
of Southern California's Tech Coast, with Irvine being the primary
business hub.
The average price of a home in Orange County is $541,000. Orange
County is the home of a vast number of major industries and service
organizations. As an integral part of the second largest market
in America, this highly diversified region has become a Mecca
for talented individuals in virtually every field imaginable.
Indeed the colorful pageant of human history continues to unfold
here; for perhaps in no other place on earth is there an environment
more conducive to innovative thinking, creativity and growth than
this exciting, sun bathed valley stretching between the mountains
and the sea in Orange County.
Orange County was Created March 11 1889, from part of Los Angeles
County, and, according to tradition, so named because of the flourishing
orange culture. Orange, however, was and is a commonplace name
in the United States, used originally in honor of the Prince of
Orange, son-in-law of King George II of England.
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Incorporated:
March 11, 1889
Legislative Districts:
* Congressional: 38th-40th, 42nd & 43
* California Senate: 31st-33rd, 35th & 37
* California Assembly: 58th, 64th, 67th, 69th, 72nd &
74
County Seat: Santa Ana
County Information:
Robert E. Thomas Hall of Administration
10 Civic Center Plaza, 3rd Floor, Santa Ana 92701
Telephone: (714)834-2345 Fax: (714)834-3098
County Government Website: http://www.oc.ca.gov |
CITIES OF ORANGE COUNTY CALIFORNIA:
Noteworthy
communities Some of the communities that exist within city
limits are listed below:
* Anaheim Hills, Anaheim * Balboa Island, Newport Beach
* Corona del Mar, Newport Beach * Crystal Cove/Pelican Hill,
Newport Beach * Capistrano Beach, Dana Point * El Modena,
Orange * French Park, Santa Ana * Floral Park, Santa Ana
* Foothill Ranch, Lake Forest * Monarch Beach, Dana Point
* Nellie Gail, Laguna Hills * Northwood, Irvine * Woodbridge,
Irvine * Newport Coast, Newport Beach * Olive, Orange *
Portola Hills, Lake Forest * San Joaquin Hills, Laguna Niguel
* San Joaquin Hills, Newport Beach * Santa Ana Heights,
Newport Beach * Tustin Ranch, Tustin * Talega, San Clemente
* West Garden Grove, Garden Grove * Yorba Hills, Yorba Linda
* Mesa Verde, Costa Mesa
Unincorporated communities These communities are outside
of the city limits in unincorporated county territory:
* Coto de Caza * El Modena * Ladera Ranch * Las Flores *
Midway City * Orange Park Acres * Rossmoor * Silverado Canyon
* Sunset Beach * Surfside * Trabuco Canyon * Tustin Foothills
Adjacent counties to Orange County Are: * Los Angeles
County, California - north, west * San Bernardino County,
California - northeast * Riverside County, California -
east * San Diego County, California - southeast
Orange
County is home to many colleges and universities, including:
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ABOUT
CAMP PENDLETON
Marine
Corps Base Camp Pendleton is the major West Coast base of the United
States Marine Corps and serves as its prime amphibious training
base. It is located in Southern California between the cities of
Oceanside and San Clemente. The base was established in 1942 to
train U.S. Marines for service in World War II. It is named after
Marine General Joseph Henry Pendleton, who long advocated setting
up a West Coast training base for the Marine Corps. Today it is
the home to a myriad of Fleet Marine Force units including the 1st
Marine Expeditionary Force and various training commands.

The
base's diverse geography, spanning over 125,000 acres (506 km²),
plays host to year round training for Marines in addition to all
other branches of the U.S. military. Amphibious and sea-to-shore
training takes place at several key points along the base's 17 miles
(27 km) of coastline. The main base is in the Mainside Complex,
at the southeastern end of the base, and the remote northern interior
is an impact area. Daytime population is around 100,000. Recruits
from nearby Marine Corps Recruit Depot, San Diego spend a month
on Pendleton's Edson Range receiving field training, and after graduating
from boot camp return to the base's School of Infantry for further
training. Camp Pendleton remains the last major undeveloped portion
of the Southern California coastline, save for a few small state
parks. In this way, it acts as a kind of buffer between Orange County,
which is generally considered part of the Greater Los Angeles Area,
and San Diego County, which generally is not.
