Peri Olsson of Santa Rosa takes her dog Teddy on a walk at Taylor Mountain Regional Park and Open Space Preserve in Santa Rosa. (Alvin Jornada/The Press Democrat)
This article was originally published in January, 2020.
Grab your backpack, fill up the water jug and lace up those boots. It’s time to take a hike! And, if you’re so inclined, sip some wine: in Sonoma County, there are tasting rooms at the end of the trail. (Remember to call wineries in advance to make sure that they are open, to get hike dates and make reservations).
Preeti Mistry curates a team of BIPOC women chefs at J Vineyards & Winery. (Courtesy J Vineyards)
At face value, J Vineyards’ summer wine and food pairing experience, “Shifting the Lens,” will showcase three chefs of color (Jenny Dorsey, Preeti Mistry and Shenarri Freeman), pairing their culinary creations and favorite flavor profiles with J Vineyards wines.
But Mistry isn’t a face-value kind of person. An outspoken activist for food justice and inclusion, Mistry used their platform as a Top Chef Season 6 contestant and as a guest on Michelle Obama’s “Waffles + Mochi” Netflix series to spotlight the need for representation of people of color in the food world (Mistry uses the pronouns they/them).
As a new Sonoma County resident and curator of “Shifting the Lens,” Mistry is expanding Wine Country’s narrow vision of wine and food pairing — cheese, charcuterie, European cuisine — to include global ingredients and underrepresented voices.
“We wanted to do something that not only showcased different cuisines with the wine but went beyond that to the deeper meaning behind the pairings,” Mistry said.
Preeti Mistry curates a team of BIPOC women chefs at J Vineyards & Winery. (Courtesy J Vineyards)
The winery says the event will build on its “legacy of growing, evolving and challenging people’s notions on pairing wine with food,” according to the online description of the chefs’ curated tasting menus.
“At J, we believe that learning about how a meal is made, the story behind its ingredients and how the chef’s experience shaped the dish goes beyond culinary knowledge. It broadens our scope and takes us to a place of discovery and connection,” the winery website says. J Vineyards & Winery is owned by E. & J. Gallo.
During Dorsey’s, Mistry’s and Freeman’s monthlong residencies at J Vineyards, each will prepare a five-course tasting menu that will be featured at the winery’s Bubble Room and host a VIP dinner and discussion.
“It’s so rare for chefs like us, BIPOC (Black, Indigenous and people of color) women, to have the platform and stage, cooking the food of our own culture,” Mistry said of the Indian, Chinese and soul food cuisines featured in the series. “People think these might not pair well with wine, but that’s absolutely not true.”
Mistry, who identifies as a queer, first-generation Indian woman, plans to include green garbanzo beans with stone fruit, sprouted mung puri and hibiscus pani along with burnt masala quail with saffron rice and a dessert of saffron cardamom yogurt pudding. Dorsey’s and Freeman’s menus are still in the works.
Dorsey is the founder of Studio ATAO, a nonprofit that advocates for equitable standards in the hospitality industry. Freeman champions plant-based Southern soul food inspired by her family in North Carolina.
All three chefs focus on farm-to-table cuisine, using fresh and local ingredients, but Mistry said the moniker isn’t unique to European cuisine.
“Right now, I’m in a crunch for sourcing (these meals) at local farms. I’m running around to find someone growing parilla and shiso. It’s about dispelling the myth that the only farm-to-table food is European. Where do you think the rest of us get food?” Mistry said.
J Vineyards & Winery’s vine-covered Russian River Valley production facility. (Courtesy of J Vineyards & Winery)
While there were more than 10 chefs on the winery’s shortlist for the residency, Mistry said it came down to a handful of people who really inspired them.
“This is part of a larger vision,” Mistry said. The goal is to create mentorships and showcase people who can bring even more impact and change to the community.
Dorsey’s tasting menu will be at the Bubble Room July 7-10 and July 14-17, with a VIP dinner on July 9. Mistry’s tasting menu will be available Aug. 18-21 and Aug. 25-28, with a VIP dinner Aug. 20. Freeman’s tasting menu will be available Sept. 29 through Oct. 2 and Oct. 6-9, with a VIP dinner on Oct. 1. More details at jwine.com.
Outside of Big Bottom Market in Guerneville. (Courtesy Big Bottom Market)
Michael Volpatt, owner of Big Bottom Market, is perhaps best known for his biscuits, which were one of Oprah’s “Favorite Things” a few years back. But Volpatt, a fixture in this tiny Russian River community, has his hands in the mix in many ways beyond making biscuits.
Volpatt co-owns the Equality Vines tasting room across the street from the market, heads up a local PR firm and volunteers at a nearby pig sanctuary. Not to mention that at the beginning of the pandemic, he became the host of a self-produced cooking show, making livestreams of his homemade meals: “I didn’t know what I was going to do. I hadn’t found my pod yet. So I said, ‘I’m going to do what makes me happiest,’ which is to make my mother’s marinara sauce.”
After finishing a day’s work, Volpatt heads to what he calls his gym, nearby Armstrong Woods, where he hikes the redwood trails and does strengthening exercises. But it’s his connection to the people of Guerneville that seems to fuel his boundless energy and interests.
For a Russian River day trip that would make Volpatt proud, check out these favorite stops below in Guerneville and west county.
