Laura Mederos, with the Charro Negro food truck, holds up their Aguachile de Camarón, left, and Ceviche de Camarón in the Roseland area of Santa Rosa. (Christopher Chung/The Press Democrat)
I’ve been gushing about best bets for food at the Mitote food truck park in Roseland for more than 18 months. Ironically, this ambitious project hasn’t even officially broken ground.
I recently spoke to Octavio Diaz, the Healdsburg restaurateur leading the project, about where things stand and the upcoming groundbreaking in late September.
Over the last year or so, the food truck park has been a gathering spot in the heart of Roseland for several Latino-owned food trucks, including Charro Negro, Lucha Sabina, Gio y Los Magos, La Victoria and Diaz’s own truck, Maria Machetes.
The busy Sebastopol Road location in front of the former Dollar Tree store, now Mercadito Rosaland, has made it a destination for those seeking some of the best birria, tacos, tamales, aguachiles and tlayuda around. Tents and tables with colorful tablecloths serve as the communal dining area, allowing eaters to sample different trucks.
“There’s much more to come,” said Diaz, who was selected from a group of restaurateurs to organize and build out Mitote. He owns Healdsburg’s Agave restaurant, as well as a sister restaurant in Oakland. The Diaz family also operates Tu Mole Madre, El Gallo Negro and Mole Diaz Bros., under which Diaz’s mother makes a signature Oaxacan sauce sold by the jar at their Healdsburg market, Casa del Mole.
“I’ve been working on this for three years,” said Diaz, pointing to construction fences that only recently went up in the asphalt parking lot — a sign that the envisioned cultural heritage spot is finally moving forward.
The idea for Mitote is to create a colorful, family-friendly gathering place featuring food trucks; a bar fashioned from a shipping container; a large seating area; and a stage.
“I want to have everyone here. We want to have a mole festival, tamales festival and taco festival,” Diaz said.
He’s also considering wine and beer pairings with the Mexican food truck cuisine. He hopes visitors from all over Sonoma County will be enticed to come to Roseland to experience a modern take on the vibrant food culture of Mexico.
While Diaz and I talked, I made myself at home with a chicken and rice plate with his family’s signature mole sauce. It’s a classic Oaxacan recipe painstakingly made using dozens of ingredients. Served with roasted vegetables, it’s not fancy, but it is hearty and comforting.
I also tried a plate of tacos overflowing with grilled onions and meat as well as a tlayuda, a large tortilla topped with beans, queso fresco and meat. Both included a drizzle of mole, adding to the depth of flavor.
The surprise favorite, however, is something I profess to hate: a hot dog.
It’s not just a hot dog, but Diaz’s “famous hot dog.” I’m not a purist, so putting bacon, mayonnaise, queso and whatever other mystical ingredients on this split and griddled hot dog had me deliriously eating bite after bite.
While there, I also grabbed birria tacos from Gio y Los Magos food truck. They claim the tacos are made with a “touch of magic” (un toque de magia); the crispy fried tortillas, velvety stewed meat and melted cheese put regular tacos to shame. Dipped in consumé, they’re divine.
Though the trucks are a bit hard to find right now (on the east side of the Mercadito), it’s worth witnessing the inclusive evolution of Roseland’s food scene — tacos in hand — as bare asphalt becomes a destination food park well worth the trip.
Expect a spring-ish opening of the completed park at the intersection of Sebastopol Road and West Avenue.
Checking into a nice and comfortable hotel is something to look forward to — especially when you haven’t traveled in a while due to the pandemic. But if you’re planning your first vacation in a long time, or you’re tired of the regular hotel room, you might want to consider booking accommodations that offer something a little different.
In addition to its many excellent hotels and resorts, Wine Country is also home to some pretty unique vacation rentals, treehouses, glamping tents and other interesting places to stay. How about spending the night in a gingerbread house after a trip to the Sonoma Coast? Or sipping some pinot by a yurt with a vineyard view? Here are a few ideas that will make your next Wine Country vacation, or staycation, extraordinarily out of the ordinary. Click through the gallery for details.
Kaila Bohler, Sofia Englund and Dana Rebmann contributed to this article.
Haven’t made plans for the long weekend ahead? Enjoy three days of work-free bliss with our list of things to do in Sonoma County this holiday weekend. Click through the above gallery for details and don’t forget to tag us on Instagram (@sonomamag) when you share your weekend highlights.
King and Queen, 1987, by Keith Herring at The Donum Estate in Sonoma. (Anthony Laurino)
Creativity reigns supreme in Sonoma County. Although our world-class winemakers and award-winning chefs tend to take center stage, the region also is home to a diverse range of artists, who display their works in open studios and galleries. Art can also be enjoyed outside of galleries and museums in Wine Country — in hotels, restaurants, even vineyards. We’ve listed a few favorite artsy destinations in the gallery above. Did we miss one of your favorite spots? Leave a comment below.
Sofia Englund and Abigail Peterson contributed to this article.
Jocelyn Boreta, executive director of The Botanical Bus with the organization’s mobile clinic in Kenwood, California on January 16, 2021.
