Sleek, Modern New Build in Glen Ellen Hits the Market. Take a Look Inside

Love clean lines and modern design? Get ready to check all the boxes. A new build in Glen Ellen just hit the market and it comes with many of the most-wanted modern design features. 

The 3,700-square-foot home has three bedrooms and four bathrooms, plus an additional structure of 1,500 square feet. The dwelling sits on 2.2 acres and is listed for $7,650,000. Clean lines compose this modern home, which has true floor-to-ceiling windows that pocket into the wall in the great room for “seamless indoor-outdoor living” and great views. 

Board-formed concrete walls, which mimic wood, offer a weighty visual counterpoint to all the glass. The look is warmed up by occasional spots of stained wood siding, fashioned from reclaimed wood from 100-plus-year-old sinker cypress trees. 

The open concept floor plan connects the kitchen, dining and lounging areas and sets the stage for casual living. Elegant modern furniture pieces and geometric lighting designs cap off the look and infuse sophistication into the less-is-more look. 

Color is kept to a minimum with gray walls and tonal cabinets. Subtle shades of blues are infused with restraint through textiles and art. Warmth is introduced in the palette through small details like gold framing on chairs and the occasional satiny pillow.

The expansive yard has a rectangular pool that mirrors all the angles of the home. The theme of blues continues outside via a similar subtle use color: pillows on the outdoor sofa, and two aqua-colored Adirondaks which provide a playful splash of vivid color. The landscaping is dotted with plants placed in fire-resistant “islands.” 

Other amenities that suit modern tastes include a 444-bottle, climate-controlled wine room, two gas fire pits, a hot tub and solar panels.

This home at 12320 Manzanita Lane in Glen Ellen is listed with Holly Bennett with Sotheby’s International Realty – Wine Country – Sonoma Brokerage. For more information call 707-484-4747, 707-935-2500 or visit hollybennett.com

Cozy Log Cabin with Spectacular Wine Country Views Listed for $1.45 Million

If you’d like to experience Wine Country living in a cozy hillside retreat, a unique property just hit the market in Sonoma County. A log cabin perched on 48 acres in the hills west of Healdsburg, with panoramic views of Dry Creek Valley, is currently listed for $1,450,000. 

The two-bedroom, two-bathroom, 1,504-square-foot dwelling, built in 1998, manages to be both classic cabin and modern home thanks to a few inspired design details. 

The unfinished log walls provide a richly textured canvas for the interior decor. Only a few elements are needed to modernize the rustic design: lights with drum shades, stone countertops, select spots of finished walls, and pretty linens. These details shine against the simple-yet-sumptuous honey-colored wood grain.

The Dry Creek Valley views, of course, take center stage. Windows on all sides of the home offer light and picturesque views. Interior window frames that disappear into the walls yield all the focus to the outdoors.

The backyard elements echo the simple natural design indoors. A rectangular covered deck abuts a pool with matching clean lines. The lounge chairs repeat this simplicity, and the cylindrical log posts of the terrace cover provide pleasing contrast to all the rectangular shapes. The style is effortless yet complete, especially when taking in the views. 

On the exterior of the home, red trim offers a surprising touch of color. The choice is repeated in a trio of Adirondack chairs positioned on the porch for optimal valley viewing.

The home has other cozy cabin features — a wood burning stove, high-ceilings, and an open floor plan — all of which encourage easy, comfortable living. Click through the above gallery for photos. 

This home at 4001 Brack Road is listed with Carole Sauers of Healdsburg and Artisan Sotheby’s International Realty. For more information call 707- 433-6555, 707-433-6555, or visit carolesauers.com

Meet Sonoma Jazz Singer Stella Heath

Sonoma County jazz singer Stella Heath. (Courtesy of Stella Heath)

Singer Stella Heath is an old soul—or, as people like to tell her, “I’m not of my time.” By age 8, she was obsessed with classical singing and piano, preferring her mother’s collection of Ella Fitzgerald and Louis Armstrong recordings to the latest radio hits. As the lead vocalist in a handful of local bands – Bandjango Collectif, Stella & the Starlights, the Stella & Ian Duo – she loves to interpret Swing-era jazz standards, along with French gypsy and New Orleans favorites.

At 34, her crowning achievement to date might be The Billie Holiday Project, a touring storybook revival concert she wrote and performs, exploring the life of the iconic jazz singer – a show that always ends with Lady Day’s ominous classic “Strange Fruit.” Looking ahead, 2022 is shaping up to be an epic year for Heath, not just because of her growing popularity on local stages, but because she’s also expecting twins in March.

