Nature Takes Center Stage in Sea Ranch Home Listed for $1.2 Million

Sonoma County’s Sea Ranch continues to attract homebuyers with its modernist architecture that blends effortlessly with the surrounding coastal landscape. 

Among current listings in the oceanfront community is a home on Deer Trail, built in 2003 in a style that emulates that of the iconic Condominium 1, one of the original buildings designed and constructed here in the 1960s by a group of UC Berkeley architects. Their mission was to transform a 5,200-acre sheep ranch on the Sonoma Coast into a modernist residential community that was “light on the land.” Walls of oversized homes that disrupt the coastline and block the ocean view, like those on the Southern California coast, were banned from The Sea Ranch masterplan. 

The home on Deer Trail was designed by architect Earl Carlson, who built several houses for his family in The Sea Ranch. Carlson used a classic post and beam construction for the home, which features dramatic sloping rooflines with gray siding; signature design elements of Sea Ranch dwellings. The home has two bedrooms, one bathroom and a detached office. It is under contract for $1,200,000.

Solar panels and windows that allow for “passive solar gain during the day,” according to listing agent Hanne Liisberg, add to the home’s eco-friendly qualities. An electric vehicle hookup will power the new owner’s car and a Tesla heating system backup help prevents power outages. 

White walls with blonde wood trims and fir doors add warmth to the interior of the home, while modern railings and black fixtures create a more contemporary feel. The rooms are sparsely furnished with a few pieces of furniture and simple adornments, allowing the redwoods that surround the home to decorate the interior, via large windows. Simple touches enrich the space, like an outdoor copperhead shower and cork floors that add a softness to the upstairs rooms. 

Click through the above gallery for a peek inside the home.

This home on 41454 Deer Trail is listed with Hanne Liisberg and Company in The Sea Ranch. For more information, call 707-785-3322, or email info@liisbergandcompany. liisbergandcompany.com

Sonoma Magazine Celebrates 10th Anniversary with Gala at Buena Vista Winery

Debbie and Jacob Yarrow attend the Sonoma Magazine 10th Anniversary Party at Buena Vista Winery in Sonoma, CA. The event took place on July 28, 2022. (Photo by Charlie Gesell)

Close to 200 readers, advertisers and editorial staff of Sonoma Magazine gathered on July 28 at Buena Vista Winery in Sonoma to celebrate the magazine’s 10-year anniversary.

Sonoma Media Investments, helmed by CEO Steve Falk, purchased Sonoma Magazine “10 years ago, almost to the day,” Falk said at the gala. “We’ve just been rated the number one magazine of its size in the country. What better place to be 10 years later than the place where we launched the idea?”

Many readers in attendance credited Sonoma Magazine with broadening their Sonoma County horizons as it continues to inform the community of a wide variety of events, as well as highlighting hidden spots for tourists and locals alike.

After moving to Sonoma County from Iowa five years ago, the executive director of the Green Music Center, Jacob Yarrow, and his wife, Debbie, found Sonoma Magazine a “fast introduction to what was going on in the county”.

Debbie and Jacob Yarrow attend the Sonoma Magazine 10th Anniversary Party at Buena Vista Winery in Sonoma, CA. The event took place on July 28, 2022. (Photo by Charlie Gesell)
Debbie and Jacob Yarrow attend the Sonoma Magazine 10th Anniversary Party at Buena Vista Winery in Sonoma. (Photo by Charlie Gesell)
Steve Falk and Abigail Peterson talk at the Sonoma Magazine 10th Anniversary Party at Buena Vista Winery in Sonoma, CA. The event took place on July 28, 2022. (Photo by Charlie Gesell)
Steve Falk, CEO of Sonoma Media Investments, and Abigail Peterson, Sonoma Magazine editor-in-chief, talk at the Sonoma Magazine 10th Anniversary Party at Buena Vista Winery in Sonoma. (Photo by Charlie Gesell)

When Michele Garber, the founder of a plastic surgery advising company, moved to Santa Rosa during the height of the pandemic, she found the magazine to be a helpful virtual guide to the county, when the actual county was less safe to explore. “The magazine lets me know who’s who, what’s going on,” she said.

