A6 BUSINESS Wallowa County Chieftain Wednesday, September 15, 2021 The Brick off ers unique fare to Wallowa BIZZ BUZZ By Bill Bradshaw New this year, eatery caters to later crowd WALLOWA — A local couple has taken over the former Main Street Grill and revamped and reopened the place, dubbing it The Brick Restaurant. Cody and Tish Green opened The Brick in April. The name from the new establishment comes more from its structure than any- thing, Tish said. “It actually wasn’t any- thing spectacular,” she said. “We were having a hard time landing on a name and we looked around one day and because the building’s all brick, it became The Brick.” In fact, she relishes the local and family history in the building. On one of the walls she keeps photo- graphs of the building from the 1880s and 1902 of the Hotel McCrae, owned and operated by her step-grand- mother’s family. She said the building was sold in 1902, thus the latter photo. “And now we have it,” she said. The Greens are green Neither Cody nor Tish has ever run a restaurant or bar before and they’re learn- ing as they go, they said. “We’re green at it,” Tish said. “I worked as a prop- erty manager for Chris- man (Development) for the past fi ve years while I lived here. When Wiley (Frye) decided to sell this place … we just got a wild hair and thought we’d try and do it. I’ve always loved cooking at home and now we’re serving other people.” Cody, on the other hand, has more experience with cattle. He operates his grand- father’s 1,000-acre ranch where he raises about 100 head of Hereford-Angus cross. “I don’t know anything about restaurants,” he said. “I’m mainly doing it to help Tish.” He’s the main bartender, but also handles the front end of the restaurant while Tish cooks. “He was saying (a few days previously) that how his life has changed opening this place because he used to work solely with cows and didn’t have to work with many peo- ple,” Tish said. “Now he’s in this profession where he’s (working with people) all day, every day, so it’s been a huge change for him.” Does he prefer people or cattle? “A little bit of both,” Cody laughs. He grew up in the Wal- lowa area, while Tish is from Pendleton and has only lived here about six years. But she’s no stranger to the area. “I spent a lot of summers here because my grandpar- ents were here,” she said. “We spent all our lives com- ing to Wallowa, but as far as actually moving here, that was in 2015.” THE BRICK RESTAURANT Who: Cody and Tish Green Where: 214 E. 1st St., Wallowa Phone: 541-886-2555 Email: tish.green@aol. com Online: Facebook page Hours: 3-10 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday; 8 a.m.-noon Sunday Bill Bradshaw/Wallowa County Chieftain Tish and Cody Green prepare to open for the day on Wednesday, Sept. 8, 2021, at their business, The Brick Restaurant, in Wallowa. Greens, they’re still working out bumps in the road. “We’re still trying to fi g- ure out ‘kinks’ before we settle into a menu and what works for us, especially as we move toward a fall and winter menu,” Tish said. “The hours, we’ve had to change a little bit — we even had to close the past couple of weeks because we had to stay in quarantine because we were exposed to COVID, and we absolutely had no income the past two weeks, so that was another kink we had to work out.” Other delays were caused by a wait to get liability insurance to cover the hard liquor in the bar. “It was previously just beer and wine,” Tish said. “But fi guring our hours and what works for us — we open at 3 p.m. and it usually picks up about 5 p.m.” Working out ‘kinks’ Finding their niche Being that the restau- rant business is new to the Adding one more eat- ery to a small town may Bill Bradshaw/Wallowa County Chieftain Tish Green, co-owner of The Brick Restaurant in Wallowa, gets the kitchen ready to open Wednesday, Sept. 8, 2021. She and husband, Cody, operate their new venture. seem like too much, but the Greens have found their niche. With others off ering breakfast and lunch, they decided to focus on din- ner and staying open later. That’s evident in both their hours and their menu. “Our option was to pick a lane,” Tish said, adding that nearby restaurants off er ear- lier meals, so they planned to concentrate on fare for later in the day and evening. “Our intent was to not do what everyone else was doing, not to off er the same kind of thing,” she said. “Originally, we wanted to be the place that stayed open later.” The intent is not to com- pete with nearby restaurants. “There’s no need for that much competition in a tiny community like this,” she said. “Rather than making it about competition, it’s more about giving more opportuni- ties to the folks who are here. That’s the route we wanted to go and we’ll stick with for & Skylight Gallery awhile. We like change.” That’ll be evident as the seasons change. Right now, the menu is “focused more on dinners: steak dinners, pork