Here, Stella talks about music, motherhood and surviving the pandemic.

Surviving the pandemic

I tried to hit the ground running and make the most of livestreams and online concerts. I met a fantastic blues pianist and singer from Cincinnati named Ben Levin, and we did several duets during the pandemic. We want to continue the collaboration since it’s so rare when you find someone’s voice that really blends with yours. I also did a lot of hiking, which is one of my favorite things to do (favorite trails: Willow Creek near Monte Rio, Jenner Headlands and Armstrong Redwoods), and I visited Mt. Rainier for the first time.

Reviving Billie Holiday

I think jazz is this incredible American art form that should be studied and revered in our society, but it’s not. People feel alienated and they don’t understand jazz. People have to be introduced to it. So, connecting jazz to a storyline or a historic figure, an icon like Billie, kind of brings people into it in a different way. And having the pinnacle be “Strange Fruit,” and how it’s connected with the struggles we’re all still facing today, I think is really important.

Singing in different tongues

The language intrinsically brings out different aspects of yourself or your voice. Like singing in French, a lot of the French songs are these melancholic, complex story songs with a whole dramatic arc. Whereas singing in Spanish, it can be very carnal and guttural, like on your sleeve, your heart’s just out there. I love how the language allows you to express different parts of yourself.

On the verge of motherhood

I could have the best-laid plans, but I know it will be totally different once the twins come. It’s a time of transition. I want music to be a part of their lives, so I want to get back to performing and having music around, at rehearsals and all of that. We’ll see how it all shakes out. The last show I have booked on the calendar is March 5, so right now that’s my cutoff.

Sonoma Winery Debuts Striking New Tasting Venue

The Vertical Panorama Pavilion at The Donum Estate in Sonoma. (The Donum Estate)

The Donum Estate in Sonoma is one of the top destinations in the world for viewing contemporary sculptures outdoors. Here, among rolling hills and vineyards, you’ll find an ever-expanding sculpture collection that includes works by artists such as Ai Weiwei, Keith Haring, Jaume Plensa, Subodh Gupta and Tracey Emin.

Now, the Carneros region estate has added yet another reason to make your way to Sonoma Valley.

Inside the Vertical Panorama Pavilion at sunset. (The Donum Estate)

A new tasting space, the Vertical Panorama Pavilion, opened on the 200-acre property in August. As to be expected, it’s a strikingly beautiful venue for sipping wine and taking in the views: 832 colored glass panels come together to form a conical canopy atop an open-air lounge seating area. The glass panels — an interpretation of the changing seasons at The Donum Estate — are in a spectrum of colors that range from an autumnal orange to a springlike emerald green and reflect light like a kaleidoscope.

Three years in the making, the artful new tasting venue was designed by Berlin-based Studio Other Spaces, founded by artist Olafur Eliasson and architect Sebastian Behmann. Along with views of the estate vineyards, it boasts scenic vistas of San Pablo Bay and a sampling of the 50-some, large-scale sculptures that dot the property.

To gain access to the Vertical Panorama Pavilion, visitors will need to make an appointment for Donum’s new three-hour Transcend Experience, which is $500 per person. It includes a tour of the property aboard an all-terrain vehicle and a sampling of five rare, single block, library wines (a portion of vintages made from a single variety of grapes from a single block within a vineyard that have been reserved to be re-released or consumed at a later date).

The Donum Estate wines are paired with dishes like foie gras with Donum plum jam and summer truffles, grape leaf dusted salmon in basil paprika broth, and a lobster tart topped with Tsar Nicoulai Caviar. Guests also take home a gift back, which includes a box of treats from Napa-based Kollar Chocolates, wildflower seeds and lavender products created from the estate gardens.

The Donum Estate offers a few more affordable tasting options, ranging in price from $95 to $175 per person. These tasting experiences don’t allow access to the Vertical Panorama Pavilion, but guests will be able to get a peek of the installation while walking around the property.

The Donum Estate, 24500 Ramal Road, Sonoma, 707-732-2200, thedonumestate.com

Roseland’s Mitote Food Park Gets a Cocktail Bar

Mitote Food Park in Roseland now offers a selection of tequila and mezcal drinks from their cocktail bar. (Heather Irwin / The Press Democrat)

In late August, Mitote Food Park moved to its permanent location on Sebastopol Road. Now, it has an enclosed dining square flanked by a changing lineup of food trucks and vendors.

A small shipping container is home to the new Mitote cocktail bar that sells wine, beer, mezcal and tequila cocktails like La Coqueta (The Flirt), with tequila-hibiscus-strawberry syrup and blood-orange liqueur.