(Photo: Erik Castro/for Sonoma Magazine)
In 2017, community organizer and activist Jocelyn Boreta cofounded the Botanical Bus, an innovative bilingual mobile herbal medicine clinic that promotes healing in Sonoma’s Latinx community. Boreta, who has studied both herbalism and cultural anthropology and previously worked with indigenous women in Guatemala and Peru, says the nonprofit’s efforts are needed more than ever, as Sonoma’s Latino population continues to suffer disproportionate health impacts during the coronavirus pandemic.
In response to Covid last spring, Boreta and her colleagues distributed 500 herbal care kits for immunity, stress relief, and respiratory health.
This year, they will continue their outreach with mobile health services for farmworkers at more than two dozen worksite clinics. The Botanical Bus also sponsors a promotora program, which engages community leaders to organize culturally relevant, bilingual wellness workshops.
Here, Boreta shares some thoughts on the healing power of plants.
Healing Plants
I see through my work and in my personal life that our connection to herbal medicine is extraordinarily empowering.
The idea that all of us have a deep knowledge of how to care for ourselves, our families, and our
communities, with plants that are surrounding us—and that we actually have instincts, and that we have co-evolved with the plants that surround us—is a really powerful thing to learn and to embrace.
From Wildfires to Pandemic
Those first fires identified a deepening health disparity in Sonoma County. And it’s not a surprise that housing density, access to medical insurance, and workplace safety affect Covid infection rates. We’ve seen these social determinants of health affecting the Latinx community here, so that’s really the foundation of why we wanted to take action.
Indigenous Knowledge
It’s alive and well, and we’re there to support it. We’re growing a group of advocates who have deep knowledge and want to share. There’s an indigenous woman who’s joined us from a village outside of Oaxaca, and her knowledge of herbal medicine is really strong. She’s rediscovering it through our community, because it’s not necessarily valued in other in other realms of her life here.
Herbal Medicine and Covid
Our practice at the clinic is often about nourishing the nervous system so that people can restore healthy sleep cycles and manage their stress in what are often very stressful circumstances, and also
bolster immunity. There’s no magic plant that’s going to stop people from getting Covid, but there are definitely wellness remedies that will build our resilience. And that’s what we’re focused on.
Sunflower Love, Petaluma: Amy Streckfus and Curtis Garlick fell for each other while acting on the set of Netflix’s “13 Reasons Why,” and now the community has fallen for their upstart sunflower business, CA Sunflower Farm (CA stands for Curtis and Amy). They’re open on Sundays in rural west Petaluma, and can deliver cheery bouquets or bring sunflower pop-ups to parties. “Each day is different,” says Streckfus. “It’s exciting to continue meeting the community.” Open Sundays and by appointment. 3365 I St., Petaluma, casunflowerfarm.com-Luke J. Straub.
Flamingo Resort Transformed, Santa Rosa: The landmark neon sign hasn’t gone anywhere, but after a $20 million renovation, the Flamingo is once again a place to be seen. A new, dramatically flared porte cochère hints at the stylish, Palm-Springs-meets-Wine-Country vibe inside, including a lineup of contemporary art, plenty of jungalow and flamingo accents and mint-green Trimline phones. The biggest draw remains the hotel’s heated pool, which boasts new dining options, and soon, a vintage trailer repurposed into a hip bar. From $189 per night. 2777 Fourth St., Santa Rosa, 707-545-8530, flamingoresort.com-Dana Rebmann.
Trio of cocktails at Flamingo Resort’s Lazeaway Club. (Courtesy of Flamingo Resort)
Winery Baseball, Santa Rosa: Balletto Vineyards & Winery cares about their workers — so much so that back in the 2000s, when employees proposed dedicating a section of prime Russian River Valley vineyard land to an employee baseball park in the early 2000s, owner John Balletto gave an immediate thumbs up. It’s the only ballfield of its kind we know of: Instead of a cornfield, the first baseline runs alongside a block of Chardonnay, and “it’s outta here” home runs land right in the vines. Winery guests are welcome to visit the field, which is near the main tasting room, and watch practices—perhaps with a glass of the winery’s excellent rosé. 5700 Occidental Road, Santa Rosa, 707-568-2455, ballettovineyards.com
Vintage Ice Cream, Petaluma: Son of an ice cream vendor, Dan Sager has redone his father Oscar’s vintage 1963 Ford ice cream truck, drawing on his dog, Freddie, to headline a new Oskey’s Ice Cream logo done in cheery mint-and-white paint. “I added some strawberry and chocolate trim, too,” Sager jokes. He stocks old-school novelties like Rocket Pops and Choco Tacos, hitting birthday parties and events along with a regular route through Petaluma. This summer, look for Oskey’s new “ice-cycle”—a Harley Davidson paired with Oscar’s classic sidecar. 707-235-1439. Daily schedules on Instagram @oskeys.icecream-Luke J. Straub
New Doughnuts, Santa Rosa: Do a friend a favor this summer and pick up a couple of salted caramel old-fashioneds from the new Johnny Doughnuts. Or a raspberry Bismark, a brown-butter glazed, or a few of Johnny’s famous croissant-doughnut hybrids, called crodoughs. Johnny’s, which recently opened in the former City Garden space just east of downtown, uses a recipe from the 1920s with potatoes as a key ingredient, for a deliciously pillowy bite. Cult-favorite status reached in record time. Open daily, 1200 Fourth St., Santa Rosa. 707-308-4836, johnnydoughnuts.com-Heather Irwin
Artist Maria de los Angeles. (Ryan Bonilla)
Art That Unites Us, Glen Ellen: Multidisciplinary artist Maria de los Angeles, who grew up in Santa Rosa before moving to New York City for art school at Pratt and, later, an MFA from Yale, is returning to Sonoma to help install two new murals. Commissioned through the Sonoma Valley Museum of Art, the works shine light on Sonoma Valley’s diverse cultural heritage through a kaleidoscope of color and deep symbolism. “It’s a public work to promote conversation about shared experience—what we’re proud of, who we want to be, what we want to protect,” says de los Angeles. “When I first started planning this mural, I thought about looking at a map. But the map is just a history of how we have divided everything; I want to think about what unifies us.” Located at the corner of Arnold Drive and Carquinez Avenue. svma.org
Wet-hopped beers made with fresh hops are available only in early fall. In this picture, beer from Fogbelt Brewing Company in Santa Rosa. View photos to learn more. (Courtesy of Fogbelt Brewing Company)
In 2013, when Paul Hawley transplanted a few wild hop plants he found growing along a fence in a vineyard near the Russian River, he had no idea it would spark the revival of a crop that once made Sonoma County famous with brewers around the world. “In the beginning, I just wanted to see what would grow,” says the co-owner of Fogbelt Brewing Company, who grew up the son of a winemaker, farming grapes outside Healdsburg.
