East Bay Times

Oliveto closing after 35 years

Co-owner of famed restaurant: ‘Pandemic was really difficult. It’s time to retire.’

- By Jessica Yadegaran jyadegaran@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

Rockridge’s Market Hall will never be the same.

Oliveto, the iconic Oakland restaurant that carved a path for Cal Italian cuisine within the farmto-table movement, is shuttering at the end of the year after a 35year run.

“We’re tired,” co-owner Bob Klein told The Mercury News Thursday. “Running a restaurant these days is really difficult. The pandemic was really difficult. It’s time to retire.”

For four decades, the Kleins — wife and celebrated cookbook author Maggie Blythe Klein cofounded Oliveto — worked with world-renowned chefs including Paul Canales, Michael Tusk and Paul Bertolli to build menus, memorable meals and special events that highlighte­d Northern California farmers and purveyors from Paul Muller of Full Belly Farm to Matt Magruder of Magruder Ranch and Tom Worthingto­n of Monterey Fish Market.

Oliveto opened just 15 years after Alice Waters unveiled Chez Panisse in Berkeley. The restaurant has a similar layout, with a cafe on one floor doing Romanstyle pizzas and other casual fare and a white-tablecloth dining room upstairs showcasing dishes like Piedmontes­e flat-iron steak or Saffron Chitara. The Kleins’ devotion to locally sourced, seasonally driven cuisine paved the way for countless Bay Area restaurant­s of the same vein, like Delfina and A16.

“We have tried for 35 years to bring the natural food environmen­t to our customers,” Klein says.

Klein will continue his mission of soil and place, “of knowing where you are through food,” via Community Grains, the heritage wheat and wholegrain flour company he founded

to support California grain farmers. Also based at Market Hall, Community Grains sells chef-approved, planet-friendly pasta, bread and polenta, and has plans to expand its already robust education and outreach program. So Klein’s not really retiring.

“The idea of wheat has been butchered by an industrial veil that has made it so generic we’ve kind of lost it,” he says. “Let’s bring it back again.”

Klein does not want to end Oliveto’s legacy on a sad note. He is working closely with people like Worthingto­n, who has done countless “Oceanic Dinners” in the storied upstairs dining room, to infuse Oliveto’s final two months with joy. Expect special dinners and other events before the close of the year.

“The key is celebratio­n,” he says. “And celebratin­g being part of what has happened in Northern California over the past 35 years. I once went to an organic farm in Ireland, and when I told them I was from Northern California, they were in awe.”

Klein did not comment on what will become of the iconic space at 5655 College Ave., but he alluded to discussion­s of a possible sale.

“We haven’t really had time to deal with it,” he says. “I think I’ll be getting calls.”

Oliveto will be open seven nights a week through the end of 2021 at 5655 College Ave. in Oakland. Dinner will be served from the upstairs menu Wednesday through Saturday, and from the downstairs cafe menu Sunday through Tuesday.

For reservatio­ns, call 510547-5356 after 4 p.m. or go to oliveto.com.

 ?? FILE PHOTOS BY JANE TYSKA — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? The outside of Oliveto is seen on College Avenue in Oakland on July 2, 2019. The popular Italian restaurant is closing its doors for good at the end of the year.
FILE PHOTOS BY JANE TYSKA — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER The outside of Oliveto is seen on College Avenue in Oakland on July 2, 2019. The popular Italian restaurant is closing its doors for good at the end of the year.
 ?? ?? A dish served at Oliveto: rigatoni with peaches, Tuscan sausage and basil.
A dish served at Oliveto: rigatoni with peaches, Tuscan sausage and basil.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States