Chicken, vegetables and rice with red mole from the Maria Machetes food truck at the Mitote Food Park in Santa Rosa, Calif. on Monday, July 25, 2022. (Beth Schlanker/The Press Democrat)
Chicken, vegetables and rice with red mole from the Maria Machetes food truck at the Mitote Food Park in Santa Rosa, Calif. on Monday, July 25, 2022. (Beth Schlanker/The Press Democrat)

We also loved the La Charla, with smoky mezcal, pineapple, cucumber, habanero peppers and lemon juice; as well as the spicy La Leyenda (The Legend), with mezcal and mole syrup. Simple margaritas are $10, and specialty cocktails are $12 to $14.

Don’t miss the churro from La Churroteka, where you can get crispy cinnamon-sugar sticks filled with chocolate, condensed milk or caramel (after 4:30 p.m. Thursday through Sunday).

A pre-ticketed mezcal tasting and food pairing event, Sabores y Saberes de Mexico, will take place 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 18, at the park. Tickets are $50, available at eventbrite.com.

Natural Wine Bar Coming to Sebastopol

Geneva Melby, pictured, and Ryan Miller will open The Redwood, a natural wine bar, in Sebastopol in late 2022. (The Redwood)

Geneva Melby and Ryan Miller, both alums of Sebastopol restaurants Khom Loi and Ramen Gaijin, will open The Redwood, an all-day wine bar and kitchen at the former Ginger Thai space in Sebastopol.

The Redwood will focus on natural wines, with small bites and wine tasting during the day and a full restaurant menu and wine at night, according to Melby. The announcement of a brick-and-mortar location comes after the pair held dining pop-ups for more than 18 months at Khom Loi.

“When we moved (to Sonoma County), we started meeting all of these natural winemakers, joining this community but realizing that we had to go to SF or Oakland to buy or even have a glass of these natural wines in person,” Melby said. Though natural wines have become more common at places like Miracle Plum, Scribe and Pax, Melby said there’s still plenty of room for growth.

“We just saw that niche and wanted to fill it,” she said.

Salad Nicoise from The Redwood with Albacore confit, pinto gold potatoes, romano beans, olives, tarragon, parsley, 7-minute egg and colatura vinaigrette. (The Redwood)
Salad Nicoise from The Redwood with Albacore confit, pinto gold potatoes, romano beans, olives, tarragon, parsley, 7-minute egg and colatura vinaigrette. (The Redwood)

The field of natural wines, sometimes called low-intervention wines, is expanding. These wines are typically made from grapes grown in small vineyards, processed without additives such as sulfur and fermented with native yeasts. Without chemical manipulation or filtering, the wines take on particular flavors and variations from their growing environment.

The Redwood primarily will sell natural wines from California, Oregon and Washington. A few local natural wine producers they’ll include are Two Shepherds, Jolie Laide and Pax.

“It hearkens back to how wine was made for millennia. People think these wines are going to be funky or flawed, but we want to put these wines in front of people,” said Miller, who will head the wine program at The Redwood.

Most small-production natural wineries are labors of love run by vineyard owners or winemakers, and they don’t have tasting rooms, according to Melby. The Redwood will stock 10 to 15 wines to sell by the glass and eventually include more than 100 wines for purchase.

The restaurant menu will change with the seasons, with plenty of shared plates and Mediterranean flavor, but Melby also leans heavily on cuisines from around the world.

“We make what we like to eat,” she said. That includes cheeses, charcuterie and seafood.

“It has to be food we feel pairs well with the wine,” she said. “We’re defined by the seasonal bounty and whatever we’re most excited about at the time.”

More details about The Redwood and upcoming pop-up events are at theredwoodwine.com.

10 Fun and Unique Date Ideas in Petaluma

Petaluma, CA, USA, Monday, August 3, 2020._The Rivertown Racers practice on the Petaluma River. (CRISSY PASCUAL/ARGUS-COURIER STAFF)

Sonoma County is full of romantic restaurants and beautiful wineries that make for textbook dates. But once in a while, you might want to switch up your date night routine with something a little different. Next up in our series on unique date ideas in Sonoma County is the town of Petaluma.

One of the oldest cities in California and the location for a few Hollywood movies, it is brimming with old-school charm and romantic ambiance. From live theater to entertaining museum tours, here are 10 fun and unique dates in Petaluma. Click through the above gallery for details.

