Othello man's hobby grows into small business, with local helpers and fans
CHERYL SCHWEIZER | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 5 years, 7 months AGO
Senior Reporter Cheryl Schweizer is a journalist with more than 30 years of experience serving small communities in the Pacific Northwest. She began her post-high-school education at Treasure Valley Community College and enerned her journalism degree at Oregon State University. After working for multiple publications, she has settled down at the Columbia Basin Herald and has been a staple of the newsroom for more than a decade. Schweizer’s dedication to her communities and profession has earned her the nickname “The Baroness of Bylines.” She covers a variety of beats including health, business and various municipalities. | October 7, 2020 1:00 AM
OTHELLO — It was the Christmas bazaar in Othello that told Brian Lumsden that something he had been pursuing as a hobby could work into something bigger. And the Othello community has been a part of making that happen.
Lumsden had been making spice rubs for a long time, looking for the proper accompaniment for pork, beef, chicken, fish and vegetables. Cooking has always been an interest of his.
“As a kid I was in the kitchen all the time,” he said.
The experiments in barbecue started when he was in college.
He came up with a mix of garlic, chipotle, sugar and smoked salt that he liked, and when he gave it as presents, other people liked it too. He hadn’t thought of selling it until people offered to buy it, he said.
Even then, Lumsden said he didn’t think of selling it, until his wife, Tamar, came up with a suggestion.
“She said, ‘Why don’t you try to sell them at the Othello Christmas bazaar?’” he said.
So Lumsden bought some small deli containers and labels. “I had 100, and I was hoping to sell 10 of them,” he said. He sold out in a couple of hours, and that was the start of B’s Rubs.
Lumsden is a history and civics teacher at Othello High School and the OHS golf coach. The spice rub business has to fit around his day jobs. But Lumsden is used to juggling multiple careers.
“Most of my life I’ve had a business of some kind,” he said.
Lumsden started with two options, his original Smoked Rub and the Spiced Apple Rub. Now he’s up to 10 rubs. All are low-sodium and gluten-free and do not contain MSG, he said. He also sells a kit designed to teach people how to cure small batches of their own bacon.
In cooking, a rub has a specific job to do. “A rub is a collection of seasonings that are put together by intention, that pairs well with different meat and vegetables,” he said. Rubs can be salty or spicy, sweet or savory, or any combination thereof.
The development process starts with the end goal. The Big Squeeze rub, for instance, was developed when customers asked him for a lemon pepper mix. “I wanted mine to be tart and hot,” he said, so he added some chili peppers for that extra kick.
The Batch No. 9 started as a thank-you gift for a neighbor who took Lumsden salmon fishing. The neighbor’s dietary preferences sent Lumsden in search of a sugar-free rub for salmon, which resulted in a mix of garlic, onion and pepper.
The Jamaican Jerk, like its name implies, was designed to be spicy and citrusy. Hooked on Seafood is the newest addition. “Citrus, honey, onion and dill,” Lumsden said.
Cooks can — and should — experiment with different rubs on different meats, or even vegetables. “I occasionally sprinkle a little of the Spiced Apple on bacon,” he said.
Originally B’s Rubs was a family affair, with Lumsden, his wife, his daughter Devyn and his parents doing most of the work.
“My mom would be labeling, and Dad would be mixing stuff up,” he said of the early days in the kitchen. The business grew to the point where it almost became too much and a lot less fun. Lumsden set up his production facility in a former restaurant kitchen owned by a friend and hired some outside help.
When he first opened the door of his current location, he said, he thought it was way more space than he would ever need. “Now we’re out of room,” he said.
He credited the support of his neighbors for some of B’s Rubs success. “Honestly, the town of Othello and the people that I know there helped us grow,” he said. “I would say it’s community-built, for sure.”
There was the occasion when he and his wife were faced with the task of labeling 10,000 bags by hand. His wife’s solution was a “labeling party,” inviting neighbors and friends over to help out, with Lumsden cooking prime rib and crab legs for the crew. The job was done in a couple of hours, he said.
Most B’s Rubs customers come through sporting goods shows, he said, and he was concerned when the COVID-19 outbreak forced cancellation of most shows. He was afraid he might have to suspend operation. But orders have stayed strong, and the online business is approaching Christmas season levels, he said.
While he has plenty of ideas — there’s that mix of maple and sriracha he’s been thinking about — Lumsden said he will probably stick with his current product line for the time being. The current business is just about big enough, he said.
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