Meet The Gants of Bandon Rain Cider Company

There’s something new in Bandon.  Something sweet, but not too sweet; something tart, but not too tart; something steeped in family history and tradition yet on the cutting edge.  Gary and Karen Gant and their son and daughter-in-law Trevor and Mary Gant have put their heads and fruits together and have come up with the best hard cranberry-apple cider around, and they have called it Bandon Rain Cider Company.  The Gants have been working on their cider for three years and finally unveiled it at the 2016 Cranberry Festival where it received a very warm welcome.

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Gary, a 3rd generation Bandon cranberry grower, was first inspired to try his hand at hard cider when he considered the loaded apple trees on his “small” 7 acre farm and wondered what he could do with them all.  He decided to grind and press them and make hard apple cider.  He made it, and, he says, it was “horrible.  You couldn’t drink it.  It was just bad.”

After a year of aging, however, the cider was “almost palatable,” according to Mary.   After talking with Gary about the cider, Trevor and Mary, who were working in the TV industry in Los Angeles, became interested in the idea.  They went to Trader Joes, bought some bottles of apple cider to ferment.  They brought some up to Bandon, and after tasting it, the family agreed that they were definitely on to something.

Over the next couple of years, they worked on finding just the right blend of cranberry and apple juice to make a well-balanced unfiltered hard cider.  Gary and Mary attended a class taught by cider guru Peter Mitchell and brought a sample of their latest version for him to judge at the end of class.  The cider master’s first comment was “It’s pink.”  After the Gants explained it was due to the cranberries, he smelled, swirled, and sipped, shook his head, again exclaimed, “It’s pink!”  He went on to say that he could taste the cranberry and the apple, the astringency was nice, and it had a long taste and was well-balanced.  His final comments were, “Good job!  Well done.  I would buy this.  I would drink this.”  They knew then that they were on the right track.

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After the class, the Gants asked for feedback from many different people, continuing to fine-tune the cider to find the right apple/cranberry balance.  Everyone had their own opinions; some thought it was too sweet, others too tart, but most people liked it.

When they decided that they would make cider on a larger scale and try to market it, they had to get serious about commitment.  Gary got to work renovating two buildings on his 7 acre farm, and Trevor and Mary quit their jobs to move up to Bandon and work on cider full time.

Their hard work has paid off in spades.  The cider has only been on the market for a couple of weeks now, but it has been received extremely well among the locals and visitors.  People from all over were able to try it at the Cranberry Festival and at Cycle Oregon.  A couple thousand cyclists (who also tend to be drinkers) from all over the country participate in Cycle Oregon, so Bandon Rain got a fair bit of exposure from that one event.  A wine-maker in Dundee, Oregon in the heart of the Willamette Valley wine country was very interested in their fermenting process, and a couple from England who were particularly taken with the cider said, “It’s great to see the United States starting to learn about cider.”

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The Gants seem to have found the ideal cranberry-apple balance they were looking for, but there is still much to learn and work to be done to continue to progress in the industry.  They are selling the cider locally on tap and in kegs now, focusing on getting the word out there, but they have an eye to the future.  If they choose to bottle the cider to sell in stores, they will need to decide between pasteurizing and filtering.  Filtering the cider would change the nature of the fine product they created, and pasteurizing can be expensive and complicated.

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The fermenting family members are starting to find their niches in the cider production.  Gary explains that there are a lot of moving parts to keep track of.  He finds himself ordering small yet important and very specific parts online, storing steel tanks in his truck, and wandering around the hardware store looking for just the right food-grade fitting that won’t disintegrate in the acidic cider.

One of the most important parts in the cider process is starting with the right fruit.  Although the Gants’ property has a good selection of apple trees, they won’t be enough to keep up with the market’s demands.  Bandon Rain cider is made of a blend of juice from a variety of Northwest apples.

bandon-rain-pullThere’s no question that the economy has shifted in Bandon.  A town that was once dominated by fishing and timber with some cranberries and cheese thrown in there now largely revolves around tourism and golf.  I, for one, am extremely happy and excited to see the injection of a new industry that people will come to associate with our small coastal town: cranberry-apple hard cider by the name of Bandon Rain.