Petaluma’s The Oyster Girls Want You to Have a Party

All it takes is a cool, winter day out on Tomales Bay, right after a storm passes and the water turns to glass, “when it just feels like home to me,” says Aluxa Lalicker. It is where she learned to ply the waters as a kayak guide and where she mastered the art of shucking oysters, a life skill she passed down to her younger sister, Jazmine. They might have been born in the Yucatan and raised in Oklahoma, but The Oyster Girls were conceived in the briny waters of Tomales Bay.

“I call it the slippery slope upward,” Aluxa says. “It really is an obsession or an addiction.”

After shucking oysters on the beach for clients while working as a kayak guide on the bay, Aluxa was hooked. Transporting that experience to the Bay Area party circuit, she and Jazmine took their show on the road in 2007 as The Oyster Girls, catering events everywhere from wineries to fire stations. Quick to show off their knife skills, the sisters were often the life of the party. Their look was classy and sophisticated—much like the vintage girl lounging on a half-shell that makes up their business logo.

Sisters Jazmine, left, and Aluxa Lalicker maintain close relationships with local oyster farmers. (Deb Wilson)
Sisters Jazmine, left, and Aluxa Lalicker maintain close relationships with local oyster farmers. (Deb Wilson)
The sisters maintain close relationships with local oyster farmers. (Deborah Wilson)
The sisters maintain close relationships with local oyster farmers. (Deborah Wilson)

Everywhere the sisters went, people learned more about Tomales Bay – and more about the mystique of the oyster as an aphrodisiac, a fascination that goes back to ancient Greece and the Roman Empire. For Jazmine, part of the fun is “taking the sexuality and turning it into education, and showcasing the oyster for the femininity that it has, which I think before wasn’t really showcased before.”

The sisters’ nuanced approach is a welcome counterpoint to the stereotypical bro oyster shucker. “The number one biggest misconception with oysters is that it takes some big dude wearing, like, a rubber apron and rubber boots and really dirty gloves that have never been washed before. And they’ve got to power through this hard, really hard, dirty, gritty work,” Aluxa says. “It’s a huge misunderstanding,” adds Jazmine. “Because oysters are so delicate, and it takes so much finesse to open them.”

Another misconception is that an oyster party will turn into a hazmat scene. “I’ve had people gasp, like, ‘You’re going to wear that and shuck oysters?’” Aluxa says. “Or they ask, ‘Do I need to Saran-Wrap the bar area?’ They want to Saran-Wrap the whole room.”

“It’s not a crime scene,” Jazmine jokes. Quick to finish each other’s sentences, the two sisters were born in Cancun, Mexico, where their parents – their father is Mexican and their mother is from Oklahoma – ran a bed-and-breakfast. Not long after a hurricane ravaged the Yucatan peninsula, the family relocated to Tulsa, Oklahoma. It was in Sooner country, where, as a teenager, Aluxa tasted her first oyster. Her grandfather wanted to show her, “how to act on a date and what to expect on a date,” she remembers. “So I went out and bought a little black dress, and my grandpa picked me up in his truck and we went out and ate oysters.”

The briny, salty flavors blew her mind. Over a decade later, she migrated to Sonoma State University and was working for Blue Waters Kayaking on Tomales Bay when a friend taught her how to shuck an oyster. The sisters knew from the beginning that it would be important to create lasting relationships with local oyster farmers, especially Hog Island Oyster Co., Tomales Bay Oyster Company, and Drakes Bay Oyster Company. “I’ve always seen The Oyster Girls as a bridge between the oyster farmers and the party world,” Aluxa says.

Drakes Bay Oyster Company co-owner Ginny Cummings taught them that a handshake was all it took to do business. To this day, The Oyster Girls buy half their bivalves from the company, which pivoted to farming oysters in Baja, Mexico after closing down their operations in Point Reyes National Seashore in 2014. “They found that niche that no one else was doing at the time,” says Cummings of the sisters. “They had sass, but they also had class.”

Sisters Jazmine Lalicker, left, owner of The Schuckery, and Aluxa Lalicker, owner of The Oyster Girls. Photo taken at The Schuckery in Petaluma, Calif., on Tuesday, November 16, 2021.(Beth Schlanker/The Press Democrat)
Sisters Jazmine Lalicker, left, and Aluxa Lalicker at The Schuckery in Petaluma. (Beth Schlanker/The Press Democrat)
Oysters at The Shuckery in Petaluma. (Beth Schlanker/The Press Democrat)
Oysters at The Shuckery in Petaluma. (Beth Schlanker/The Press Democrat)

Those relationships came in handy when the Lalickers opened The Shuckery on the ground floor of Hotel Petaluma in 2016. Inspired by a trip to New Orleans, where hotel oyster bars are a way of life, the two carved out a 32-seat oyster bar that goes through 600-1,200 oysters a day. Jazmine, who once worked as a server at Petaluma’s Central Market, now primarily focuses on the restaurant, while Aluxa books Oyster Girl parties. Both businesses are starting to bounce back from the pandemic, along with the oyster industry as a whole.