Gala guests said that it was Sonoma Magazine’s continued dedication to displaying the beauty of the community — through its writing and photography — that continues to make them fans of the magazine.

According to publisher Steve Childs, the credit goes to Sonoma Magazine editor-in-chief Abigail Peterson, who led the magazine to its 2021 Folio Award for Editorial Excellence and its 2022 City and Regional Magazine Award for General Excellence.

As the Sonoma County sun set over the magazine’s gala, Peterson commented, “I think we’ve really brought the pages of the magazine to life tonight.”

Video from the gala event, by Julia Green.

David and Diane LaMonica, owners of Salt and Stone Restaurant, enjoy a bite to eat in front of the fountain at the Sonoma Magazine 10th Anniversary Party at Buena Vista Winery in Sonoma, CA. The event took place on July 28, 2022. (Photo by Charlie Gesell)
David and Diane LaMonica, owners of Salt and Stone Restaurant, enjoy a bite to eat in front of the fountain at the Sonoma Magazine 10th Anniversary Party at Buena Vista Winery in Sonoma, CA. The event took place on July 28, 2022. (Photo by Charlie Gesell)

Click through the above gallery for more photos from the gala.

Discover Sonoma’s Scenic Backroads Like a Vintage Race Car Driver

Sonoma County is well known for its scenic backroads, snaking over mountains, around bucolic farms, ranches and endless vineyards, then out to the Russian River and the glorious Pacific Ocean. Spectacular views abound, and one of the best ways to take it all in is with a race car.

A vintage race car, to be exact, such as the 1958 Porsche Speedster owned by Dave and Natalie Hagan of Calistoga. Or the 1955 Lancia Aurelia B24 Spider owned by Charles and Gail McCabe of Napa. Or any of the more than two dozen classic motorcars owned by enthusiasts who travel to Wine Country for each spring’s Napa Valley 750 road rally.

(It’s called the Napa Valley rally to designate the tour’s host resort, Harvest Inn in St. Helena, but it also covers Sonoma and Mendocino counties, as well as a jaunt into Davis in the Sacramento Valley region).

Over five days, the car collectors tour in dramatic, movie-style convoys all across the northern California region, exploring remote byways and the California 1 Highway. Along the way, they make numerous stops at picturesque wineries, quaint cafés, landmarks, and high-end restaurants. In all, the trip covers 750 miles, starting and ending each day at Harvest Inn.

Classic car enthusiasts travel to Wine Country for each spring’s Napa Valley 750 road rally. (Everett Lederer)
Classic car enthusiasts travel to Wine Country for each spring’s Napa Valley 750 road rally. (Everett Lederer)

These small but mighty cars go fast, and with their lean, racy frames, feel like they’re flying as they hug the skinny, winding pavements. So here’s an even better idea for folks timid behind the wheel: Hitchhike with a professional driver, like I did.

My guide politely ignored when I dug my foot into the floor mat by the passenger seat, making futile attempts to brake. He assured me that his car wouldn’t lift off the earth as it zipped around curves, and suggested I hold on to the dashboard’s safety handle if I felt particularly buoyant.

And he reminded me that truly, we weren’t speeding – not much, anyway. Rally participants have to honor policies that keep everyone safe on the road. It’s not a race, we all agree.

A scenic tour on Sonoma’s backroads

Next year’s Napa Valley 750 rally is slated for March 26-31, with entry open to anyone with a snazzy sports car built before 1972. But if you don’t happen to have your own classic wheels, you can still enjoy a rally-worthy adventure on your own.

The Napa Valley 750 team has mapped out a detailed course for a single day adventure through Sonoma County, which you can embark on any day of the year. You can drive your own car or rent a fancier version from Turo. A recent check for bookings via the Santa Rosa Airport found a variety of sexy beasts, including a 2021 Tesla Model S, a 2022 BMW X6, and a 2021 Audi A4.

