High Time for High Tea Takeout in Sonoma County

Scones and tea at Patisserie Angelia are among the tasty treats for high tea, now available for takeout. Heather Irwin/PD

Whether you’re cooped up with bored kids or just needing a little you-time, one of the best ways to chill is with a pinkies-up high tea. Local tea houses are now offering this English tradition to go — from crustless cucumber sandwiches and scones to pasties and baked treats. Breaking out granny’s silver service not required, but really, why not?

Tudor Rose Tea Room: Our crummy Monday turned into a charming afternoon teatime escape for one. High-tea order includes four tea sandwiches (little crustless triangles of curried-chicken, cucumber and cream cheese, hummus), a mushroom and onion tart, scone with cream and jam and a packet of tea. Add-ons include sausage rolls, savory pies, French onion soup and savory pies. Owner Angela Grant is an unreservedly enthusiastic Brit who makes sure the whole experience is authentic. Daily, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Order online, phone confirmation. 733 Fourth St., Santa Rosa, tudorrosetearoom.com.

Patisserie Angelica: High tea with a Parisian twist at this longtime Sebastopol patisserie. First, choose a luxe tea from the famed Mariage Freres Tea Company (just reading the descriptions is an exotic adventure). Pinkies-up petit fours include mini versions of favorite desserts: two scones, quiche, seasonal cheesecake, lemon meringue tart, chocolate souffle, Parisian “puff” and a real-deal macaron. Gluten-free options available. Love, love, love to go. Order anytime at 707-494-2547 for Café carry out each Saturday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., 6821 Laguna Park Way, Sebastopol.

Muir’s Tea Room: Enchanted Fairy Tea Service (wrapped as a gift) is so cute we want to pinch it! Wrapped up as a fairy gift, it includes the Wee Willie Winkie Pinkie Strawberry and Cream Cheese Finger Sandwich, Pixie Puff Pastry Pesto Pinwheel, a toadstool tart, a handpainted fairy cookie and more. All food is plant-based (ie: no meat). Available Tuesdays and Fridays or by request. Pre-order online at muirstearoomandcafe.com. 330 South Main St., Sebastopol.

First Sonoma Winery Reopens After Coronavirus Shutdown

More than two months into the coronavirus shutdown, local wineries are eagerly awaiting approval to reopen to the public. On Monday, Sonoma County’s top health official submitted a reopening plan to the California Department of Public Health, which would allow wineries, as well as breweries and restaurants, to offer patio service. In the meantime, Healdsburg’s Jordan Winery has found a loophole within the latest loosening of restrictions announced last week and will reopen its grounds on Saturday, May 23. 

Taking advantage of Sonoma County’s relaxed coronavirus closure rules for public and private parks, allowing locals to drive to parks, Jordan Winery will welcome visitors to its 1,200-acre estate for guided hiking excursions by appointment — with wine picnics to go — making it the first winery in Sonoma and Napa counties, and possibly the state of California, to legally reopen to visitors.

“As a business that has this much private open space surrounding us, we just felt like this was the right thing to do,” said Lisa Mattson, director of marketing and communications at Jordan Winery. She added that the winery’s loop trail will allow hikers to spread out. “You never have to worry about passing anybody and there’s plenty of space.” 

Jordan Winery has offered hiking experiences for several years now with picnic lunches on the estate terrace. To comply with Sonoma County health orders and guidance, the new hiking excursions will not include a post-hike meal on the terrace. Instead, winery chef Todd Knoll will pack up a picnic to go, featuring four salumi selections from Healdsburg’s Journeyman Meat Co., two artisanal cheeses, salad greens sourced from the winery’s garden, and accouterments like house-made estate mostarda, marinated olives, and spiced nuts. Each party will also take home two bottles of Jordan’s estate wines for pairing, the 2018 Chardonnay and 2016 Cabernet Sauvignon.

Offered on eight days between Saturday, May 23, and Sunday, June 7, the moderate four-mile hike will traverse woods, meadows, vineyards, olive orchards and circle a lake. Hikers can take a water break at the Jordan Point Vista, a panoramic hilltop, and will also pass by cattle pastures, the chef’s garden and an apiary.