Hawley had already planted a few rows of the industry-standard hop varieties Cascade, Chinook, and Centennial. But the row of wild California Cluster hops he discovered along the river outproduced them all, he says. “They just blew away everything else.” At the time, Hawley’s quarter-acre was the largest hopyard he knew of in Sonoma County, while in Santa Rosa, Moonlight Brewing Co. also had a quarter-acre hopyard that had been rescued from Korbel.
A beer-drinking buddy of Hawley’s who shares his love of hops, Mike Stevenson planted his half-acre Warm Spring Wind Hop Farm in Sebastopol a year later. When Stevenson joined with Hawley to form the NorCal Hop Growers Alliance in 2016, they were hoping to dig up anything they could find out about the heyday of hops in Sonoma County. They knew hops had first been planted near the Laguna de Santa Rosa in 1858, and the county’s hopyards reached more than 2,000 planted acres by 1899. By the 1930s, around 3 million pounds were harvested annually. But for a number of reasons, the crop had largely faded away by the 1960s.
“I kept thinking if only I could find an old-timer who used to grow hops, they could answer all my questions,” Hawley remembers. “But I couldn’t find anyone.”
Click play to watch”The Dance of the Bines” by John Beck
As more farmers joined the hop collective, they shared hard-won tips learned from trial and error along with information gleaned from research. The group saved on bulk orders and pooled money together to buy new equipment. Guest speakers from UC Davis and the hop mecca of Yakima, Washington, dropped by to share the latest in industry news.
Now, about a month into this year’s abundant hop harvest, as fresh wet-hopped brews are getting chalked up on local beer boards, a half-dozen tight- knit commercial growers are mounting a hop revival, marking a tradition that dates back 160 years.
These freshly harvested Sonoma hops are headed straight to the brewery. A wet-hopped beer is one made with fresh whole cones harvested only hours before they’re dropped into the brew kettle. It’s a seasonal tradition, available only in August, September, and October. (Kent Porter/Sonoma Magazine)A hop vine is called a “bine.” A close cousin of cannabis, the hop flower, or “cone,” is what gives beers like IPAs and pale ales their beautifully bitter aromas and delicate floral notes. (Kent Porter/Sonoma Magazine)
In Rohnert Park, Ron and Erica Crane are embarking on their second harvest at Crane Ranch Hops, where sheep help with pruning and fertilizing on a family farm first settled in 1852. The couple is building a kiln to dry some of their hops this year.
In west Santa Rosa, Erin Shea and Mike Sullivan at Blossom & Bine are growing a little-known variety with hardly any bitterness called Teamaker, along with the usual suspects like Cascade, Chinook, and Cashmere. Last year, the couple picked their first crop entirely by hand — something they’ll never do again.
North of Healdsburg, in Alexander Valley, Melissa Luci feeds her Alexander Valley Hops a healthy mushroom compost, so tasty it attracts raccoons. To keep critters out of her 1.5-acre hopyard, which is surrounded by a sea of Cabernet vines, she often blasts live Giants baseball radio broadcasts into the night.
In Sebastopol, at Capracopia and Redwood Hill Farm, Scott Bice fertilizes his hops with goat manure from his dairy. Every hop grower in the area will drop by his farm at some point during harvest to feed their bines through “The Wolf,” a reconstituted 1973 German hop harvester that Bice and the Cranes imported for $50,000 for the hop growers collective.
Keeping it local this fall, these growers’ hops will flavor beers at Russian River, Fogbelt, Crooked Goat, Barrel Brothers, Steele and Hops, Old Possum, Pond Farm, and Mad Fritz breweries, among others.
