Forage Wars: The Growing Controversy Over Sonoma’s Wild Foods

It doesn’t take long into a foraging expedition for Ryath Beauchene to share one of his biggest pet peeves: “I try not to say the word ‘foray,’ as in ‘going on a mushroom foray,’” he explains. “If you look up the definition, it’s a military incursion into enemy territory,” he says, as he drives north along Highway 1 to Salt Point State Park, a stuffed toy mushroom swinging back and forth from his rearview mirror.

Before long, Beauchene is standing in the middle of the forest, savoring a lull between winter storms. It hardly feels like a military invasion. Bird calls are blanketed by the sound of crashing waves in the distance. Hiking through mossy ravines, over and under fallen logs, he picks candy caps and chanterelles that pop bright yellow and orange against the forest floor, much less camouflaged than the black trumpets hiding in patches.

“These are my friends,” Beauchene says, showing off his harvest with outstretched mycelium-tattooed arms. As a longtime mushroomer and co-owner of Moon Fruit Mushroom Farm near Sebastopol, he can see why people call the search for these small treasures “Easter egg hunting for adults.”

But, depending on who you ask these days, the original, warmongering intention of foray might feel a little closer to the truth. Google “mushroom foray” and you’ll get nearly half a million hits. In our region, the seasonal mad dash for prized porcinis and other mushrooms has become so competitive that Salt Point State Park administrators recently dropped the “bag limit,” indicating how many mushrooms a visitor can collect each day, from 5 pounds to 2 pounds.

“I do the best I can,” says park ranger Levi Pior, who carries a digital hanging scale everywhere he goes. In just his second year on the job, Pior is the lone enforcer of the newly lowered limits, which went into effect at the start of the new year. “I’ve caught a few people —one had 37 pounds of porcini. And I’ve seen photos of people taking 40 to 50 pounds of matsutake out of the park.”

“These are commercial people and families that are coming in, and they’re trying to loophole the rule. They’re coming in with five or six people and now they can take 25 to 30 pounds and now they’re taking this to a farmers market and making a commission on the state, which isn’t fair to the rest of the public who are just coming out to learn and forage and find stuff for food and just get out in nature and enjoy it. They’re making it a business.”

Sebastopol mushroom hunter Ryath Beauchene blows dirt off of a pigÕs ear mushroom he harvested in Salt Point State Park Monday, January 23, 2023. (John Burgess/Sonoma Magazine)
Ryath Beauchene is a longtime mushroomer who leads expeditions in Salt Point State Park. He’s concerned about the local impact of inexperienced foragers. (John Burgess/Sonoma Magazine)
Sebastopol mushroom hunter Ryath Beauchene uses scissors to remove dirt from a black trumpet mushroom in Salt Point State Park Monday, January 23, 2023. (John Burgess/Sonoma Magazine)
Sebastopol mushroom hunter Ryath Beauchene uses scissors to remove dirt from a black trumpet mushroom in Salt Point State Park Monday, January 23, 2023. (John Burgess/Sonoma Magazine)

It’s not just mushroomers who are facing stiff competition. Whether harvesting seaweed in lowtide pools, gathering green herbs in the woods, or collecting wildflowers in roadside gullies, foragers up and down the North Coast are facing increased pressure in the wild.

“Since COVID, the secret places where nobody would ever be, there are people there now,” says Redbird Willie, a local Indigenous ecologist of Pomo, Paiute, Wintu and Wailaki ancestry. He lives on the 7.6-acre Heron Shadow Farm in Sebastopol, where he and other tribal members reconnect with the land, gathering wild foods for cultural ceremonies and growing traditional crops like squash, corn, elk clover, and ginseng. Away from the farm, Redbird Willie regularly forages on lands throughout the Bay Area.

“You would think after shelter-in-place ended, it would settle down,” he says. “But it hasn’t. People learned about these places, and now they use them.” He first began harvesting from wild spaces years ago, when he set out to learn Pomo basket weaving with his daughters. It’s customary, he says, to take time and learn the deep-rooted story of the habitat that you hope to harvest. “My practice is if I find a patch, I don’t harvest from it for a year. I’ll observe it for a year before I start interacting with it, just to decide how resilient and how healthy it is.”

Unfortunately, others don’t always practice the same level of respect and reciprocity when it comes to leaving enough for others. He recently returned to a patch of dogbane he had been tending for years, harvesting small amounts to use in making rope, only to discover that somebody had clear-cut the entire area.

“Usually, Native people can spot an area that’s being tended,” he says. “If you’re out and doing it all the time, it’s easy to tell. But if you’re inexperienced, and you come across this big, healthy patch, it’s pretty tempting I guess.”

Mushrooms picked on the forest floor of Salt Point State Park. (Kent Porter/The Press Democrat)
Mushrooms picked on the forest floor of Salt Point State Park. (Kent Porter/The Press Democrat)
At Salt
At Salt Point State Park. (Kent Porter/The Press Democrat)

When Heidi Herrmann founded Strong Arm Farm and began harvesting nori and kombu seaweeds along the Sonoma Coast 15 years ago, she contacted several sea farmers along the Mendocino Coast, where competition for seaweed can be much more fierce.

“I reached out and said, ‘Can I come see your drying techniques?’ and nobody invited me,” she remembers. “I was all peppy and optimistic, and it wasn’t met with meanness, but more like, ‘I don’t have time for that.’” Learning by talking to biologists and reading everything she could get her hands on, Herrmann quickly found that June and July were the best months with the lowest tides and the most sunshine. But it was common sense that led her to the basic rule of foraging: “Don’t pillage.” It’s the same rule she applies to her cut-flower business, where she’ll stop alongside the road and pick up bamboo or eucalyptus or redwood branches to make wreaths and garlands. Some people call it “scrumping,” she says, adding that a mossy log can fetch $12 or more for use as a tablescape.

