NEWS
BY JENNIFER BURNS BRIGHT
BELLY BUTTONED UP
Belly Taqueria to Close, longtime restaurateurs plan move to Portland
ur Lady of Carnitas, the muse of rosy-fingered
pork, is silent. The Mahaneys are leaving town.
Longtime co-owners of Eugene favorites Bel-
ly and Belly Taqueria, Brendan and Ann Marie
Mahaney plan to move to Portland in early 2018
to ponder new avenues and do a little more yoga.
As Ann Marie Mahaney continues her education in
nursing, husband Brendan will spend the rest of the year
cementing a partnership with some familiar faces. Together
with two of his former chefs, partners Edgar Arellano and
Mikey Lawrence, owners of the Buck Buck fried chicken
cart, they plan to open a New Orleans-inspired New Amer-
ican restaurant, Black Wolf Supper Club, in the space that
now houses Belly Taqueria at 454 Willamette Street. See
our story in Chow this issue.
The team’s experience with the Mahaneys’ restaurants
will surely color the cuisine: Arellano served as sous chef
at Belly Taqueria, and Lawrence worked his way up from
doing odd jobs like picking plums to managing the kitchen
as chef de cuisine at Belly. Both say they consider the Ma-
haneys family.
“We call them mom and dad. I owe everything to Bren-
dan,” Lawrence says. “I’m so thankful to have those guys
in my life.”
Nevertheless, with Brendan Mahaney’s departure, an
era will end.
Belly and Belly Taqueria both served as models for
casual but urbane dining, relying on our bounteous local
farmers’ markets instead of trucked-in produce, all priced
at under $20 a plate.
Mark Kosmicki, co-owner of Party Downtown, cred-
its Mahaney and his business savvy for starting the new
wave of creative Eugene restaurants that has swept town
in the past decade. Belly employed young chefs like Kos-
micki’s partner, Tiffany Norton, and elevated spirits in a
city known to be hard on emerging talent.
“Without him,” Kosmicki says, “there’d be no Party,
Grit, Membrillo, Mame. He opened the door for the next
generation, and he’s an inspiration to all of us.”
After leaving the Ph.D. program in English at the Uni-
versity of Oregon and serving stints at Marché, Red Agave
O
BRENDAN MAHANEY
and restaurants in San Francisco, Mahaney says he sus-
pected he could “provide a marriage between fine dining
and a less expensive, comfortable spot with seasonal food
that was accessible, yet a little rough and tumble” in Eu-
gene.
It wasn’t fancy food, but it wasn’t mundane family
cooking, either. Inspired by British chef Fergus Hender-
son, the burgeoning Portland dining scene and the greats of
California cuisine, from day one Belly’s menu showcased
first and support for the unhoused and community members
living on the edge in our cover feature this week.
• We are excited to see that Lane County is looking to
embrace the concept of “housing first” with its proposal to
build apartments for the homeless near Autzen Stadium. The
$11.7 million studio-apartment four-story project would be
located next to the Lane County Behavioral Health building,
providing access to services that are a key part of the housing
first concept. Housing first, made famous when Salt Lake City
successfully homed its chronically homeless, gets those in
need into housing then links them to services. The program
has been shown to save money. The county is also considering
allowing a car camping similar to Eugene’s in Santa Clara
along the River Road corridor to the north of the Randy Papé
Beltline. You can see an example of just why we need housing
8
A ugust 24, 2017 • eugeneweekly.com
• Creswell voters will soon get the chance to rethink
marijuana sales in their community. Last fall Creswellians
banned them by a narrow margin. Now a marijuana company
run by Eugene lawyer-turned-grower Mike Arnold has filed
enough petition signatures to put the matter to a new vote.
Overturning the city’s ban would give his company One Gro
what even its execs have said amounts to a monopoly right to
sell pot there. We’re not opposed to legal marijuana, but
Arnold’s campaign has a distinct carpetbagger smell. One Gro
and its execs have dangled shaky promises of pot tax
revenue to sway the city. And then there’s that attitude. In
July, Arnold snarked that Creswell was “the city brought to you
by not one but two dollar stores. Something to be proud
of.” Be wary, Creswell.
• President Donald Trump looked up at the solar eclipse
without protective eyewear, something even a first grader
local vegetables and hunky meats of European country
cooking.
The décor was as unpretentious and fun as the food. A
black-masked Audrey Hepburn gazed out like a queen over
thrift store furniture and tchotchkes. She shook when the
train passed the building, and perhaps a little, too, when the
sound system blasted Run DMC.
Ann Marie Mahaney puts it plainly: “The interior wasn’t
moneyed or high design. It made people feel comfortable.”
A few months after opening Belly in 2008, the Mah-
aneys were running a popular taco night on Mondays,
which came and went and came again, and eventually in-
spired them to open up the Belly Taqueria in 2012. Vis-
its by food critics Mark Bittman and Jonathan Gold, who
tweeted about the “formidable tripe and trotters” in 2011,
may have contributed to the restaurant’s prestigious James
Beard award nomination.
Although he says he talks about the nomination to any-
one who asks him what he was doing in 2012, Mahaney
credits the success to his favorite cook, wife Ann Marie,
as well as her “honest palate,” killer gougère and key lime
pie recipes and affinity for budget-priced European wines.
This marriage of minds allowed for an expansion into
the much larger downtown space with a full bar. Belly
quickly transformed into a popular venue that never gave
up its specialties of the house: boudin sausage, bacon-
wrapped figs and relentless pork confit served with an ar-
ray of seasonal roasted fruit.
After Belly was sold to Diana and Steve Lee in 2015,
Mahaney retrenched at the taqueria, relieved to focus on
simpler, satisfying fare, since “carnitas and margaritas and
guacamole never went out of season.”
Though he certainly kept up the experimentation, as
evidenced by the St. Patrick’s Day green-apple and kale
margarita this year, he started thinking about transforming
the taqueria into its next incarnation. Gustatory travels to
New Orleans came to mind. Soon enough, they were dis-
cussing options with Lawrence.
While still in town, Mahaney plans to focus on the pan-
try menu for Black Wolf Supper Club before gracefully
fading into the background. “This transition is dreamy for
me,” he says. “We get to have a good, creative young chef
experienced in logistics tackle the challenge … and he’s
providing me with 30-year-old energy past my bedtime.”
Iinterested in supporting the new restaurant’s Kickstarter campaign? Go to
kickstarter.com/projects/1521306200/buck-buck-and-the-black-wolf-supper-
club. If they raise $30,000, the Mahaneys will match the amount.
knew not to do. Later that evening, the Donald announced his
plan for Afghanistan, refusing to release a troop count or a
timeline for the war that has dragged on for 16 years. He took
jabs at the Obama administration and of course praised
himself highly. Despite his controversial Charlottesville
comments in which he attempted to lay the blame for the
death of anti-racist protester Heather Heyer on white
supremacists and the newly invented “alt left” alike, the
president continues to try to shift focus away from his lack
of accountability, inability to lead the country or employ a
competent staff and his failure to deliver any of his campaign
promises (most of which we’d prefer he’d not deliver on). It’s
only going to get worse before it gets better.
• As summer comes to an end, once again the banks of
the Willamette River are covered in trash from seasonal
campers. It seems like one solution to help solve this problem
would be simply be additional trashcans along the bike path.
It won’t fix everything, but it wouldn’t hurt.