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| Brothers Tony (left) and Tom Noto have taken
the restaurant that bears the family name from a place to grab a slice
of pizza to an elegant eatery cited by The Wine Spectator
for its culinary achievements. |
After the lunch crowd has thinned out, Noto’s
restaurant on Cascade’s busy 28th Street, just minutes from Gerald
R. Ford International Airport, is a little oasis of calm. Those diners
still at their linen-draped tables linger over dessert—perhaps an
Italian-style bread pudding topped with a white-chocolate vanilla custard,
a cannoli with sweetened riccota cheese and chocolate shavings, tiramisu
or triple-vanilla crème brule with carmalized sugar topping and
fresh mixed berries—and sip their cappucino.
At a table near Noto’s oak bar, co-owner Tom Noto
(B’82) spreads out blueprints between plates of Filetto di Salmone
and Risotto ai Vegetali, explaining how the restaurant will be expanding
to accommodate more regular diners, as well as more catered events. It’s
an expansion made possible by careful financial planning, loyalty from
staff and the video arcade boom of the 1980s.
The
Restaurant Built on Quarters
“We started out in Standale in a kind of old,
1950s business strip in a building we bought in 1982,” says Tom.
“It was relatively inexpensive and just kind of started one step
at a time.”
One of the mainstays of that first site was video games.
In those early days, food was secondary to the real money-maker—video
games such as Pac Man and Centipede.
“As soon as Pac Man came out, that was the craze,”
explains Tom. “We say that this is the house that was built on quarters.
We had a snack bar where we served pizza and submarine sandwiches. The
pizza business took off so we started delivering and it snowballed.”
In the mid ’80s traffic at arcades tapered off
as Nintendo and other home video games gained in popularity. At a family
reunion in 1985, Noto’s father John, mother Mary, brother Tony (E’79)
and sister Joanne decided to take the plunge into building a full-service
restaurant, perhaps even applying for a license to sell beer and wine.
The staples would be favorite family recipes for Italian sausage and peppers,
lasagna and eggplant parmesan.
They discussed what renovations would need to be done—
a new entrance, new windows, additional kitchen space. They made plans
for getting all the permits they’d need to get started.
The next day, John Noto passed away.
The dream of expanding the business didn’t die
with the elder Noto, in large part due to his old-fashioned belief in
keeping out of debt. Even as the arcade business dried up, the Notos were
well-situated to expand.
“We owned all 300 video machines we had,”
says Tom. “At first, my brother borrowed, $20,000 to buy some games.
Whatever the payment was, say $1,000 a month, our father made sure we
paid $1,000 a week. Back then as the video-game business was dropping
off it didn’t matter to us, because everything that came in was
profit since all the machines were paid for.”
A
Moveable Feast
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After a few months, the Notos went ahead with the plan
they developed during their family reunion. They added 25 feet to the
back of the building, dug a basement, gutted the rest of the building
and installed new heating and cooling systems.
On their first night as a full-service restaurant, they
sold four pizzas.
“So the days of the American Dream are still alive,”
laughs Tom, “but it only happens to those who are willing to work
long enough and hard enough to make it happen.”
After that first night of selling only four pizzas,
the restaurant steadily gained business—especially after branching
out into delivery for area college students. Eventually, the Notos ran
out of space in their Standale location and were unable to buy adjacent
property at a reasonable price. Plus, estimates for further building expansion
seemed prohibitive given the area’s limited traffic—especially
for lunch-time business.
The Notos looked around and decided to make the move
to a new location. After studying demographics and the proximity of various
businesses near the Gerald R. Ford International airport, the family decided
to locate their new restaurant in Cascade on the southeast side of Grand
Rapids.
Now, situated near the airport and the area’s
many hotels, Noto’s is a culinary haven for travelers, as well as
local residents, looking for something other than 28th Street’s
many chain eateries.
“Some people on the west side say we abandoned
them to come out here where income levels are higher, but much of our
business comes from the people who travel here,” says Tom. “We’re
the kind of restaurant that attracts people who like fine food. We’re
probably the only restaurant in the area that really does everything from
scratch—all our desserts, our salad dressings, the bread. The beef
is stockyard beef out of Chicago.”
That attention to detail is one of the reasons why Noto’s
was one of only two restaurants in greater Grand Rapids, and one of only
a handful in the state, that were recognized for excellence by The Wine
Spectator.
With his degree in Hospitality Management, Tom Noto
knows that preparing good food is only one element of running a successful
restaurant. In Noto’s case, a large part of their success has been
a remarkable continuity among their servers.
“Our head server, Krista, has been with us since
we opened. Some of the servers started out as 16- and 17 year-old bread
distributors,” he says. “These kids are good enough and smart
enough that they go away for three or four months, they pick right back
up again, like Jason, our world traveler. He graduated from Michigan State
in advertising, moved to Chicago to go into advertising and didn’t
like it. He came back here, worked for almost, a year, then spent New
Year’s Eve 2000 in Egypt at the pyramids. Now he wants to come back
and earn enough money to go to Australia. I told him to send an e-mail;
we’ll have a spot ready for him.”
The
Next Course
Tom Noto studies the blueprints for the restaurant’s
expansion plans that are spread out on the now-cleared table. By the first
half of 2004, Noto’s is looking to almost double the square footage
at its current location, where the family has
operated since February 1997.
“There will be a three-level addition onto the
back and the side, a wine cellar and cellar rooms, a circular staircase,
a main-floor banquet room and pre-function lobby space where we can do
appetizers and so on for up to 350 people,” he explains. Right now
we’re planning a wedding reception where we’re actually shutting
the restaurant down for the evening.”
Forget your chafing dishes of meatballs and white frosted
cake. This reception will start with an antipasto of imported cheeses
and olives followed by blue point oysters on the half shell, jumbo shrimp
cocktail and individual single-bone lamb chops for appetizers. Well-wishers
will have a choice of chicken marsala or beef filet with vegetable and
a potato—after a Mediterranean salad and farfalle pasta with tomato-cream
sauce—all finished off with homemade Italian cookies and cannoli,
fruit to dip in the chocolate fountain and a cappuccino bar.
“Banquets are a big part of our business. After
our expansion, we’ll have the room to do, say, a 600-person fundraiser,”
says Tony Noto, a former baseball player at Ferris. “With the three
levels, we’ll have about 20,000 additional square feet. We’ll
be able to do one large function and a smaller one at the same time.
“This is a big dream. We have no partners, nobody
telling us what to do. Our only partner is the bank, and we’re ahead
of schedule with payments, which is a good thing.”
Not bad for a restaurant that started as a place to
grab a slice and play a quick game of Asteroids.
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