Big Bottom Market’s Lazy Day Chardonnay with lunch. For every bottle of wine it sells, the Guerneville restaurant donates $1 to a local nonprofit. (Karen Kizer/Sonoma Magazine)
Big Bottom Market
Volpatt’s market has terrific takeout, cookbooks and foodie gifts, and partners with winemakers to offer bottles that give back to local charities.16228 Main St., Guerneville, 707-604-7295, bigbottommarket.com
River’s End Restaurant & Inn
Specializing in spectacular sunsets since the 1920s, this restaurant overlooks the spot where the Russian River slips into the ocean. Try hyper-local Dungeness crab ravioli with wild mushrooms.11048 Highway 1, Jenner, 707-865-2484, ilovesunsets.com
The view from the River’s End Restaurant & Inn is a sweeping panorama of the Pacific at Jenner where the Russian River flows into the ocean. (Courtesy photo)
Christopher Queen Galleries
In nearby Duncans Mills, this two-story gallery features rotating exhibits of contemporary artists on the first floor, and, on the second floor, California landscapes from the 1800s and early 1900s.4 John Orr’s Gardens, Duncans Mills, 707-865-1318, christopherqueengalleries.com
West County Wines
Flambeaux Wines is run by a family from New Orleans that creates bottles to pair with Southern foods like gumbo and shrimp and grits. And Porter-Bass has been farming with biodynamic practices since the 1980s. Both wineries are open by appointment.Flambeaux Wine, 1333 Jack Pine Road, Healdsburg, 707-637-9019, flambeauxwine.com; Porter-Bass, 11750 Mays Canyon Road, Guerneville, 707-869-1475, porter-bass.com
Love Wins sparkling rosé wine, left, and Decision pinot noir released by Equality Vines. (Christopher Chung/ The Press Democrat)
Equality Vines
The Love Wins sparkling wine celebrates the landmark Supreme Court decision that legalized same-sex marriage.16215 Main St., Guerneville, 877-379-4637, equalityvines.com
When Pigs Fly Ranch
Some very fortunate pigs are living well at this sanctuary on the Russian River. Wesley, an 800-pounder, will roll over for belly rubs. Visits by appointment. whenpigsflyranch.org
Gail Coppinger, right, and Scott Woodson, owners of Elk Fence Distillery, make Fir Top Gin, The Briny Deep Whiskey and White Elk Vodka in the only distillery in Santa Rosa. (John Burgess / The Press Democrat)
When Scott Woodson approached his friend Gail Coppinger to gauge her interest in distilling, Coppinger needed some clarification.
“Distilled water? Perfume? I had no idea he was talking about whiskey,” recalled Coppinger, who was running an organic produce stand at the time.
The two had met years earlier while working as painting contractors. Coppinger, a house shingler by trade, had moved on from contract work when Woodson showed up at her produce stand to talk whiskey. After catching up, they discovered they both were yearning for a new adventure.
Gail Coppinger, right, and Scott Woodson, owners of Elk Fence Distillery, make Fir Top Gin, The Briny Deep Whiskey and White Elk Vodka in the only distillery in Santa Rosa. (John Burgess / The Press Democrat)
“I approached Gail with the idea of starting a distillery because I remembered how well we worked together,” said Woodson, who has been an avid home brewer since the 1990s. “I knew we would make a good team.”
Today, Coppinger and Woodson are the proud owners and distillers of Elk Fence Distillery, the first craft distillery in Santa Rosa. Located in an industrial building off Santa Rosa Avenue, the small-batch distillery produces an American single malt whiskey, a botanical gin and a barley-based vodka, all poured and sold in their recently opened tasting room.
(As for the name, it refers to the fence bordering a field where Woodson once grew barley. On the other side were elk, and he called the area “the elk fence.” The partners thought it a fitting name for their new venture.)
For Coppinger and Woodson, getting to this point was an exercise in patience and determination that brought a new crop of gray hairs. From ideation to first distillation, the process took about five years, which Coppinger compared to “going through a series of brick walls,” from complications with permits to the 2017 Tubbs Fire.
“You hit one brick wall, you figure out how to go through it and then you keep going,” she said. “Because at some point you’ve gone too far forward to go back.”
An old Steinway upright in the Elk Fence Distillery tasting room in Santa Rosa Tuesday, May 24, 2022. (John Burgess / The Press Democrat)
Breaking new ground
To start distilling, Coppinger and Woodson needed to apply for a distilled spirits permit. But before that, they needed to secure a lease on a distillery location.
Unfortunately, with no distilling experience, they found few property owners were willing to give them a chance — especially considering the flammability risk of spirits production. A year and a half later, they were grateful to obtain a location in Santa Rosa that would eventually become the town’s first distillery ever.
Then came the divorce.
The day before Coppinger and Woodson were scheduled to submit their distiller’s permit application, their attorneys called to discuss an urgent matter: tied-house laws.
In simple terms, federal and state tied-house laws prohibit distillers, brewers and winemakers from pressuring bars, restaurants and retailers to buy their alcohol. The laws came into effect after Prohibition, when alcohol beverage producers would often bribe saloons and retailers to sell their products in exchange for low-interest loans, free draft systems and other perks.
At the time, Woodson’s wife, Cat Cowles, worked for Hog Island Oyster Co., a popular oyster bar in Tomales Bay that had two liquor licenses. According to tied-house laws, that was a conflict of interest.
“If we wanted to be approved for our distiller’s permit, I would need to get a divorce!” Woodson said, laughing. “So that night, I broke the news to Cat. Fortunately, she agreed.”
“One of the things I love about Scotty is that he’s very even-tempered,” Coppinger said. “Nothing really rattles him. In that way, we even each other out. That’s one of the reasons our partnership is so strong and solid.”