Scott Bice in his Sebastopol hopyard. Every hop grower in the area will drop by Bice’s farm at some point during harvest to feed their bines through “The Wolf,” a reconstituted 1973 hop harvester that Bice imported from Germany. (Kent Porter/Sonoma Magazine)
Erin Shea and Mike Sullivan of Santa Rosa’s Blossom & Bine with their two children. The couple grow a little known but highly prized variety called Teamaker, along with the usual suspects like Cascade, Chinook, and Cashmere. Last year, the couple picked their first crop entirely by hand — something they’ll never do again. (Kent Porter/Sonoma Magazine)
If you’ve never seen a hop harvest, the first thing to know is a hop vine is called a “bine.” A close cousin of cannabis, the hop flower, or “cone,” is what gives beers like IPAs and pale ales their beautifully bitter aromas and delicate floral notes. More jargon: A beer’s bitterness is measured in IBUs or International Bitterness Units. And when hops have gone “O.G.” they have not turned “Original Gangster” but “Onion-Garlic” — a dreaded off-flavor that can plague certain varieties.
Fresh, wet-hopped beers are what get many beer lovers going this time of year. A wet-hopped beer is one made with fresh whole cones harvested only hours before they’re dropped into the brew kettle. It’s a seasonal tradition, available only in August, September, and October, making it the Beaujolais Nouveau of beers. Most beers are dry-hopped, with cones that are heated and dried in a hop kiln and often pelletized and refrigerated before being added to the beer. The difference between a fresh, wet-hopped beer and a dry-hopped one, people like to say, is the difference between cooking with fresh basil from the garden and dried basil from the spice rack.
“Some days when you’re out here, it’s almost like you can see the growth process in action, because they’re growing so fast,” says Erin Shea of Santa Rosa’s Blossom & Bine. (Kent Porter/Sonoma Magazine)
To see and smell a young hop flower coming to maturity on the bine, you begin to understand the allure for any brewer looking to make the freshest, locally sourced beer available. Standing in the middle of her hopyard on a baking-hot afternoon, Melissa Luci of Alexander Valley Hops plucks a flower and pulls it apart to expose tiny, yellow lupulin glands inside. “That’s what flavors the beer,” she says, pointing to the bright resinous beads before letting the flower fall to the ground, which is composted with bark from trees burned by the 2019 Kincade fire.
Luci, who has a degree in art history, came to hop- growing on a whim. One day, as she was looking at the long, narrow fairway where her father would drive golf balls every evening before dinner, “it occurred to me to go up,” she says — literally 18 feet in the air. She began researching and poring over archival photos and erected a hopyard on wooden poles she sourced from Washington. “You want them to reach the top by the summer solstice,” she explains, looking up at the climbing tendrils, which always wrap clockwise around the coconut-husk twines. On this day, most of her 1,500 bines of Cascade, Triumph, Chinook, and Cashmere have met the challenge and are touching the top wire as they dance in the breeze, undulating in waves down each row.
Luci’s family has grown Cabernet grapes since the ’70s in the surrounding Peline Vineyards. She’s a farmer, but very much a Cali farmer. When you ask what it was like to taste the first beer flavored with her own hops, she says, “It was bitchin.’” One of the most memorable was a Barrel Brothers concoction called “Hop Cones of Dunshire,” inspired by the TV show “Parks and Rec.”
The difference between a fresh, wet-hopped beer and a dry-hopped one, people like to say, is the difference between cooking with fresh basil from the garden and dried basil from the spice rack. (Kent Porter/Sonoma Magazine)
A hundred years ago, hops were huge business in Sonoma County. In this photo, farmworkers are stripping the hop vines near Wohler Road in Healdsburg in the 1920s. (Courtesy of Sonoma County Library)
Luci had an early harvest this year. Early or late, the annual hop harvest was always big news around the turn of the 20th century. “During the period of about four weeks from September to the early part of October all the way from 15,000 to 30,000 men, women, and children were busily engaged from sunrise till sunset picking the blossoms from the great hop fields of California,” reads a 1900 story from the San Francisco Chronicle. It estimated at least 7,500 acres of hops were planted in Sonoma, and neighboring counties, totaling 9 million bines.
Every fall, migrant workers would camp along the banks of the Russian River, as entire families pitched in for the harvest. Paul Hawley’s 97-year-old grandmother tells stories of picking hops as a little girl for a few seasons, always adding how “it wasn’t much fun at all.” Back then, hop harvesters walked on stilts to pick the upper reaches of towering bines. They wore thick wool suits to protect themselves from scratchy bines and what newspaper stories called “hop poisoning” — a severe rash on the face and arms from the “nettle-like fuzz on the stalks of the hop vine.” And their hands would end up stained dark from hop resin — something that could be “removed by rubbing with the crushed green leaves of the hop.”
By the early 1900s, when Grace Brothers Brewery in Santa Rosa was selling its “Special Brew” (and later “Happy Hops” lager), the local crop flavored much lighter, less hoppy beers than the double and triple IPAs that score raves on Beer Advocate today. Back then, a variety called California Cluster was king — the same one Paul Hawley later found growing wild in a vineyard off Eastside Road. A London hops broker who visited both Yakima and Sonoma County hopyards in 1892 told the Sonoma Democrat that Yakima hops were very rich in lupulin and “altogether of the finest quality for the European market.” But “they are excelled by the Sonoma hops in only one essential. The Yakima hops lack softness to the touch, silkiness, which the Sonoma product possesses in a high degree.”
