wine
BY LANCE SPARKS
On Modesty
& Greed
Owner Tabitha Eck
with a glass of
Abbelone ‘09
Pinot Noir
What would Karl Rove not drink
this holiday?
PHOTO BY TRASK BEDORTHA
W
Uncorked in Veneta
Our Daily Bread helps grow local wine tourism
W
hen, last month, the Oregon Legislature passed two bills, HB 3280 and SB 829 — together dubbed the
“King Estate bills,” to be reconciled into one bill — it became clear that King Estate would retain its
full-service, fi ne-dining restaurant at the winery, and would continue to serve thousands of visitors at the
Estate. This came as good news to many of the businesses and towns along Territorial Road, from Cottage Grove
to Monroe.
Tabitha Eck, co-owner, along with her parents, Tim and Catharine Perkins, of Veneta’s only fi ne-dining
restaurant, Our Daily Bread, was delighted at the news of King’s success: “Hey, wonderful! I think it would be
sheer foolishness to shoot yourself in the foot when it comes to (wine) tourism. Everything they do there adds value
to the valley as a whole. I profi t from what they do there,” she said.
Eck and her parents have consciously positioned Our Daily Bread to take an active role in developing the
growing wine-tourism businesses along the Territorial corridor. ODB is housed in a former church, remodeled and
expanded but retaining some nice church-y touches, such as the Gothic-arched windows with stained glass, even
what looks like the church’s old upright piano. (But atop the piano sits a small sign bearing the distinctly secular
homily “Dancing Allowed — Shoes not required.”) The restaurant is open seven days, serving breakfast, lunch,
dinner and Sunday brunch. They have gained some fame for baking — ahem — their daily bread, plus pastries,
focaccia, and a full range of desserts: “It was very important for us to have an in-house product,” Eck said, noting
that they also make their own sauces, dressings, gravies, while keeping close relationships with local growers and
suppliers, especially wineries.
Tabitha Eck is young, only 28, but she has made some astute decisions about the family’s restaurant. Most
notably, she has worked hard to make Our Daily Bread’s wine list the best in the south Willamette Valley for its
inclusion of local wines. Nearly every winery in the southern part of the valley has a representative wine on ODB’s
list: “Some are so new that we haven’t had a chance to interact with them yet,” Eck said, mentioning Sarver and J.
Scott, “but we’re constantly reprinting our wine list,” broadening and updating to include such rarely found labels
as Pfeiffer and HillCrest, which are only sold at the wineries.
Eck has seen what restaurateurs in California’s and Washington’s wine valleys have seen, that concentrating on
local wines doesn’t imply any compromise on quality, and the mutual support that follows helps everyone. “We
have an amazing amount of variety around us, and it’s all so good. And we really enjoy the relationship aspect.
Many of the vineyards are small and family-owned, like us. It’s just good for everybody.”
Our Daily Bread’s kitchen might be small, but the menu is eclectic and ambitious, plating a range from
sandwiches and burgers, soups and salads, to pastas and prime rib, and local wines (microbrews, too) to match any
dish. The list offers 28 white wines, four rosés, 37 reds (16 local pinot noirs), fi ve sparkling and fi ve dessert wines
(including Chateau Lorane’s honey mead). An additional six wines — three white, three red — are available by the
glass (or bottle). Total choices add up to around 85. Prices are moderate, ranging from a nice Emerson Chardonnay
($16) to King Estate’s blockbuster 2006 Domaine Pinot Noir ($86). Eck also reaches into Oregon’s southern wine
valleys to fi nd some rather special bottlings, like Agate Ridge’s 2007 Primitivo (a Zinfandel relative) from the
Rogue, Spangler’s 2007 Petite Sirah or Girardet’s 14 Vines from the Umpqua.
Eck stays busy with her family (as we spoke, her husband, Marshall, waited tables while her three children — the
youngest, Joshua, just 10 months — waited at home), her restaurant, and her extensive wine list, but apparently that’s
not quite enough. She also maintains a small retail space where she sells ODB’s wines directly, plus Riedel glassware
and assorted hand-crafted items related to the kitchen or to wine. The family recently added an event area (and new
parking lot), anticipating a summer of hosting wine garden parties featuring local wineries and live music.
How do the Veneta residents feel about all this activity? “We have huge local support,” Eck said. Mothers’ Day
was booked with 400 reservations. The Wings and Wine Festival in May brings bird-loving visitors in fl ocks. Note
to other family members: Our Daily Bread also makes something special for Fathers’ Day, Labor Day and other
special occasions.