The tour begins in St. Helena, traveling through Calistoga, Santa Rosa, Forestville, Occidental, Freestone, Valley Ford, Tomales, Marshall, Pt. Reyes Station, Olema, Petaluma and Sonoma. It covers 125 miles. Find a map of the route here: tinyurl.com/4vjwbx3p. And be sure to stop along the way to soak up each of these unique destinations.

Click through the above gallery for more details and the perfect pit stops.

New Tasting Room Enlivens Sleepy Stretch of Petaluma Boulevard

The Brooks Note tasting room in downtown Petaluma. (Gary Ottonello)

The Brooks Note winery tasting room tasting room has been open for almost a year, but many locals and visitors have yet to discover this hidden Petaluma gem.

Set along a stretch of Petaluma Boulevard better known for auto body shops than fine wine, this bright and modern space is less than a 10-minute walk from downtown.
Garry Brooks and his wife, Joanne Note Brooks, opened the tasting room last August. Garry left his job in IT business management in 2004 to pursue winemaking and went on to work at Sonoma County’s Ravenswood Winery, Kosta Browne and Dutton-Goldfield before launching his own pinot noir label in 2012.

In 2018, with several vintages under his belt, Garry set out to find a home for Brooks Note. The search brought him to a 100-year-old building in Petaluma that originally housed a Studebaker dealership. For Brooks, its proximity to the downtown area and to some of his favorite Petaluma Gap vineyards sealed the deal.

“I’ve been making wine from this area for as long as I’ve been in the business,” he said. “And there’s such an amazing vibe in Petaluma, between the music and the art and the food.”

Transforming the space into a modern tasting room was no simple effort. In the process, the couple peeled back layers of paint to expose the ceiling’s original wood beams and reused the building’s original materials when they could.

The result is an open and inviting tasting room with stylish lounge and table and bar seating. The space is also home to the Brooks Note winemaking facility, which includes a solar-cooled barrel room and a production area that doubles as an indoor crush pad.

Tasting reservations at Brooks Note are appreciated, but not required. Visitors can choose between three flights of five wines each, including current releases, single-vineyard wines and pinot noir-only selections. Each flight, from $30 to $75, includes a plate of local cheeses and charcuterie. Wines include pinot noir, chardonnay, cabernet sauvignon, syrah and a Rhône-style red blend.

“Stylistically, my wines are a little bit more restrained,” Garry said. “I make my pinots in a very similar way to when I was at Kosta Browne, but we pick the grapes when they are a little less ripe. I really want there to be a balance of fruit and herbal flavors.”

The goal, he said, is to treat the grapes with respect so a sense of place emerges in the wines.

Garry also likes to keep things approachable in the tasting room. In addition to offering tasting flights and wines by the glass, Brooks Note hosts live music from 6 to 8 p.m. every other Friday.

“People can think of wine as elitist,” he said. “But we try to create an environment where people feel welcome to come in.”

Open 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. every day. 426 Petaluma Blvd. N., Petaluma, 707-981-8470, brooksnotewinery.com

The Lounge at Little Saint Opens in Healdsburg

The Lounge upstairs at Little Saint in Healdsburg features live music. (Emma K Creative)

The Lounge at Little Saint, the upstairs music and performance venue at Little Saint, has officially opened, with free live music every Thursday night and ticketed events throughout the week.

The expansive second floor at the former SHED space includes a 12-foot-by-16-foot stage, outdoor patio and bar, specialty cocktails and seasonal bites from Chef Bryan Oliver.

Cocktail from Little Saint in Healdsburg. (Chad Surmick/The Press Democrat)
Cocktail from Little Saint in Healdsburg. (Chad Surmick/The Press Democrat)
Cocktail from Little Saint in Healdsburg. (Chad Surmick/The Press Democrat)
Cocktail from Little Saint in Healdsburg. (Chad Surmick/The Press Democrat)

Upcoming musical acts include Langhorne Slim on Sept. 6 and Lucy Dacus on Nov. 15, along with wine tastings, private dinners and book signings with thought leaders.

