Inside Look is a Modesto Bee series where we take readers behind the scenes at restaurants, new businesses, local landmarks and news stories.
You ever dream you’re on an island somewhere, then wake up and you’re still in Modesto?
That’s what eating at Cariblue Restaurant on Yosemite Avenue is like, but not disappointing. The new eatery serves Caribbean food — the only spot for this type of cuisine in the city.
The flavors of Cariblue’s cuisine will make you feel like you’re in Jamaica — and you don’t even have to get on an airplane.
“Caribbean food is very tropical,” owner Abel Cano said. “We (make) it like you are at the ocean.”
The restaurant opened Sept. 27 between Starbucks and Little Caesar’s in the Cost Less Parking lot. The location previously housed George’s Gyros.
Cano was born in Guatemala and moved to Redwood City around 16 years old. His mom started teaching him how to cook a year later — though the restaurant industry wasn’t his first career venture.
“I wanted to be a doctor,” Cano said. But medical school proved too expensive for the family man with a wife, two kids and a baby on the way.
He switched lanes and became a computer network technician, working at Intel in San Jose. He also became certified as an electrician.
Cano’s mom gave him a wake up call one day, motivating him to do what he loved: cooking.
Thirty years from the age he first started learning how to cook, Cano opened the original Cariblue Restaurant in Redwood City in 2015.
That restaurant, at first, had a mixed menu. It served breakfast and lunch with menu items highlighting traditional Mexican and Caribbean dishes.
Why? Because Guatemala’s culture is a mix of Spanish, Mayan and Caribbean influences.
“It’s very close to the islands,” Cano said. “In Guatemala City, they don’t have (Caribbean food) but if you go out of Guatemala City to the Caribbean side, you will see all this kind of food.”
But as his customers began getting a taste of the Caribbean, they wanted more. So much so, Cano transitioned his menu to solely Jamaican.
Nearly five years after opening his first restaurant, Cano brought his family to Modesto. His wife, Lulu, has a daughter who lives in Modesto and convinced the couple to make the move.
He didn’t consider opening a restaurant here at first, but Cano eventually felt a need to bring Caribbean food to the region.
“For four years, I noticed that they don’t have Caribbean food around here,” he said. “I said, ‘It’s time.’”
Caribbean food — as Cano describes it — is a different flavor in every bite.
Jerk chicken and oxtails are two of the most commonly ordered dishes. You can get them in a combo plate with rice and beans as well as sweet plantains for $18.99.
Other things on the menu include curry shrimp or goat, chipotle barbecue ribs, jerk polenta and fried corn bread.
The rice and beans are made with coconut cream. The plantains are like eating dessert, Cano said.
The meat is fall-off-the-bone tender. One Yelp reviewer said “the homemade jerk season sauce was fabulous and I could drink it.”
Other Yelp reviewers praise the large portions, flavors and friendly service.
“I’m the chef, I’m the owner, I’m the dishwasher. I’m everything,” Cano said.
Cariblue, at 3801 Yosemite Blvd., is open Monday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 7:30 p.m., and Sundays from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Delivery is available through DoorDash and Uber Eats. Catering is available through ezCater.
As of now, the Modesto restaurant is the only existing location of Cariblue. Cano could not renew his lease in the building where the original restaurant was because apartments will be built on that land, he said.
Cano is not sure if he will re-open in Redwood City.
This story was originally published October 18, 2024, 4:15 PM.
The Modesto Bee
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Dominique Williams writes about new business, restaurant and retail developments for The Modesto Bee. She is a Ripon native and a graduate of Sacramento State.