The quaint former church with modest blue trim adds to the bustle of Veneta’s downtown along Territorial
Road. “Locals appreciate it. And we have a unique ability to attract Eugeneans out this way. There’s nothing in this
immediate area, aside from a vineyard” — unnamed — “that can say they do that.”
One vineyard that can draw thousands — King Estate —is thriving, as is the business of viticulture in this part
of the south Willamette Valley. Good food, superb wines and dazzling views; it’s really a simple formula with a
country twist, very attractive.
In Tabitha Eck’s words, “It’s a unique experience out here.”
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e’re feelin’ the buzz: Fourth of July, Art and the
Vineyard, high summer (on the calendar, at least).
I’m ready, my whole family is ready, so let’s
celebrate some. It doesn’t have to be much, a smidge of smile-
inducing hoopla.
Like most Americans, our slice of American Dream Pie
is rather modest. Our work is satisfying, and we’re perfectly
willing to slog long hours over many years to plate our thin
wedge. We live in a warm, dry house with a thriving garden
(though soggy and sun-hungry), have happy/healthy kids/
grandkids. We have enough to eat and decent wines to slurp with
dinner. OK, my Honda is ancient, but it hums, it’s economical
and it’s paid for. And, sure, my Pulsar is no Rolex, but it marks
time’s fl y-by, meaning that although my wife is youthful and
lovely, I could probably benefi t from a few cosmetic surgeries,
some “procedures” — but I won’t.
I just don’t suffer from that kind of ego, get no jolt from
feeling better, bigger, stronger, richer than anyone else; in fact,
I’m saddened to see others struggling, destitute or in pain. I’m
a sucker, maybe, for people holding ragged signs on street
corners. I consider it my duty — and my good luck — if I can
help neighbors when they need a hand. And we don’t mind
paying our taxes, contributing to our community.
All this is prologue to saying — confessing, I suppose —
that I just don’t understand greed. Last night, Kat and I watched
the HBO documentary Hot Coffee and were appalled by the
Karl Rove-inspired corporate attacks on Americans’ rights in
court. But it wasn’t only the unrelenting attacks that bothered
me; rather, it was the smug self-satisfaction of the corporate-
rich, their glee at crushing all opposition through strategies
that are vile, bordering on criminal and certainly sinful (if they
actually believed in God or divine justice, which clearly they
don’t, though they piously beat their breasts to assert their faith
when it serves their political purposes).
If the Rovians and allied Bush-leaguers have their way,
we’ll see the establishment of nothing less than global fascism
— or “corporatism” as Mussolini called it just prior to WWII
— starting with the U.S. Even the illusion of democracy will be
gone. The current Republican attack on voters’ rights is part of
the battle. At stake are chances to sweep up trillions of dollars
in tax breaks and public funds, including Social Security and
Medicare.
The chilling question, of course, asks what we can do to stop
them, if anything. On that note, and as our segue, we wonder
what wine Karl Rove drinks. Probably not these modest lovelies:
Eve 2008 Chardonnay ($11): Another fi ne, accessible wine
from Washington’s Charles Smith Wines, producers of a broad
range of superb wines, many at affordable prices for common
people. This chard is fresh and clean, the fl avors of apples and
aromas of white fl owers given a deft touch of oak — delish with
chicken and picnic chow (screwcap opener an added virtue).
Alex Eli 2009 Gewurztraminer ($15): Just say “ga-vertz”
and be happy with this crisp, zippy and zesty white from a family
production in Molalla. Juicy, jazzy grapefruit fl avors invite
matching with cheesy pastas, even traditional potato salad.
Domaine Saint-Nabor 2010 Gris de Gris ($10): It’s one
of the most charming and invi ting rosés we’ve encountered this
season, in one of the prettiest packages. It’s French (duh), from
the Rhone Valley, pale pink but blessed with lingering fl avors of
early raspberries with hints of orange zest. Outstanding value,
for many summer foods.
Crowley 2009 Willamette Valley Pinot Noir ($23):
Summer’s not usually time for red wine — except for pinot noir,
‘cause it’s always time for pinot noir, especially for an aromatic
blast of roses and cherries, followed by a mouthful of lush, ripe
raspberries and black cherries, carefully crafted to match with
meats, cheese, warm breezes, whatever; gimmesum.
We close with simple wishes for your summer and beyond:
Duck the greedheads, share your love.
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EUGENE WEEKLY JULY 7, 2011 29