The basic foraging rule of thumb, Herrmann explains, is to take only a tenth of what is growing and leave plenty for others, which includes humans and animals. But it’s not a foolproof rule, she explains. “What if 10 people come after me and they’re all taking 10 %?”

Early on, it was important to learn how to cut the seaweed, trimming kombu where it starts dividing into fingers, so it grows back abundantly. “It truly feels like a regenerative food,” she says. “I could conceivably harvest a second time off this crop. You can’t say that about much.”

Recreational seaweed harvesters are allowed to take home 10 pounds per day. Because she holds a commercial permit, Herrmann is able to harvest around 2,500 pounds a year, which supplies restaurants, stores, catering outfits and even local nonprofits like the Ceres Community Project in Sebastopol, where chef John Littlewood uses her foraged kombu in medicinal broths.

When she started teaching classes and leading seaweed harvesting tours for ForageSF, people joked that she was giving away her secrets to future business competitors. “But once people realize it’s going to take you all day to process this little 10-pound bag, most people would rather keep their day job,” she says.

Heidi Herrmann has a commerical permit to harvest kombu and nori along the Sonoma Coast. She is involved in teaching others how to forage respectfully but doesn’t like to reveal too much about her favorite collecting sites. (Paige Green)
Heidi Herrmann has a commerical permit to harvest kombu and nori along the Sonoma Coast. She is involved in teaching others how to forage respectfully but doesn’t like to reveal too much about her favorite collecting sites. (Paige Green)

Herrmann is also careful not to reveal too much to her students. “I’m not going to share my secret spots,” she says. “It’s just like mushrooming—find your own secret spot.” Like most experienced foragers, Herr≠≠mann sees education as the key to raising awareness and showing eager newbies how to forage mindfully.

Barbara Jean Avery, a friend of Herrmann’s, once harvested nettles and other wild herbs and sold them to restaurants like the Farmhouse Inn and Backyard. But it didn’t take long for her to see how foraging for money could be a conflict. Now, as director of the S onoma County Herb Exchange, Avery promotes the growing of herbs instead of foraging and other wild crafts.

“I think the relationship between wildcrafting and commerce is sketchy at best,” she says. She says she’s seen plants like wild sage decimated by foragers.

“I think we live in a culture of extraction and privilege, and we’ve been taught that everything is there for the taking and that’s just not true,” she says.

Avery tries to change mindsets, overseeing programming for the Sonoma County Herb Exchange’s education programs. She likes to tell first-time foragers that it can be the journey and not the “take” that provides the most benefit. “I think one can go out and be among the plants, and that can be the medicine,” she says. “You don’t necessarily need to take something home and put it in a cup of tea.” Then again, it can depend on the plant. In her mind, if somebody wants to forage for fennel, which she says is highly invasive, then have at it.

Near the top of the list on the unspoken foraging code of ethics is: Don’t pick a plant or mushroom and then discard it because you decide you no longer want it or need it or like it. A day before our trip to Salt Point, Beauchene warned how “people leave unwanted mushrooms all around – you’ll see them littering the forest floor.” Ranger Levi Pior mentioned something similar. “If you don’t know what the mushroom is, take a photo of it,” he recommends. “There are great apps out there like iNaturalist. But you shouldn’t take it and then just flip it on the ground and leave it upside down. It’s kind of taking away from someone else enjoying it.”

And sure enough, as he searches for a psilocybe mushroom recently spotted near Gerstle Cove campground, Beauchene finds a discarded red russula mushroom sitting on top of a bear box. “Why do people do this? This happens all the time,” he says, visibly frustrated. “This is living tissue that could be inoculating the forest.”

He digs a shallow hole and buries the russula near some pine trees to help cultivate future mushrooms, a process he terms “field propagation” or “ecological participation.” Scenes such as this are part of the reason he and his partner started leading mushrooming walks at Salt Point. “We were resisting that for many years because we didn’t want to add to the traffic in that park. But we’re not seeing the practices change, and we feel we have a lot to share.”

At Bohemia Preserve near Occidental, Coby Liebman and his foraging partner Redbird forage for native plants, Tuesday, May 18, 2021. (Kent Porter / The Press Democrat) 2021
At Bohemia Preserve near Occidental, Coby Liebman and his foraging partner Redbird Willie forage for native plants. (Kent Porter / The Press Democrat)

Last summer, chef Daniel Kedan, who teaches at the Culinary Institute of America in Napa, took his “Farm to Table” class on a field trip to learn how to harvest seaweed along the coast with Herrmann. He wants his students to understand the impact they have as chefs. “We’re the ones that are buying, and so every single thing that we do, we’re putting our money where our mouths are,” he explains. “I could buy something off the back of the truck just as easily and probably make more of a profit that way, but that’s not what it’s about.”

Years ago, it was a roaming band of foragers who opened Kedan’s eyes to the possibilities of working with wild foods in his restaurant: a species of fiddlehead with marzipan flavors or a wild watercress unlike anything he’d ever tasted. “We used to get these wild onions,” he remembers. “Now I see them everywhere, but until someone brought them in, I’d never known.” When Kedan’s Forestville restaurant, Backyard, closed in 2021, it was a loss not only for customers, but also for foragers from around the North Bay who would show up at the back door of the kitchen and unload their wild-picked bounty.

One of his most reliable mushroom sources was Dylan Taube, who first started supplying Kedan with fungi when Kedan was the executive chef at Lowell’s in Sebastopol. Over the past decade, Taube has traveled the mushroom circuit all over California, and as far north and west as Washington and New Mexico. Taube says he’s picked over a thousand dollars’ worth of mushrooms in a day, but other times comes home empty-handed.