chops, chicken, pastas and we have a few options for burgers, chilis, a sirloin dip like a French dip but with sirloin meat so it’s better,” Tish said. “When I switch to the winter menu in a couple of weeks, we’ll be gearing toward the warm, comfort foods, so a lot of hot sand- wiches, hot rolls and soups.” They’ll also have a unique, namesake off ering. “We are going to serve a ‘brick of fries,’ because we are The Brick,” she said. “You typically see something like that at a fair. It’s this compressed ‘brick’ of pota- toes and you fry it … usually they’re topped with cheese, chili and you can even do a lot of diff erent things.” ——— Bill Bradshaw is a reporter for the Wallowa County Chieftain. Have a business tip? Contact him at 541-398-5503 or bbrad- shaw@wallowa.com. Church Directory Finding books is our specialty CLUES ACROSS 1. Join together 7. “War and Peace,” for one 11. Not well-lit 14. One giving a speech 15. ___ or false 16. Music genre associated with black eyeliner 17. *Completely immoral supervisor? 19. Financing letters 20. Metallic fabric 21. Burden 22. Bad throw at a casino 23. Like the wolf in a fairy tale 24. *Weaving instructor? 27. Irritates 29. Points of view 30. Like some people who read closed captions 31. Tightly stretched 35. Vessels with spigots 36. *Some under-the-table flirting? 39. (OMG!) 41. Maker of Thick & Fluffy waffles 42. Wyatt of the Wild West 46. Actress Sorkin 48. Closer, in a guessing game 50. *Evidently fake jewel? 54. Slippery, as a street 55. Pixar movie with talking vehicles 56. Sporty auto roof 57. Angel costume headwear 59. ___-man band 60. Mess up ... and a hint to 17-, 24-, 36- and 50- Across 63. Lead role in “How I Met Your Mother” 64. Last number in many prices 65. “Am not!” response 66. Popular show letters 67. High cards in royal flushes 68. Yards’ relatives CLUES DOWN 1. ___ story (sad-sounding tale) Joseph United Methodist Church Grace Lutheran Church 3rd & Lake St. • Joseph Pastor Cherie Dearth 10 AM Worship Phone: 541-432-3102 409 West Main - Enterprise Online AND In Person For More Info Worship Online at 541-432-3102 JosephUMC.ORG JosephUMC.org SUNDAY WORSHIP at 9am Pastor Cherie Dearth Pastor John B. King Jr phone (message): 541-426-4633 web: gracelutheranenterprise.com Enterprise Christian Church St. Patrick’s Episcopal Church 85035 Joseph Hwy • (541) 426-3449 We have ‘In-person worship” @ 9:00 am (Guidelines observed) Sunday School at 10:30 Parking Lot Radio/Facebook @ 9:00 100 NE 3rd St, Enterprise NE 3rd & Main St 541-426-3439 Worship Service Sunday 9:30am David Bruce Pastor, Enterprise Christian Church Lostine Presbyterian Church Discussion Group 9:30 AM Worship Service 11:00 AM Childrens program during service Blog: dancingforth.blogspot.com 2. Nutty confection 3. Layered pasta dish 4. Something in your cart 5. Make a visit 6. Notable span 7. Was surrounded by wavy lines, in a comic 8. Quarrel 9. Party attendees 10. ___ Lingus 11. Start of a letter to a longtime advice columnist 12. Influences 13. Shape-shifts 18. Thumbs-down votes 22. More like sea salt than iodized salt 23. Like the wolf in a fairy tale 25. Regarding, in a memo 26. “Regarding, in a memo” or “Counterbalances” 28. Counterbalances 32. Enjoyed a buffet 33. Big name in boots 34. “You’re it!” 37. Certain column in the paper 38. Like freshly cut grass 39. Dad joke, e.g. 40. Sauce for fettucine 43. “Has the meeting started?” 44. Change the hue of 45. Inquire nosily 46. Broad neckties 47. Kind of acid in fertilizers 49. Stick (to) 51. Make amends 52. Shuffles around aimlessly, say 53. Decide 58. Words before and after “is” 60. Ancestry.com test subject 61. Spiral-cut meat 62. ___ Altos, California 107 E. Main • Enterprise • 541-426-3351 www.bookloftoregon.com Summit Church Sundays at 9:30 am and 11 am Sundays at 10 am at the Cloverleaf Hall in Enterprise. at are the required Cloverleaf Hall available in Enterprise Masks - but made at the door. Pastor: David Pendleton 541.398.0597 Hwy 82, Lostine www.summitchurchoregon.org Stephen Kliewer, Minister Cloverleaf Hall • 668 NW 1st St. • Enterprise, OR 97828 Wallowa Assembly of God 702 West Hwy 82 Wallowa, Oregon 541-886-8445 Sunday School • 9:am Worship Service • 10:am Pastor Tim Barton Visit Us on Seventh-Day Adventist Church & School 305 Wagner (near the Cemetery) P.O. Box N. Enterprise, OR 97828 Church 541-426-3751 School 541-426-8339 Pastor David Ballard 503-810-9886 Worship Hour 10:30 a.m. - Noon Christ Covenant Church Pastor Terry Tollefson Church Office: 541-263-0505 Family Prayer - 9 AM Sunday School - 9:30 AM Worship - 10:30 AM 723 College Street, Lostine Enterprise Community Congregational Church Join us at the BIG BROWN CHURCH Sunday Worship 11:00 am Sunday Worship 11:00 am Bible Studies: Bible Studies: Sundays 9:30 am & Sundays, 9:30 am & Thursdays, 5:30 pm Thursdays, 5:30 pm Led by Lay Pastor Archie Hook 301 NE First St. • Enterprise, OR Find us on Facebook! 541.426.3044