By the time Coppinger and Woodson were ready to begin building their distillery, it was 2017, the year of the Tubbs Fire.
“When we told the fire department we wanted to build a distillery, they were like, ‘What?’” Coppinger said. “They had no idea how to handle us because there was no historical framework for building a distillery in Santa Rosa. There are numerous distilleries in Sonoma County, but each town has its own rules. So that made things very complicated.”
It would take three years for Coppinger and Woodson to build the distillery, but they forged ahead with determination throughout the process. To support U.S. manufacturing, they bought high-quality American-made equipment for their facility, including two copper Trident stills from Maine, a roller mill from South Dakota, a wort chiller from Arkansas and a boiler from the small town of Wyoming, Illinois.
Under the gaze of the mounted head of an elk purchased on eBay, co-owner Gail Coppinger checks a tank in the production room at Elk Fence Distillery in Santa Rosa Tuesday, May 24, 2022. (John Burgess / The Press Democrat)
For the tasting room, the pair cleverly transformed a tired office space adjacent to the distillery into a cozy bar beaming with character. Every object here has a story to tell, from the old-growth redwood bar dating to the 1800s, to the upright antique Steinway piano rescued from a basement, to the dark and dreamy wall art obtained at flea markets throughout the state.
Now, after years of delay, the Elk Fence tasting room is finally open for tastings, tours and select artisan cocktails.
The spirits
Elk Fence Distillery produces three core spirits, including a whiskey, a gin and a vodka.
Briny Deep ($140 a bottle), an American single malt whiskey, is made with local barley sourced from Admiral Malts in Alameda and Grizzly Malts in Rohnert Park. Aged for two years in new American white oak from Minnesota, it’s delightfully drinkable for such a young expression. “If you put good stuff in the barrel, it doesn’t take long to age,” Coppinger said.
White Elk ($35 a bottle) is a barley-based vodka that could stand on its own with just ice and a twist of lemon. Distilled only twice, the spirit retains a subtle sweetness with a hint of malt.
Fir Top ($50 a bottle) is a botanical gin made of juniper, coriander, tangerine and grapefruit from San Francisco Herb Co. It’s fresh, citrusy and destined for a gin and tonic with Fever-Tree tonic.
On certain days, Woodson whips up one or more of his inventive cocktails, like the popular Elksicle, with Fir Top gin, fresh tangerine juice, lemon and apricot liqueur.
The Elk Fence Distillery produces, from left, White Elk Vodka, The Briny Deep Whiskey and Fir Top Gin in the only distillery in Santa Rosa. (John Burgess / The Press Democrat)
Tastings include a complimentary tour, with additional bottles available for purchase. The spirits are also available at Bottle Barn, Willibee’s and in cocktails at Perch and Plow.
Looking forward, Coppinger and Woodson want Elk Fence Distillery to be a gathering spot, where people can listen to music or learn more about the art of distilling. They also hope to offer classes in distilling someday.
“People know how to make beer and wine, but distilling is often under a veil of secrecy. We want to share our knowledge with others,” Woodson said. “Some people call themselves a master distiller, and I just shake my head. You might know a lot, but you’ll never know everything. That’s why we’re always learning and experimenting.”
Tastings from $10, waived with purchase. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Fridays and by appointment. 464 Kenwood Court, Suite E, Santa Rosa; 415-497-4338, elkfencedistillery.com
You can reach staff writer Sarah Doyle at 707-521-5478 or sarah.doyle@pressdemocrat.com.
Dolsot Bibimbap, rice topped with vegetables and fried egg in a sizzling stone pot with beef, with traditional Korean side dishes from Soban Korean in Petaluma. (John Burgess/The Press Democrat)
Hungry for something different? Check out Petaluma’s new restaurants (welcome, Table Culture and Stellina), a wildly inventive destination (you go, Street Social), a cultural gem (Korean in P-Town!) and a wonderful spot coming soon (hello, Costeaux).
Stellina Pronto
If you’ve never had a cornetto, here’s your chance to fall in love with the soft, lighter Italian-style croissant stuffed with goodies like custard, Nutella or jam. Sugar speckled morning buns beckon, too, as does a phyllo-layered raspberry puff anchored by plenty of pastry cream. At lunch, swoop in for the fabulous focaccia sandwiches — the bread is pillowy, golden, chewy, and so crackly on top it almost looks like fried cheese (get it loaded with Grandma Vera’s meatballs, herbed red sauce, fresh basil and melted provolone).
Custom cakes at Stellina Pronto. (Courtesy Stellina Pronto)Nutella cornetto filled with the creamy chocolate and hazelnut spread, drizzled with chocolate ganache, and topped with whole toasted hazelnuts, at Stellina Pronto. (Courtesy Stellina Pronto)
Owners Christian Caiazzo and Katrina Fried got their start in Point Reyes, with their Osteria Stellina, so you’ll see accents like Point Reyes Toma cheese or Cowgirl Creamery’s Mt. Tam Triple Cream cheese on a puff pastry with organic local egg and Petaluma’s Caggiano Company ham. That matcha in the frothy tea, though? It comes straight from Kyoto, Japan.
Chef-owners Stéphane Saint Louis and Steven Vargas like to add twists to classic dishes, for extra “pow” on the palate. So commit to a five- or seven-course tasting menu and you’ll find some creative takes, such as grilled asparagus topped in hollandaise, but also umami-rich X.O. sauce and sweet-salty pepitas. Or scallops with snow peas, but also coconut cream. Or homemade Parker House rolls with bone marrow butter, but also ramp powder and leek flowers. It’s haute cuisine, to be sure, but with the chunky block wall building that looks like a renovated auto repair shop, it feels neighborhood casual, too.