The hiking experience, including picnic and wines, is $220 (for two people) and will take place at 9:30 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. on Thursdays, Saturdays and Sundays. Maximum capacity for each time slot is 10 people (five groups of two). Additional hikes may be added to the calendar soon. 

In compliance with Sonoma County’s health order, masks must be carried throughout the hike but only have to be worn when it’s not possible to maintain six feet distance. Mattson said guests should only need to wear their masks when they meet at the winery chateau at the start of the hiking excursion, but anyone who wants to wear a mask for the duration of the hike can of course do so. The winery also encourages hikers to bring their own water, though individual glass bottles will be available at the water stop. Hand sanitizer stations and thoroughly cleaned, luxury porta potties are positioned at the beginning, middle, and end of the trail. 

The winery plans to resume picnics on the terrace at individual tables as soon as they are allowed to sell food and alcohol on site again. Mattson said they also plan to add some picnic days to their schedule of events — the winery’s expansive lawn can accommodate up to 50 people with social distancing protocols in place.

To make a hiking reservation, visit Jordan Winery’s website: jordanwinery.com/visit/tours-and-tastings/nature-hike.

Sonoma County’s Slow Food Movement Turns to Issues of Food Equity

Slow Food story Carol Diaz and the Slow Food group have a dinner at her house vegetables grown by Rebecca Bozzelli – farmer

When delegates from 15 countries met in Paris to sign the Slow Food Manifesto three decades ago, it signaled a sea change from the factory food industrialization then sweeping the globe. Eschewing processed, packaged foods, Slow Food supporters dedicated themselves to clean, seasonal, environmentally friendly and humanely sourced sustenance.

And 5,500 miles away in Sonoma County, most people yawned.

Because here, in this abundant agricultural food shed, Slow Food has long been a way of life. Surrounded by family-run farms and farmers markets, many of us already seek out what’s freshest and most delicious.

These days, the culinary movement is growing to feed our minds as much as our bodies, furthering the conversation about food justice and equality. The Food Justice movement works to solve economic pressures that prevent access to healthy, nutritious, and culturally appropriate foods. As Slow Food’s mission statement notes, one goal is “accessible prices for consumers, and fair conditions and pay for small-scale producers.”

It’s true that in its earlier years, the Slow Food movement was often seen as a wealthy pursuit, appreciated by people with the money to buy pricey ingredients and the time to meticulously cook them. Even in food-rich Sonoma County, terms like “cult” and “snobby” were heard, with rarified ingredients showcased at $100-a-plate restaurants and not always available to low-income groups.

“There is a history of people thinking that Slow Food in the USA is elitist,” says Paula Shatkin, a 20-year member of Slow Food Russian River. “But our efforts have always been focused on environmental justice, and we have many events that are low cost or free to share local bounty. We were never just a restaurant movement — one of our recent gatherings was a potluck at a member’s home to share the stories of the simple foods of our immigrant ancestors.”

The message seems to be being heard, as more and more, a Slow Food lifestyle is obtainable by everyone. CalFresh food assistance can be used to pay at many farmers markets, and in 2015, Market Match was launched to offer CalFresh users a dollar-for-dollar match of up to $20 at participating Sonoma County farmers markets.

Chef Sheana Davis of Sonoma’s The Epicurean Connection even offers classes showing people how to cook slow food at home using all CalFresh approved ingredients, including fancy-sounding handmade cheeses ranging from a silky creme de ricotta, to vegan smoked tofu miso ginger cheese crafted with soy milk. Each cheese requires just four ingredients, simple mixing skills and tools, and about a half hour to make an ample batch.

“Slow Food is just real food,” says Carol Diaz, an officer of Slow Food Sonoma County North. “If you take real food, especially if it has come from a local farmers market, and prepare it simply and quickly, you can easily turn it into the most delicious meal. You don’t need 10 boutique ingredients, a long recipe, and a lot of time, you just need some basic staples, like good olive oil and salt.”