As soon as he gathers a good batch, he’ ll start texting Sebastopol and Petaluma chefs to see who’s interested. Prices vary with supply and demand, but he can sell chanterelles and hedgehogs for around $15-$17 a pound. Porcinis can go for $20-$25 a pound. Loyal restaurant clients include Ramen Gaijin, Fern Bar, Handline, Cucina Paradiso, Central Market and The Sea Ranch Lodge.

Since the pandemic, he’s seen mushrooming become super-trendy. “You’ve got people from the Bay Area driving up in their Teslas, saying, ‘I want to learn about mushrooms.’ Cool, that’s great, bro. But you’ve got people who are trying to survive. And you’ve got a valuable commodity that’s like dollar bills sitting on the forest floor. What would you do? If you have $1 bills and $5 dollar bills sitting all over the forest floor – are you gonna grab them or are you gonna leave them?”

He has a commercial permit to harvest in Jackson Demonstration State Forest in Mendocino County, where he often hunts. Salt Point can be good, but he agrees with mushroom elder Patrick Hamilton, aka the MycoChef, who says the reason Salt Point is so over-run with visitors is “because it’s the only game in town” – the result of being the only state park in California that allows mushrooming.

“If you drive up to Salt Point along Highway 1 during porcini season (roughly 10 days after the first rain in the fall), you can barely park a car now,” says Hamilton, a Sonoma County Mycological Association board member and avid mushroom hunter for more than three decades. Like many, he believes opening other state parks would relieve pressure on Salt Point. Over a decade ago, he lobbied Golden Gate National Recreation Area administrators to open their land to mushrooming, but they refused. As a result, as public lands grow more and more over-picked, private ranches and pastures are quickly becoming the final frontier.

“If you can make connections with people on private property, it can be a honey hole,” Taube says. He has friends who will occasionally hop a fence and poach on private property, but that can get dicey. “For me, it’s not worth getting arrested, and you can get shot at, you can get dogs sicced on you. It’s not worth it.”

Redbird, Tuesday, May 18, 2021. (Kent Porter / The Press Democrat) 2021
Redbird Willie collects plants to use in Native American cultural practices. Recently, he was troubled to find someone had clear-cut a patch of wild dogbane he had been tending. (Kent Porter/The Press Democrat)

Redbird Willie has run into similar problems over the years—an irony not lost on him as he tries to navigate what was once his native land.

“A lot of times, the places I go are not exactly legal,” he says. “It’s just a big issue for us—land access. So you have to be careful about that.”

“For Native people, that’s one of the things we always talk about—where can we go for this and that? And there are varying degrees of danger involved with all the different places, and you try to find the places that are the most forgiving.”

He’s noticed since he started collecting in the ‘90s, some national parks “have been more forgiving to native people to come and collect and do their cultural practices.”

On one trip, he was stopped by a national park ranger who took a quick look at his backseat filled with plants and said, “OK, move along.”

“Nowadays, there’s a path Native people can follow and ask permission,” he says. “Most rangers realize it’s a beneficial process. When a Native person tends to the land, they make it better. The biggest hurdle is bureaucratic red tape and how to get around that.”

In 2015, the Kashia Band of Pomo Indians, with the help of the Trust for Public Land, bought 688 acres on the northern Sonoma County coast, north of Salt Point and created the Kashia Coastal Reserve. One of the goals is to revive cultural traditions and the harvesting of Native foods—wild herbs, abalone, seaweed, mussels and urchins—on the land for many generations to come.

In her seaweed classes, Herrmann often teaches students how to show appreciation, leading them in a moment of thanksgiving for the source of the seaweed they’ve harvested and that will nourish them. She often prefaces it with “Hey, I know I’m appropriating this technique that the Pomo do, but I happen to like it.”

It’s a tricky balance between honoring a tradition and appropriating another culture, she explains, but she’d rather do it than nothing at all. “Here I am, just some like blue-eyed, blonde girl, like who am I? I’m just new here.”

Redbird Willie has seen Pomo customs like giving thanks coopted to the point where one can no longer tell their origin. And he admits it’s a fine line to parse. “I kind of lean in the direction where, if a person’s heart is in the right place, why bring it down if good things are happening from it?”

Back in the forest at Salt Point with Ryath Beauchene, it’s so quiet that when a waterlogged branch snaps and falls several stories to the earth, it sounds like the crack of a rifle. As he walks back to the car with several pounds of mushrooms he gathered in less than an hour, he says he’s come to recognize the park lands as, essentially, another home.

It’s exactly what Redbird Willie was talking about earlier that morning when he said, “People need to decide where their home is—where’s your home? When you say, ‘OK, this is my home,’ when they do that, then they’ll take responsibility for that spot. Then they care about where their water’s coming from. Then home isn’t just a little box that you sleep in.” Redbird Willie admits it’s a controversial view, the idea of conceding Native land as someone else’s home—a concept many of his friends don’t agree with.

Beauchene points out that it could work on another level as well: “If you’re in someone else’s home, you’re going to be much more respectful, right?”

A bounty of black trumpet, hedgehog and chanterelle mushrooms harvested in Salt Point State Park Monday, January 23, 2023. (John Burgess/Sonoma Magazine)
A bounty of black trumpet, hedgehog and chanterelle mushrooms harvested in Salt Point State Park Monday, January 23, 2023. (John Burgess/Sonoma Magazine)

Are More Regulations Coming?

Salt Point State Park ranger Levi Pior is a forager himself, hunting mushrooms regularly with his wife. One day, he would like to teach his 6-month-old daughter the hobby.