Dessert featuring choux glacé, dulce de lèche and chocolate at Table Culture Provisions in Petaluma. (Courtesy of Table Culture Provisions)Hiramasa with pomelo and kimchi at Street Social in Petaluma. (Courtesy of Street Social)
Street Social
Menus are revamped every Tuesday, to keep you coming back for new, delicious, mad scientist surprises like chicken liver mousse kicked up with Ethiopian berbere pepper, or gluten-free golden fried chicken plated with charred sprouting cauliflower and Indonesian sambal chile paste. Owners Marjorie Pier and Jevon Martin also have fun with their beverage list, showering it with small production bottlings from Europe (their orange wine is organic, natural Pinot Grigio Kabaj Sivi from Goriška Brda, Slovenia) and, yep, a variety of canned beers.
The dishes can be unfamiliar to many palates: golbaengi-muchim, sea snails tossed with vegetables in a sweet-spicy vinaigrette, or doenjang jjigae, a fermented soybean paste soup, for example. But owners Daniel and Sarah Kim also offer more approachable yet still exciting fare like seafood jeon, a hubcap-size, inch-thick pancake studded with chopped shrimp, scallops, squid and tender vegetables, then skillet-fried to a crisp edge and fluffy interior for dipping in sweet-tangy Korean soy sauce.
Kimchi Jjigae, bottom, spicy homemade kimchi soup with pork and organic tofu, and a side of kimchi from Soban Korean in Petaluma. (John Burgess/The Press Democrat)
This is real deal cooking, as most entrées come with banchan, the colorful collection of small side dishes that are a Korean signature. Here, we savor rainbow selections of homemade kimchi, plus nibbles like marinated bean sprouts, pickled cucumber, fish cake, turnips with red chile, Korean spinach, crisp ueong (gobo root) and yeongeun (lotus root). For spicy plates, be sure to order a Korean beer or soju (vodka-like rice drink) — it will soothe the burn from the delectable kimchi jjigae, a pork-tofu stew swirled with Korean red chile pepper and kimchi.
A landmark for nearly 100 years in Healdsburg, the café will boast an outpost later this summer in the historic Hotel Petaluma on Washington Street. Founded in 1923 and owned by the Seppi family since 1981, the bakery is beloved for its hand-shaped, long-fermented artisanal breads baked on an Italian hearth oven. Over the years, the selection has expanded to include treats like chocolate tortes, fruit-nut tarts, feather light macarons, and elaborate cakes. Stop in, too, for a luxurious breakfast (cinnamon walnut bread pain perdu draped in pure Vermont maple syrup) and lunch (hearty, gooey cheese-capped French onion soup, or chicken panino slathered with tangy lemon cilantro mayo on focaccia).
Videographer Jake Viramontez sets up his editing station in his Graton studio. Viramontez started a nonprofit to make fundraising videos for other nonprofit groups. His video on Sebastopol’s Ceres Project inspired Sony to gift him their latest FX3 camera and then hired him to direct up to 10 short films for other nonprofits in their Create Action campaign. (Photo by John Burgess/The Press Democrat)
When Jake Viramontez was a kid growing up in San Jose, he loved watching international spy thrillers, remote adventure films — “anything where people would explore and navigate the globe with confidence.”
“I guess I’m still trying to live out that reality,” he says, only days before flying to Germany for a film shoot. At 34, he’s already been to 54 countries, making both advertising films and short promotions for nonprofits. In 2021, after working in Los Angeles for over a decade, he moved to Graton.
On a whim, Viramontez created Free Exposure, an initiative that offered to make films for nonprofits in need at no cost. He started with a short for Our Own, a Los Angeles nonprofit that helps underserved kids with college prep and business internships.
Changing the name of the initiative to “Sown,” he focused his second film on the Ceres Community Project, a life-altering Sebastopol group that works with teen volunteers to grow and make organic meals for those facing serious illness. The work was screened at this year’s Sonoma International Film Festival and can be seen at ceresproject.org.
Videographer Jake Viramontez, of Graton, started a nonprofit to make fundraising videos for other nonprofit groups. His video on Sebastopol’s Ceres Project inspired Sony to gift him their latest FX3 camera and then hired him to direct up to 10 short films for other nonprofits in their Create Action campaign. (Photo by John Burgess/The Press Democrat)
Nonprofit storytelling
“As a filmmaker you’re always telling the story of the potential of the human spirit; of our ability to overcome obstacles and to emerge on the other side stronger. That’s the hero’s journey. That’s ‘Star Wars.’ That’s ‘The Odyssey.’ And I think nonprofits live that every single day.”
Biggest challenge
“Asking for money for this initiative. I have no problem raising for other people, and I actually really enjoy it. But I’m really bad at asking for money for Sown.”
The takeaway
“It feels like purpose. It’s why I like the name ‘Sown’ so much, because it feels the way that you would look at a giant oak tree – and go, ‘Wow, that started somewhere.’ And it started as an acorn.”
See and learn more about Jake Viramontez’s work at sownforgood.com.
Mulberries can be muddled into refreshing summer drinks. (Shutterstock)
As spring unfurls into summer, a bird’s-eye view of Sonoma County reveals a patchwork of leafy mulberry trees, many heavy with fruit, stretching from Two Rock to Sonoma, from Lakeville to Dry Creek Valley, from Penngrove to Jenner.