During the restaurant hiatus, many of the meaty mollusks sat in the water for an extra 12 to 18 months, growing larger than usual. “I’ve never seen Kumamotos so big,” Aluxa says.

When it comes to local oyster terroir, Aluxa can get super nerdy.

“An oyster that was eating zooplankton is almost like a wine that came from stainless steel,” she says. “It’s going to be really bright, briny— steely and metallic. And an oyster feeding on phytoplankton, it’s still gonna have the salt of the bay, but it’s gonna have a sweeter finish, like seagrass and melon – even though it’s the same oyster from the same bay, at the same time of year.”

Still amazed that many locals take it for granted, both sisters cherish this time of year on Tomales Bay. “It’s a little-known secret, but it’s the most beautiful time of the year,” Aluxa says. “Sure, you get rain. But then you get four days of calm weather, with the water like glass. The migrating birds move in. The anchovies come in, and the whales are migrating. Californians eat most of their oysters in the summer, with outdoor barbecued oysters – it’s a very California thing. But really, I think the oysters are the best this time of year.”

Jazmine and Aluxa Lalicker’s oyster bar, The Shuckery, is located inside the Hotel Petaluma, 100 Washington St., Petaluma. 707-981-7891, theshuckeryca.com. For catering and events, visit theoystergirls.com.

From left, Tasso Herb Grilled Oyster with cure ham and herb butter, Rockefeller Grilled Oyster with spinach, parmesan, Pernod, and garlic, Classic Chipotle BBQ Oyster all served with lemon and grilled baguette from The Shuckery in Petaluma. (John Burgess/The Press Democrat)
From left, Tasso Herb Grilled Oyster with cure ham and herb butter, Rockefeller Grilled Oyster with spinach, parmesan, Pernod, and garlic, Classic Chipotle BBQ Oyster all served with lemon and grilled baguette from The Shuckery in Petaluma. (John Burgess/The Press Democrat)

How to Throw Your Own Oyster Party

Inspired by local oyster experts Jazmine and Aluxa Lalicker, we’re celebrating the season by honoring winter oysters. So grab a shucking board and some Sonoma County seafood and read on to learn about how to set up the perfect oyster party.

It may seem obvious but…

Make sure you invite people who love oysters, says Aluxa Lalicker, co-owner of The Oyster Girls and The Shuckery restaurant in Petaluma. You don’t want to throw a party where you’re shucking oysters and no one’s eating them – that’s no fun for anyone.

Out of the shell

Decide whether to hire a professional oyster shucker or do it yourself. If you’ve never brandished an oyster knife, practice ahead of time. Jazmine and Aluxa Lalicker have a how-to video at theoystergirls.com.

Source your oysters

Figure out if you’re going to get a bag of the same oysters, or do a tasting of several varieties. The Oyster Girls have oysters for pick-up and party kit trays to go. Or, if you’re driving to Tomales Bay to pick up oysters, bring a cooler, and don’t make too many pit stops on the way home. You don’t want your oysters to sit for long in the car.

Set up the bar

Don’t banish your oyster bar to a far corner of the party—choose a central location. Next to the alcohol is often a good idea, say the sisters. Picnic tables and wine barrels easily showcase big oyster platters.

Grab supplies

You’ll need a shucking board, oyster knife, glove, apron, and trash can. Also some crushed ice and platters if you’d like to display your oysters after shucking.

Wine, cocktails, tequila shots — all good!

“Really, it comes down to whatever makes you happy,” says Jazmine Lalicker of what to drink with your oysters. Wines made in stainless steel and neutral oak pair beautifully, especially Chablis and Chenin Blanc—and, of course, Champagne.

At The Shuckery, Jazmine serves a popular Huntress cocktail, with gin, vermouth blend, Campari, golden raisins, toasted oak, and Angelica root. And don’t forget: “The oyster can always be the salt to your tequila shot,” Aluxa says.

Meet the Forward-Thinking Young Wine Director at Healdsburg’s Little Saint

At age 28, sommelier Alexandria Sarovich considered leaving the wine industry. She had reached what felt like the top of her game at SingleThread, the Michelin three-star restaurant in Healdsburg. But the emotional toll of being furloughed during a shutdown and the widespread devastation of the pandemic had left her longing for a role with more connection. To stay grounded, and stay learning, she ended up accepting a gig as the wine director at Little Saint, the high-profile plant-based cafe, wine shop, and event space from the SingleThread team.