With new daily limits dropping from 5 pounds to 2 pounds, and the ever-growing popularity of foraging at the state park, Pior would like to see a permitting process implemented for mushroomers. “Almost like a fishing license,” he says. “Where you have to buy a permit or a mushroom foraging license for Salt Point. And then when you do that, we give you a list of rules or ethics.”

Wildlife ecologist Meghan Walla-Murphy had a similar idea of creating a foraging license that would be region-specific. For example, there might be different permits for coastal Sonoma County or the Mayacamas.

“Or it could be watershed-specific,” says Walla-Murphy, who teaches at Santa Rosa Junior College and leads the North Bay Bear Collaborative. “You would have a permit to harvest in this watershed because you’ve taken this class, but if you bump over into the Eel River watershed or into the Klamath watershed then your license no longer applies.”

Permits are already required to lead mushrooming group tours in Salt Point, so maybe individual foraging permits would not be that much of a stretch, says Pior. Afterall, permits are required to pick mushrooms in Jackson Demonstration State Forest further north in Mendocino County.

Even though state administrators have considered shutting down mushrooming all together at Salt Point, Pior says he can’t imagine a day when mushrooming is no longer allowed. “I’d like to see this park still open for foraging so my daughter can learn one day.”

Where to Go for Easter Brunch in Sonoma County

Brunch at Layla restaurant at MacArthur Place Hotel and Spa in Sonoma. (Emma K Creative)

It’s that time of year again when we wave goodbye to winter and welcome spring — and the Easter bunny. Sonoma County restaurants, chocolatiers and bakeries have special treats in store, from bottomless brunches and egg hunts to Easter cakes and truffle-filled bunnies. All brunch listings are for Sunday, April 9.

Santa Rosa

Flamingo Resort: Santa Rosa’s midcentury Flamingo Resort will host an Easter brunch in its ballroom from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. The seasonal Easter menu includes a carving station with prime rib, salmon with curry-lemongrass broth, omelet station, matcha pancakes, yogurt parfait bar and other brunch classics, plus vegetarian dishes and sweets. $75 for adults and $35 for kids 12 and under. Reserve on Tock. 2777 Fourth St., Santa Rosa, 707-545 8530, flamingoresort.com

John Ash & Co.: Gourmet restaurant John Ash & Co. will host an Easter brunch from 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. The menu includes eclectic and seasonal fare, such as Hog Island oysters, spring asparagus soup, Dungeness crab cakes, strawberry challah French toast, fried chicken and waffles or seared filet of Angus beef. Reserve on OpenTable. 4350 Barnes Road, Santa Rosa, 800-421-2584, vintnersresort.com

Breakfast at MacArthur Place Hotel and Spa in Sonoma. (Emma K Creative)
Brunch at Layla restaurant at MacArthur Place Hotel and Spa in Sonoma. (Emma K. Morris)

Sonoma

El Dorado Kitchen: Three-course prix fixe brunch, $45 per person, includes Dungeness crab cake, carrot soup, Wagyu beef carpaccio, eggs Benedict, rack of lamb and lemon pudding cake. 405 First St. W., Sonoma, eldoradosonoma.com

Layla at MacArthur Place: Three-course prix fixe brunch with a menu crafted by new executive chef, Francisco Lopez Jr. Menu standouts include brioche French toast, honey ham Benedict and New Zealand lamb lollipops. Entrees are followed by a trio of miniature desserts, including a strawberry poppy seed shortcake. Optional brunch cocktail pairings are available, such as a Gardez Spritz or Passion Fizz. $65 for adults, $35 for children. 29 E. MacArthur St., Sonoma, macarthurplace.com/food-drink/layla-restaurant

Santé at Fairmont Sonoma Mission Inn: The tree-course brunch at Fairmont Sonoma’s restaurant is served 10:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. and features a smoked salmon platter to share, butter poached lobster Benedict, scrambled eggs with truffles, fried chicken and waffles, spring lamb leg, and a dessert platter. $125 for adults, $39 for children (separate kids menu). The hotel hosts an Easter egg hunt at 10 a.m. for all ages. Reservations required. 100 Boyes Blvd, Sonoma, 707-939-2415, fairmont.com

Fairmont Sonoma Mission Inn hosts an Easter egg hunt at 10 a.m., followed by brunch 10:30 a.m. to 2:30. (Fairmont Sonoma Mission Inn)
Fairmont Sonoma Mission Inn hosts an Easter egg hunt at 10 a.m., followed by brunch 10:30 a.m. to 2:30. (Fairmont Sonoma Mission Inn)
Fairmont Sonoma Mission Inn hosts an Easter egg hunt at 10 a.m., followed by brunch 10:30 a.m. to 2:30. (Fairmont Sonoma Mission Inn)
Fairmont Sonoma Mission Inn hosts an Easter egg hunt at 10 a.m., followed by brunch 10:30 a.m. to 2:30. (Fairmont Sonoma Mission Inn)

Folktable at Seven Branches: Folktable will cater an Easter brunch at Seven Branches Venue and Inn with a menu that includes strawberry acai shooters, a fresh juice bar, beets with berries, avocado toast, brioche French toast, duck confit hand pies, eggs Benedict, sliced ham, prime rib station, salmon and lox, and beignets. Seatings at 10 a.m. and 12 p.m. $90 for adults, $45 for children. 450 W. Spain St., Sonoma, sevenbranchesvenueandinn.com

Wit & Wisdom: Chef Michael Mina’s Wit and Wisdom will serve a three-course prix fixe brunch. Menu offerings include items such as roasted Pacific oysters, a Tavern breakfast with eggs, bacon, heirloom tomato and duck fat potatoes, and sweet desserts like the beloved Chocolate Bar. Guests can sip on a variety drinks, including bloody Marys, espresso-based Carajillos and mimosas. $89 per person. Reservations are highly encouraged and can be made at bit.ly/3M7lFFb. 1325 Broadway, Sonoma, 707-931-3405, witandwisdomsonoma.com

