These Winemakers Are Raising the Bar for Canned Wines

Maker 2020 Sparkling Sauvignon Blanc by Bodkin Wines. (Courtesy of Maker Wine Company)

Wine in a can — wait, keep reading! — has been around since the mid-1930s, and the variety on store shelves has been growing in recent years. Yet there is an abundance of distrust and unease among many seasoned wine drinkers when you mention the concept.

But consumer acceptance is growing thanks to winemakers like William Allen, who produces three canned wines under his label Two Shepherds in Windsor, including Bucking Luna, a sparkling red blend of old vine cinsault and carignan.

“Consumers are right to have a mediocre opinion about canned wine, because a lot of canned wine has been mediocre,” Allen said. “It’s up to small wineries like us to help change that. So we’re canning some of the best juice we have.”

Allen is among a small but growing group of winemakers and sellers determined to elevate the canned wine industry by producing quality, limited-production wines that are delicious, convenient and not too serious. These winemakers choose quality over quantity, and their wines often sell out quickly.

Waves, a canned wine label from Las Jaras Wines. (Courtesy of Las Jaras Wines)
Waves, a canned wine label from Las Jaras Wines. (Courtesy of Las Jaras Wines)

At Sans Wine Company, which produces single-varietal, single-vineyard wines in cans, co-founder Gina Schober said the acceptance of canned wines continues to evolve and has accelerated over the past few years.

“From a sales perspective, things are very different now than when we first began making canned wine,” she said. “People are finally starting to understand you can get quality wines in cans. There will always be people who we’ll never convince because they are traditionalists, and that’s fine. But we try our best by offering high-quality wines that make people say, ‘Oh wow, these are really good.’”

Schober, who co-founded Sans Wine Company in 2016 with her husband, winemaker Jake Stover, was inspired to make canned wine when she noticed people floating down the Russian River in inner tubes. Both she and Jake have a background in the wine industry, so it was important to both of them to make a quality product. All of their wines are produced with organically grown fruit from old vine vineyards in Lake, Mendocino and Napa counties, with no sulfites or filtering. The resulting wines include a juicy carbonic carignan and a dry riesling from McGill Vineyard in Rutherford, Napa Valley.

Maker Wine Company sells premium canned wines from small producers throughout California. (Courtesy of Maker Wine Company)
Maker Wine Company sells premium canned wines from small producers throughout California. (Courtesy of Maker Wine Company)

At Novato-based Maker Wine Company, which sells premium canned wines from small producers throughout California, co-founder Sarah Hoffman said their mission is “to make wine more approachable and inclusive in a lighthearted way,” while keeping quality top of mind. The company focuses on single-vineyard, single-variety, small-batch wines and depends on a staff of sommeliers and industry experts to help taste and choose the wines.

“We want to highlight our winemakers and the wines they love, and those tend to be wines with a story and place,” Hoffman said. “That’s why we’re called ‘Maker.’ If you can’t figure out who the winemaker is on a canned wine website, that’s a really bad sign.”

Maker, which gained industry recognition for earning a gold medal and 96 points for its 2019 Mendocino Viognier in a can at the 2020 North Coast Wine Challenge, has been at the forefront of the most recent canned wine evolution. Millennial co-founders Hoffman, Kendra Kawala and Zoe Victor saw a significant lack in the quality canned wine market and were not impressed by the industry’s marketing efforts.

“Wine is an incredible product, but it doesn’t always present itself in the most customer-friendly way,” Hoffman said. “People really appreciate the fact our wines come in a single-serving package, especially those who live alone. Instead of opening an entire bottle of wine and risking spoilage, they can open a can and have a glass of quality Anderson Valley pinot noir.”

For Allen of Two Shepherds, who has a loyal following among natural wine drinkers who covet his Old World-style small-lot wines, one of the biggest hurdles in selling canned wine is changing consumer mindset about cost. Allen, whose wines are among the most fairly priced in Sonoma County, said some consumers “balk at the price of an $8 can of wine.”

