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Arcadia Bagel Bakery on a Roll : Business: New fast-food joint offers California’s contemporary answer to the doughnut--via drive-through.

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SPECIAL TO THE TIMES

You drive up to the tinny voice box outside Arcadia’s newest fast-food joint and blurt out your order. And hold the lox, you say.

The lox?

In a new twist on the quintessential California way of eating, Michael and Bridget Goldstein have opened what may be the country’s first drive-through bagel bakery.

Goldstein’s Bagel Bakery opened at 221 N. Santa Anita Ave. in September, the second Goldstein’s outlet. The original, a 5-year-old store in Old Pasadena, sells 5,000 bagels daily and the new one is even busier, said Michael Goldstein, a 40-year-old former stockbroker who now wears shorts and a T-shirt to work.

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“My wife and I have two kids and we use the drive-through a lot because it’s convenient,” he said. “So we decided if we opened another bakery it would be a drive-through.”

Based on initial business, the Arcadia bakery is expected to generate $3 million in sales annually, twice as much as the Pasadena location, with one-third of the business generated by the drive-through. “Bagels have replaced the doughnut as the food to bring to the office,” Goldstein said.

Nationwide, bagel sales exceeded $500 million last year, according to the U.S. Department of Commerce and the research firm Information Resources. The Goldsteins have ridden the craze, acting as consultants for a new San Dimas bagel store and are talking of starting a separate fast-food chain. The Arcadia bakery until last year was a former dry cleaners.

The Goldsteins leased the site and invested $500,000 in new ovens and bagel-making equipment, knocking down an old building behind it for a parking lot, creating a patio and a drive-through lane.

“This isn’t a business you can start with $20,000. I tell people who say they want to get in it,” Goldstein said.

It was the second time they started from a shell. In 1989 they leased the San Antonio Winery store at Colorado Boulevard and DeLacey Street in Old Pasadena and turned the shell into a bakery. In the years since, it’s become a success as the area has become the Westwood of the ‘90s. “I like to think Old Pasadena grew as the bakery grew,” Goldstein said.

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The winery went to court last year in a bid to end the bakery’s lease, accusing it of breaching its lease terms on the now highly valuable site. After a jury was seated, the winery decided to settle, paying the bakery $70,000 in attorney’s fees and providing a 40-year lease. “We put $250,000 into the site when Old Pasadena was zero and we weren’t going to be pushed out,” Goldstein said.

Still, he said, “It’s a lot less stressful than being a stockbroker.”

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