Tickets and details about The Lounge at Little Saint are at littlesainthealdsburg.com. 25 North St., Healdsburg, 707-433-8207.

Forestville’s Farmhouse Inn Opens Casual Sister Restaurant

Slow roasted pork shoulder with stone fruit at the Farmstand at Farmhouse Inn. (Heather Irwin/Sonoma Magazine)

The Farmhouse Inn, nestled among the vineyards of the Russian River Valley, has long been a favorite getaway for publicity-weary celebrities and well-heeled visitors. Besides the luxury accommodations, part of the allure has been the Michelin-rated restaurant previously managed by Chef Steven Litke.

Since Litke’s departure in 2021, however, the culinary program has reinvented itself out of necessity, with a newly redesigned kitchen and the installation of Chef de Cuisine Shawn Jackson Clark overseeing a revamped fine dining program and Executive Chef Trevor Anderson spearheading a newly reimagined casual restaurant experience called Farmstand. Both chefs are Farmhouse alums.

The primarily outdoor dining, with bubbly Neapolitan pizzas, wood-fired cooking and shareable plates, was inspired by a previous toe-dip into all-day dining at the Forestville inn. The new concept is far more welcoming, with a trip-worthy menu and deck seating that takes advantage of the property’s woodsy charm. Farmhouse and Farmstand dining experiences are both open to the public.

Mushroom and corn pizza at the Farmstand at Farmhouse Inn. (Heather Irwin/Sonoma Magazine)
Mushroom and corn pizza at the Farmstand at Farmhouse Inn. (Heather Irwin / Sonoma Magazine)

The Farmstand menu is entirely a la carte, with impossibly fresh vegetable dishes (many from co-owner Joe Bartolomei’s garden) like sweet roasted carrots with salsa verde, summery pressed watermelon with feta and black olives and cool red beets with fresh berries and pistachio butter. All range from $12 to $16 each. Wood-fired pizzas ($24-$25) are generous, with a maitake mushroom and black truffle-leek cream version taking top honors in our book. Larger entrees, like a grilled flatiron steak or half chicken, range from $18 to $38.

This captivating experience is a comparative deal for the area and showcases the inventive new directions of the culinary program here. Expect frequent menu changes throughout the season. On Wednesday nights, Farmstand offers a prix fixe menu for $65 per person with several seasonal items and an outdoor movie in the courtyard.

Breakfast and lunch daily, dinner 5 to 8 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. 7871 River Road, Forestville, 707-887-3300. Find full details and the all-day Farmstand menu at farmhouseinn.com.

This Is Sonoma County’s Most Charming Town, According to Condé Nast Traveler

(FILE PHOTO) A couple window shops outside stores in a building along Matheson Street that had been eyed for a potential hotel in Healdsburg. (Alvin Jornada / The Press Democrat)

Healdsburg continues its streak as one of the hottest destinations in Wine Country. In a recently published article, luxury travel magazine Condé Nast Traveler (CNT) called it “Sonoma County’s most charming town” and listed the best places to eat, stay and play during a visit.

“Despite several splashy restaurant and hotel openings in the past year, (Healdsburg) maintains a breezy vibe that makes for relaxed weekends in wine country,” said Janet O’Grady, the author of the article, who also noted that Healdsburg is “more rustic than its glitzy neighbor Napa Valley.”

Click through the above gallery to see the best places to eat stay and play in Healdsburg, according to Condé Nast Traveler.

7 Favorite Wine Shops in Sonoma County

Wine mercantile at Little Saint in Healdsburg. (Heather Irwin/The Press Democrat)

For me, wandering the aisles of a beloved wine shop recalls the luxury of a leisurely afternoon at a library. Just me, endless time and the alluring smell of discovery and books.

Endless time isn’t something many people can afford these days, and online shopping makes it easier than ever to conveniently buy wine from our homes while wearing our comfy pants. In Sonoma County, we’re surrounded by wine, wineries and tasting rooms. Yet spending even a few tactile moments at a local wine shop can be valuable, educational and enlightening.