By the ‘60s, the crop had all but died out when one of the last big harvests took place at Bussman Ranch near Windsor. Post-World War II fertilizers had introduced “downy mildew” into the soil, decimating hopyards, which were then replanted with prunes and grapes. New trends and drinking preferences favored lighter, less hoppy beers. With more daylight hours (hops need 16 hours a day) and soil conditions more resistant to mildew, Yakima, Washington offered better growing conditions for hops. The area now grows around 75% of the hops in the U.S., which produces nearly half of the hops in the world, about the same amount as Germany.
But local hops have a huge advantage when it comes to seasonal wet-hopped beers: They can be picked in a hopyard a few miles from the brewery and dropped in the kettle within hours. Wet-hopped brews also require about five times the amount of hops when wet, which at $8 to $9 a pound (compared to the 81 cents per pound that pioneer farmers Otis Allen and Amasa Bushnell got for their 1,100 pounds of inaugural Sonoma County hops in 1858) makes for a decent payday for local growers. To make a wet-hopped beer with Northwest hops — and some Bay Area brewers actually do it—you need to overnight the hops by mail, paying a premium for what is mostly water weight.
“During the period of about four weeks from September to the early part of October all the way from 15,000 to 30,000 men, women, and children were busily engaged from sunrise till sunset picking the blossoms from the great hop fields of California,” reads a 1900 story from the San Francisco Chronicle. (Kent Porter/Sonoma Magazine)
For now, the next step in the rebirth of Sonoma County hops will be reaching and maintaining a consistent level of quality that brewers can count on every harvest, says Vinnie Cilurzo, owner-brewer at Russian River Brewing Company. Cilurzo grew hops at Korbel in 1997, where his brewery was first started, and now buys 50,000-60,000 pounds of whole cone hops a year from growers in the Northwest.
“Just because it’s local doesn’t mean that the quality is there,” says Cilurzo, who pitched in $5,000 so the NorCal Hop Growers Alliance could purchase its first harvester — a modern update of the first hop- picking machine invented in 1940 by Santa Rosa farmer Florian Dauenhauer. “So we need to make sure these growers are doing the best they can and have the best practices they can to have the highest quality hops that are at least coming close to what we can get up in the Northwest.”
A lot of it comes down to timing, Cilurzo says — knowing when to prune, when to add nutrients, when to train the bines up the line, how much to water, and ultimately, when to pick so the hops don’t come in underripe or overripe.
“If people aren’t harvesting at the right time and they’re just doing it for convenience — like, say the brewer says, ‘We have to do this the second week of August or we can’t do it.’ And the grower needs the money — then the hops aren’t going to be as good and then the beer won’t be as good,” says Scott Bice, who started farming a quarter-acre in 2015 on a neglected apple orchard at his Redwood Hill goat dairy and now grows about 1.5 acres.
Fresh hops from Melisssa Luci’s Alexander Valley hopyard, all packaged up for the trip to the brewery. In September, wet-hopped IPAs, pale ales, and pilsners start showing up on beer boards all over the Bay Area. The seasonal brews are often available for just a day or two, or a week at most. (Kent Porter/Sonoma Magazine)
When it comes to locally sourced beer, there’s one final ingredient that’s been missing all these years: Barley. On a hot, dusty June afternoon, Ron Crane of Crane Ranch Hops, who comes from a longtime local farming and ranching family, pulls up to a farm on Lakeville Highway, southeast of Petaluma, where he grows hay and runs sheep on 1,000 acres along the Petaluma River. His pickup truck is loaded down with spent grain from Russian River Brewing Company, a trail of juice dripping out the back of his tailgate onto the dirt road. While some ranchers are spending a fortune on feed during the drought, Crane keeps his sheep alive on the mealy brewing byproduct that he gets for free.
It was his wife Erica’s idea to plant hops. “I wanted to find something that could be our legacy,” she explained a few days before, wearing a “Don’t Worry Be Hoppy” T-shirt while touring their 2.5-acre hopyard. Last year, the couple got to belly up to the bar at the Russian River outpost in Windsor to toast their very own R&D Crane Ranch Pale Ale. For Ron, who flew Apache helicopters in the second Iraq War and CALSTAR rescue helicopters, it marks a new adventure, inspiring him to build a hop kiln this year to extend the life of his hops.
But today, he’s eager to check on his barley crop. If a lab test confirms the protein levels are suitable for malting, it will be one more step toward his dream of making a beer from entirely local ingredients — the holy grail for farm-to-bottle afficionados — all sourced and made within a 30-mile radius.
Back in 2017, Nile Zacherle at Mad Fritz in St. Helena, who specializes in origin beers, made an all-Sonoma County beer with hops from Bice’s Capracopia hopyard and barley from Front Porch Farm in Healdsburg.
But in a county that prides itself on homegrown ingredients, this new all-local brew will be special, with barley grown by the same farmer who grew the hops. Crane’s plan is to malt the barley at Grizzly Malt in Rohnert Park, and brew the beer in batches at Russian River Brewing Company and Old Caz Beer.
Taking a four-wheeler out to his field of Genie barley, Crane picks a few spikes and pulls off the golden barley berries, turning them over in his hand. They’re still at least a few days away from harvesting. “I’m hoping in a few months, this will go into a fresh- hopped batch of beer,” he says, smiling. “How cool would that be?”