Slow Food members cross a wide spectrum of economic levels, she explains, united by the quest for flavor and nutrition. “People care about what they are eating,” she says. “They want food that tastes good, that’s local or organic, healthy and not overly processed, that’s grown in a way that is good for the environment.”

In fact, Sonoma County’s two Slow Food chapters work hands-on to show communities how to incorporate goodness from the garden into their everyday routine. The Russian River group, for example, helps establish organic gardens at local elementary and high schools, teaching students how responsible planting practices bring long-term soil fertility, an economically feasible healthy diet, and delicious food to generations.

For even easier Slow Food, many casual eateries across Sonoma County focus on top-notch ingredients as well, offering chef-driven menus with seasonal salutes once reserved for high-end restaurants. It’s difficult to get more down-to-earth than a horse trailer converted into a pizzeria, as is the case at Santa Rosa’s Red Horse Pizza, which parks at HenHouse Brewing Company on Bellevue Avenue.

“We wanted to show people that you don’t have to compromise taste to achieve health, and we are extremely lucky to be in Sonoma County where we can get a huge variety of fresh, organic vegetables and amazing meats and cheese,” says Kendra Stuffelbeam, who runs the pizzeria with husband Nate. “And who doesn’t love pizza and beer?”

The Stuffelbeams gained their Slow Food Snail of Approval certification in May of 2018, undergoing a rigorous approval process including visits from a three-person Slow Food team that tours each restaurant, interviews the owner and chef, and rates the business on 12 categories including use of seasonal ingredients and menus, sustainable ingredients sourced from local producers, humane treatment of people and animals, investment in fair labor practices, and green business practices like composting and recycling.

“The Snail of Approval project grew out of our wish to support local restaurants that feature and support local farmers and producers,” said Russian River chapter’s Paula Shatkin. An online “Snail Trail” map guides consumers to certified partners.

A look at a recent cheese class at Sonoma’s Epicurean Connection shows how the Slow Food movement continues to evolve and attract new supporters. A sold-out seminar of more than two dozen students, including cooks from their mid-20s to seniors, all crowded around Slow Food chef Sheana Davis as she led them through the easy, inexpensive process of making today’s popular plant-based foods, including velvety feta made with almond milk-soaked almonds, salt, whole black peppercorns, and Meyer lemon olive oil.

“I teach these classes to Sonoma Valley Mentoring Alliance, the YWCA, local schools, and CalFresh families,” she says. “And I teach Michelin star chefs with the exact same recipes.”

Slow Food in action

The Slow Food community in Sonoma County includes two nonprofit chapters, Sonoma County North and Russian River, that further education about where high-quality food comes from and how our food choices affect the world around us. Each group hosts events throughout the year including group dinners, potlucks, an annual heritage turkey auction, an apple-pressing event, and more.

For information or to become a member, visit Slow Food Sonoma County North, slowfoodsonomacountynorth.org, and Slow Food Russian River, slowfoodrr.org.

Behind the Scenes of Guy Fieri’s ‘Hospital Week’ Thank You Tour

Celebrity chef Guy Fiieri takes a selfie with Santa Rosa CHP commander Aristotle Wolfe, who picked up bags of to go lunches for his office at Memorial Hospital in Santa Rosa. Fieri brought family, friends and his 48-foot Guy’s Smokehouse Stagecoach mobile kitchen to feed first responders and hospital workers lunch on Wednesday. (photo by John Burgess/The Press Democrat).

Outside Memorial Hospital last week, hospital workers lined up in the parking lot, standing on red Xs spaced 6 feet apart, for a glimpse of Guy Fieri.

The Food Network chef, game show host and Hollywood Walk-of-Famer was busily signing 300 boxed meals for staff, with another 300 to go for the night shift.

For hours on Wednesday, he stood under an awning as it rained off and on, his hand clenched around a black Sharpie, writing a quick “Great Work” or “Thank you!” while posing for a photo with anyone who wanted one. His hand was cramping up, but he wasn’t complaining. I asked.