Here is a selection of some of our favorite wine shops in Sonoma County.

Bottle Barn

A visit to Bottle Barn is like a trip to Trader Joe’s: You always spend more money than you planned on, but not because the prices are high. There is simply so much to tempt you.

Founded in 1990 by Bruce and Loretta Emmons, and now owned by Sajiva and Tina Jain, Bottle Barn achieves what few wine retailers can: an extraordinarily diverse collection of wine, beer and spirits at equally diverse prices.

Hidden behind an unassuming storefront in northwest Santa Rosa, the 15,000-square-foot retail shop is a Wine Country mainstay, selling a huge selection of Sonoma County wines and nearly as many international selections. From rare, older vintages to obscure, uncommon varietals to Wine Spectator’s Top 100 wines or Sonoma County’s Harvest Fair wine winners, you’ll find it here. They also stock a wealth of specialty spirits and local beers, so no one feels left out. Be sure to sign up for their email newsletter for information on new product releases, sales, events and more.

Open 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily. 3331-A, Industrial Drive, Santa Rosa. 707-528-1161, bottlebarn.com

Ciao Bruto! Wine & Provisions

Those familiar with winemaker Sam Bilbro will recognize his obsession with Northern Italian grape varieties, which are at the heart of his winery, Idlewild Wines. Now, as an extension of that adoration, Bilbro has launched Ciao Bruto!, a new Italian wine and specialty food shop in Healdsburg.

Co-founded with Thomas DeBaise, who oversees Idlewild’s operations, and winery hospitality director Courtney Humiston, the shop focuses on organic wines from small producers in Italy and France, along with a great selection of Champagne. A selection of specialty Italian foods are also available, like tinned fish, Caravaglio capers, Centoni and Mancini pasta and dried chickpeas from Paolo Bea. Located right next door to Idlewild Wines, Ciao Bruto! is difficult to resist.

Open 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily. 130 Plaza St., Healdsburg, 707-756-3918. ciaobruto.com

Avinage

Human-scale wines are the focus at Avinage, a new wine shop in Petaluma that focuses on small-production wines from family-owned wineries and small-scale importers. “People that make wine on a human, not industrial scale,” owner Damien Carney said of the producers behind their wines.

A former sales director and portfolio manager for wine importers in New York and California, Carney was frustrated at the dearth of European wines from small, sustainable wine producers in Petaluma. So he decided to open his own shop. At Avinage, he stocks about 250 wines from France, Spain, Italy, Portugal and California, including local favorites from producers like Pax, Scribe and Arnot-Roberts. One of the shop’s highlights in the Table of No Regrets, which encourages customers to buy new or uncommon wines for $25 or less.

Open 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. daily. 15 Petaluma Blvd. N., Petaluma, 707-774-6080, avinagewines.com

Little Saint Wine Shop

Accessibility remains front-of-mind when Wine Director Alexandria Sarovich decides which wines to carry at Little Saint’s wine shop in downtown Healdsburg. A popular facet of the 10,000-square-foot space shared by Little Saint’s plant-based restaurant, cocktail bar, café and event space, the wine shop sells wines from 30 different countries at a wide range of prices.

“My goal is to make our wine list accessible to as many people as possible by offering wines at a variety of price points,” Sarovich said. “Whether someone is looking for a $10 bottle or a $300 bottle, I want them to feel welcome.” All the wines are sustainably produced, either by local winemakers or international producers, and there is a thoughtful selection of wines made by women and people of color. Wines by the glass are available, too, along with regular wine tastings and special events.

Open 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday, 6 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Thursday to Monday. 25 North St., Healdsburg, 707-433-8207, littlesainthealdsburg.com

Miracle Plum

An intriguing selection of natural, organic, low-intervention wines are the draw at Miracle Plum, a retail shop, wine store and wine bar in downtown Santa Rosa, with a commissary kitchen down the street.