Fogbelt, Russian River, Pond Farm, Crooked Goat, Barrel Brothers, Steele and Hops and Old Possum are among the local breweries serving wet-hopped beers. (Kent Porter/Sonoma Magazine)
Where to Drink Wet-Hopped Beers
Sonoma’s version of Oktoberfest arrives in September, as local farmers wake before dawn to harvest ripe hops, delivering them to breweries hours after they’re picked. “You really get the essence in the beer of what the hops smell and taste like hanging on the bine,” says Russian River Brewing Company owner-brewer Vinnie Cilurzo. “Our goal is to have the hops picked from the bine and into the kettle in 5 to 6 hours.”
Drinking a wet-hopped beer is the best way to sample Sonoma’s terroir. Instead of being dried in a kiln and pelletized, home-grown hops are dumped whole-cone into wet-hopped beers. This month, wet-hopped IPAs, pale ales, and pilsners start showing up in pastel chalk on beer boards all over the Bay Area. It’s a wild time of year for beer lovers: The seasonal brews are often available for just a day or two, or a week at most.
Fogbelt Brewing Company
Owners Paul Hawley and Remy Martin plan to brew four to five wet-hopped beers this harvest, releasing them in a Wet Hop Week celebration, with hopped-up food pairings, most likely in the first or second week of September. “These are the most exciting beers for us to brew, because you only brew them once a season,” says Hawley, who is also petitioning the county to create a new “farm brewery” designation that would give breweries similar tax and ag benefits as wineries, a model that’s already been adopted in New York, Oregon, and Placer County.
Fogbelt will once again make an Alliance IPA using hops from any NorCal Hop Growers Alliance members (commercial and non- commercial growers) who want to add their cones to the mix.
This past spring, Hawley helped prune the bines at Scott Bice’s Capracopia hopyard and used all the cuttings to make pickled hop shoots, which will be served during Wet Hop Week. In the past, they’ve also served salad with hop-oil dressing, hops chimichurri on lamb, and sausage made with hops alongside their wet- hopped beers.
Even Pliny can’t compete with the freshness of a wet-hopped beer. “It’s one of my favorite beer styles,” says Vinnie Cilurzo. In 1998, Russian River Brewing became only the second brewery in America (in modern times) to make a wet- hopped beer — with Cascade and Chinook hops Cilurzo grew at Korbel Winery.
Last year, Cilurzo and his wife, Natalie, helped bring in the harvest at Crane Ranch Hops, buying a few hundred pounds of Cascade, Chinook, Triumph, and California Cluster to make HopTime Harvest Ale and R&D Crane Ranch Pale Ale. Look for more Crane Ranch hops, and possibly other locally farmed hops, in RRBC wet-hopped beers in early to mid-September.
The San Rafael brewery, which takes its name from the west county artist colony located near where owner-brewer Trevor Martens grew up, is planning on brewing two wet-hopped beers in mid-September: a Pils and an IPA. Last year, they made a pilsner from Blossom & Bine’s barely bitter Teamaker hops. “While it leaves some things up in the air regarding the brew schedule,” says Martens, “it’s really exciting for us to work with a local hop farmer and be waiting for this natural product to hit its peak.”
Other local breweries that love to make wet-hopped beers are Crooked Goat, Barrel Brothers, Steele and Hops, and Old Possum. Check their beer boards and social media for the latest, and hurry — these special brews don’t last long.
Owner Sydney Pfaff of Healdsburg’s Legion Projects is bringing new energy to the town’s art scene with exhibits of works by emerging contemporary artists. “I don’t want to do what’s expected,” explains Pfaff, who says she’s excited to introduce fresh voices to the Sonoma community.
Pfaff, who worked as a fashion journalist before launching an art career in 2013, curates contemporary shows that rotate about every six weeks. The newly bright, streamlined gallery space, with a line of skylights uncovered during recent renovations and a huge mural on the wall outside, is tucked into a cluster of modern gray studios, north of the Healdsburg Plaza.
Legion Projects exhibited works by San Francisco artist Anoushka Mirchandani in August. (Hillary Jeanne Photography)Legion Projects exhibited works by Oakland artist Taylor Smalls in August. (Rachel Rothstein)
Pfaff has quickly plugged into the local scene, exhibiting the work of artist and educator Jessica Martin and collaborating with winemakers like Alice Warnecke Sutro of SUTRO Wine Co. and chefs like Ploypailin Sakornsin, formerly of SingleThread, for openings and events, which spill out onto a sunny, pea-gravel patio and adjacent greenbelt. On view through September 11 is Jellying, a solo show of “bold, abstract paintings in striking colors” by LA artist Dennis Foster.
Legion Projects, 711A Healdsburg Ave., Healdsburg. Open Thursday- Saturday 12-3 and by appointment. legionsf.com
Acme Burger at Acme Burger in Cotati. (Heather Irwin/Sonoma Magazine)
The dearth of kitchen and dining room workers in Sonoma County is continuing to make life difficult for local restaurateurs. But somehow new restaurants continue to pop up all over the county. Here are some recent openings.
Now Open
Acme Burger, Santa Rosa: Dying for a fat burger on a squishy bun with all the fixings? The popular Cotati destination for tasty patties, fried chicken, rock cod and barbecue pulled pork in a bun has opened a second location in the former G & G Shopping Center at 1007 West College Ave. The menu is the same as at the original location. We highly recommend ordering the soup with truffle fries on the side.