Kenwood

Salt & Stone: Salt & Stone will celebrate Easter with a generous a la carte brunch menu, starting with cinnamon buttermilk coffee cake, fresh fruit and drinks for the table. For the mains, the menu includes items such as huevos rancheros, brioche French toast, steak and eggs, a Bay Shrimp Louie, gulf prawn tagliatelle, lamb burger and cauliflower gnocchi. Make a reservation online or over the phone. 9900 Sonoma Highway, Kenwood, 707-833-6326, saltstonekenwood.com

TIPS Roadside: TIPS Roadside will host a family-style bottomless brunch from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The brunch, along with mimosas and Bloody Marys, is all-you-can eat. The menu includes garden salad, smoked brisket, fried chicken, fish and grits, scrambled eggs, bacon, Succotash, housemade biscuits and pecan meringue cookies for dessert. $60 for adults, $25 for children under 12. Add on the bottomless beverages for $19 per person. Reservations are required; reserve a table at bit.ly/40wVHiC. 8445 Sonoma Highway, Kenwood, 707-509-0078, tipsroadside.com

Healdsburg

Spoonbar: Spoonbar will host an a la carte Easter brunch from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. The brunch menu includes delicacies such as Hobb’s smoked salmon, apricot pan perdue, lobster Benedict, Niman Ranch New York prime steak and eggs, Mr. Duncan’s mushroom quiche and beignets. The kids brunch menu ($17) includes French toast, scrambled eggs with bacon and potato, chicken tenders with fries and mac and cheese. Three fresh flavors of bottomless Bellini will be available for $25. Make reservations on OpenTable. 219 Healdsburg Ave., Healdsburg, 707-433-7222, spoonbar.com

Petaluma

Stockhome: This Swedish restaurant is serving Easter brunch from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. The menu includes dishes like Matjes herring with dill, apple and horseradish cream; spring salad with Aquavit vinaigrette; charred local asparagus and pea tendrils; caraway-smoked salmon with shaved fennel; and grilled local lamb loin with garlic, herbs and red wine. For dessert, there will be strawberry and rhubarb pie with vanilla sauce, cinnamon rolls with cardamom and whipped cream and a Swedish cheeseboard with huckleberry jam. Tickets for the brunch can be purchased online. $90 for adults, $45 for children. 220 Western Ave., Petaluma, 707-981-8511, stockhomerestaurant.com

Rohnert Park

Sally Tomatoes: Sally Tomatoes will celebrate Easter with an egg hunt and brunch buffet from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. The buffet includes eggs Benedict, French toast, carved ham, chicken parmigiana, assorted pastries and ice cream. Drink specials include Peeps bottomless mimosas, Bloody Marys and chocolate martinis for adults. The buffet is $25 for adults and $12.50 for children. Call to make a reservation. 1100 Valley House Drive, Rohnert Park, 707-665-9472, sallytomatoes.com

Rio Nido

Rio Nido Roadhouse: Rio Nido Roadhouse will host its annual Easter Egg-stravaganza with a brunch at 9 a.m. and an egg hunt starting at 11 a.m. There will be a Peep Diorama Art Contest based on the theme “Peeps in Mythical Lands.” Drop off shoe box-sized dioramas before 1 p.m. for judging. Winners and prizes will be announced by 2 p.m. There will also be a Peep catapult competition for kids of all ages. Call to RSVP for the Easter egg hunt to ensure there will be enough goodies for everyone. 14540 Canyon 2 Road, Rio Nido, 707-869-0821, rionidoroadhouse.com

A brass bunny filled with chocolate truffles from Fleur Sauvage in Windsor. (Fleur Sauvage)
A brass bunny filled with chocolate truffles from Fleur Sauvage in Windsor. (Fleur Sauvage)
Easter treats from Costeaux French Bakery in Healdsburg. (Costeaux French Bakery)
Easter treats from Costeaux French Bakery in Healdsburg. (Costeaux French Bakery)

Sweet treats

Costeaux French Bakery: Costeaux will be open on Easter with its regular Sunday brunch menu, including Costeaux favorites such as eggs Benedict, deep-dish quiche, avocado toast on artisan bread and pain perdu (French toast) made with the house cinnamon walnut bread. 417 Healdsburg Ave., Healdsburg, 707-433-1913, costeaux.com

Fleur Sauvage: This artisan chocolatier will sell a Brass Bunny with truffles for Easter. The bunny is made of 65 percent chocolate and contains 12 dark chocolate truffles. $25, available by pre-order at fleursauvagechocolates.com

Patisserie Angelica: Patisserie Angelica will have cakes, adorable Easter-themed cookies and chocolate raspberry Easter egg cake. Gift a West County High Tea experience with French Mariage Freres tea, scones, savories and sandwiches. Reserve at 707-827-7998, 6821 Laguna Park Way, Sebastopol, patisserieangelica.com.

Molti Amici to Open in Former Campo Fina Space in Healdsburg

The court is reset for a new game during bocce league play at Campo Fina restaurant in Healdsburg, California on Thursday, July 14, 2016. (Alvin Jornada / The Press Democrat)

Molti Amici is now open. Check out the review of this Healdsburg Italian restaurant by Heather Irwin.

 

When the funeral parade for Healdsburg’s Campo Fina restaurant marched past Jonny Barr last October, the former SingleThread general manager instantly knew he had to revive it.

Long considered part of the town’s tight-knit social scene, the casual Italian restaurant was an after-work hangout for restaurant workers, winemakers and locals.

