Cal Ave shakeup: Tandoori Oven shutters; Pizza Studio moves in | Peninsula Foodist | Elena Kadvany | Palo Alto Online |

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Cal Ave shakeup: Tandoori Oven shutters; Pizza Studio moves in

Uploaded: Jul 17, 2014
California Avenue fast-casual Indian joint Tandoori Oven has suddenly shuttered, with a curt handwritten sign appearing in the front window that reads, "Closed :( sorry, out of business."



An employee from another Tandoori location ? there are six total, including Palo Alto ? who wants to remain anonymous said Wednesday that co-owner Mani Kabir sold his share of the business to his partner and began shutting the South Bay chain down. The employee also said that the Palo Alto lease ended and "the owner doesn't want to do a new lease."

Tandoori's location in Campbell has also closed and Los Gatos will shutter by November, the employee said. Remaining outposts in San Jose, Daly City and Santa Clara remain for now, but "the rest are also on the way, I guess," the employee said. He added that ownership told employees the restaurants were not doing well, but he said he hasn't seen a drop in business.

Kabir, who did not return requests for comment, opened at 365 California Ave. (between The Counter and Starbucks) in December 2008.

And the space has already been spoken for, with Pizza Studio, a fast-casual chain where you can create your own pizza (think Chipotle model), laying claim to the lease.

Jeff Burrill, the regional developer for Los Angeles-based Pizza Studio, said Wednesday he's already in the permitting process with the city.

"We're hoping as soon as we're issued that building permit, we're going to be off and running and five or six weeks later we'll be open," he said. The chain opened this month a new location in the Village at San Antonio Center in Mountain View.

Pizza Studio slings 11-inch custom pizzas, all $7.99 each plus unlimited toppings. You start your masterpiece by choosing one of five crusts (traditional, whole grain and flax seed, rosemary herb, "firecracker" or gluten-free), then one of four sauces (tomato blend, basil pesto, tangy BBQ and extra virgin olive oil) and four cheeses (grated mozzarella, crumbled feta, shaved parmesan and crumbled goat).

Proceed to toppings, which range from typical veggie and meat items to broccolini, banana peppers, genoa salami, turkey fennel sausage and more. Spice addicts can add chipotle or garlic powder, Jamaican jerk, Old Bay seasoning or truffle salt. View the full menu here.

There's also a "starving artists" menu with five pre-built pizzas, all at $5.99 a pop.

Pizza Studio ovens bake from both the top and the bottom very quickly at 600 degrees, meaning the personal pizzas are ready within two minutes, Burrill said.

"They're much easier for us to install," he added (hence the fix-to-six-week timeline). "We think that these provide us not only speed but consistency in baking. It'll come out equally baked, top to bottom, and just perfect every time."

And because Pizza Studio does, in fact, emulate an art studio, every outpost provides wall space for local artists to display and sell their work, commission-free.
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