COMING HOME TO THE GALLEy AND THE ANDEDSON INN
Transcription
COMING HOME TO THE GALLEy AND THE ANDEDSON INN
Coming Home to the Galley and The Anderson Inn AN INTERVIEW WITH Dave Peter and Jeff Anderson By Hilary Grant I t’s a movie moment where even the most stoic adults tear up: Judy Garland as Dorothy in the last scene of the classic The Wizard of Oz. started companion hotel upstairs – the two may have discovered that coming home has been their best move ever. After journeying to the land over the rainbow, the farm girl has now awakened in her own bed, magically returned to Kansas where her family and friends are waiting. “You’re all here!” she exclaims incredulously. “I’m not going to leave here ever again – because there’s no place like home!” Dave Peter isn’t sitting down much these days. Up by seven o’clock every morning, he often doesn’t make it to bed until midnight. The same might be said for Dave Peter and Jeff Anderson. Childhood chums in Morro Bay, both boys grew up to leave what was then a mostly small fishing village, bound in separate directions for adventures in bigger and flashier places. Today, the pair is back. Indeed, with Peter new owner of The Galley Seafood Grill & Bar – a beloved Embarcadero landmark that’s now been completely renovated – and Anderson helming The Anderson Inn – a just M A R C H 2008 Journal PLUS Dave’s Story Peter is also enjoying every minute of these very long days. “Opening a restaurant has always been my true passion,” he explains. “It’s also been even more than that. I’ve always wanted to be grounded in a community, be a part of that community, and give back to that community. “The new Galley is the anchor that’s allowed our family to do that.” It has been a circuitous path to realize the restaurateur dream. Born in Riverside, Peter moved to Morro Bay when he was four years old after dad Gil accepted a job teaching math at Cuesta College. On the day Peter turned 14 years old, work permit in hand, he began PEOPLE 17 his first restaurant job – bussing tables at the original Galley for owner Bud Anderson, Jeff ’s father. “I had known the Anderson family as their paperboy,” says Peter. “I also knew them from the restaurant, where we would sometimes go for a special treat after a Little League game. In fact, it was after one of those games in about 1974 when Bud asked me if I’d like to join The Galley Farm League. That meant that once I turned 14, I could start working for him as a busboy. I kept reminding him of this on a regular basis while I delivered his papers!” The Galley job stuck: Peter worked there through high school (he’s a 1980 Morro Bay High grad) and through his two years at Cuesta, eventually becoming a host and wine server. “Bud Anderson was my first real business mentor,” says Peter. “It was his passion for customer service, and the leadership he showed in terms of how he treated and motivated his employees, that inspired not only my desire to someday enter the restaurant business, but my business career in general.” Dave Peter in front of The Galley Restaurant After Cuesta, Peter earned a Business Administration degree from San Diego State University. “My lifelong dream had always been to return to Morro Bay and open a waterfront restaurant,” he says. “But after college, I first chose the ‘practical path’ in what was then the fast-growing technology industry.” To that end, Peter’s first job out of SDSU was for a tech company in San Diego. One year later, he was with a new firm in Germany, where he met and married wife Aglaja. Perhaps anticipating the huge impact computers and all of their accoutrements would have on our global economy, the couple next relocated to the Bay Area, the heart of that cutting-edge technology. There they started their own small company, with son Julian born in San Jose. Daughter Sanja came along two years later, but by this time, the Peters had sold that enterprise and were in San Diego. Peter continued to do consulting work and was also involved in two more start-up companies – one of them was ultimately sold to computer software giant Adobe. In 1999, the family finally made it to Morro Bay. For Peter, though, this newest move was more of a place to land while working around the world. He had become a corporate vice president for Boston-based Progress Software, first managing sales in the United States for the publicly traded company, then in charge of the firm’s European business – a step that had the entire family in Germany in 2002 and 2003. Peter was still with Progress when he once again returned to Morro Bay in 2003. Travel continued to be at the top of his agenda: this time, running the company’s Asian concerns, Peter spent much of his time in the Far East. He finally retired from technology in 2006, and took two years off to focus on the plan for what would become the new Galley. The project, however, had been on Peter’s mind for some time. “It was 2002 and I had called the Andersons one evening from my office in Europe,” says Peter. “It’s something I regularly did, just checking in and finding out how things were going. It was then that they first shared their idea for what they wanted to do – one that would ultimately replace the old restaurant and lead to my involvement.” The Anderson Family: Jeff, Mollie, Rita, Bud, and Rodger These days, despite its $4 million renovation (that figure includes the hotel), The Galley Seafood Grill & Bar is still, at heart, a family affair. Peter’s wife Aglaja works alongside her husband and 16-year-old Julian does kitchen prep. Following in her dad’s footsteps, Sanja is 14 and bussing tables. And while the retro Hawaiian Island motif, spectacular views of Morro Rock and great service all make for a special dining experience, the food is perhaps the most important ingredient of all. Purchasing wild-caught fish directly from Morro Bay fishermen is a priority, with seafood choices changing daily. Many of the entrees are also served “naked,” with only a light sauce on the side – this way, says Peter, customers can experience “the true taste of the best seafood available.” In addition, all of the pesticide-free vegetables and produce come from the Los Osos family farm of head chef Henry Galvez, who has more than 30 years of experience as a chef and was instrumental in creatM A R C H 2008 Journal PLUS 18 PEOPLE ing the new Galley menu. Desserts here are a combination of both comfort food and taste: there’s everything from an old-fashioned ice cream sundae to dark chocolate cake to baked-in-the-kitchen cookies. Wines are treated with care, too: stored in custom designed vaults from France, the restaurant offers a cornucopia of offerings from award winning Central Coast wineries and out-of-region vintners. Peters is also grateful to John Anderson, Bud’s grandson and another Galley member who helps the reincarnated eatery run so smoothly. “John has all of the current operational experience I didn’t have,” says Peter. “He has helped to put all of our processes and systems in place.” “Plus, he’s an Anderson – a bridge to the past, who is also helping to create the foundation for the future.” Jeff’s Story Just a few feet away, Jeff Anderson is busy with his family’s latest enterprise: The Anderson Inn. An upscale boutique hotel with just eight rooms, each upstairs space is tranquil, roomy and comfortable – and all boast fireplaces, wireless Internet access and full views of Morro Bay and Morro Rock. Entering the hospitality business with this elegant combination is the newest way the Anderson family is shaping the unique character of Morro Bay. The town, says Anderson, is not only full of childhood memories, but is also a place with a new energy and positive future. “Morro Bay was a great place to grow up in,” says Anderson, who, with brother Rodger – a former mayor of Morro Bay – and sister Mollie, represents the fourth generation of Andersons to live in San Jeff and his mom back in the early 60s M A R C H 2008 Luis Obispo County. (The family first settled here in the 1860s, and Anderson’s great-grandfather Jefferson Lee Anderson, who Jeff is named for, built the Anderson Hotel, still standing in downtown SLO on Monterey and Morro Street.) “At five years old, I could ride my bike anywhere in town,” continues Anderson. “When I was 11 and 12, I remember during the summer, spending more than one night on the top of Morro Rock with my brother, a few of his friends and my dog Skippy. Dad was working, and we would tell him we were going camping, but not tell him where!” Like Dave Peter, Anderson graduated from Morro Union Elementary and then attended Morro Bay High. At 15, he left home for the Robert Lewis Stevenson School, a private boarding school in Monterey County that believes that academic success is the key to a joyful life. Anderson stayed up north after graduation from Stevenson, attending West Valley College in Saratoga. It was here he learned the scholastic nuts and bolts of the restaurant business. After that, Anderson relocated to the big island of Hawaii, where he gained more experience at The Kona Galley in Kailua-Kona, another seafood restaurant owned by Bud Anderson. But like Dave Peter, Jeff Anderson had already learned much of his profession hands-on – he, too, was one of the old Galley kids, and like Peter, always knew he would come back to Morro Bay. “The Galley first opened in 1966,” explains Peter, “and it’s employed hundreds of kids since then. I started working there when I was 11, cutting fish for the Bayshore Fish Market, which was then part of the business. By the time I was 12, I was working as a busboy on weekdays and weekends. Breakers dinner, 1962 Journal PLUS PEOPLE 19 is especially thankful to contractor Chuck Eras – “he made it all trouble free because of his leadership and kind nature.” The Galley, 1965 In addition to his Inn duties – which, says Anderson, are managed equally by sister Mollie with Rodger stepping in when needed – Anderson can also be found most nights at The Galley, sharing hosting duties with Dave Peter. “I’ve been with Dave from the first night he opened the new Galley,” he says. “The other night, we passed each other in the hallway, each super busy, each running off to do something, each going in a different direction. “None of that mattered. I looked at him and said, ‘I can’t believe how much fun we’re having!’” Visit www.galleymorrobay.com or call (805) 772-7777 for more information on The Galley Seafood Grill & Bar. To find out more about The Anderson Inn, log on to www.andersoninnmorrobay.com or call (805) 772-3434. The Galley and Anderson Inn, today Are Stairs a Problem? WE HAVE THE SOLUTION. Bruno stairlifts provide you with total access to your home. Call us for a noobligation home access evaluation. “In fact, I worked with Dave on his first day,” Anderson continues. “He was 14, I was 22, and by then, I was working side-by-side with my dad, doing host duties. I do remember some great stories about Dave, but just like in boarding school or the Marine Corps, there is a ‘code of silence!’” apart. It had been, for years. Being right on the waterfront, especially with stilts right in the water, is brutal. We kept band aids on it for a very long time, doing lots of little repairs, before we finally made the decision that the best thing to do was tear it all down and start new.” Anderson has fond recollections of the last great days at the old Galley. Anderson credits brother Rodger with servicing the most challenging part of the entire tear-down and rebuild: the bureaucracy and red tape that took more than a year and a half to get through. Mollie came up with the look for the hotel, passing on those ideas to interior designer Jeannie MacDougal. Anderson “After a year in Hawaii, I split the duties of operating the restaurant with Rodger and Mollie,” he says. “It was great, but we all knew that the building was literally falling CALL TODAY FOR FREE CATALOGS Mon-Fri 9-4, or by Appointment Locally Owned & Operated 358 QUINTANA RD. MORRO BAY, CA 93442 (805) 772-8210 & (800) 464-1973 WWW.MOBILITYMASTERS.COM M A R C H 2008 Journal PLUS