“They don’t understand that a 250-milliliter can is one-third of a $24 bottle of wine. And that’s a pretty good price for carignan from 75-year-old vines,” he said. “Some people are still used to bulk wines being sold at $4 a can.”

Drink now

With no oxygen transfer due to the absence of a cork, wine in cans isn’t designed to age, so they won’t get any better with time. While the science is still uncertain on the shelf life of canned wines, we recommend you enjoy them within one year of purchase. And for best results, keep the cans chilled or store them in a cool, dark place.

“Our canned wine from 2019 still tastes as fresh as a daisy,” said winemaker Joel Burt, who co-founded Las Jaras Wines in Sebastopol with Eric Wareheim. Waves, a sub-label of Las Jaras, focuses on playful wines in sparkly packaging, including a juicy zinfandel and petite sirah blend; a zinfandel carignan rosé; and a white blend with grüner veltliner, chenin blanc and chardonnay.

“I’m a fine-wine guy, so canned wines really didn’t make sense to me in the beginning,” Burt said. “But now, I think it’s really fun to explore making casual, delicious, low-alcohol wines. And I couldn’t be more excited.”

A can of "Bucking Luna" sparkling Cinsault-Carignan at Two Shepherds in Windsor, Calif. on Tuesday, May 31, 2022. (Beth Schlanker/The Press Democrat)
A can of “Bucking Luna” sparkling Cinsault-Carignan at Two Shepherds in Windsor. (Beth Schlanker/The Press Democrat)

Here are some of our favorite canned wine picks:

Two Shepherds — 2021 Bucking Luna, sparkling cinsault-carignan, $8 per can, twoshepherds.com

Maker Wine — Sparkling Sauvignon Blanc from Bodkin Wines, six cans for $48, makerwine.com/products/bodkin-sparkling-sauvignon-blanc

Waves from Las Jaras Wines — White Blend, $12 per can, bit.ly/3m02wXl

Sans Wine Company — Rosé of Carignan “Poor Ranch,” six cans for $60, sanswineco.com/product/rose

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

Tasty New Thai Restaurant Opens in Rohnert Park

Thai Iced Tea, Pad Thai, and Yellow Curry with Sticky Rice from Charm Thai Kitchen in Rohnert Park. (Heather Irwin / The Press Democrat)

There is something remarkable about wok hay — the breath of the wok — when it comes to Asian cuisine: the hint of smoke, crispy bits mingling with softer noodles and vegetables, the unmistakable tang imparted by cooking in seasoned metal over a fire.

That’s why I’m pretty happy with the flavors of the newest entrant into the Thai game in Sonoma County, Charm Thai in Rohnert Park. Located across from Sonoma State University, it’s affordable enough for students, generous in its portions and has clean, bright flavors that aren’t completely dumbed down for American tastes.

A handful of dishes are standouts, and unique locally, including taro empanadas, kee mao (also known as drunken noodles) and chicken larb. Taro, a mildly sweet purple cousin of the potato, is an Asian staple; here it’s stuffed into fried pockets of dough and comes with a peanut-vinegar dipping sauce.

Taro empanadas at Charm Thai Kitchen in Rohnert Park. (Heather Irwin / The Press Democrat)
Taro empanadas at Charm Thai Kitchen in Rohnert Park. (Heather Irwin / The Press Democrat)

The kee mao is a mix of chewy rice noodles and vegetables, perfumed with basil and with a prickle of heat (here with jalapeños, which is slightly odd). There’s no alcohol in the noodles — the name is a reference to the need you’ll have for a drink after tasting the hot intensity typically associated with the dish. If you want that heat, ask them to turn it up from a two to a six. Larb salad, ground chicken served with lettuce leaves, is refreshing. The yellow curry is thick, creamy and packed with spices including turmeric, lemongrass and a touch of cumin.

The restaurant is an offshoot of Petaluma’s Lemongrass Thai, and I’ll note that I ordered the food through a delivery app. Some of the Yelp reviews have been pretty unflattering, but my experience was excellent. You’ll have to decide for yourself.