There are old trees, new trees, fruitless trees and trees that produce the rare white mulberry. Mulberries do not ripen all at once. A single tree can be harvested for weeks, beginning in May and continuing through late June.
Some of this local fruit ends up at farmers markets, but it often sells out quickly. Most mulberries, we hear, are enjoyed fresh, but if some manage to make it back home, try them folded into scones and muffins, cooked into jam or chutney, or muddled into refreshing summer drinks, such as this one, inspired by a recipe in Robert Kourik’s 2021 book “Sustainable Food Gardens: Myths & Solutions.”
Mulberry-Ginger Mocktail
Makes 1, Easily Doubled
• 1 slice fresh ginger, about the size of a quarter
• 1 small lime wedge
• 3 tablespoons fresh mulberries
• 1 ounce freshly squeezed lime juice
• 1 bottle ginger beer (we the Fever Tree brand)
• Ice cubes
• 1 small sprig of mint or cilantro
• 2 or 3 whole mulberries
Put the slice of ginger into a large mug or pint glass and use a wooden pestle to gently pound, or muddle, it. Add the lime wedge and pound gently; then add the mulberries and pound gently again, just enough to break up the berries. Pour in the ginger beer, stir gently, and add three or four ice cubes.
Garnish the drink with the sprig of mint or cilantro, top with whole mulberries, and enjoy.
To make this into a cocktail, add 1 ½ ounces vodka with the lime juice.
Dustin Valette, co-owner and chef at Valette and The Matheson in Healdsburg. (Courtesy of Michael Woolsey)
The wait for the annual fall Michelin awards can be grueling for restaurateurs, so the restaurant guidebook dangles a few carrots in the months before, including “discoveries” under consideration for a star or Bib Gourmand.
Healdsburg’s Matheson restaurant was one of 17 recently-opened restaurants in California tapped for the honor this week and featured on guide.michelin.com. The Matheson, a years-in-the-making project from Chef Dustin Valette, opened in fall 2021 with a fine-dining restaurant, a private mezzanine and an upstairs lounge called Roof 106.
Dustin Valette, co-owner and chef at The Matheson in Healdsburg. (Courtesy of Michael Woolsey)
“Chef Dustin Valette’s latest venture is in a soaring complex, but that never takes the focus away from the menu that weaves seasonal products with California flair and Mediterranean elements,” said the Guide’s “Famously Anonymous” inspectors in a press release. This is the first nod for Chef Valette, whose namesake restaurant, Valette, has never been awarded a Michelin star despite its popularity and creative, locally-sourced menu.
Highlighting notable new restaurants enables food lovers to “enjoy new discoveries” and note “culinary gems,” according to writers of the California Michelin Guide. It’s also a chance for curious diners to avoid the mobs after restaurants are starred.
The Matheson is at 106 Matheson St. in Healdsburg, thematheson.com. Reservations are highly recommended.
Kona Kampachi Ceviche with avocado, kohlrabi, citrus kosho from The Matheson in Healdsburg. (John Burgess/The Press Democrat)
Also included in the “new discoveries” list of California restaurants (with Inspectors’ notes) are:
Abacá, San Francisco: Chef Francis Ang, together with wife and co-owner Dian, have produced this ode to Filipino cooking in the lush Kimpton Alton Hotel.
Be.Stéak.Ă, Campbell: An elegant ambience complements an elevated menu of exceptional steaks and an array of dishes at Chef Jeffrey Stout’s newest restaurant.
Birch & Rye, San Francisco: At this cozy nook, Chef Anya El-Wattar combines her upbringing and restaurant chops to offer a unique, ingredient-focused interpretation of Russian cuisine that is in equal measure indulgent and fresh.
Dela Curo, Oakland: Located in Swan’s Market in downtown Oakland, this order-at-the-counter style of spot is brought to diners by Chikara Ono.
Donaji in San Francisco. (Courtesy of Stephanie Pass)
Donaji, San Francisco: Chef Isai Cuevas, who earned a reputation selling his excellent tamales at farmers markets across the city, now has a cheerful, neighborhood brick-and-mortar.
Ernest, San Francisco: Chef Brandon Rice’s hip, irreverent cooking style sets the vibe, exemplified in fancy-meets-comforting combos like Kaluga caviar with crème fraîche and tater tots.
Good Good Culture Club, San Francisco: The vibrantly flavorful cooking here highlights Southeast Asian flavors and unique Californian expressions in dishes like a signature adobo-glazed fried chicken wing stuffed with garlic rice.
Hawks, Granite Bay: The straightforward menu reflects the seasons, offering a small selection of familiar plates heightened with a touch of oomph.
Lane 33 Café in Napa. (Courtesy of Jose Calderon)
Lane 33 Café, Napa: In the category of bowling alley eats, mole and quesadillas aren’t likely to spring to mind, but Chef Alex Soto’s skillful, flavor-packed Mexican cooking served Wednesday-Sunday will change your outlook.
Le Fantastique, San Francisco: Creativity and finesse are part and parcel of the cooking, and the too-cool vibe and vinyl soundtrack are matched by gracious hospitality.
Miller & Lux, San Francisco: Fine dining may seem an unlikely find in the shadow of the hulking Chase Center arena, but this stunning harborage from Chef Tyler Florence is worth a splurge.
Nisei, San Francisco: ”Nisei” refers to the American-born children of Japanese immigrants, which Chef David Yoshimura is; the synthesis of that heritage forms the basis of his cuisine.