Expect to find something out of the ordinary here, like a skin-contact vermentino blend from Italy, a biodynamic sylvaner from Germany, or a verjus fermented in the style of a pét-nat from Martha Stoumen and Julia Sherman in Sebastopol. Miracle Plum also sells natural wines by the glass, which can be enjoyed at the small bar, and weekly winemaker tastings on Thursdays.

Open 10 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Tuesday to Saturday, 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Sunday. 208 Davis St., Santa Rosa, 707-708-7986, miracleplum.com

Sonoma’s Best Wine Shop

Sommelier and wine director Todd Jolly is at the helm of this gem of a wine shop in the town of Sonoma that features sustainable, limited-production wines from family-owned producers in Sonoma County and around the world. Jolly chooses every wine on the shelves and is happy to make recommendations based on your personal palate. On Thursdays from 4-6 p.m., Jolly hosts a themed tasting of five wines for $20. Wines by the glass are also available at the wine bar. The Tasting Society is the shop’s quarterly wine club, which features a mix of both domestic and international wines priced around $25/bottle.

Open 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday and Tuesday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday to Friday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Thursday. 1190 E. Napa St., Sonoma, 707-996-7600, sonomas-best.com

Wilibees Wine & Spirits

Did you know that Wilibees is made up of Wi (for wine), li (for liquor) and bees for beer and, well, bees?

Open since 2008, Wilibees Wine & Spirits was founded on the principle of making wine less intimidating and more accessible to everyone. With locations in Santa Rosa and Petaluma, the store offers an excellent selection of local and international wines, spirits, beer and cider — something for everyone. The Santa Rosa location has a deli and tap room with a rotating list of 12 beers and 24 wines on tap. Wilibees also has a wine club with a focus on “crisp whites,” “bold reds” or “fuller whites,” depending on your preference.

About those bees: Wilibees donates part of their proceeds to support threatened honeybee populations.

Santa Rosa: Open 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday to Saturday, noon to 6 p.m. Sunday. 700 Third St., Santa Rosa, 707-978-3779, wilibees.com

Petaluma: Open 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. daily. 309 Lakeville St., Petaluma, 707-762-2042, wilibees.com

You can reach Staff Writer Sarah Doyle at 707-521-5478 or sarah.doyle@pressdemocrat.com.

Family Who Fled Afghanistan Opens Restaurant in Santa Rosa

(Clockwise from bottom) A lamb gyro, fry bread with beans, falafel salad, and chicken and rice plate at ZamZam in Santa Rosa, Calif. on Monday, July 25, 2022. (Beth Schlanker/The Press Democrat)

Inside a convenience store on Ninth Street in Santa Rosa, Afghan refugee Suliman Dawood serves up traditional gyros along with plates of chicken, fish and falafel atop fragrant Persian rice drizzled with creamy white garlic sauce, called shawarma sauce here.

The impromptu eatery is called ZamZam, a reference to a life-giving, sacred well in Mecca that is treasured in Islamic culture.

This is the humble font from which Dawood, 20, is beginning his American life, light years from his former career as a national soccer player in Afghanistan.

Dawood is one more than 100,000 refugees who fled the war-torn country during the chaos surrounding the U.S. military’s departure and the Taliban’s swift return to power last year. In a harrowing escape, he left Afghanistan with three brothers and their mother. The group are now are now temporarily settled in Santa Rosa with a fifth brother, Roman Zemari, who is a U.S. citizen.

Saida Noore makes fry bread at ZamZam in Santa Rosa, Calif. on Monday, July 25, 2022. (Beth Schlanker/The Press Democrat)
Saida Noore makes fry bread at ZamZam in Santa Rosa. (Beth Schlanker/The Press Democrat)
The chicken kebab with seasoned fries at ZamZam in Santa Rosa, Calif. on Monday, July 25, 2022. (Beth Schlanker/The Press Democrat)
The chicken kebab with seasoned fries at ZamZam in Santa Rosa. (Beth Schlanker/The Press Democrat)

Zemari recalls the anguish-filled days watching from afar and unable to help as his family struggled to depart the country.