Behind him the culinary team, including me, our faces covered with superhero-themed masks, cranked out hundreds of hot meals for the hastily-organized event. The menu included more than a thousand pounds of pulled pork, Caesar salad, vegetable penne pasta and focaccia served to medical staff from Fieri’s $300,000, 48-foot mobile kitchen.

It was no small task: 600 boxed meals were signed and handed out at Memorial on Wednesday, plus 700 meals at Sutter hospital Tuesday and 800 boxed were meals planned for Kaiser on Thursday.

“This was a little bigger than we thought,” Fieri said Wednesday. Already he had run out of the 1,500 superhero T-shirts made for the hospital staff, but he promised to bring more next week.

With the three-day “Hospital Week” thank-you tour he came up with just 10 days earlier, Fieri said he simply wanted to feed some Santa Rosa hospital workers who put themselves on the front lines, along with EMTs, firefighters, police and other first responders also risking their safety. You know, just an intimate little soiree feeding 2,000.

I was part of the culinary crew, working alongside Fieri, his family (including eldest son Hunter working the line), several of his closest friends, his Knuckle Sandwich culinary team and local chefs John Stewart (Zazu, Black Pig Meats), Duskie Estes (Zazu, Farm to Pantry) and Domenica Catelli (Catelli’s).

(Irwin helped arrange the event but was not paid to do so. Fieri covered the costs of the event. Irwin is the dining editor at Sonoma Media Investments and founder and CEO of Sonoma Family Meal, which pays local restaurants to cook for people in need.)

Spoiler alert: Fieri is pretty much exactly what you see on TV, times 100. Dressed in a camo chef’s jacket with a knife sheathed on his hip, he was in constant motion, signing boxes, calling back to the kitchen for vegetarian orders, checking on staff boiling penne in a tent behind the rig.

The rig itself was pure Fieri, natch. Covered in a green and gray camo pattern, it was over the top of the top, with a 30-gallon tilt-skillet, reach-in freezer and refrigerator, multiple high-capacity burners, a smoker, broiler, two fryers, a custom sound system and several flat-screen televisions. It has to be pulled by a semi. The galley kitchen made for tight quarters, so a second outdoor kitchen was used to boil pasta and prep.

But it’s Guy who people wanted to see. Near the end of the day, Fieri elbow-bumped a fire chief asking for a picture with his truck. Picture taken, he headed back to the line.

“Thanks brother. Thanks for everything you do,” he said, handing a meal to a firefighter. Most were quietly wide-eyed at seeing a celebrity up close, actually handing them a meal. He never rushed anyone through the line, didn’t have media or handlers present and seemed genuinely grateful to be serving his community.

His mother, Penny Ferry, stood nearby. “He has such a big heart,” she said. Fieri’s friends working the event said the same, having known him for years, long before he became famous.

Though Guy doesn’t seem fazed by the bad rap he sometimes gets in the media, his friends and family are pained by the nastiness.

The vitriol, said Stewart, is part of being a household name and brand rather than being seen as a person. “America hates a winner. They love tearing people down,” he said.

Meanwhile, Fieri just kept dishing up meals and offering thanks.

“Really appreciate what you’re doing” he said as women in scrubs giggled and asked for yet another picture.

“Here, take a meal, sister.”

These Local Food Trucks Are Serving Up Cheap Eats via Pickup and Delivery

Tips Tri Tip truck at The Block in Petaluma. (Heather Irwin)

Anyone who’s in the business of feeding hungry crowds is facing some serious challenges right now. Restaurant dining rooms are closed. Grocery stores are working hard to keep shelves stocked. And food trucks, while considered essential businesses, are seeing empty streets, canceled events, vacant business districts, and closed taprooms and wineries. Some have already been forced to shut down operations while others are rolling into an uncertain future.

But there may be some light at the end of the tunnel: Gov. Gavin Newsom recently allowed an exception to California’s stay-at-home orders to permit food trucks to operate at highway rest stops. Some food trucks are now serving hospitals and there’s also an effort underway in San Francisco to push for legislation that would make it easier for restaurants to open food trucks during the pandemic.