To sample Bandon Rain cider, head to the Beverage Barn on the corner of 12th St. and Highway 101.  Bring a growler; you’ll want to fill it up after tasting this cider!

To keep up with the latest about Bandon Rain Cider Company, follow them on Facebook, and visit their website.

Meet Peter Braun at Cobblers Bench

One of the oldest continuously running businesses in Bandon, Peter Braun’s Cobblers Bench has been a fixture in Old Town since 1979.  And, like many local businesses, it was passed down from an older generation.

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Peter’s father Wolf, a leatherworker, opened The Cobblers Bench in 1979 after having visited a friend in Bandon and deciding it would be home.  He set up shop next to what is now the Bandon Coffee Café but was forced to move out when the shop burned.  After the fire, Wolf was cleaning things out of what remained of the building, and seeing his boot jack on the sidewalk, a man walking by asked if Wolf could fix his boot.  Wolf asked the passer-by to come back when he had his shop reestablished, but quickly changed his mind and called him back, telling him he would go ahead and fix the boot.  He must have earned some good karma with his offer; as it turned out, the man was a Mason and told Wolf that one of the shops in the Masonic Hall building was for rent.  Shortly after, The Cobblers Bench opened again in the current location of the Spirit of Oregon shop, added retail clothing items, and then moved to its current location on the corner.

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As a kid and even a younger man, Peter had neither dreams nor plans of someday taking over his father’s business.  He spent most of his childhood in Marcola, a small town east of Eugene, before moving to Bandon for his senior year of high school.  In college, he studied theater and then enrolled in film school in Portland.  After graduating, Peter worked in the film business for more than 10 years in Oregon and California, working on projects that lasted 6-8 weeks.

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It was during a quiet time between projects in 2003 that Wolf asked Peter to come to Bandon to take a role in a play he was directing.  Peter took him up on this offer as well as his offer to work in the shop during the days.  He had never attempted shoe repair, but, as he said, “shoe repair isn’t brain surgery.”

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After the play closed, Peter began a more frequent back-and-forth schedule between Portland and Bandon.  He would come to Bandon for a week to help in The Cobblers Bench doing the shoe repairs for his dad, then return to the Rose City to do a film job.  He kept this up for a couple of years until Wolf decided to start his gradual retirement to Hawaii where he had bought land.  Over time, Peter’s responsibilities at the shop increased to where he was essentially in charge, doing the buying and making many of the decisions.

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When Wolf moved to Hawaii for good in 2007, Peter took over completely, taking on a fair bit of debt along with the business.  The stock market crashed just a year later, putting the store in even greater danger.  Though without formal business training, Peter had a great deal of good business sense and was able to keep the store open by liquidating much of the old merchandise and bringing in new lines of clothing and shoes to the shop, focusing more on outdoor wear than the women’s boutique clothing it had been previously.  The Cobblers Bench is now solidly out of debt and has been transformed into one of the cornerstones of Old Town.

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Peter Braun puts his energy into more than just the success of The Cobblers Bench; he spends a great deal of that energy helping Bandon become “the crown jewel of the south coast.”  He started his term on the Bandon City Council in January of 2015, is president of the Chamber of Commerce, and works with the Greater Bandon Association.  His intentions with his work with these groups as well as with his membership with the Masonic Lodge is to try to represent the people of the city, and to help Bandon improve and put its best foot forward.

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When asked if he plans to stick around Bandon, Peter replied, “Oh, I’m not going anywhere.”  His dad and twin brother tried to get him to come to Hawaii with them, but he has no desire to leave. “We live in the most amazing place in the world,” he said.  With his help, there’s no doubt it will only become more amazing.

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