Sarovich grew up in a large Italian-American family in Chicago, the eldest of five kids, and often cooked for her younger siblings while her parents worked. “Food was a way I could bring my family back together,” Sarovich explains. Her mother stretched the family’s food budget to buy organic fruit and dairy, and supplemented with produce she grew in her own garden. Large family meals on Sundays were always a way to connect. “All my life I’ve been trying to recreate that special feeling of family and community and the nurturing aspect that food can provide,” she says.

At Little Saint, which opened in April, Sarovich has crafted an intelligent and of-the-moment wine list of some 300-plus bottles. She focuses on sustainably produced wines, local winemakers, and international producers—and highlights women winemakers and wines made by people of color.

Sommelier Alexandria Sarovich. (Kent Porter / The Press Democrat)

Sarovich says she challenges herself to think about more about interesting, everyday wine picks. “I love drinking wine with people who don’t work in the wine industry—like my childhood friends and my roommate’s mom—to get a sense of what most people like to drink,” says Sarovich. “I want to see how they look at wine. I really try to stay grounded because sometimes it’s easy to get too up-in-the-air with all the expensive wines.”

She is fond of wines from the Sonoma Coast, especially those from the Fort Ross-Seaview AVA. “The wines from that area are so balanced,” she says. “The high elevation combined with strong winds and coastal temperatures tends to make the grape skins a bit firmer, which provides more backbone and tannin structure to the wine. Then there is this beautiful bright red fruit with layers of complexity because of the soil.”

After living in Sonoma County for three and a half years, Sarovich says she loves the feel of a farm-focused community—especially during the harvest season, when, she says, “there is so much energy, it’s buzzing.”

That’s when she’ll bike through Dry Creek Valley, where she can admire fruit ripening on the vine and revel in the sense of possibility: “I can’t help but feel excitement about their potential.”

Little Saint, 25 North St., Healdsburg. 707-433-8207, littlesainthealdsburg.com

From left, 2021 Sutro, Sauvignon Blanc, Warnecke Ranch; 2018 RAEN, 'Sea Field' Fort Ross Seaview, Pinot Noir; 2021 Sophie James, Rose of Pinot Noir, Sonoma. (Kent Porter / The Press Democrat) 2022
From left, 2021 Sutro, Sauvignon Blanc, Warnecke Ranch; 2018 RAEN, ‘Sea Field’ Fort Ross Seaview, Pinot Noir; 2021 Sophie James, Rose of Pinot Noir, Sonoma. (Kent Porter / The Press Democrat)

Favorite Sonoma Picks

Little Saint wine director Alexandria Sarovich loves the complexity of these three local wines.

RAEN 2018 ‘Sea Field,’ Fort Ross-Seaview, Pinot Noir $95 Made by brothers Carlo and Dante Mondavi, this environmentally- conscious wine expresses the terroir of the windswept Sonoma Coast.

Sophie James 2021 Sonoma Rosé of Pinot Noir, $45 Sophie Grey, a mother of three girls, was a grape grower before she launched her own wine brand. Little Saint is the only wine shop that carries her wine.

Sutro 2021 Warnecke Ranch Alexander Valley Sauvignon Blanc, $35 Winemaker and artist Alice Sutro is a Sonoma County native. Sarovich says the wine is bright and balanced, and goes well with veggie-centric dishes.

7 Restaurants to Try Right Now in Sonoma County

Grilled Flat Iron with Sonoma succotash, popcorn and herbed butter from The Farmstand at the Farmhouse Inn in Forestville Tuesday, August 16, 2022. (John Burgess/The Press Democrat)

From tapas and champagne to a new pizza place, here’s where to eat this fall in Sonoma County. Click through the above gallery to see what to order.

Kancha

Kancha is the little tapas and bubble room I’ve always dreamed downtown Santa Rosa would support.

Chef Angel Cayllahua is an experienced chef and sommelier with a simple but ridiculously good menu of cold and warm tapas-style plates that draw from his Peruvian upbringing and Japanese restaurant training. His sake collection is stunning, the bubbly flights are fantastic, and the cozy interior space matches the clean, bright dishes coming out of the thimble-size kitchen.

Cold seafood bites of ceviche, tartare and causas (a Peruvian potato dish) are Cayllahua’s specialty. Salmon tartare ($17) is topped by a gentle foam of ponzu and studded with pine nuts and serrano chiles for a sweet-tart-briny mouthful.