San Ho Won in San Francisco. (Courtesy of Eric Wolfinger)
San Ho Won, San Francisco: Combining the talents of Chefs Corey Lee and protégé Jeong-In Hwang, here it’s safe to expect the exceptional. The kitchen’s refined technique deftly combines traditional Korean tastes with a sense of novelty.
Sato Omakase, San Francisco : This stylish counter offers an ambience of restful tranquility, but more importantly, it serves up an indulgent tasting that highlights painstakingly sourced ingredients.
Sorella, San Francisco: The spirited younger sister to grande dame Acquerello; the family resemblance is nonetheless apparent in the thoughtful cuisine, which runs Californian by way of Northern Italy.
Stokes Adobe, Monterey: The small, ingredient-driven menu draws upon French and Italian elements, seen in hearty, satisfying dishes like the maltagliati pasta in prosciutto-parmesan broth.
Each morning at the Naked Pig in Santa Rosa, boxes of veggies are cut and juiced with the green waste going into one bucket to be added to the compost at owner Dalia HernandezÕs home, while another bucket is filled with organic table waste destined for the municipal green waste can. (John Burgess/Sonoma Magazine)
A wall inside the Naked Pig in downtown Santa Rosa is lined with colorful jars of preserved tomatillo salsa, fermented ketchup, and three types of quince preserves. The counters are adorned with vases of lacy fennel fronds, yellow sorrel flowers, miner’s lettuce, and an avocado fallen from a nearby tree. And the menu offers a decadent waffle topped with jam made from Santa Rosa plums picked just down the street.
“I don’t waste food, but one of the things I do is forage food, especially locally,” says chef/owner Dalia Martinez. “We have an excess amount of food trees. I’ve been in the practice now of collecting these urban foraged fruits. I use them to make jam, soda syrups, and whole preserved fruit for the restaurant.”
Martinez, who was raised in Santa Rosa, also saves scraps from the kitchen for the worms in her home compost bin, to be converted to nutrients for her flower and herb garden. She orders ingredients judiciously and adjusts portion sizes and sides to give guests more of what they want and less of what they don’t — and sends whatever is scraped from their plates to the green bin out back for pickup by local waste servicer Recology, which takes the materials to an industrial composting facility.
Dalia Martinez, chef and owner of the Naked Pig in Santa Rosa, uses the bottom of her leeks for her frittata recipes and adds the green tops to her pork bone broth. (John Burgess/Sonoma Magazine)
With a passion for snout-to-tail, root-to-flower cooking, Martinez is a true believer in the idea that no edible food should go to waste. But she’s far from alone in Sonoma. The Naked Pig is among 14 restaurants countywide to be recognized by Slow Food USA for its social and environmental practices, and plays one part in a larger system of farms, eateries, and food-gleaning organizations working daily to reduce food waste.
In fact, every Sonoma County restaurant is now involved in the effort: composting, once the province of crafty home gardeners, is now California law. Senate Bill 1383, passed in 2016, requires that as of this past January, all restaurants send their food scraps and soiled napkins not to the trash, but to the organics bin for separate pickup. This ensures that their green waste gets a second life — and potentially a third, fourth, and so on — as nutrient-rich compost.
Composting brings the additional benefit of drastically reducing greenhouse gas emissions that occur when food and other organic matter slowly decompose in a typical municipal landfill. In California, landfills are the third-largest source of methane emissions, responsible for about 20% of the state’s total. Methane is an especially bad climate actor: while it persists for a relatively short time in the atmosphere, it is 84 times more potent than carbon dioxide.
Dalia Martinez, owner of the Naked Pig in Santa Rosa, brings in her own edible flowers and table arrangements from her home garden. (John Burgess/Sonoma Magazine)
At first, Gustavo Gutierrez of Los Tres Chiles in Santa Rosa’s Bennett Valley neighborhood thought composting would be a financial burden for his popular Mexican restaurant. “I remember when [Recology] approached us for the very first time. ‘Oh my God, how much is this going to cost?’ he recalls thinking. “At the end of the day, it’s like, ‘What is this going to cost me?’” He hesitated, but eventually signed on. He got new green bins for the kitchen, bought compostable bags to line them, and began training employees on what went where. After a couple months, separating out organics and keeping the bins clear of non-compostable contaminants became second-nature, Gutierrez says.
That’s when reality set in: Composting wasn’t costing him money — it was saving it. “We went from a big bin of just garbage to the smallest bin of garbage that we can get,” he says. “Every penny that you spend for that program, it’s worth it, to see the reduction in garbage — and actually, you save money because your bin is now smaller.”
Los Tres Chiles downsized from a 3-cubic-yard bin to a 1-cubic-yard bin in the alley out back, saving plenty on weekly trash service. Similarly, in the kitchen, which was once replete with waste bins, staff now slide or dump veggie scraps, leftovers, and other organics into one of four green bins. Landfill waste — mostly plastic bags that held tortillas, chicken, or other ingredients — is collected in just a single trash can.
After its trucks make their rounds to restaurants like Los Tres Chiles all over Sonoma County, Recology delivers organic waste to a commercial compost facility in either Richmond or American Canyon, says Recology’s Waste Zero department manager Celia Furber. (Residential green waste goes to either Ukiah or Novato.) Owners of these facilities then sell most of the compost they’ve made to individual farms and wineries throughout the region, Furber explains.
