BUSINESS & AG LIFE THURSDAY, JULY 1, 2021 THE OBSERVER & BAKER CITY HERALD — B3 Eateries added to off erings at the Depot By BILL BRADSHAW BENNIES BAGGIES Wallowa County Chieftain When: 8 a.m. to 2 p.m., Thursday through Sunday Where: 83490 Joseph Highway, Joseph Phone: 541-304-5289 Email: BenniesBaggies@gmail. com Online: BenniesBaggies.com Z’S BBQ When: 4 p.m. to when they’re sold out. Where: 83490 Joseph Highway, Joseph Phone: 612-219-2717 Email: Zbbqtruck@gmail.com Online: Facebook.com/z’sBBQ Instagram: @zsbbq Bill Bradshaw/Wallowa County Chieftain Autumn Roseberry shows one of the trays meals are served on at Z’s BBQ on Wednesday, June 23, 2021. Z’s is located at the Depot be- tween Enterprise and Joseph. Still running unsupported Windows 7? We’ll help you avoid critical issues by installing Windows 10! Ludwigson said. “Over the winter, we added more equipment and got the health certifi cation (from the state.) So now we’re serving really delicious breakfast burritos. We got permission from Mike and Kathy (Leo) from the old Red Horse to use their Red Horse breakfast burrito recipe.” Ludwigson emphasized the variety of his menu. He and Amy Roseberry serve three diff erent burritos, four lunch entrées that are either wraps or sandwiches, as well as muffi ns, cookies and other items. He said much of the food is organic, but he’s been unable to fi nd organic ingredients for all the menu. Barbecue perfection Meanwhile, Zieman was perfecting his barbecue. “This is his fi rst crack at doing barbecue, but he took months of perfecting it,” Ludwigson said. “I don’t know how many BRINGING QUALITY PRODUCTS AT AFFORDABLE PRICING TO EASTERN OREGON Computer not running as fast as when it was new? Let us install lightning-fast solid state drive! Try the SHIP TO STORE feature at millershomecenter.com 3109 May Lane, La Grande 541-963-3113 3815 Pocahontas Road, Baker City 541-523-6404 N OF S T IA TIO O C AT E R FO SS have a good lunch.” Located in the lobby of the Depot, it’s long off ered premium coff ee to guests. “When Red Horse Coff ee went out of business a couple years ago, we went down there … and bought a bunch of their equipment with plans of maybe trying to do some kind of restau- rant in the future,” he said. Well, the future has arrived and now the restau- rant also fi lls hungry stom- achs at breakfast. “I’m a self-proclaimed breakfast burrito afi cionado and burrito connoisseur,” he said. “Last fall, we opened just with coff ee. We didn’t have our food license for the certifi cation set up yet,” “I guess our deal is making food that’s healthy and natural and good for humans and good for the earth,” he said. “We try to use natural meats, natural ingredients, no GMOs — and, it tastes fantastic.” a mixture of oak and cherry wood. “The oak is for the heavy smoke and the cherry adds a little sweet- ness to it,” he said. “The cherry burns a little faster and the oak burns slower and longer. It’s a combina- tion of both that way.” Of course, eating bar- becue can be a messy prop- osition, and Z’s BBQ takes that into account. “We’ve got plenty of napkins and wet naps around here,” Zieman said. Roseberry said that she and Zieman just moved back to Wallowa County a couple months ago. “We’re going to make this more of a permanent location,” she said. But the truck, itself, is mobile. “The plan is to be able to (travel), but right now we’re just getting estab- lished here,” Zieman said. In August, they plan to be at the Main Street Show ‘n’ Shine in Enterprise and they have a couple wed- dings scheduled to cater. “The plan is to be more mobile, but it’s nice to have a place that people can fi nd us all the time,” he said. ESTERS NATIONAL A WALLOWA COUNTY — The historic Depot, long a site popular for trav- elers’ lodging, has added food to its off erings with the advent of Bennies Bag- gies and Z’s BBQ at the site along Highway 82 between Enterprise and Joseph. Housed in the 1908 building that once was the railroad depot in Enterprise along the tracks near where Wallowa County Grain Growers now stands, it was moved in the 1980s to its current site. Purchased four years ago by Leita Barlow and her daughters, Amy and Autumn Roseberry, the daughters have been joined in the business ventures by their boyfriends, Ben Lud- wigson and Daniel Zieman, respectively. True to form for most successful businesses, they saw a need and found a way to meet it. Both eat- eries opened Thursday, June 17. “The idea came from we’ve got a lot of Airbnb guests and people coming through this area and they were always asking us where they could get lunch for the day before they go on the Railriders or they go hiking or what- ever,” Ludwigson said. “So we got a big commercial fridge, which sparked this idea of preparing healthy, bagged lunches that would be fi lling and would travel well and people could put the stuff in their backpack and bring with them to times we got to sit back and enjoy the 12-hour- smoked, delicious barbecue just being test subjects. It was awesome. He really dialed it in.” Zieman does more than the usual ribs, but all off erings are for a healthy appetite. “Rather than sand- wiches — we might throw some specials on every now and then, but the idea behind it is a family-style meal or if you want a nice, big meal for yourself,” Zieman said. “We spend all day smoking the meats. Then, when we serve it, you and another person can come get a nice plate of it. You can get the pulled pork, you can get the ribs, you can get brisket, your sides and get a couple plates full.” It’s served on trays lined with butcher paper with a variety of barbecue sauces and sides, Autumn Rose- berry said. “We’ve got a few dif- ferent size options,” she said. Zieman smokes his meats on a carefully con- trolled fi re outside their service truck. He uses F O U N D E D 19 2 0