Sonoma Beef Burger with onion rings, fried chicken burger, chili fries and Cajun fries at Acme Burger in Cotati. (Heather Irwin/Sonoma Magazine)
Asahi Ramen and Izakaya, Healdsburg: The owners of the top-notch Asahi Sushi & Kitchen in the Healdsburg Plaza have expanded their offerings with a second location serving ramen and izakaya (Japanese bar snacks). The menu includes nibbles like shumai dumplings, gyoza (potstickers), tempura, fried potato croquettes, furikake French fries and karaage (Japanese fried chicken). The guiltiest of pleasures is the takoyaki: little fried balls of octopus slathered with mayo and topped with flakes of salty dashi. The ramen family is well represented with miso, shoyu, pork, kombu and vegetarian broths topped with pork char siu, seafood or vegetables. Larger entrees, including teriyaki and katsu, are also available. 1047 Vine St., Healdsburg, asahiramenandizakaya.com
The Kratos with pesto sauce, mozzarella, fire-blistered cherry tomatoes, spicy Italian sausage, olives and figs, finished with fresh basil and balsamic glaze at Zimi Pizza at The Block in Petaluma. (Courtesy of Zimi Pizza)
Coming Soon
Zimi Pizza: Owner Dino Moniodis has announced a second location, in Rincon Valley, for his Petaluma-based wood-fired pizzeria. Moniodis said it will serve pizzas, calzones and desserts along with gyros and spanakopita. The pizzeria will replace Urban Pizza, which recently closed. Moniodis also recently said he’ll be opening a Greek restaurant, Taverna Lithi, in 2022 in Sebastopol’s forthcoming food hall, The Livery on Main.
Wine and food pairing at St Francis Winery & Vineyards in Santa Rosa. Click through the slideshow for more fabulous foodie wineries in Sonoma County. (Timm Eubanks/St Francis Winery & Vineyards)
This is part two in a series on local wineries with stellar wine and food experiences.
In 2015, St. Francis Winery & Vineyards in Sonoma Valley was declared the No. 1 restaurant in the U.S. — for the second time in three years — by OpenTable.com, based on reviews by users of the online-reservations company’s website and app.
Funny thing is, St. Francis isn’t a restaurant and isn’t licensed to be one. It’s a winery that happens to serve restaurant-quality small dishes to accent its wines. Unlike at a restaurant, guests cannot order from a menu at St. Francis, instead accepting the wines and bites selected by the winemakers and chef. There is no dinnertime service. No takeout. No kids. One price fits all.
These limitations don’t detract from the experience for fans of fine wine and food, their lack of choice offset by vineyard views, expert matching of wines to in-season ingredients and deliciously casual education on the provenance of the drink and food.
St. Francis may garner the most publicity for its pairings program, yet a handful of other wineries in central and southern Sonoma County do an equally exceptional job of ensuring tasters don’t walk away hungry by serving more substantial “non-meals” than simple cheese and salumi plates.
Contrastingly, EDGE, in the town of Sonoma, is a restaurant that happens to be connected to a winery. Stone Edge Farm Estate Vineyards & Winery owners Mac and Leslie McQuown grow and produce sophisticated cabernet sauvignons and sauvignon blancs in the Moon Mountain District AVA above Sonoma. Hard-core tasters are welcome to visit the McQuowns’ Silver Cloud Vineyard hospitality center. Many then continue their experience by driving down the mountain for dinner (or Sunday lunch) at EDGE, which the McQuowns operate as a separate entity, although executive chef Fiorella Butron uses produce from the McQuowns’ 16-acre organic garden for many of the restaurant’s dishes and their wines are prominent on the wine list.
Most of these south-central Sonoma wineries provide stellar wine and food experiences Thursday through Sunday, all by reservation and all outdoors for now. Visit their websites for specific days and hours of operation, as well as menus du jour. Picky eaters and salad nibblers might want to stick to restaurants. For those with adventurous palates and interest in near-perfect pairings, these spots are for you.
EDGE from Stone Edge Farm Winery
Sonoma locals might remember Rin’s Thai Restaurant on East Napa Street. Leslie and Mac McQuown purchased the Victorian home that was Rin’s and kept its historic bones but gutted the interior and installed a state-of-the-art kitchen. This is where culinary director/executive chef Fiorella Butron works, making EDGE the culinary home of the McQuowns’ Stone Edge Farm Estate Vineyards & Winery.
Established as a private dining club for members of the Collectors Cellar (with John McReynolds as culinary director), EDGE morphed into a fine-dining restaurant open to the public during the pandemic. McReynolds semiretired and protege Butron took over, focusing on fresh-from-the-farm ingredients from the McQuowns’ 16 organically grown plots. Service is Thursday-Saturday, dinner only, and Sunday lunch.
Dishes served at Stone Edge Farm Estate Vineyards & Winery’s EDGE restaurant in Sonoma. (Courtesy of Stone Edge Farm Estate Vineyards & Winery)
The menus, which change weekly, are prix fixe, (multiple courses for a fixed price). For example, the Aug. 26-29 menu ($195) offered five courses, among them cured king salmon with cucumber and crème fraîche with Stone Edge sauvignon blanc; tomatoes, ricotta, basil oil and baby lettuces with Stone Edge Surround red Bordeaux-style blend; and heritage pork loin and shoulder with zucchini and eggplant tian and beet mole, paired with Stone Edge cabernet sauvignon. Butron has a knack for turning notoriously difficult-to-pair vegetables and herbs into elegant, wine-friendly dishes.