To help support Sonoma County food trucks, we’ve rounded up a few favorites that remain open, serving customers via pickup and delivery. Click through the above gallery for details. And send us an email if we missed one of your favorites!

Heather Irwin and Grace Yarrow contributed to this article. 

These Local Chefs Are Offering Free Online Cooking Classes

Many of our favorite dishes from Sonoma County restaurants are available for curbside pickup and delivery as we shelter at home. Ordering takeout remains a great excuse to eat well while supporting local businesses, but chances are you’ve still been spending more time in the kitchen. If you’re looking for ways to up your cooking game and get some meal-planning inspiration, a number of Wine Country chefs are offering free virtual classes. Click through the above gallery for some inspiration.

Three Good Bets for Takeout, Including Jackson’s Bar and Oven

Pulled chicken salad, maitake mushroooms, boeuf bourguignon from Barndiva in Healdsburg. (Heather Irwin / Sonoma Magazine)

As my daughter and I took our first bite of a juicy, perfectly medium-rare burger from Jackson’s Bar & Oven, we both stopped and stared at each other, then slowly began chewing. She broke the silence after looking at the takeout boxes sprawled between us — truffle fries, a wood fired margarita pizza, a glistening Caesar salad — and looking back at me sheepishly.

“I don’t mean to be mean, but I forgot food could taste this good,” she says. My culinary ego bruised, I conceded she was completely and totally right.

For many of us, eating has become more of a chore than a pleasure as restaurant dining rooms remain dark and anything other than fast food takeout is still something of a novelty.

Chefs are still learning, too, how to operate with takeout and delivery the only options. Buns and fries get soggy in transit. Even the most perfect of plating goes awry in a plastic takeout box. Charming small plates in a restaurant seem anemic and sad when they’re swimming in an oversized deli container.

Most of us have forgotten how good food can taste. How transformative mashed potatoes whipped with housemade creme fraiche and cultured butter can be after weeks of ramen from a cardboard cup. Oh, how we’ve forgotten.

Over the last week, I ordered takeout food from three restaurants — Jackson’s Bar and Oven in Santa Rosa, Sushi Kosho in Sebastopol and Barndiva in Healdsburg. None have done big takeout business in the past, instead relying on their well-known eateries to draw in customers looking for well-plated dishes, hospitality, good service and their unique points of view.

After photographing and eating each meal, I spoke to each chef about how they’ve arrived at their “new” normal, which seems to shift daily. Here are their stories.

Jackson’s Bar and Oven

The meal: Wood-fired margarita pizza, truffle fries, “The Burger,” Caesar salad, Jackson’s margarita

The sitch: The restaurant constructed a plexiglass “shield” in front of the bar area and offers most of their menu, including cocktails, to go with almost no contact with staff. Open 11:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. Wednesday through Sunday. Ordering is by telephone only, at 707-545-6900, with menus online at jacksonsbarandoven.com. 135 Fourth St., Santa Rosa.

The reality: Jackson’s reopened last week after weeks of being closed. Chef/owner Josh Silvers says he was only able to reopen after qualifying for the Small Business Administration’s Paycheck Protection Program. It’s a complicated and fraught forgivable loan program that covers up to eight weeks of payroll costs. Silvers brought back 15 of his 40 staff. He calls the program a “lifeline from a super-rickety boat” because there’s only so much work to be done with takeout-only ordering.

Silvers says response has been up and down, one day going gangbusters and the next not so much. That much fluidity is challenging after years of steady growth and a recent expansion. “The phone rings and we’re like, ‘Yay! An order!’” he says.

The hope is that the state will ease shelter-in-place orders and allow restaurants to reopen with well-spaced seating. The unique layout of Jackson’s allows for multiple seating areas, and Silvers says he’s crossing his fingers they’ll get the green light in early June.

“I don’t know if people will come, but I know they’re sick of (staying home),” he says.