Worried that Chef Ari Rosen’s shuttered space at 330 Healdsburg Ave. would languish like many other closed restaurants throughout Sonoma County, Barr quickly raised capital to take over the lease last December.

After some spring remodeling, he hopes to reopen in May as Molti Amici — roughly translated from Italian as “many friends.”

“When Campo closed, something clicked, and I knew I had to bring it back,’’ Barr said. “I needed to make sure the space went to a restaurateur who really cared about our community. I want to bring new life to the space, to pay respect to what was, and to embrace what can be.”

As the new owner, he plans to bring back the wood-fired pizzas, pasta and fiercely competitive games of bocce on the outdoor patio, but most importantly, the sense of kinship Rosen fostered at the restaurant.

“Campo Fina sat at the center of town, and everyone would go there for lunch and dinner,”  he said. “Every time you were there, you’d walk past three or four tables of people you knew. It would take 15 minutes to get to your table because you would get caught up in conversation.”

When Rosen closed the restaurant Oct. 1, he cited the space’s rent doubling, a labor shortage and a lack of housing for restaurant staff.

“We are aware of the challenges that our industry faces, be it high rent or lack of workforce, and we’re embracing the challenge,” Barr said.

Barr has hired his former SingleThread co-workers, Sean McGaughey and Melissa Yanc, to anchor the kitchen as co-executive chefs. The couple owns the buzzy Quail & Condor Bakery and Troubadour Bread. McGaughey also has a French dinner program several nights a week called Le Diner.

“The whole thing was a leap of faith,” Barr said.

The trio joins several other SingleThread alums who have gone on from the Michelin-starred restaurant to other culinary projects.

Barr is quick to point out that the restaurant won’t be a grab for Michelin stars. He hopes to keep the menu simple and seasonal, focusing on the community.

Barr, who is also a sommelier, will curate the wine program. The 115-seat Molti Amici will also have a full bar.

“It just means the world to me to bring the space back for so many people who cherish it. I shot for the moon,” he said.

Santa Rosa’s L’oro di Napoli Serves Some of the Best Pizza This Side of the Atlantic

Margherita, the queen of pizzas with sauce of fresh tomatoes, melted mozzarella cheese with fresh basil and EVOO from L’Oro di Napoli in downtown Santa Rosa. (John Burgess/The Press Democrat)

Though the pizza in your freezer may be ancestrally related to Neapolitan pizza, it’s a cousin more distant than the moon.

Making more than just a pie, the great Pizzaiuoli (pizza bakers) of Naples are considered as critical to humanity as Indian yoga, the Great Barrier Reef or the Galápagos Islands, according to UNESCO.

But you don’t have to travel 6,000 miles for a taste. Santa Rosa has its own Neapolitan Pizzaiuolo trained in the generations-old traditions — and he’s making some of the best pizza this side of the Atlantic.

L’oro di Napoli restaurant opened quietly in fall 2022 at the former La Vera Pizza restaurant in downtown Santa Rosa, offering up a carefully curated selection of the thin-bottom, dark-spotted, puffy-crust pizzas.

I’m embarrassed to say that last fall I tried one, and it was good. However, the delivery driver didn’t get it to my door as hot and delicious as I’d like, and it subsequently fell off the radar.

L'Oro di Napoli
The enormous Lasagna with a Stagionale salad of arugula, roasted butternut squash puree, sliced almonds., topped with pecorino cheese, in an orange mustard and Extra Virgin Olive Oil dressing from L’oro di Napoli in downtown Santa Rosa. (John Burgess/The Press Democrat)
Funghetto Tartufato with melted Scamorza affumicata over sautéed oyster mushrooms topped with parmigiana reggiano and truffle oil from L’oro di Napoli in downtown Santa Rosa March 24, 2023. (John Burgess/The Press Democrat)
Funghetto Tartufato with melted Scamorza affumicata over sautéed oyster mushrooms topped with parmigiana reggiano and truffle oil from L’oro di Napoli in downtown Santa Rosa. (John Burgess/The Press Democrat)

Foodie social media channels recently crowed about the restaurant’s buzzy homemade lasagna, leading me to see what all the hubbub was about. Turns out I failed to understand Neapolitan pizza entirely the first time.

By a mile.

The historic galley-like restaurant that served up pizza and pasta for more than 40 years still has its exposed brick walls, outdoor patio and upstairs dining area. But that’s where the similarities end.

Pizzaiuolo Domenico De Angelis and co-owner Roberto Sbaraglia have transformed the space into a Naples street scene complete with second-story balconies hung with laundry and traditional food baskets lowered down by nonnas.

Also new is a domed pizza oven sitting center stage with De Angelis hand-pulling dough and monitoring the Italian-made wood-fire stove that reaches nearly 1,000 degrees. It’s a fascinating dance to watch the chef’s fluid moves as he creates platter-sized pizzas in 90 seconds.

Sharing a Pizza Rustica with Parmigiano cream sauce, topped with roasted potatoes, smoked provolone, Italian sausage and EVO in the 4th Street window seat at L'oro di Napoli in downtown Santa Rosa March 24, 2023. (John Burgess/The Press Democrat)
Sharing a Pizza Rustica with Parmigiano cream sauce, topped with roasted potatoes, smoked provolone, Italian sausage and EVO in the 4th Street window seat at L’oro di Napoli in downtown Santa Rosa. (John Burgess/The Press Democrat)
A balcony designed by L'oro di Napoli owner Domenico de Angelis in downtown Santa Rosa March 24, 2023. (John Burgess/The Press Democrat)
A balcony designed by L’oro di Napoli owner Domenico de Angelis in downtown Santa Rosa. (John Burgess/The Press Democrat)

Unlike American pizzas that are, literally, a pale facsimile of those made in Naples, De Angelis’ crust is dotted with what’s referred to as leopard spots where the dough has been charred (no, not burned; it’s supposed to be that way).