Camp Pendleton is located in Oceanside which is the third largest
city in San Diego County, California. The city has a population
of 173,303. Together with Vista and Carlsbad, it makes up the Tri-City
area. The city is just south of U.S. Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton,
the busiest military base in the United States. Oceanside has grown
massively from the 1970 census report of 45,000 people. Much of
the city area was developed into single-family home tracts when
real estate booms took place in the 1970s and 1980s. Since 1990,
more commercial and industrial development diversified Oceanside's
economic base, with another population boom ever since. According
to the US census, Oceanside's continual growth will put the city
population estimates above the 200,000 mark in 2010 or exceed 250,000
by the year
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ABOUT SAN DIEGO
San
Diego is a coastal Southern California city located in the
southwestern corner of the continental United States. As of
2006, the city has an estimated population of 1,256,951. It
is the second largest city in California and the eighth largest
city in the United States. It is the county seat of San Diego
County.GR6 and is the economic center of the San Diego–Carlsbad–San
Marcos metropolitan area, the 17th-largest metro area in the
U.S. with a population of 2.9 million as of 2006, and the
21st largest Metropolitan area in the Americas when including
Tijuana.
San
Diego County lies just north of the Mexican border—sharing
a border with Tijuana—and lies south of Orange County. It
is home to miles of beaches, a mild Mediterranean climate
and 16 military facilities hosting the United States Navy,
the United States Coast Guard and the United States Marine
Corps.
The
University of California, San Diego (UCSD) and the affiliated
UCSD Medical Center combined with nearby research institutes
in the Torrey Pines area of La Jolla make the area influential
in biotechnology research. San Diego's economy is largely
composed of agriculture, biotechnology/biosciences, computer
sciences, electronics manufacturing, defense-related manufacturing,
financial and business services, ship-repair and construction,
software development, telecommunications, and tourism.
The city of San Diego it self has deep canyons separating
its mesas, creating small pockets of natural parkland scattered
throughout the city. The same canyons give parts of the city
a highly segmented feel, creating literal gaps between otherwise
proximal neighborhoods and contributing to a low-density,
car-centered built environment. Downtown San Diego is located
on San Diego Bay. Balboa Park lies on a mesa to the northeast.
It is surrounded by several dense urban communities and abruptly
ends in Hillcrest to the north. The Coronado and Point Loma
peninsulas separate San Diego Bay from the ocean. Ocean Beach
is on the west side of Point Loma. Mission Beach and Pacific
Beach lie between the ocean and Mission Bay, a man-made aquatic
park. La Jolla, an affluent community, lies north of Pacific
Beach. Mount Soledad in La Jolla offers views from northern
San Diego County to Mexico. Mountains rise to the east of
the city, and beyond the mountains are desert areas. Cleveland
National Forest is a half-hour drive from downtown San Diego.
Numerous farms are found in the valleys northeast and southeast
of the city. San Diego County has one of the highest count
of animal and plant species that are on the endangered species
list than other counties in the United States.
Communities and neighborhoods of San Diego: Old Town,
San Diego. Old Town, San Diego. Northern: Bay Ho, Bay Park,
Carmel Valley, Clairemont Mesa East, Clairemont Mesa West,
Del Mar Mesa, La Jolla, La Jolla Village, Mission Beach, Mission
Bay Park, North City, North Clairemont, Pacific Beach, Pacific
Highlands Ranch, Torrey Hills, Torrey Pines, University City
Northeastern: Black Mountain Ranch, Carmel Mountain Ranch,
Miramar, Miramar Ranch North, Mira Mesa, Rancho Bernardo,
Rancho Encantada, Rancho Peñasquitos, Sabre Springs, San Pasqual
Valley, Scripps Ranch, Sorrento Valley, Torrey Highlands Eastern:
Allied Gardens, Birdland, Del Cerro, Grantville, Kearny Mesa,
Lake Murray, Mission Valley East, San Carlos, Serra Mesa,
Tierrasanta Western: Burlingame, Hillcrest, La Playa, Linda
Vista, Loma Portal, Midtown, Midway District, Mission Hills,
Mission Valley West, Morena, North Park, Ocean Beach, Old
Town, Point Loma Heights, Roseville-Fleetridge, Sunset Cliffs,
University Heights, Wooded Area Central: Balboa Park, Bankers
Hill, Barrio Logan, City Heights, Downtown (Columbia, Core,
Cortez Hill, East Village, Gaslamp Quarter, Horton, Little
Italy, Marina), Golden Hill, Grant Hill, Logan Heights, Memorial,
Middletown, Sherman Heights, South Park, Stockton Mid-City:
City Heights (comprising Azalea Park, Bayridge, Hollywood
Park, Castle, Cherokee Point, Chollas Creek, Colina Del Sol,
Corridor, Fairmount, Fox Canyon, Islenair, Ridgeview/Webster
Rolando, Swan Canyon, Teralta East, Teralta West), College
East, College West, Darnall, El Cerrito, Gateway, Kensington,
Normal Heights, Oak Park, Talmadge Southeastern: Alta Vista,
Bay Terrace, Broadway Heights, Chollas View, Emerald Hills,
Encanto, Jamacha-Lomita, Lincoln Park, Mountain View, Mt.