Sushi Kosho

The meal: Japanese eggplant with sweet miso glaze and walnuts, sesame chicken donburi, “Combination Set” of sashimi, rolls and sushi, miso soup

The sitch: This breezy space in the Barlow has a large table blocking the entrance where pickup orders are placed. Online menu and ordering at sushikoshotogo.com. Pickup 1-8 p.m. Wednesday through Sunday. 6750 McKinley St., Sebastopol

The reality: This is the fourth time chef-owner Jake Rand has reopened his restaurant in 18 months. He says he’s a persistent optimist. “I approach every day as if it’s just going to get better. I’d just be paralyzed sitting at home,” he says. Some days have been great, some days have been a setback, but Rand feels he’s making progress with his takeout program that includes fresh sushi and sashimi (which I think is the best in the county), along with approachable poke and donburi bowls, small plates of heart-breakingly good grilled vegetables and sake to go.

Rand says the hardest part of to-go orders for a sushi chef is not interacting with customers. “It’s contrary to what we do as chefs. You react to the order, you read the customer, you interact with the guest. Some people want it all at once, some want to take their time,” he says. The other challenge is working against fixed time limits for orders.

“We don’t make anything in advance, there’s no batch-making sushi,” he says. So if 20 people order for a 6:30 p.m. pickup, they’re scrambling. “When 20 people are waiting for food all at once, that’s a harder beast to handle,” he says.

Barndiva

The meal: Boeuf Bourguignon, shiro-dashi glazed maitake mushrooms, pulled chicken salad, Flirt cocktail

The sitch: Menus change frequently, all items a la carte. Menu and ordering online at shop.barndiva.com or by phone at 707-431-0100. Open noon to 8:30 p.m. Wednesday through Sunday. Delivery option in Healdsburg and Geyserville or no-contact pickup (bags set up at table inside doorway). 231 Center St., Healdsburg.

The reality: New chef Jordan Rosas was in the kitchen of Barndiva for exactly two weeks before the county locked down. Having received two Michelin stars at his former Beverly Hills restaurant, Somni, he wasn’t exactly ready to start putting his carefully-crafted dishes into a to-go box.

“The food I like to do, when you put a plastic lid on it, it just disintegrates. I had to really think differently about people and putting a smile on their faces. So we are doing comfort food that’s approachable and carries out well. I put a lot of care into it, and I hope that’s what you’re tasting. So far, we’ve gotten good feedback,” he says.

Barndiva General Manager Lukka Feldman (who is doubling as a delivery driver) is looking for ways he can convey the restaurant’s focus on hospitality in a new way. He’s found a fan base of San Franciscans he’s delivering to in the city for Mother’s Day and is looking for new ways to bring the restaurant to a wider community.

Feldman says the closure of restaurant dining rooms may have a small silver lining in allowing management to examine how they can work on wage disparity between servers and kitchen staff. “The heart of the business is the kitchen. People always talk about working out this disparity, but no one looks at it. We’re trying to rethink how we can make it more fair,” he says.

The Whole Pie in Santa Rosa to Close Permanently

Trish Davis doesn’t rely on machines when making her crusts. Each morning she rolls out the dough by hand at The Whole Pie in Santa Rosa. (John Burgess/The Press Democrat)

Trishia Davis has always turned to baking when life got tough. Pies, she said, make bad days better for everyone.

After the 2017 opening of The Whole Pie, a cheery Santa Rosa bakery with a focus on pies, she found salvation in butter, cream, chocolate and whipped cream as fires, power outages and evacuations repeatedly disrupted her business. The pandemic, however, pushed her bakeshop far beyond anything a sweet treat could overcome. On Saturday she’ll officially turn in her rolling pin and permanently close her 3-year-old bakery.

“Since the beginning, we’ve faced one disaster after another and you’ve faced them with us, holding our hands, and eating our pies. Now it’s time to choose a new dream,” Davis said Monday on social media, inviting longtime customers to liquidate her remaining inventory on Friday and Saturday. She joins Bistro 29 and Whisper Sisters in Petaluma, who have also closed their doors in recent weeks.

It was a decision she pondered for several weeks after suspending operations when shelter-in-place orders were announced. As the weeks rolled on, Davis and co-owner Julia Freis came to the decision that it made more sense not to reopen.