Compost can also be used by local ranches. Research from the Marin Carbon Project, a consortium of public agencies, nonprofits, and university researchers, has shown that compost applications to grassy or shrubby rangelands — which make up roughly a third of the land in Sonoma County — can further mitigate climate change by promoting plant growth, which then sequesters carbon in the soil.
Organic materials from commercial compost bins are unloaded at the Recology waste facility in American Canyon. (Beth Schlanker/The Press Democrat)
In addition to the new composting rules that took effect in January, a second component of SB 1383 that’s still being rolled out addresses another, arguably more egregious form of waste: usable, edible food being thrown away in the trash.
The law requires that by 2024, large restaurants, hotels, cafeterias, event spaces, and other venues donate all surplus edible food and produce to food-recovery organizations and services. This requirement is already in effect for grocery stores, wholesale food vendors, and food distributors.
Restaurants in Sonoma County generally do a good job of not throwing away edible food, says June Michaels, founder of Sonoma Food Runners. The nonprofit’s mission is to alleviate hunger and prevent food waste by collecting and distributing quality perishable and prepared foods that would otherwise go to waste. Almost one in four Californians doesn’t have enough to eat, according to CalRecycle.
At many restaurants, excess food gets integrated into new dishes or is fed to workers, Michaels explains. A handful of local restaurants do occasionally call her up to donate, and one café offers baked goods on a weekly basis. “The chefs get super-creative, and I admire that,” Michaels says. “If they have anything they want to donate, they know they can trust us to pick it up safely and take it to someone who needs it.”
When the new food-recovery law for restaurants takes effect in 2024, donations to Sonoma Food Runners and similar local organizations could increase. Xinci Tan, organics program manager for Zero Waste Sonoma, a regional government agency operating programs to reduce landfilled waste, says about 30 restaurants in the county are large enough to be affected by the new requirement. They’ll be on the hook to promptly donate any edible, if less-than-perfect, food they may currently find more convenient to trash than to serve to those in need.
June Michaels, left, with Sonoma Food Runners, a local nonprofit that collects and distributes surplus edible food. Michaels’ group hopes to see an uptick in donations in 2024, when new state laws will require that larger restaurants donate surplus food to those in need instead of throwing it away. (Christopher Chung/ The Press Democrat)
Simultaneously, broader business forces are converging to help prevent waste, even before meals are made. Restaurants of all sizes, still reeling from the pandemic, now face rising food costs due to supply-chain disruptions, transportation costs, and inflation, in addition to drought and other climate impacts. Buying too much is a major liability.
Crista Luedtke, chef/owner of boon eat + drink and Brot restaurants in Guerneville, believes that reducing food waste is increasingly critical for restaurants in today’s economic environment. “Everyone in the business, we all have to be focused on it,” she says. “Margins are so slim, and food waste heavily impacts that and your ability to be successful.”
From this perspective, even kitchen scraps dutifully diverted from the trash to the compost can look like waste. The Environmental Protection Agency has designed a “Food Recovery Hierarchy” that helps make this clear. At the tip of the pyramid is landfill/incineration, the least-preferred option, and the last resort for food disposal if no other options are available. Until recently, this choice has been the status quo for many restaurants and other businesses that handle food, including supermarkets.
After landfilling, the next-best alternative is composting. Better yet are industrial uses like converting cooking oil into biodiesel; feeding animals (a fairly common practice in Sonoma County); and, of course, feeding hungry people by donating surplus edible food to food banks, soup kitchens and shelters.
Finally, the base of the pyramid is source reduction — creating less food waste in the first place. This is where restaurants can save money by ordering ingredients more conservatively and by converting what some may consider scraps into perfectly good food — even exciting and innovative haute cuisine, many local chefs say.
“Right now, the cost of everything is going up,” says Dino Bugica, head chef and owner at Geyserville restaurant Diavola Pizzeria & Salumeria, another Slow Food award recipient. “We just try to be really smart with the menu … We try to have a plan. We look at the menu: ‘This is where this goes, this is where this goes.’ It’s kind of fun to puzzle it all together.”
What that puzzle looks like varies from season to season, Bugica says. “Right now, with a lot of vegetables, like the spring garlic, spring onion tops, and all the little artichoke and asparagus shavings, we make a really nice vegetable stock.”
Bugica also features high-quality seafood and meats on his menu, all parts of which eventually end up in recipes. Trimmings from beef and pork and pieces of fish or shrimp can be reduced in a sauce and then frozen for later use. Even fish bones and heads can be dehydrated and turned into powder for use in sauces.
“Some of that stuff is traditional,” Bugica says. “I mean, people have been preserving stuff forever. So it’s kind of a good reminder about just keeping the pantry stocked. You never know when you’re gonna need that roasted fish bone sauce.”
At Crista Luedtke’s boon eat + drink, reducing waste at the source means noticing what’s left on people’s plates so portion sizes can be adjusted accordingly, and being diligent about ordering to avoid unused ingredients. “It’s crucial to the vitality of my operation for us to have very little food waste and food loss,” she says. “We’re keen on planning appropriately, so we can make sure that we move it, as opposed to lose it.”
Whatever it takes, believes June Michaels, who worked in restaurants and catering all over the country before forming Sonoma Food Runners. “We live in an abundant region of some of the world’s finest food producers,” she says. “It is a sin to waste the food, the water it took to grow it, the fuel it took to transport it, and the labor and talent it took to plant, harvest and prepare it.”