The emotional story begins with his mother, Zakia Sayed Osman, visiting family in Afghanistan last year. As the political situation quickly began deteriorating, Zemari begged her to leave the country with her four Afghan sons (including Suliman), daughter and two grandchildren.

Because Osman has a green card, the family were granted humanitarian asylum in the U.S., and the path out seemed assured. But while they made their way through the terrified crowds at the Kabul airport, one son, 19-year-old Ibrahim, was struck by Taliban soldiers. Gunfire erupted as the family continued on, but Osman’s daughter and two grandchildren were forced to turn back. They remain trapped in Afghanistan.

“There was shooting happening, and my mom got on the plane with my little brothers,” Zemari explained. Dawood and Ibrahim, along with the two younger siblings, 12 and 16, now have temporary humanitarian asylum here.

Adapting to a new culture

As Dawood and his brothers settled into their new Santa Rosa home, one of the challenges was finding familiar cuisine.

“We struggled finding food for us (in Sonoma County),” said Dawood, whose family eats halal, as do many other Muslim families in the area.

Halal means “permissible” in Arabic. It requires that the slaughter of animals for food adheres to strict Islamic standards. Like kosher food, overseen by Jewish law, halal also prohibits the consumption of pork or other “unclean” animals. Conventionally raised meat is not considered halal.

So without many local options for halal food, the family started a restaurant.

Roman Zemari and his brother Suliman Dawood, rear, cook at ZamZam in Santa Rosa, Calif. on Monday, July 25, 2022. (Beth Schlanker/The Press Democrat)
Roman Zemari and his brother Suliman Dawood, rear, cook at ZamZam in Santa Rosa. (Beth Schlanker/The Press Democrat)

Operating out of Harry’s Market in a scruffy west-end neighborhood of Santa Rosa, ZamZam is the humblest of eateries, lacking tables and chairs and only available for takeout or delivery through apps like DoorDash. Surrounded by industrial businesses and low-income housing, the market attracts families seeking sodas and candy along with less savory characters who loll drunkenly nearby.

That element, Dawood said, frightens away the very demographic — Muslim families looking for halal meat — he hopes to serve.

“Families don’t like that we are in a liquor store,” he said. Intoxicating substances (including liquor) are forbidden in Muslim culture. “But we tell them if they don’t feel comfortable, we can come out with the food. We would love to have a place where people can come to sit and eat, and we hope to one day have that, in a Turkish style with sofas.”

Though the menu is limited to combo plates with spiced chicken, ground lamb, gyros, chicken wings and American dishes like hamburgers and pizza, all of the food is halal.

ZamZam soon will be taking American dishes off the menu and replacing them with bolani (an Afghan bread filled with potatoes and leeks) and Afghan “burgers,” a lavash flatbread filled with fries, a hot dog, boiled eggs and chutney. Desserts like baklava are housemade and delicious.

There have been menu wobbles as the family starts up their enterprise, but Zemari wants to give his brother Dawood and the rest of his resettled family hope in their new homeland by giving them productive work. Zemari worked with a friend to secure the kitchen and has his own restaurant experience working for local food vendors.

“My brother was very famous,” he said of Dawood, who played on the Afghani National Soccer Team. “People used to want selfies with him. Now he’s sitting here doing nothing. It’s very stressful for him. (With the restaurant) now, he can know people and talk. Customers all like him, and he’s busy,” Zemari said.

And that’s precisely what Zemari wanted for his family.

“I wanted them not to be thinking about Afghanistan, so they can recover. No one wants to leave where you grew up, but no Afghanistan exists that we knew,” Zemari said.

Best Bets

Combo over rice, $16.95: Lamb and shredded, seasoned chicken over Persian rice with lettuce, onions and tomatoes. Drizzled with sour cream and yogurt garlic sauce. Green cilantro sauce and spicy red sauce also available.

Chicken Gyro, $13.45: Seasoned chicken wrapped in a pita with lettuce, onions and tomatoes.

Fry Bread, $9.95: Dawood learned how to make this savory indigenous bread from a previous kitchen tenant, the Fry Bread Shop, that recently shuttered at the convenience store. A pouf of fried dough is topped with taco fixings including beans, cheese, olives and white and green sauce. Add lamb or chicken for an extra $1.95.

