Sections
Home » Happiness » How to Share a Waffle

YES! I want to try YES!
Magazine.
YES! by Email
Join over 62,000 others already signed up for FREE YES! news.
[SAMPLE]  [ARCHIVE]
YES! This Week email logo
Sign up for our weekly highlights email. 

David Korten's Agenda for a New Economy: 3 Ways to Get the Book

Posters ad (generic)

Hot or Cold: the YES! Klean Kanteen

 

How to Share a Waffle

Bartering for your breakfast: One step closer to a local economy?

Off the Waffle, photo by Abby Quillen

Need waffles? At Off the Waffle in Eugene, Oregon, sharing can be a substitute for money.

Photo by Abby Quillen.

Off the Waffle in Eugene, Oregon is not your typical waffle house. You won’t find pads of butter, bottles of fake maple syrup, or sides of hash browns and eggs here.

The owners, brothers Omer and Dave Orian, are in their mid-twenties and usually sport matching red afros. They and their seven employees serve traditional Belgian Liège waffles made from yeast-leavened batter. They use pearled sugar imported from Belgium, which caramelizes through the waffles, making them crunchy on the outside and moist on the inside.

And if you’re low on cash, Omer and Dave are happy to make a trade, because they’re big fans of bartering.

“When we were in elementary school, Dave would carry with him a little suitcase full of toys in hopes of trading them for cool stuff that other kids had,” says Omer.

Dave says the brothers have traded all kinds of things for waffles, including “acupuncture, massage, plumbing, a trumpet, and art.” And Omer adds that they received yard rakes from one customer.

“We have bartered for things we never would have gotten were we to have to pay cash for them,” Dave says.

If you’re a business lawyer, Omer and Dave would like to trade you some waffles for your services.

The Orian brothers also installed a “barter wall” next to the counter to encourage exchanges between customers. The “wall” is a large corkboard with a sign next to it explaining: “It may benefit you to trade your goods and services with your neighbors as an alternative to using money, which can potentially be a little hard to find these days.”

“I don’t know that our five foot bartering wall will be the thing that turns this local economy in the right direction, but I do think we can make a significant impact,” Omer says. He argues that Eugene possesses ample “human and natural resources” to sustain itself. “The lack of cash flow due to the economy should not stop this city from prospering.”

Barter wall, photo by Abby Quillen

Photo by Abby Quillen.

Right now you can make a number of exchanges using the wall. Ellen will do some proofreading or editing for you if she can borrow your truck for an hour. Heather, a doula-in-training, will provide free labor support in exchange for experience toward her certification. Mike will fix your bicycle for some moped parts. And if you’re a business lawyer, Omer and Dave would like to trade you some waffles for your services.

If legal work for waffles doesn’t sound like a fair trade, you probably haven’t tasted these waffles. Everyone who has seems to invariably sound like a teenager with a crush. The store is wallpapered with waffle wrappers decorated by customers, many of them waxing poetic about the waffles. “Waffles make me so happy,” one gushes. “There’s a waffle at the end of the rainbow,” another proclaims. Off the Waffle’s 1,695 Facebook fans seem pretty smitten as well.

Off the Waffle’s “original” waffle is served in a to-go wrapper just like it would be if you purchased it from a street vendor in Brussels. But you can also sit down in the casual dining area, enjoy the Django Reinhart music that’s often playing on the stereo, and get a waffle served on a plate and topped with a combination of gourmet ingredients you’d expect to find in a much fancier restaurant. The Ahee-hee, for instance, features cream cheese, garlic-rubbed seared rare ahi tuna, sesame seeds, and drizzled sesame oil.

While you wait, you can pick up Off the Waffle’s small “joke basket” and exchange jokes with other customers. It’s crammed with scraps of paper, post-it notes, and pieces of napkin scribbled with jokes like, “What’s the difference between snowmen and snowwomen?” You turn it over for the punch line: “Snow balls.”

Off the Waffle just moved to a new location, and they haven’t put their sign up yet, but day and night, a line seems to snake from the counter to the door. Most people pay cash, but if you have a healthy potted plant or a restaurant-style highchair, Omer and Dave will probably trade you a mighty tasty waffle for it.


Abby Quillen, bio picAbby Quillen is a freelance writer who lives in Eugene, Oregon with her husband, son, two cats, and four chickens. She blogs about simple, healthy, and sustainable city living at www.newurbanhabitat.com. She wrote this article for Shareable.net.

Interested?

  • Yard for Share: When the web connects gardeners with available land, surprising things can happen.