1710 E. Cotati Ave., Rohnert Park, 707-242-3016, charmkitch.com

El Torito Supermarket opens: The owners of Los Molcajetes, a bar and grill on Montecito Avenue in Santa Rosa, have opened a grocery store focused on Mexican and Latin American foods. The El Torito Supermarket is at 460 Mission Blvd., Santa Rosa.

Celebrate National Rosé Day in Healdsburg

Hooray for rosé! It’s summer and time to pull out your white shoes, shorts and, best of all, a little blush wine.

Though we’re happy to drink the pink year-round, Healdsburg’s Bacchus Landing will give props to rosé with an event from noon to 4 p.m. on Saturday, June 11 (National Rosé Day).

Yacht attire is encouraged (get out those captain’s hats, Hawaiian shirts and boat shoes). The festivities will include a live DJ, plus Aldina Vineyards, 13th & Third Wines, Dot Wines, Montagne Russe and Smith Story Cellars serving their newest rosés.

Tickets include a pour from each of the wineries. Black Piglet food truck will serve food for purchase.

14210 Bacchus Landing Way, Healdsburg. Tickets are $25 per person, at bit.ly/3GE8BCg.

Pair Doughnuts and Beer at HenHouse Brewing Co.

HenHouse Brewing and Johnny Doughnuts pair up for National Doughnut Day on June 3. (Courtesy photo)

Move over wine pairings, it’s time for doughnut and beer pairing. Because really, wouldn’t you rather have a few more carbs to light up your life?

Ready to fill your belly with deliciousness just in time for National Doughnut Day (June 3), HenHouse Brewing Co. is teaming up with Johnny Doughnuts for a limited-edition beer flight paired with Johnny’s mini doughnuts Friday, June 3 through June 5. The event will happen at the brewery’s taproom at 322 Bellevue Ave. in Santa Rosa and Palace of Barrels at 333 N. McDowell Blvd. in Petaluma.

The $22 tasting will include three new coffee- and pastry-themed beers, including:

“No Chocolate Frosted Mini Donuts Were Harmed In The Making Of This Barrel-Aged Pastry Stout,” a hearty brew aged in bourbon and maple syrup barrels. The chocolate-doughnut inspired beer is also made with Haitian cacao nibs and a blend of Tahitian and bourbon vanilla. Paired doughnut is a Maple Old Fashioned.

“The Delicious Little Devil,” barrel-aged in bourbon and maple syrup barrels and brewed with Land and Water coffee, paired with Chocolate Cake Doughnut.

“Fresh Pots” Coffee Saison, made with Land and Water coffee and paired with Lime Poppy Seed Glazed Doughnut.

If you want the expanded doughnut and beer experience, a Johnny Doughnuts coffee-and-doughnut-filled food truck will be serving up full-sized doughnuts at HenHouse’s Palace of Barrels in Petaluma 11 a.m. to 2 pm. Sunday.

In addition to the mini doughnuts, guests will also receive a free doughnut voucher with the purchase of a bottle of barrel-aged doughnut beer redeemable at Johnny’s locations throughout the Bay Area, including the shop located at 1200 Fourth St. in Santa Rosa.

The Best Cheap Eats in Healdsburg

Doubling as a health foods store and deli, Shelton’s in Healdsburg has long been a dependable market for nutritious grub at a fair price. The sandwiches are piled high with fresh ingredients and the hot bar is always stocked with prepared specialty foods. (Courtesy of Shelton’s Natural Foods Market)

In a city full of high-end restaurants, it can be difficult to find a delicious meal that’s easy on the wallet. But if you know where to look, Healdsburg has a selection of tried-and-true establishments serving up tasty, budget-friendly fare. Click through the above gallery for 10 places where you can get a bite to eat for $15 or less.