Baklava: This filo pastry filled with nuts and honey is incredible. Too bad it’s not available every day, so call ahead to inquire.

Popular Pizza Pop-Up Returns to Sebastopol

Pepperoni pizza from Pleasant Hill Pie in Sebastopol. (Pleasant Hill Pie)

Gravenstein Grill in Sebastopol is reviving its popular pizza concept, Pleasant Hill Pie, from 4:30 to 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday nights. During the 2020 pandemic lockdown, the restaurant sold takeout pizza and burgers. The latter was so successful it grew into the brick-and-mortar Sonoma Burger in 2021.

The pizza party happens on the Gravenstein Grill patio, with 12-inch pizzas, salads and drinks from the restaurant’s full bar (including happy hour discounts).

8050 Bodega Ave., Sebastopol, 707-634-6142, gravensteingrill.com

Pepperoni pizza from Pleasant Hill Pie in Sebastopol. (Pleasant Hill Pie)
Pepperoni pizza from Pleasant Hill Pie in Sebastopol. (Pleasant Hill Pie)

Apple Fair food

The Gravenstein Apple Fair will return to Ragle Ranch Regional Park on Aug. 13 and 14 after a two-year hiatus, with creative fair food highlighting the iconic local apple.

On the menu are Farm Trails Apple Fritters, the Black Pig Bacon BLT, gooey grilled cheese sandwiches from The Farmer’s Wife and apples dipped in housemade goat-milk caramel from Rocker Oysterfellers.

A variety of apple ciders produced by Ethic Ciders include Golden Rule, Montage, Gravitude, and Scarlett. (Beth Schlanker/The Press Democrat)
A variety of apple ciders produced by Ethic Ciders in Sebastopol. (Beth Schlanker/The Press Democrat)
BLT from Black Piglet food truck. (Heather Irwin/Sonoma Magazine)
BLT from Black Piglet food truck. (Heather Irwin/Sonoma Magazine)

Bayou on the Bay will go all out with Cajun sausage rolls with Gravenstein caramelized onions, smoked Gravenstein barbecue macaroni and cheese, curried Gravenstein jambalaya, beignets with Gravenstein apple compote, Gravenstein apple pie bread pudding and Gravenstein apple Southern sweet tea.

Let’s say we’re thrilled to the core. Hard apple cider will, of course, be a huge part of the event, with top-notch craft brewers including Tilted Shed, Ethic Cider, Golden State Cider and Eye Cyder offering sips and pairings in the VIP tent. Oliver’s Craft Cider Tent will pour 15 ciders made with with apples grown within 100 miles of the fair’s home at Ragle Ranch.

For more details and tickets, go to gravensteinapplefair.com.

Wine bar turns 20

If Sonoma County could be encapsulated into a restaurant, Willi’s Wine Bar would be it. Mark and Terri Stark’s first restaurant opened in 2002 near the Luther Burbank Center and quickly became a top destination for small plates — something rather daring at the time — along with great wines and a generally chill vibe. The restaurant was destroyed in the 2017 wildfires but rose again in 2019 in Santa Rosa’s Town and Country shopping center with many of the same menu favorites.

Willi’s Wine Bar: The original Stark’s restaurant that burned to the ground in the fires. Will be rebuilt, opening in late 2018.
The original Willi’s Wine Bar.
Guests at the new Willi's Wine Bar in Santa Rosa, on opening day. (Heather Irwin / Sonoma Magazine)
Guests at the new Willi’s Wine Bar in Santa Rosa, on opening day. (Heather Irwin/Sonoma Magazine)

In August, the restaurant turns 20, and to celebrate, the Starks are asking fans to make and post a short video on Facebook or Instagram sharing a memory of the restaurant with the tags @williswinebar and #willis20th. Twenty winners will be randomly selected from the entries to attend a private anniversary party on Aug. 21. Contest ends Aug. 15; complete rules at starkrestaurants.com.