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Michael Klein: An Eagle lands in the restaurant business

Eagles tight end Brent Celek views his day job this way: "Football players have the easiest job in the world."

Brent Celek at Prime Stache, 110 Chestnut St.
Brent Celek at Prime Stache, 110 Chestnut St.Read moreMichael Klein / Staff

Eagles tight end Brent Celek views his day job this way: "Football players have the easiest job in the world."

He and several silent partners, including teammate Todd Herremans, have opened Prime Stache, an American bistro, at 110 Chestnut St. in Old City. The site, with the same owners but under different management, previously was a bar called 879.

Celek, 28, led a redecoration that included a marble-topped bar and reclaimed wood over a concrete floor. He rustled up a chef, Hee "Chino" Chang, who ran the kitchen at Redstone Grill in Marlton when Celek was a rookie and used to come in on Friday nights for feasts.

Prime Stache - the name is a pun on "stash" and the sign outside is simply a large mustache - is all-American, from beer and spirits and wines to the ingredients on the menu, which includes pappardelle and meatballs ($11), meat loaf ($13), cedar-plank salmon ($13), a chicken club sandwich ($8), and fish tacos ($9). "Even the coffee," said the clean-shaven Celek. "Kona, from Hawaii." (Chang, born in South Korea, is the only import.)

Chang's menu is mainly small plates, as opposed to full-size entrees. "When I go to a restaurant, I like to go with a group and try a lot of different dishes," said Celek. The menu is family-friendly, too.

It's open daily at noon for lunch, dinner, and Sunday brunch, and will stay open till 10 p.m. or later.

Celek freely concedes that he has no restaurant experience, even as a kid growing up in Cincinnati. But he's a regular at such places as Continental and Tequila's, and in his downtime has boned up on the business. "I want to know the industry," he said.

What's new

Thursday is the premiere of Mugshot Diner (2424 E. York St., 215-426-2424), a bright 150-seater in the 2424 mixed-use space, a few blocks from Aramingo Avenue in Fishtown. It's an offshoot of the Mount Holly diner, unrelated to the Mugshots coffee shops. It will run 24 hours on Fridays and Saturdays.

Bonefish Grill, the casual seafooder, has opened in Airport Square in North Wales.

Flashback

Back in 1976, lunch at La Famiglia (8 S. Front St.) was something like $10, which adjusted for inflation would be about $40 now. So much for that. Giuseppe Sena, a son of the founder, is offering a two-course lunch for $17.95 Tuesday to Friday.

To market

Yong Chi, owner of the Center City Korean cafes Giwa and Rice & Mix, is bottling the hot sauce used at Giwa. Under the name Yong's Kitchen, he is taking to market his version of go chu jang, the traditional paste made mainly with fermented soybean and red chili pepper. Chi's sauce is at once spicy and sweet. He has it made by a food company in Lancaster County and says it's the same recipe used in the restaurant, except that the bottled version includes apple cider vinegar as a natural preservative. It's $5.95 at Giwa.

Briefly noted

Joe Brown's Melange @ Haddonfield, on Tanner Street for five years after a long run in Cherry Hill, was padlocked by the State of New Jersey. A New Jersey state spokesman said the business owed $71,875.08 in unpaid sales tax from 2008 and 2009. The business collected the money but failed to pass it along to Trenton, he said. The judgment was in place since 2009.

After 23 years, Bruno's (9800 Germantown Pike, Lafayette Hill) has instituted Sunday brunch. So has Fitler Dining Room (22d and Spruce Streets), open mere weeks.

With 18 food trucks dishing out some of the gooiest foods known to man, it's a given there will be some stained shirts at the third annual Vendy Awards, coming June 8 to Penn Treaty Park. Enter Tide, which has signed on as a sponsor. Not only will Tide dole out Stain Erasers, it will also poll attendees on the dishes deemed to be the messiest.