 

YES! Magazine encourages you to make free use of this article by taking these easy steps. Quillen, A. (2010, July 14). How to Share a Waffle. Retrieved February 12, 2012, from YES! Magazine Web site: http://www.yesmagazine.org/happiness/how-to-share-a-waffle. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License Creative Commons License


You won’t see any commercial ads in YES!, in print or on this website.
That means, we rely on support from our readers.

||   SUBSCRIBE    ||   GIVE A GIFT   ||   DONATE   ||
Independent. Nonprofit. Subscriber-supported.




Reader Comments

waffles

Posted by eve beili at Jul 24, 2010 12:28 AM
very nice, but how is importing butter from belgium local.
tuna? sustainable? i dont think so. it is first hunted in our quickly
emptying oceans, then flown to wherever, not to mention the mercury.

local?

Posted by renejrtc at Jul 24, 2010 08:12 PM
the article is not about local consumption. by comparing a fast food restaurant to what these people serve (beyond food); if they import something from beyond, it is worth the energy used to transport it. The point of the article is to become aware of an alternative to what we're accustomed to. The article speaks volumes, and only one if not many can only wish for such an article to be published nationwide. Peace!

waffles

Posted by eve beili at Jul 25, 2010 02:17 AM
it is better tha fast food, but anything that can be grown or produced locally should be. bringing butter from belgium is using fuel. not to mention the pollution caused by raising dairy cows and the cruel practices.
i am all for alternatives, but be honest. and they did mention buying local products. i know it is hard and i have many vices but i make an effort.

Pearl Sugar

Posted by Aaron T at Jul 28, 2010 02:53 PM
It's not the butter, but the pearl sugar that's imported for Belgian waffles. It's a key ingredient and it's not produced in the U.S. Here's a link about it: http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-pearl-sugar.htm. And if you're worried about the mercury in tuna, it's the nuclear power plants and the medical waste that we need to blame, not a waffle shop.

Bartering

Posted by Alison Cassin at Jul 28, 2010 12:34 PM
I love that this business exists. I live in Eugene and this is one of the many aspects of this community that makes it a great place to live. I try to buy local - at the grocery store, at farmers market, at Saturday Market (the outdoor handcrafters market) - and the fact that we have the opportunity to barter for a waffle or other goods and services, even if they're not sourced locally, still seems like a better alternative to most places. Thanks for the great article! (Also, I'm pretty sure someone stole the sign from the new location and that's why it's not up right now.)

Governments starting to recognise barter

Posted by Selina Markham at Dec 15, 2011 02:00 AM
The City of London Corporation recently launched a report about barter exchanges and excess capacity exchange.

The research explores existing and potential applications of multilateral reciprocal trade, including countertrade and corporate and retail barter. Reciprocal trade constitutes an estimated 20% (over US$100 billion) of global trade but contracts and negotiations tend to be lengthy and complex. The emerging multilateral reciprocal trade sector offers the potential to eliminate the inefficiencies of bilateral capacity exchange through the mechanism of common tender – an alternative means of exchange to sovereign currency which is not convertible to cash, earns no interest and can only be redeemed for goods and services within the capacity exchange.


According to the City of London press releases:

"Capacity exchange development presents untapped opportunity for London

The development of an innovative, global capacity exchange hub in London could improve productivity by reducing marginal spare capacity, stimulating innovation and providing an alternative to conventional credit, according to a new report released today commissioned by the City of London Corporation, Recipco and the Economic and Social Research Council.

Capacity Trade and Credit: Emerging Architectures for Commerce and Money highlights how businesses with spare capacity in their own goods, services or infrastructure – often the case in economic downturns – could utilise their surplus via an exchange to ‘finance’ the purchase of other goods and services that they need. Capacity exchanges have the potential to offer SMEs and larger businesses an alternative credit stream in the face of a challenging environment for conventional credit as banks rebuild bank balance sheets.

According to some reports, 20% of global trade (over US$ 100bn) takes place in non-monetary exchanges. Capacity trading across the world has traditionally taken the form of simple bartering, which involves two parties – commonly SMEs in local or national trading networks – settling a transaction through a flow of goods or services rather than sovereign currencies - or cash. This form of exchange has traditionally been seen as less efficient than monetary trade since it requires finding a suitable counterparty at one point in time and is often contractually more complex.

In contrast, the internet-based multilateral exchange discussed in the report could potentially lower transaction costs through market clearing. The report finds that London is uniquely placed to facilitate the expansion in scale needed for larger government and multinational organisations to utilise capacity trading more effectively. "

Featured in the report was the Ormita Commerce Network, a global barter exchange franchise model with offices in 17 countries and several billion USD of barter transactions per annum.

A copy of the UK Government report can be found at: http://217.154.230.218/NR/r[…]editSummaryFindings_web.pdf

Ormita Commerce Network website: www.ormita.com


People Who Love YES! Find Out Why... Subscribe Today

Personal tools