A pillowy halo around the edges called the cornicione holds in the restrained toppings of tomato sauce, cheese, olive oil, fresh basil and maybe a few anchovies, spicy sopressata, sausage or olives.

Never pepperoni (that’s an American thing), piles of cheese or, heaven forbid, pineapple. The paper-thin bottom of the pizza would simply collapse from the weight and shame of it all.

“The dough here is too heavy,” said De Angelis in a thick Italian accent. His dough proofs for 24 hours vs. three to four at American chain pizzerias. De Angelis then pops the soft dough and toppings into the tiled oven with a long-handled wooden paddle to puff and cook atop a stone from Mount Vesuvius, a volcano that shadows his hometown of Naples.

The oven took 20 days of careful monitoring to temper the stone. Left unattended, it would have to be seasoned again for several weeks.

He’s rightly proud of his pizzas, and there’s just one thing De Angelis asks — skip the ranch dressing.

“They ask me for ranch,” he said, “and I say, ‘You’re gonna kill my pizza.’”

Best bets

More than 85% of L’oro di Napoli’s ingredients come directly from Italy, including the highly digestible flour, sun-ripened tomatoes, olive oil and cheese.

You’ll notice the difference in both taste and the lightness of the pizzas. Lighter styles of pizza like the Marinara or Margherita can easily serve one at a sitting.

Pizzas range from $18 to $24 each, but the simple Quattro Formaggi with mozzarella, Parmesan, Gorgonzola and fontina is especially good.

Lasagna, $25: Easily enough for two to four people, it’s six layers of beef Bolognese, béchamel, tomato sauce and Parmesan cheese. It’s the best nonna-style lasagna you’ll ever eat.

Polpette della Nonna, $12: These golf ball-sized meatballs are terrific, but the simple marinara sauce astounds. San Marzano tomatoes aren’t too acidic, resulting in a smooth, perfectly balanced bite.

Also great: The restaurant sometimes has other specials, depending on the day. Take a chance, because they’re always good.

Tip: If you do order their pizzas for delivery, four minutes in the oven on broil (keep an eye on it) should restore it to new.

L’oro di Napoli is at 629 Fourth St., Santa Rosa, 707-293-9540, lorodinapolisr.com.

Ethel’s Bagels Opening Petaluma Bakery in Mid-April

Bagels from Ethel’s Delicatessen in Petaluma. (Courtesy of Ethel’s Bagels)

Ethel’s Bagels, a pandemic pop-up that’s become a top purveyor of Bay Area bagels, plans to open their Petaluma bakery in mid-April after lengthy renovations.

The family-run business took over the former April Pantry space at 1000 Clegg Court last March. They plan to sell organic bagels along with a delicatessen menu including Reuben sandwiches, classic lox, breads such as New York rye, braided challah, babka, rugelach and other traditional Jewish sweets.

Bagels from Ethel's Bagels in Petaluma. (Courtesy of Ethel's Bagels)
Bagels from Ethel’s Bagels in Petaluma. (Ethel’s Bagels)

But what we dream of is their cream cheese schmears, like smoked lox and black garlic sherry.

If you need a bagel (or Reuben) fix sooner, Ethel’s delivers to selected locations in Sonoma and Marin counties and frequently has pops-up at local farm markets. For more details, go to ethelsbagels.com.

Santa Rosa’s Brew Coffeehouse to Open Second Location Next Week

Alisse Cottle, left, and Jessica Borrayo of Brew Coffee and Beer House. (Loren Hanson Photography)

Downtown Santa Rosa coffeehouse Brew plans to hold a soft opening for its new Forestville location on Monday, April 3.

Located in the former Backyard restaurant spot, the new outpost, the second coffeehouse for Brew, will serve the same full food and drink menu as at the Santa Rosa store, including 18 taps with rotating selections of craft beer, cider and wine.

Avocado toast at Brew in Santa Rosa. (Shana Bull)
Avocado toast at Brew in Santa Rosa. (Shana Bull)

Alisse Cottle and Jessica Borrayo opened the humble coffeehouse, with its recognizable rainbow crosswalk and LGBTQ+ flag, in 2015, and it’s become a beacon for local artists and the queer community.

The new Brew will host rotating pop-up dinners, too. The first will be on Thursday, April 6, with Second Staff’s Rage Cage fried chicken dinner. The new location will be open from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. daily. 6566 Front St., Forestville, brewcoffeeandbeer.com. The Santa Rosa location is at 555 Healdsburg Ave., Santa Rosa.

Exciting New Hotel Offerings in Sonoma Wine Country

Additional Sonoma County luxury establishments that were recommended by Forbes include Farmhouse Inn (pictured) and Farmhouse Inn Restaurant in Forestville and Hotel Les Mars in Healdsburg. (Farmhouse Inn)

Spring is finally here and hotel properties in Sonoma County are ready to celebrate. From spring break getaways for parents to mocktails with a view, here’s what’s new on the local hotel scene. Click through the above gallery for a peek at the properties.

A new hotel package

Who says spring break is just for kids? Forestville’s Farmhouse Inn is offering an incentive for parents to get away and relax. Now through August, get 10% off the best available room rate, 20% off spa treatments at the onsite Wellness Barn and a $100 Farmstand food and beverage credit. Book online or give the property a call.