Downtown Bakery & Creamery: This humble bakery by the downtown plaza has been offering affordable, delicious treats for more than 30 years. It sells fresh-baked bread, breakfast pastries, delectable desserts, sandwiches and house-made ice cream. The best part? Everything on the menu, save for large cakes and a bag of bagels, is under $10. Best bites include the fig bar ($3.50), sticky bun ($4.50), brownie cupcake ($3.50), baby fruit galette ($7.25) and grilled ham and cheese ($7). 308 Center St., Healdsburg, 707-431-2719, downtownbakeryhealdsburg.com

The Wurst Restaurant: Opened by a Detroit native, The Wurst is a casual hot dog joint that fuses Midwestern specialties and hospitality with fresh Sonoma County ingredients. Several of its items are imported from the Midwest, all the sauces are housemade and there are 16 local beers on tap. Best bites include the Detroit Polish ($12), the Chicago Dog ($12) with green relish, dill pickle spears, fresh veggies and mustard, and the Southwest Turkey Burger ($13) with grilled veggies, pepper jack cheese, avocado and chipotle sauce. Though they’re passionate about sausage, Wurst’s burgers always get top billing in Healdsburg. 22 Matheson St., Healdsburg, 707-395-0214, thewurst.com

Shelton’s Natural Foods Market: Doubling as a health foods store and deli, Shelton’s has long been a dependable market for nutritious grub at a fair price. The sandwiches are piled high with fresh ingredients and the hot bar is always stocked with prepared specialty foods, such as rotisserie chicken, barbecued ribs and lemon fettuccine Alfredo. Best bites include the Crunchy Veggie sandwich ($10.99) with pesto, sprouts, cucumber, tomato, onion, avocado, almonds and cream cheese on light rye and the Sonoma Special ($12.49) with smoked turkey, pepper jack, avocado, red onions, lettuce and tomato on sourdough. 428 Center St., Healdsburg, 707-431-0530, sheltonsmarket.com

Taqueria Guadalajara: An unassuming hole-in-the-wall Mexican eatery, Taqueria Guadalajara is one of those places most adored by regulars and locals in the know. Fresh ingredients, generous portions, friendly staff and reliably affordable eats make this taqueria a true dependable gem. Best bites include the regular tacos ($3.69 each), chicken tostada ($6.65) and regular burrito with carnitas or al pastor ($10.75). Do yourself a favor and order a housemade horchata ($3.25) speckled with fresh bits of cinnamon. 125 Healdsburg Ave., Healdsburg, 707-433-1052, ordertaqueriaguadalajara.com

Plank Coffee: Sure, you could stop by this quaint coffee shop and pick up an artfully prepared latte or cappuccino, but why not sit down for a while to enjoy a farm fresh breakfast? From pastries to sandwiches, with plenty of vegan options, Plank Coffee has a healthy selection of morning dishes that won’t break the bank. Best bites include the housemade ginger cookies ($3.95 each) croissant, egg and cheese sandwich ($9.50), bagel, egg, cheese and tempeh bacon sandwich ($12.50) and breakfast burrito ($13). 175 Dry Creek Road, Healdsburg, 707-395-0572, plankcoffee.com

Otoro Sushi: This sushi restaurant and fish market sources fresh fish and other ingredients from local farmers’ markets, and imports other select quality, sashimi-grade fish from around the globe. Otoro excels in beautiful, colorful sushi rolls, light and crispy tempura, a cozy modern ambiance and fast, friendly service. Best bites include the miso soup ($3), spicy garlic edamame ($6), salmon skin roll ($8), spicy California roll ($8) and tempura veggie roll ($10). 1280 Healdsburg Ave., Suite 101, Healdsburg, 707-756-3932, otorohealdsburg.com

Big John’s Market: This family-run grocery store has been around for almost 30 years, selling everything from organic produce and local baked goods to housemade sausage and sushi. In addition to carrying items from dozens of local purveyors, Big John’s Market has its own sandwich deli, hot bar, pizza oven and burrito bar for affordable, made-to-order lunches. Best bites include the Fitch Mountain sandwich ($10.99) with chicken breast, bacon, provolone, tomato, avocado and chipotle spread; the Center Street sandwich ($10.99) with prosciutto, fig, blue cheese and olive spread; and the Funghi pizza ($9.99) with fontina, oven roasted mushrooms and thyme. 1345 Healdsburg Ave., Healdsburg, 707-433-7151, bigjohnsmarket.com