“We’re a cabernet producer, first and foremost,” said Dorothe Cicchetti, Stone Edge Farms’ director of sales and marketing. “Cab can be challenging to pair with vegetables, but Fiorella makes it happen.”
Pam and George F. Hamel Jr. opened their high-end and eclectic Sonoma Valley winery in 2014, with food service a major component from the get-go.
“In our family’s home, food and wine have always been celebrated together,” said managing director George Hamel III. “We knew we wanted to offer a tasting experience that thoughtfully paired our wines with food, but we wanted to go beyond the expected and put our own unique spin on it. Not only (do we) have access to top-quality grapes, but also vegetables, proteins, cheeses and more, and we felt that our Reserve Experience should reflect what this region has to offer.”
Outdoor dining area at Hamel Family Wines in Sonoma. (John Bedell)
Duck breast served at Hamel Family Wines in Sonoma. (John Bedell)
The Reserve Experience ($150), created by executive chef Clinton Huntsman, is seasonally inspired, as are the menus of the other winery chefs mentioned here. It begins with a sip of sauvignon blanc and a tour of the ranch and caves, moves to a tasting of cabernet sauvignon still maturing in a barrel and is followed by a four-course pairing of Hamel’s cabernet-centric blends to Huntsman’s small-plate dishes. Pan-roasted rib-eye might be accompanied by a celery root and black truffle cabbage roll. Short rib raviolo can gain complexity from radish, popped sorghum and black-garlic foam. Morel mushrooms might be stuffed with duck sausage, fresh chickpeas and horseradish. All are designed to complement cabernet sauvignon-based wines.
Jeff Mayo owns two tasting rooms in Sonoma Valley, the first in Sonoma, the second in Kenwood. He created the latter for the express purpose of pairing his reserve-level wines with appropriate small bites. Seven wines are matched with seven seasonal dishes prepared by executive chef John Locher (formerly of the General’s Daughter, Chateau St. Jean Winery, Prelude at the Green Music Center and more). A recent Locher tasting menu ($70) featured Laurel Hill Vineyard Brut Rosé with watermelon salad, feta, red onion and raspberry-champagne vinaigrette; Reserve Laurel Hill Chardonnay with prawn “samosa” with corn chutney; Reserve Ricci Vineyard Zinfandel with Moroccan chicken and herbed couscous; and Kunde Ranch Late Harvest Gewurztraminer with Meyer lemon tartlet, strawberry coulis and basil oil.
Not so hungry? Visit Mayo’s original tasting room in Glen Ellen (13101 Arnold Drive, 707-938-9401).
Outdoor tasting at Ram’s Gate Winery in Sonoma. (Courtesy of Ram’s Gate Winery)
Ram’s Gate Winery
It seems like yesterday that this Carneros winery (formerly the site of Roche Winery) near Highway 37 and Sonoma Raceway opened to rave reviews for its comfy indoor and outdoor tasting spaces, farmstead and modern-barn feel, view-worthy perch atop a hillside and culinary offerings that complemented the bold, richly flavored wines. Now, 10 years later, the visitor experience is similarly satisfying (though, for now, only outdoors) and executive chef Stacey Combs’ dishes for the Five-Course Wine and Food Pairing program ($160) artfully emphasize local, seasonal ingredients.
When Joe Nielsen became director of winemaking in 2018, the Ram’s Gate wines began taking on a different — and, to my taste, more pleasurable — personality: more freshness and verve, less oak and buttery malolactic influence and a refinement that gives Combs more options for matching her food to Nielsen’s multiple small-production chardonnays and pinot noirs (his pinot blanc and sauvignon blanc are also food-friendly all-stars).
Grilled Albacore Tuna, Charred Corn, Pickled Chilis, Cilantro and Lime from St. Francis Winery executive chef Peter Janiak. (John Burgess/The Press Democrat)Smoky Eggplant Risotto with Burrata, Cherry Tomatoes and Sunflower Shoots from St. Francis Winery executive chef Peter Janiak. (John Burgess/The Press Democrat)
St. Francis Winery & Vineyards
The pandemic stalled this eastern Santa Rosa winery’s much-publicized and truly exceptional wine and food pairing experiences, but now they’re back. Although less communal than when OpenTable reviewers made it the nation’s top-rated “restaurant,” the twice-a-day seatings are more intimate, allow servers to keenly focus on each guest’s needs and answer questions and help everyone stay safe from COVID-19 transmission.
Celebrating its 50th anniversary in 2021, St. Francis and its executive chef, Peter Janiak, present a five-course experience outdoors, with Mt. Hood and the estate’s Wild Oak Vineyard as backdrops ($95). A recent menu included Wild Oak Vineyard Chardonnay with seared scallop and bacon-ginger marmalade; Banti Vineyard Zinfandel with port-glazed Liberty Duck breast; and Wild Oak Vineyard Cabernet Franc with petit tender au jus with chickpea and roasted pepper puree. There is also an Estate Pairings experience ($60), which serves four wines with such dishes as shrimp tostadas and pork belly sliders.