7871 River Road, Forestville, 707-887-3300, farmhouseinn.com

Breakfast at Farmhouse Inn's Farmstand in Forestville. (Aubrie Pick)
Breakfast at Farmhouse Inn’s Farmstand in Forestville. (Aubrie Pick)

Dinner with a winemaker

Sit down to dinner with some of Sonoma and Napa’s best-known winemakers at the Fairmont Sonoma Mission Inn and Spa. The 2023 Winemaker Dinner Series by Santé kicks off April 26 with Convene founder Dan Kosta. Held once a month through September, the event series also features local winemakers Michael Sebastiani of Highway 12 Winery (May 31) and Alison Smith Story of Smith Story Wines (June 28). Every event kicks off with a sparkling wine reception, followed by a four-course dinner paired with wines.

100 Boyes Blvd., Sonoma, 707-938-9000, fairmont.com

Mocktails at The Rooftop at Harmon Guest House in Healdsburg. (Harmon Guest House)

Cheers to new mocktails

The menus at two Healdsburg hot spots are sporting a new selection of mocktails.

At Spoonbar at h2Hotel, guests can sip the Cucumber Collins (fresh cucumber, simple syrup, lime, soda water), the Rosemary & Grapefruit (rosemary infused syrup, grapefruit, lemon) and the Cinnamon & Honey (cinnamon, honey, lemon, hot water).

Nearby, at The Rooftop at Harmon Guest House, selections include the Rosemary Citrus Spritz, (grapefruit juice, house rosemary syrup, soda water) and the Bee.(lime juice, mint tea, honey, ginger beer). The Rooftop is also pouring an adaptogen cocktail, containing medicinal plants and herbs that reportedly boosts the mood and support relaxation – called The Ultra-Magenta. It’s made with La Luna Mezcal, Sporgy Blue Dream Tea and lemon juice.

h2hotel, 219 Healdsburg Ave., Healdsburg, 707-431-2202, h2hotel.com

Harmon Guest House, 2227 Healdsburg Ave., 707-922-5262, harmonguesthouse.com

15 Destination-Worthy Hotel Restaurants in Sonoma County

In addition to its five-star rating of the Montage Resort, Forbes also highlighted the Montage Spa and the resort’s restaurant Hazel Hill with their very own four-star ratings. (Christian Horan Photography)

If you’re headed to Sonoma County for a vacation (or staycation), top local hotels and resorts house Michelin-starred restaurants, casual cafes and bistros worth staying in for. Click through the above gallery for some of the very best bets for hotel restaurants in Sonoma County.

Editor’s Note: This list only includes hotel restaurants that are open to the public. Room prices may vary greatly; prices listed here are a snapshot of current rates found online.

Where to Get the Best Cheesesteak in Sonoma County

I’ve spent months trying to find the perfect Philly cheesesteak in Sonoma County. While I haven’t found the real deal yet, there are some freaking great local takes. Here are my favorite contenders to enjoy on National Cheesesteak Day (March 24) — or any day of the year, really. If I missed one, let me know in the comments. Click through the above gallery for a tasty preview. 

Streetside Asian Grill: This Asian-fusion food truck may seem an unlikely place to find the best cheesesteak in Sonoma County (and the closest thing to the Philly version around). The secret to their success is keeping it simple with crispy bits of steak, grilled onions, bell pepper, white American cheese and mayo on an Amoroso Baking Co. roll (from Philly). The cheesesteak isn’t always on the menu; keep an eye on their Instagram page for details and locations: instagram.com/streetsideasiangrill.  

Canevari’s Italian Cheesesteak: Available on Fridays only, this is the Italian Stallion of cheesesteaks — big and beefy with a nice gooey center. Pick up some fresh cannoli while you’re there. 695 Lewis Road, Santa Rosa, 707-545-6941, canevarisdeli.com.

Flavor Burger’s Philly Sandwich: Flavor Burger’s Philly Sandwich features chicken or beef with Jack cheese, grilled peppers and onions on a French roll. It’s a little more Cali than Philly, but tasty nonetheless. 6560 Hembree Lane, Suite 178, Windsor, 707-836-4096, flavorburgercafe.com.

Ike’s Hollywould’s SF Cheesesteak: The Hollywould’s SF Cheesesteak comes with steak, mushrooms, Provolone cheese, lettuce, tomatoes and Ike’s signature dirty sauce (garlic aioli). Prepare to be stuffed silly — Ike’s is always a belly buster. 1780 Mendocino Ave., Santa Rosa, 707-293-9814, ikessandwich.com.

Charleys’ Steak Philly: Charleys’ Steak Philly is a solid order with provolone instead of American cheese. Plus, you can get it delivered. Order online at charleys.com and get $2 off during National Cheesesteak Month. 1071 Santa Rosa Plaza, Suite 2104, 707-545-7596, charleys.com 

The Cheese Steak Shop: The Cheese Steak Shop’s sando comes with all the right ingredients: sweet peppers, provolone and steak on a toasty Amoroso bun. 401 Kenilworth Drive, Petaluma, 707-763-4900, cheesesteakshop.com 

Popular Down to Earth Cafe Closes in Cotati

Short rib poutine at Down to Earth Cafe in Cotati. (Heather Irwin / Sonoma Magazine)

It’s heartbreaking to announce that chef Chris Ball’s Cotati restaurant, Down to Earth Cafe, closed on March 19.

The cafe opened in 2017, offering spot-on takes on comfort food, including short rib poutine, crispy fish and chips, shells and cheese with bacon and buttery butterscotch pudding. The former fine-dining chef opened a second location in Windsor during the COVID-19 pandemic, but it never gained traction.

Like other local restaurateurs who struggled through the pandemic, Ball held out hope that a return to in-person dining would revive the restaurant industry. He said ongoing labor struggles and a sharp increase in food prices ultimately forced his hand.

“Now is the time to go,” Ball said. “Bittersweet for sure, but I don’t think the situation for restaurants like us will get better as time goes on. We care too much about what we make and aren’t big enough or in the right location for it to continue to work with the extreme increases in food, labor and overhead expenses.”