Flakey Cream Do-Nuts & Coffee Shop: Flakey Cream has been a dependable breakfast and lunch staple in Healdsburg since 1960, providing locals with housemade doughnuts and freshly brewed coffee in a casual dining atmosphere daily. But this is much more than a doughnut and coffee shop. The vast menu includes farm-fresh egg breakfasts, burgers, sandwiches and salads. Best bites include the regular glaze donut ($2), jelly-filled donut ($4), three-piece French toast ($12) and the classic breakfast burrito ($14). 441 Center St., Healdsburg, 707-433-3895

Summer’s Market & Deli: Built in the ’50s and reopened in 2014 as Summer’s Market & Deli, this old-fashioned, farm-to-market delicatessen offers gourmet sandwiches, wraps, salads and even housemade ice cream. The friendly staff carefully craft every sandwich with the right balance of ingredients, and the sides, like coleslaw, pesto pasta and macaroni salad, add the perfect touch to any lunch. Best bites include The Kevin with turkey, smoked gouda and fresh veggies on a dutch crunch roll ($8.99); The Jeff Reuben with pastrami, swiss, sauerkraut and thousand island dressing on rye ($9.99); and The Dirty Jerk with turkey, bacon, cream cheese, tomato and lettuce on a sour roll ($9.99). 557 Powell Ave., Healdsburg, 707-756-5004, summersmarketanddeli.com

Lola’s Market: A one-stop-shop for fresh, seasonal produce, quality meats, grocery items, baked goods and traditional Mexican food, Lola’s Market shines as a reliable grocer selling affordable fare. Next time you’re in need of mangoes, tomatillos, dried chiles or conchas, you’ll want to head over to Lola’s, and be sure to grab something from the kitchen while you’re there. Best bites include the al pastor taco ($2.99), quesadilla on a corn tortilla ($3.49), chicken torta ($8.99) and carnitas super burrito ($9.99). 102 Healdsburg Ave., Healdsburg, 707-473-0607, lolasmarkets.com

Mediterranean-Style Home in Kenwood Listed for $3.65 Million

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Mediterranean style is right at home in a 4-bedroom, 3.5-bathroom Sonoma Valley property for sale on Los Guilicos Avenue, just a short distance from Kenwood. The property, surrounded by rolling hills and vineyards, is listed for $3,650,000.

The vineyards are not part of the property but are located just outside, so vineyard views are available without the watering, pruning and harvesting that comes with owning a vineyard. The home, built in 2008, references a classic Mediterranean villa with clay roof tiles, arched windows, terracotta stucco and iron detailing.

The windows are framed in rustic stained wood. This material has also been used in the oversized doors and in the built-in cabinetry in the library and kitchen. The warm wood has been ornamented with wrought iron door handles and scrollwork — the door to the wine cellar includes forged grapes. Lots of travertine tile has been incorporated throughout the home.

The look of this home is both elegant and rustic, a good match for many of the buildings in the heart of Wine Country. 15-foot vaulted ceilings add to the sense of grandeur of the 4380-square-foot home.

Climbing ivy adorns the front of the home and a large four-tier fountain fit for an Italian villa stands in the center of the front yard. The landscape is kept simple and green with rows of ever-so-Mediterranean Italian cypress, plus hedges and balls of rosemary, lavender and other plants.

A built-in wood-burning pizza oven, a bocce ball court and a trellised swim spa make the property feel even more like a retreat. The great room is separated from the patio by large windows and French doors that allow for a seamless transition between indoors and outdoors. Click through the above gallery to view the property.

This home is listed by Julie Leitzell of Golden Gate Sotheby’s International Realty, 415-309-7074, kenwoodvilla.com

Sweet Sonoma Buys to Enhance Summer Meals

With summer around the corner, it’s time to start relishing the season. Eating is one good way to do that. Why not enhance the experience with a few local luxuries available in Sonoma stores? We’ve picked just a few of our favorites. Get in those stores and find them plus a few favorites of your own — click through the above gallery for details.