Especially good is the limena causa ($22), made with a base of whipped purple potato mixed with lime juice and Peruvian chiles and topped with creamy Dungeness crab salad.

Larger hot dishes include Dungeness crabcakes ($24) and a shockingly good Peruvian play on mac and cheese ($16), with creamy, tangy huancaina sauce and a panko crust. Mussels ($18) come in a broth flavored with chicha de jora, a corn beer, and huacatay, a black mint paste — a distinctly Peruvian combination that works perfectly.

For dessert, Cayllahua offers a refreshing coconut parfait with coconut tapioca pearls, shaved ice, mango puree, and coconut foam. The wine list is impressive, but tasting flights ($35) of premier cru Champagne and sparkling wines are your best bet.

Open daily; happy hour from 4-6 p.m. 643 Fourth St., Santa Rosa. 707-623-9793, kanchasr.com

Parfait at Kancha Champagne Bar & Tapas in downtown Santa Rosa Tuesday June 14, 2022 (Chad Surmick / Press Democrat)
Parfait at Kancha Champagne Bar & Tapas in downtown Santa Rosa Tuesday June 14, 2022 (Chad Surmick / Press Democrat)
Strawberry summer drink at Kancha Champagne Bar & Tapas in downtown Santa Rosa Tuesday June 14, 2022. (Chad Surmick / Press Democrat)
Strawberry summer drink at Kancha Champagne Bar & Tapas in downtown Santa Rosa Tuesday June 14, 2022 (Chad Surmick / Press Democrat)

Everett & Jones

Sonoma County has always sheepishly claimed to have great barbecue, but only recently has true pit-smoked, Oakland-style ‘cue arrived on scene. Opened in July at the Graton Resort and Casino, this is the first North Bay location for the nearly 50-yearold barbecue dynasty widely considered part of the “holy trinity” of Oakland’s celebrated African American barbecue culture.

“I just want to continue to make my mom and aunties proud,” says Shamar Cotton, the grandson of founder Dorothy Everett and manager of the casino restaurant. Everett opened the first Everett & Jones restaurant in 1973 with just $700 to her name. The former domestic worker and single mother of nine children put her family to work as cooks, dishwashers and servers, and built a following through word-of-mouth. The menu has remained constant—smoked beef links, pork ribs, barbecued brisket, and chicken. Traditional sides include potato salad, baked beans, green beans, and macaroni and cheese.

Southern-style red velvet cake and peach cobbler round out an uncomplicated menu that stays true to the flavorful, slow-cooking methods that put them on the map.

Everett & Jones relies on the tried-andtrue Southern tradition of brick-pit grilling, a method that doesn’t always mesh with stringent California restaurant codes. (The original Oakland and Berkeley restaurants, built decades before modern restaurant regulations, have grandfathered clauses that allow the family to continue to cook with a brick pit and wood coals.) The new Rohnert Park restaurant, located on sovereign Native American tribal land, uses a double-decker steel cabinet encased in brick that holds burning wood coals at the bottom. A large upper oven smokes the delicious meats.

Open daily inside the Graton Resort & Casino. 288 Golf Course Dr. W., Rohnert Park. everettandjones.com

Delicious Dish

Hidden well off the Sonoma Square, this inconspicuous Arnold Drive roadhouse flies so far under the radar that most locals don’t even know about it.

But with some of the best casual, family-friendly comfort food around, it’s time for chef/owner Lauren Cotner’s close-up.

The menu focuses on nosh-worthy fried chicken sandwiches, everything-but-the-sink salads and a changing lineup of sandwiches and bowls. The fried chicken sandwich ($16) is the Goldilocks of sandwiches: a chicken breast that isn’t too thick or too thin, a soft but not wimpy bun, and breading that stays crispy-crunchy. My fave version is the Nashville, dripping with pimento cheese, sweet-pickled jalapeños, and ranch dressing. So naughty, but so nice.

Cotner’s hot Dungeness crab melt ($24) is loaded with warm Old Bay-spiced crab salad on a buttery brioche bun with cheddar, tomato, and Meyer lemon mayonnaise. And the banh mi-ahi poke bowl salad ($18) is a rainbow of black rice, pickled daikon, cucumber, watermelon radish, mint, and ruby-red chunks of tuna. Cotner gets the sauce game right on this one, putting both Sriracha aioli and a creamy miso dressing on the side.

Describing her restaurant as west Sonoma’s punk rock little sister, Cotner loves to surprise: Barbie dioramas peek from corners, a hand-drawn sketch of SNL actor Chris Farley sports a crown near the front door, and in-the-know diners frequent monthly movie nights in full costume. You can’t not have fun here.