Hope, Paradise Hills, Shelltown, Skyline, Southcrest, Valencia
Park Southern: Egger Highlands, Nestor, Ocean Crest, Otay
Mesa, Otay Mesa West, Palm City, San Ysidro, Tijuana River
Valley
THE CITIES WITHIN THE COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO ARE:
Carlsbad,Chula
Vista Coronado
Del Mar
El
Cajon Encinitas
Escondido
Imperial
Beach La
Mesa Lemon
Grove National
City Oceanside
Poway
San Diego
San
Marcos Santee
Solana
Beach Vista
The
three largest sectors of San Diego's economy are defense,
manufacturing, and tourism respectively. Several areas of
San Diego (in particular La Jolla and surrounding Sorrento
Valley areas) are home to offices and research facilities
for numerous biotechnology companies. Major biotechnology
companies like Neurocrine Biosciences and Nventa Biopharmaceuticals
are headquartered in San Diego, while many biotech and pharmaceutical
companies, such as BD Biosciences, Biogen Idec, Integrated
DNA Technologies, Merck, Pfizer, Élan, Genzyme, Cytovance,
Celgene and Vertex, have offices or research facilities in
San Diego. There are also several non-profit biotech institutes,
such as the Salk Institute for Biological Studies, the Scripps
Research Institute and the Burnham Institute. The presence
of University of California, San Diego and other research
institutions helped fuel biotechnology growth. In June 2004,
San Diego was ranked the top biotech cluster in the U.S. by
the Milken Institute.
San Diego is home to companies that develop wireless cellular
technology. Qualcomm Incorporated was founded and is headquartered
in San Diego; Qualcomm is the largest private-sector technology
employer (excluding hospitals) in San Diego County. The largest
software company in San Diego (acccording to the San Diego
Business Journal) is security software company Websense Inc.
Websense was founded and is headquartered in San Diego.
The economy of San Diego is influenced by its port, which
includes the only major submarine and shipbuilding yards on
the West Coast, as well as the largest naval fleet in the
world. The cruise ship industry, which is the second largest
in California, generates an estimated $2 million annually
from the purchase of food, fuel, supplies, and maintenance
services. Due to San Diego's military influence, major national
defense contractors, such as General Atomics and Science Applications
International Corporation are headquartered in San Diego.
Tourism is also a major industry owing to the city's climate.
Major tourist destinations include Balboa Park, the San Diego
Zoo, Seaworld, nearby Wild Animal Park and Legoland, the city's
beaches and golf tournaments like the Buick Invitational.
San Diego has several sports venues: Qualcomm Stadium is the
home of the NFL San Diego Chargers, NCAA Division I San Diego
State Aztecs, as well as local high school football championships.
Qualcomm Stadium also hosts international soccer games, Supercross
events and formerly hosted Major League Baseball. Three NFL
Super Bowl championships and many college football bowl games
have been held there. Balboa Stadium is the city's first stadium,
constructed in 1914, and former home of the San Diego Chargers.
Currently Balboa Stadium hosts soccer, American football and
track and field.
PETCO Park in downtown San Diego is the home of Major League
Baseball's San Diego Padres. The ballpark is also the current
home of the semi-final and final games of the World Baseball
Classic series, having hosted the inaugural series championship
games in 2006. PETCO Park will be the home to the 2009 World
Baseball Classic semi-finals and final as well. Other than
baseball, PETCO Park hosts other occasional soccer and rugby
events. The San Diego Sports Arena hosts basketball, and has
also hosted ice hockey, indoor soccer and boxing. Cox Arena
at Aztec Bowl on the campus of San Diego State University
hosts the NCAA Division I San Diego State Aztecs men's and
women's basketball games. Torero Stadium at the University
of San Diego hosts college football and soccer, and the Jenny
Craig Pavilion at USD hosts basketball and volleyball.