9 Must-Try Dishes at BottleRock 2022

Poutine fries from Poutine Brothers at BottleRock Napa Valley 2022. (Heather Irwin/Sonoma Magazine)

Asking a vendor whether the poutine fries at a music festival are “authentic” would be ridiculous anywhere but at BottleRock Napa Valley, the annual music, wine and food festival that features top Wine Country restaurants and Michelin-starred chefs in its culinary lineup.

Quelle surprise — the classic poutine with beef gravy, chewy cheese curds, green onions and crispy fries were on point. Maybe they weren’t as extraordinary as the pastrami-smothered fries from three-Michelin-star chef Christopher Kostow of Loveski Deli and the Restaurant at Meadowood, but they were delightful nonetheless.

Though it’s only been nine months since the 2021 BottleRock in September — delayed after cancellation in May 2020 and 2021 — crowds have returned to hear Metallica, Pink! and KYGO and taste dishes from more than 67 food vendors, down slightly from 75 last year.

More than just cold hot dogs and flat beer, BottleRock’s food lineup includes gourmet doughnuts, paella, lobster rolls and oysters along with craft cocktails, beer and local wines. If you’re going, here are nine to check out.

9 must-try dishes

Black Piglet Back BLT, $19: Toasted bread with ripe tomatoes, lettuce and garlic aioli that will bring you to your knees. The bacon is from John Stewart and Duskie Estes’ Black Pig Meat. Find it in the food truck area.

Ramen Burger, Nombe, $18: A “bun” of fried ramen noodles with a 50/50 Kobe beef and pork belly patty, slathered in miso sauce with blue cheese and buttered shiitakes. A little greenery includes arugula in wasabi aioli, tomato and cucumber pickles. Add a sushi “burrito” with spicy tuna and rice rolled into a seaweed wrap. Near the Williams-Sonoma Culinary Stage.

Salt and Vinegar Chips with Caviar Onion Dip, Charlie’s, $15: This forthcoming Napa restaurant has salty homemade vinegar chips, with onion dip studded with caviar. The caviar premixed into the dip was a bit of a letdown, but for $15, we were satisfied. VIP area.

Loveski Deli Loaded Fries, $18: Though chef Kostow was sequestered behind the VIP gates last year, this year us general admission festivalgoers can try his crinkle-cut fries with gooey white cheese sauce, pickled carrots and pastrami. Culinary Garden.

Root Beer Float, Mariapilar, $8: The float of creamy ice cream makes this drink an after-rocking cool down. Culinary Garden.

Classic Poutine, Poutine Brothers, $14: You know the drill: crispy fries, salty beef gravy and cheese curds. They’re crave-worthy and a perfect foil to those $18 craft beers. Culinary Garden.

Peanut Tofu Nachos at Azalina’s Malaysian, $9: A stomach-filling deal with braised tofu, pickled vegetables and a sweet-spicy peanut sauce atop ballpark tortilla chips. Culinary Garden.

Gerard’s Paella, $20: Heavenly saffron rice, vegetables and a topper of chicken and shrimp made in a giant paella pan. A festival staple and so hearty. Culinary Garden and VIP area.

Glazed Pork Belly Skewers, $18: The presentation of a giant hunk of pork belly on a skewer was more thrilling than the bland taste and chewy texture, but still a fun festival bite. VIP area.

Crooked Goat Brewing Comes Home to Petaluma

Karly Church serves up a beer at the new Crooked Goat Brewing Co. taproom on Howard St. in Petaluma on May 17, 2022. (John Burgess/The Press Democrat)

Many people know Crooked Goat Brewing as a hub for great craft beer in Sebastopol, but what some do not realize is that the brewery has roots in Petaluma.

Before opening Crooked Goat in the Barlow complex in 2016, co-founders Paul Vyenielo, Rich Allen, Andy Erickson, Andy Cook, Scott Tieman and Will Erickson crafted their brews in a small office space behind Pete’s Henny Penny restaurant.

Crooked Goat has come a long way since those early days, expanding its Barlow location three times to keep up with demand. On May 14, the brewery added a new taproom in Petaluma, just west of downtown. To Vyenielo, it felt like a homecoming.