The Press Democrat’s North Coast Wine & Food Festival, showcasing 30 of the region’s top chefs and 90 gold-medal wines from the North Coast Wine Challenge, will be held from 1 to 4 p.m. Saturday, June 18, at the Luther Burbank Center for the Arts, after a two-year pause due to the pandemic.
The afternoon includes tastings of the award-winning wines, food, music and interactive activities.
VIP tickets are $135 per person and include early entrance to the event at noon and all-day access to the VIP Lounge and its sparkling wine and specialty foods.
General admission is $95 per person and includes 1 p.m. entry to the main event, which features caviar, doughnut and grilled cheese tasting stations alongside the award-winning wines.
Designated driver tickets are $50 per person, which includes a 1 p.m. entry to the main event and food. Nonalcoholic beverages will be available.
For tickets: northcoastwineandfood.com. 50 Mark West Springs Road.
This file photo shows the North Coast Wine and Food Festival at Sonoma Mountain Village in Rohnert Park. The event returns this weekend at the Luther Burbank Center for the Arts in Santa Rosa. (John Burgess/The Press Democrat file)
It’s a rare treat to have the chance to sample 90 gold medal-winning wines at a single event. So to help you navigate the many choices, we’ve put together a list of 10 wines we consider some of the most sip-worthy, including whites, rosés, reds and more. All won gold or better at this year’s North Coast Wine Challenge in April.
1. Roth Estate 2019 Heritage Red Wine, Sonoma County
Let’s start at the top. The Roth Estate 2019 Heritage Red Wine took home awards for Best of Show, Best of Sonoma County and Best of Show Red, making this wine a must-try for Bordeaux-blend fans. The judging panel, who tasted the wine during the first round of blind tasting April 5, called it “ruggedly handsome, polished and fruit-forward, like a movie star with a chiseled chin.” Yum.
2. Gloria Ferrer 2012 Carneros Cuvée, Late Disgorged Sparkling Wine, Carneros, Sonoma County
Gloria Ferrer’s 2012 Carneros Cuvée claimed the top spot for Best Sparkling Wine, which we say is a worthwhile excuse to drink more bubbles. The Carneros Cuvée is produced only in select years with the best fruit on the estate, and it offers layers of complexity that have arrived with age.
3. Brassfield Estate Winery 2021 Sauvignon Blanc, High Valley, Lake County
This 2012 Sauvignon Blanc from Brassfield Estate Winery was recognized as the Best Wine of Lake County for its notes of lemon curd, bright grapefruit and intense aromatics. The winery is located in the High Valley American Viticultural Area, defined by its substantial temperature swings and steep mountain ridges that climb to 3,000 feet.
4. Portalupi 2021 Vermentino, Mahoney Vineyard, Carneros, Napa/Sonoma Counties
The 2021 Vermentino from Portalupi won Best of Show White, making it the first time the Italian varietal has won at the North Coast Wine Challenge. The grape is grown primarily in Sardinia and Tuscany, and Portalupi’s version is “refreshing and delicious” according to Chief Wine Judge Daryl Groom. Another judge compared it to “a carousel ride in your mouth.”
5. Husch Vineyards 2021 Gewurztraminer, Anderson Valley, Mendocino County
Husch Vineyards first planted gewürtzraminer in 1968, and the old vines continue to produce exceptionally aromatic fruit with signature vibrant acidity. The 2021 vintage is no exception, scoring 93 points and a Best in Class rating. Dry in style, this wine is a highly worthwhile addition to your glass.
6. Pennyroyal Farm 2021 PinoTrio, Anderson Valley, Mendocino County
A standout blend of pinot noir, pinot blanc and pinot gris, this 2021 PinoTrio from Pennyroyal Farm is “a real crowd pleaser,” according to the judges who loved the white wine’s vibrant acidity and mineral finish. The fruit is sourced from down the road at Navarro Vineyards, founded by winemaker Sarah Cahn Bennett’s parents in 1973.
7. Navarro Vineyards 2021 Rosé of Pinot Noir, Anderson Valley, Mendocino County
Winner of Best Rosé Wine and Best of Mendocino County, this dry 2021 Navarro Vineyards Rosé of Pinot Noir is highly worth seeking out for its notes of raspberry, cherry and bright acidity. Pale in hue, the wine is aged on the lees in neutral oak, giving it a smooth, supple mouthfeel.
Best Rose Wine winner Navarro Vineyards 2021 Rose of Pinot Noir Anderson Valley. (Christopher Chung/ The Press Democrat)
8. Bricoleur Vineyards 2019 Special Selection Pinot Noir, Russian River Valley, Sonoma County
A double gold was awarded to this 2019 Special Selection Pinot Noir from Bricoleur Vineyards in the Russian River Valley. Intense and spicy, with distinct aromas of cherry and mushroom, it’s a classic Russian River pinot noir you won’t want to miss.
9. Greystack Cellars 2018 Four Brothers Vineyard Grenache, Bennett Valley, Sonoma County
A delightful field blend led by grenache, with syrah, carignan and petit sirah, this 2018 grenache from Grey Stack Cellars Four Brothers Vineyard has notes of raspberry, strawberry and a hint of spice.
10. Enkidu Wine 2019 Humbaba, Sonoma and Lake Counties
This gold medal-winning Rhone blend from Enkidu Wine is focused on syrah and petite sirah, with a touch of grenache and mourvèdre. With notes of spicy black pepper, dark cherry and camphor, this would be the perfect accompaniment to barbecue or grilled meats.
You can reach staff writer Sarah Doyle at 707-521-5478 or sarah.doyle@pressdemocrat.com.