The San Diego State Aztecs (MWC) and the San Diego Toreros
(WCC) are NCAA Division I teams. The UCSD Tritons (CCAA) are
members of NCAA Division II while the Point Loma Nazarene
Sea Lions (GSAC) are members of the NAIA. San Diego has been
the home of two NBA franchises, the first of which was called
the San Diego Rockets. The Rockets represented the city of
San Diego from 1967 until 1971. After the conclusion of the
1970-1971 season, they moved to Texas where they became the
Houston Rockets. Seven years later, San Diego received a relocated
NBA franchise (the Buffalo Braves), which was renamed the
San Diego Clippers. The Clippers played in the San Diego Sports
Arena from 1978 until 1984. Prior to the start of the 1984-1985
season, the team was moved to Los Angeles, and is now called
the Los Angeles Clippers. Other sports franchises that represented
San Diego include the San Diego Conquistadors of the American
Basketball Association, the San Diego Sockers (which played
in various indoor and outdoor soccer leagues during their
existence), the San Diego Flash and the San Diego Gauchos,
both playing in different divisions of the United Soccer League,
the San Diego Spirit of the Women's United Soccer Association,
the San Diego Mariners of the World Hockey Association, and
the San Diego Gulls who were in different hockey leagues during
each of their three incarnations. The San Diego Riptide and
the San Diego Shockwave were indoor football teams that played
at the Sports Arena and Cox Arena, respectively. San Diego
has long been a candidate for a Major League Soccer franchise,
especially due to the city recording FIFA World Cup television
audiences which are double the national average. Curiously,
despite positive language being expressed by the league, the
city, the media and the public, a franchise continues to elude
San Diego. That looks likely to be finally rectified with
San Diego considered among the favourites to land one of three
franchises to be offered before 2010. The city does currently
have an active mens team playing in the fourth level of American
soccer, the San Diego Pumitas but no approaches have been
made to turn them into an MLS team as yet.
According to education rankings released by the U.S. Census
Bureau, 40.4 percent of San Diegans ages 25 and older hold
bachelor's degrees. The census ranks the city as the ninth
most educated city in the United States based on these figures.
Public colleges and universities in the city include University
of California, San Diego (UCSD), San Diego State University
(SDSU), and the San Diego Community College District, which
includes San Diego City College, San Diego Mesa College, and
San Diego Miramar College. Private colleges and universities
in the city include Alliant International University (AIU),
Design Institute of San Diego (DISD), John Paul the Great
Catholic University, National University, NewSchool of Architecture
and Design, Pacific Oaks College, The Art Institute of California,
San Diego, Point Loma Nazarene University (PLNU),Woodbury
University School of Architecture's satellite campus, and
University of San Diego (USD) . There is one medical school
in the city, the UCSD School of Medicine. There are three
ABA accredited law schools in the city, which include California
Western School of Law, Thomas Jefferson School of Law, and
University of San Diego School of Law. There is also one unaccredited
law school, Western Sierra Law School. The Joint Mathematics
Meeting of the MAA, that is, Mathematical Association of America
and AMS, which denotes American Mathematical Society, took
place in San Diego, January, 2008.
The San Diego Unified School District, also known as San Diego
City Schools, is the school district that serves the majority
of the city, it includes 113 elementary schools, 23 middle
schools, 4 atypical schools, 10 alternative schools, 27 high
schools and 25 charter schools. In the northern part of the
county, Poway Unified School District and San Dieguito Union
High School District are districts outside city limits, but
serve several schools within city limits. In the southern
part of the county, Sweetwater Union High School District
serves multiple schools within city limits, although it is
headquartered outside city limits. San Ysidro School District
(K-8) serves areas of San Diego also served by Sweet Water
Union High School District. Del Mar Union Elementary School
District and Solana Beach Elementary School District serve
areas of San Diego also within San Dieguito.
BEST
FREE MEXICAN FOOD DINNER IN ORANGE COUNTY (Call Us
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92801, 92802, 92803, 92804, 92805, 92806, 92807, 92808, 92809,
92812, 92814, 92815, 92816, 92817, 92825, 92850, 92899, Brea
92821, 92822, 92823, Buena Park 90620, 90621, 90622, 90623,
90624, Costa Mesa 92626, 92627, 92628, Cypress 90630, Fountain
Valley 92708, 92728, Fullerton 92831, 92832, 92833, 92834, 92835,
92836, 92837, 92838, Garden Grove 92840, 92841, 92842, 92843,
92844, 92845, 92846, Huntington Beach 92605, 92615, 92646, 92647,
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Los Alamitos 90720, 90721, Orange 92856, 92857, 92859, 92861,
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Park 92861, 92867, Westminister 92683, 92684, 92685, Yorba Linda
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92637, 92653, 92654, 92656, Laguna Niguel 92607, 92677, Laguna
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San Clemente 92672, 92673, 92674, San Juan Capistrano 92675,
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Caza 92679 Anaheim Hills 92807, 92808, 92809, 92817 Dove Canyon
92679 and San Diego 92101, 92102, 92103, 92104, 92105, 92106,
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Copyright
2009 MexicanRestaurantsSanClemente.com, 111 W. Avenida Palizada,
San Clemente, CA 92672
San
Clemente Chamber of Commerce,
San Clemente Journal,
City of San Clemente,
San Clemente
Historical Society,
San Clemente Hiking Trails, San
Clemente Beach Maps,
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