Open for lunch daily; check online for updated hours. 18709 Arnold Dr., Sonoma. 707-721-4231, delicious-dish.square.site

California Fried Chicken at Delicious Dish in Sonoma (Heather Irwin/Sonoma Magazine)
California Fried Chicken at Delicious Dish in Sonoma (Heather Irwin/Sonoma Magazine)

Sonoma Pizza Co., Forestville

This open, airy restaurant finally brings much-needed casual, family-friendly dining to this stretch of rural west county. Wood-oven pizzas (from $18) keep it super-simple, with ingredients like San Marzano tomatoes, basil, chiles, and fresh mozzarella.

These blistery pizzas barely kiss the oven for 90 seconds or so but get a nice little char. The Mushroom Mycopia ($23) is made with a fermented dough topped with St. Jorge cream, mushrooms, mozzarella, cheese, spring onions, and chimichurri.

All pizzas are around 12 inches, so if you’re very hungry, you may want two.

Dips are part of the party, with homemade ranch, green goddess, and almond tahini ready to douse your slice. And the burrata and beets tapas ($18) are a beauty, with tart strawberries, pistachios, puffed barley, and a honey-sumac vinaigrette.

Open for dinner Wed.- Sun. 6615 Front St., Forestville. 707-820-1031, sonomapizzaco.com

Third Pig Bar

There’s nothing that says happiness more than a dangerously delicious Piggy Punch cocktail served in a pink pig glass. The former Mother’s Ruin has been transformed into a modern garden retreat that’s light and convivial with some of the most whimsical cocktails in town. It’s the post-Covid adventure of Alex and Katie Bowman of Graton’s Bowman Cellars, who said the idea to open the bar came to them like a ton of bricks after seeing the empty businesses.

“I was staring at this pile of bricks in my yard when I suddenly thought of the Three Little Pigs,” says Alex. “The third little pig built a house of bricks that withstood all the trials and attempts of the Big Bad Wolf. Right now, we don’t know what to expect with everything going on in the world. So let’s build something that is going to last.”

Danielle Peters and Erin Clossey of Good Folks Hospitality, a Sonoma beverage consultancy, are behind the cocktail menu, including the dangerously delicious Piggy Punch made with rum, Swedish punsch, chicha morada (a purple corn drink), lime, and cardamom bitters, served in a piggy cocktail glass. Classic cocktails like the Mai Tai and the Southside (gin, lime, orange bitters and mint) round out the menu.

After one drink you’ll be squealing for more. Open Wed.-Sat. evenings. 116 S. Main St., Sebastopol. thirdpigbar.com

Third Pig Bar in Sebastopol
Piggy Punch at Third Pig Bar. (John Wesley Brewer)

Corner Project Ales and Eats

At this family-run brewpub in Geyserville, one brother brews while the other operates the kitchen. More than just fried pub grub, chef Tom Adamian’s menu includes lots of comforting dishes like meatball sliders, pulled lamb on focaccia with preserved lemons, and a perfect pickled veggie sando on thick slices of bread (my favorite). They also sell beers from other brewers. Try the funky Smelltron 3030 from Santa Rosa’s Cooperage Brewing Co. or the super-refreshing Lavender Radler from Rohnert Park-based Old Caz Beer.

Open Thurs.- Sun. 21079 Geyserville Ave., Geyserville. 707-814-0110, cornerprojectales.com

Farmstand

The Farmhouse Inn, nestled among the vineyards of the Russian River Valley, has long been a favorite getaway. Alongside luxury accommodations, part of the allure has been the resort’s Michelin-rated restaurant.

New chef de cuisine Shawn Jackson Clara is overseeing a revamped dining program, which now includes a casual sister restaurant called Farmstand under the direction of executive chef Trevor Anderson. Both Clara and Anderson are Farmhouse Inn alums.

The menu is entirely a la carte, with impossibly fresh vegetable dishes (many from co-owner Joe Bartolomei’s garden) that change with the season, such as sweet roasted carrots with salsa verde, a late-summer pressed watermelon with feta and black olives, and cool red beets with berries and pistachio butter. Wood-fired pizzas ($24-$25) are generous in size—the maitake mushroom and black truffle-leek cream pizza takes top honors in our book. Larger entrees, like a grilled flatiron steak or half chicken, range from $18 to $38.

This captivating experience, with deck seating that takes advantage of the property’s woodsy charm, is a comparative deal for the area. On Wednesday nights, Farmstand offers a prix fixe menu for $65 per person, which includes an outdoor movie in the courtyard.

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