“I was born and raised in Petaluma, and three of my partners are also from here,” he said. “We’d been looking for a second location for a couple years, and it just felt right.”

Paul Vyenielo of Crooked Goat Brewing, outside the new taproom in Petaluma. (Tina Caputo)
Paul Vyenielo of Crooked Goat Brewing, outside the new taproom in Petaluma. (Tina Caputo)

The search led Vyenielo and his friends to an 1880s carriage house at the corner of Howard Street and Western Avenue — only a few doors down from his childhood home. In later years, the space housed a tractor dealership and, most recently, a t-shirt print shop and ballet studio. The partners gutted the building and restored it to its original character.

“We exposed those beautiful bones,” Vyenielo said, “and when we saw the old wooden beams on the ceiling it was just so cool.”

Temporarily operating at one-third of the building’s 200-guest capacity (Vyenielo expects to be running at full steam as of Memorial Day weekend), the taproom is open from 11:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, and from 11:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. on Sundays. Within the next couple of months, once permits are fully approved, Crooked Goat plans to open for daily business.

Like the Sebastopol location, Petaluma’s Crooked Goat is family- and dog-friendly, with a comfortable neighborhood vibe. The taproom is spacious and open, with bar seating and long tables up front, and a large living room-style lounge area at the back. While Crooked Goat does not have outdoor seating, wall-sized rollup garage doors give the space an airy feel.

Crooked Goat features 18 beers on tap — brewed at the Sebastopol location — plus hard seltzer, zero-proof kombucha and artisan root beer. The brewery specializes in West Coast IPAs, and also offers a wide range of rotating brews from sours to lagers to fruit ales.

Food trucks provide beer-friendly noshing options, and in a few months, once interior renovations are completed, Acme Burger will begin delivering orders to Crooked Goat patrons from its new digs just across the parking lot.

If all goes well with the Petaluma taproom, Vyenielo might just get to quit his day job as a tile contractor and become a full-time Crooked Goat proprietor.

“I’ve been doing tile for almost 40 years now and it’s not nearly as fun as hanging out at the brewery,” he said. “Everybody that comes in has a smile on their face, and they’ve got a smile when they walk out.”

Open (temporary hours) 11:30 a.m.-10 p.m. Friday and Saturday, 11:30 a.m.-9 p.m. Sunday. 100 Howard Street, Petaluma, 707-559 5691, crookedgoatbrewing.com.

Santa Rosa Theater Company Tackles Gun Violence in New Play

Imaginists theater co-founder and actor Brent Lindsay, right, and David Roby during a dress rehearsal scene for “S D A (Someone Dies Again),” a new work that focuses on the role that gun violence play in American society at The Imaginists theater in Santa Rosa, Calif., on Monday, April 30, 2022. (Erik Castro/For The Press Democrat)

Collaborating quietly in their small theater in Santa Rosa’s A Street arts district, the Imaginists experimental theatrical company has been rehearsing a new project of potential artistic and social importance.

Titled “SDA (Someone Dies Again),” the experimental theater piece tackles the issue of guns and gun violence.

Developing the play during rehearsals, rather than from a previously written script, a local cast of 12 has been working for the past two months with acclaimed Hungarian director and playwright Árpád Schilling, who arrived in Santa Rosa in February to start planning the production.

Commissioned by the Imaginists and backed by a $150,000 William and Flora Hewlett Foundation grant, the piece premiered May 20 in San Francisco at Z Space, where the local company has worked twice before, and will continue June 2-11 at the Imaginists’ space in Santa Rosa.

Schilling said the intent of the play is not to deliver a lecture on gun violence but to examine the issue from a fresh point of view.

“We don’t focus on the gun. To have it onstage all the time would be like a Western movie,” Schilling said during a recent interview at the Imaginists’ theater. “Step by step, we formed our topic. We talk about the society behind the gun. We never say we know the answer.”

The playwright and director’s views on guns are influenced by his own background growing up in Hungary, he said.

