Many locals know the delicious secret inside the Rio
Market in Santa Ynez. High school kids, suits and farm hands are among the
regulars who flock to the far side of the liquor store for local, organic
burritos, tacos, quesadillas and other savory delights.
Besides the customers in line for some fresh food, you
may also see some ladies in line sneaking glances at the face of the man behind
the counter. Though he looks like he could be on the cover of a GQ Magazine,
Joe Swain would be the first to tell you he doesn’t like talking about himself.
Sitting in the sunshine outside the Rio Market, Swain
folds his hands and looks a bit uneasy talking about his life’s story.
The Santa Ynez Burrito owner and Los Olivos
native has traveled and lived around the world, but he always found his way
back to Santa Barbara County.
Swain is the middle child of three sons and was born to
intellectuals who both worked for Midland School, a private boarding school.
Swain’s father was headmaster, and Swain recalls the institution providing a
solid education without the “country club” sentiment attached to some private
schools.
Though his parents taught there and his older brother
attended Midland, Swain opted for Deerfield Academy in Massachusetts.
“I grew up thinking everyone went to boarding school,” he
says with laugh.
Swain stayed on the East Coast and graduated from Duke University
with a degree in environmental science in 1994. He then joined the Peace Corps
to study the rain forest destruction in Madagascar. The experience, however,
was not what he expected. The native people were starving, and the good farming
land was unavailable to them, so they continuously cut or burned small tracks
of rain forest to farm for food.
“The hillsides were just on fire the entire time,” he
says sadly, remembering. The group went there to try and stop the destruction
of the forest, thinking methods used in other countries would work in
Madagascar, as well. The Madagascar people, however, were angry because they
were starving, and they believed the outside world only cared about the forest,
he recalls.
Swain felt he could not fulfill the Peace Corps’
environmental goals, so he spent most of his time helping purify water and grow
vegetables with the local people.
“I got kicked out of the Peace Corps,” he says, laughing,
“which is very hard to do.”
Swain’s sentiments about the program’s goals did send him
home, though not before he developed cerebral malaria. The disease can kill
within 24 hours if left untreated, and Swain went six days untreated before
spending 45 days in a Madagascar hospital.
After returning to North Carolina, Swain befriended many
people from Mexico. He also lived in a small apartment with a Mexican family
for a while and says living with them helped him understand why some people
risk everything to come to the United States.
Swain still travels to Mexico two or three times every
year to visit a small mountain town east of Mexico City, where many of his
friends are from.
Eventually, Swain said he found himself back in Santa
Barbara County, working on ranches and multiple organic farms, which made him want to use local, organic produce in a restaurant.
“The main-stream American food system is so backward,
mass produced and filled with chemicals,” he states.
Santa Ynez Burrito was launched in 2006, and while Swain
took a brief hiatus from ownership, he took it over again in September of 2008
to the delight of hungry valley residents everywhere.
Santa Ynez resident Guy Walker says he’s known Swain’s
family for 30 years, though he really became good friends with him after he
opened the burrito restaurant.
Walker, who favors carnitas,
calls Swain “a wonderful, caring soul who’s passionate about people.” He says
Swain is good friends with his kitchen coworkers and is genuinely interested in
their welfare and providing good food to the community.
“Joe’s passion is not a marketing scheme but to give good
quality food to people,” he says.
Jesse Wallace, also a Santa Ynez resident, says he
befriended Swain after buying a burrito from him three years ago. As a
professional fighter, Wallace says he eats a lot of the organic burritos
because they’re healthy, and he says he admires Swain’s effort to keep
improving his food.
“He’s almost running a perfect model for a business,”
Wallace says. “He does the best job he can using healthy ingredients and is
environmentally sustainable.”
Both Walker and Wallace agree Swain’s contributions back
into the community make the burrito restaurant more like a co-op. Ten percent
of Santa Ynez Burrito’s profits are donated to various local nonprofit
organizations. Santa Ynez Burrito also participates in school lunch programs
and helps sponsor other activities, such as the recent Masters in Chalk
Festival.
“The only way to be successful here is to have local support,
which we receive,” Swain says. “And we return the support.” In his free time,
Swain enjoys hiking and, according to Walker, is becoming more of a jazz
enthusiast all the time.
As for the future, Swain says he’d like to open another
shop that features fresh, organic frozen treats made from local produce.
And the present? How
about answering some more questions about personal characteristics? Swain runs
a hand through his Patrick Dempsey hair, bypasses any question that could be
self-promoting and answers that his biggest flaw is impatience.
Later, he’ll go back behind the counter and joke with his
coworkers. When it’s time to take Swain’s picture, he tells them to jump in and
smiles with them like it’s a family photo.
Reach Lauren Crecelius
at lcrecelius@syvjournal.com