
The breakfast crowd on Vernon Street is about to get a new hangout. The Daily Nosh, a breakfast-and-lunch spot from longtime local caterers Randy and Lisa Peters, is set to open June 8 in downtown Roseville. The restaurant will move into 105 Vernon Street with both indoor and outdoor seating and a daytime-focused beverage program. It also brings a dedicated daytime eatery back to a block that previously housed 105 Noshery before the space shifted into a private-event dining room.
According to WhatNow, co-owner David Randolph "Randy" Peters said The Daily Nosh has secured its liquor license from the California Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control and will focus on scratch-made breakfast and lunch. WhatNow lists June 8 as the opening date and reports a menu built around biscuits, pastries, Benedicts and oversized ham steak-and-eggs plates that do not sound shy on portions.
From Pontiac Showroom To Neighborhood Eatery
The building at 105 Vernon Street has been part of downtown Roseville’s commercial life for decades. A mid-century dealer index from IH Dealers Past lists Braden Cadillac Pontiac at the address, nodding to the site’s automotive past. More recently, the property was home to 105 Noshery before the Peterses converted parts of the space into a Vernon Street dining room and event center, as reported by the Sacramento Bee.
Menu, Drinks And Staffing
The Daily Nosh is built around scratch cooking, with plans for fresh biscuits, pastries, free-range eggs and Benedicts, and the newly approved liquor license signals a beverage program to go with daytime service, according to WhatNow. The Peterses have been hiring up ahead of opening; recent postings on the Placer Job Network list bar lead, prep cook and management roles among the openings.
Randy Peters' catering website outlines multiple event rooms and banquet spaces on the property that the restaurant will share with the catering operation, giving the venue a dual identity as both an everyday breakfast-and-lunch spot and a place that can handle larger gatherings.
What This Means For Downtown Roseville
City planning documents call out Vernon Street as a key corridor for restaurants, events and mixed-use activity, and The Daily Nosh’s arrival adds daytime foot traffic and more event capacity to the area, according to the City of Roseville. With indoor and outdoor dining plus access to banquet rooms, the new restaurant fits neatly into the city’s push to expand what Vernon Street offers residents and visitors.
The owners say the goal is simple: bring back scratch-made breakfast and lunch with generous portions on Vernon Street when the doors open June 8. How well another daytime-focused concept clicks with Roseville’s evolving downtown dining scene is a question that will start getting answered as soon as those first plates hit the pass.