“One of the strange things in the United States for me, coming from Europe, is guns. It is very rare there to read or hear that something happened with a gun. Here, if you go to visit someone, you can’t be sure if there is a gun in the house or not,” he explained.

He does not profess to be completely neutral on the subject.

“If you have a conflict, and there is a trigger in you, it may be much better not to have a gun next to you,” Schilling added.

During rehearsals, Schilling and the actors have experimented with characters, scenes and story.

“I am not a director who tells people what to do or to do this or that,” Schilling said. “We have given character onstage to be complex. Actors can propose changes, but I want to see good decisions reflected on stage. It’s editing and rewriting at the same time. People to accept that in the end, I decide.”

What Schilling and the Imaginists share is a commitment to developing theatrical pieces through interaction between author, director and cast, said Amy Pinto, artistic director for production at the Imaginists.

“Imaginists is a place that has developed over years of working with community members, emerging performers and professionals. We bring everyone together,” she said.

Schilling, 48, may not be a household name in the U.S., but he has built an international reputation and is respected in theater circles.

Between 1995 and 2008, his Krétakör theater in Budapest became the best-known independent theater company in Hungary and was recognized abroad as an innovative theater. Schilling disbanded the company in 2008 to create a performing and media art workshop called Chalk Circle. Schilling and his family left Hungary for France in 2018.

Founded in 2002 by artistic directors Pinto and Brent Lindsay, the Imaginists theater describes itself on its website as “a performance laboratory investigating the intersection of art and community.”

The roots of the Imaginists go back to 1994 and the performance collective KITUS (Knights of Indulgence Theatre United States), whose vision was a break from traditional and regional theater models. In 2001, the original group disbanded. Lindsay and Pinto went on to create the Imaginists.

What the Imaginists and Schilling share is a dedication to development of characters and stories through the rehearsal process, working with the actors to produce a performance piece.

The collaboration between Schilling and the Imaginists has a long history. In 2013, Pinto attended dunaPart, the Hungarian festival of independent theater, in Budapest and heard a talk by Schilling.

In 2014, Hungarian theater critic Tamas Jaszay took a tour of U.S. theaters in different cities. He saw a production by the Imaginists and suggested they collaborate with Schilling. Later the same year, Lindsay met with Schilling in Budapest and agreed to explore the idea.

In 2015, Schilling and his wife, Lilla, an actor, spent a week in Santa Rosa, meeting with the Imaginists and attending rehearsals, and plans for a collaboration moved forward.

Lindsay returned to Budapest in 2017, and then traveled with Schilling to Slovenia to see rehearsals and the premiere of “EXIT,” a theater piece directed by Árpád in three languages.

The collaboration got its big boost in 2018, when the Imaginists and Schilling received the $150,000 Hewlett 50 Arts Commission for their project. The plan was to premiere the work in 2020, but that was delayed by the coronavirus pandemic.

An initiative of the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, the Hewlett 50 Arts Commissions were launched in 2017 to celebrate the foundation’s 50th anniversary. The five-year, $8 million initiative supports the creation and premiere of 50 new works from outstanding artists.

In April, another Hewlett 50 project, “Wicked Bodies (Sonoma),” by choreographer Liz Lerman, premiered at the Green Music Center at Sonoma State University in Rohnert Park.

For Pinto of the Imaginists, “SDA” is not only the culmination of a long collaboration, but an opportunity to tackle the important issue of gun violence in a valid and dramatic way.

“There is a gun in the show. It’s a character,” she said. “Even when the gun isn’t there, it’s a presence.”

But for her, the significance of the project goes beyond that.

“International collaborations are rare. It requires a trust, to fail, to learn together, despite all of our differences. And we recognize through this process that whether we live in the same country or not, how do we collaborate? Can we can truly listen to each other?” Pinto said.

“It is good to create something together when we are all coming from very different backgrounds and experiences,” she added. “This language of theater, in this context, is an antidote and an exorcism.”

This article was originally published in The Press Democrat. You can reach Staff Writer Dan Taylor at dan.taylor@pressdemocrat.com or 707-521-5243. On Twitter @danarts.