“We asked ourselves if we wanted to slowly bleed to death until fire season closes us or go out while we still feel a little alive,” said Davis. After years of struggling after each successive disaster, working long days and nights, and taking little compensation, she said in some ways the closure is a relief.

Since the beginning, keeping the small shop going had been an ongoing struggle despite plenty of positive feedback and seasonal surges around holidays.

“We have a great reputation. People love our pies, but we have to get them to show up regularly. When I ask people to come buy pies they do, and that has kept us going … but we’ve been treading water trying to find the right formula,” she said.

Whole Pie owner Trisha Davis has a freezer full of pies she needs to sell as she begins the process of closing her business for good due to, in no small part, the coronavirus, Wednesday, May 6, 2020 in Santa Rosa. (Kent Porter / The Press Democrat) 2020
Whole Pie owner Trishia Davis has a freezer full of pies she needs to sell as she begins the process of closing her business for good. (Kent Porter)

Davis isn’t putting all the blame on the pandemic for the closure. An outspoken advocate for the difficult plight of small businesses like hers, Davis said it’s time for a food revolution, rather than simply paying lip service to issues like fair wages and supporting local businesses. Low wages, few benefits and tiny profit margins in the restaurant business — paired with consumers clamoring for high-quality food at bargain-basement prices — have created an almost impossible trajectory for success.

“We, as a community, talk an awful lot about supporting and shopping local and being community and how that means everything, and then we don’t do it. We buy things without looking at where they come from. We’re lining up at Costco for our three-pack minimum of meat while the 4-H kids are raising meat locally and need to sell it to go to college,” Davis said.

“We’ve become a society that believes we can have everything we want at the exact moment we want it, to our doorstep with every modification we want at 5 cents cheaper than it was yesterday,” she said.

At its peak, Whole Pie employed 11 people. Davis laid off seven workers, in addition to herself and her business partner.

On Friday, the shop will begin its final sale, offering up the remainder of its take-and-bake pies, cookies, “piecicles” and pantry items like organic flour, sugar, tapioca and other baking ingredients. The sale will take place from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Friday and Saturday or until the inventory is exhausted. Customers can stop by the bakery, located at 2792 Fourth St. in Santa Rosa, as long as they are wearing masks and comply with social distancing.

Davis said she doesn’t have any immediate plans after closing the shop, but is looking forward to a day or two off. She’s unsure that the restaurant industry, however, holds much security for her future.

“Maybe I’m gonna flip hamburgers, I just really don’t know right now,” she said. “Every one of us who open a restaurant door know that it will close at some point. “I just hoped it wouldn’t be this painful.”

All Stark’s Restaurants to Reopen Friday

Beet salad and fish and chips from Willi’s in Healdsburg Food shots for Cheap Eats section Chris Hardy

Praise the lord and pass the cheese curds, because all of the Stark’s restaurants are reopening for takeout starting Friday, May 8.  Menus and hours are limited, but to get smokey poke at Bird and the Bottle and pulled duck on polenta at Willi’s Wine Bar? Suddenly it seems like life is getting a little more normal.

Here’s what you need to know…

Ordering: Menus, ordering and payment only through starkrestaurants.com. Menus will be updated each Wednesday for the following week.

Willi’s Wine Bar: Ahi tuna tartare, curried crab tacos, brick chicken thighs, Moroccan roasted lamb and Tunisian roasted carrots and more. No beverages are available currently. Pickup available Fri-Sun 3 to 7 p.m.

Bird and the Bottle: Smokey poke, fried half chicken, little gem salad, smoked beets, grilled skirt steak, craft mac and cheese with fried cheese curds. Cocktails like Pancho’s Pride, Macho Pisco and Easy Rider, plus bottles of wine and beer available. Pickup available Fri-Sun 3 to 7 p.m.

Bravas: Fried chicken or paella for two, tomahawk beef rib chop for two. Wine, sangria and cocktails to go. Pickup available Fri-Sun 3 to 7 p.m.

Stark’s Steak and Seafood: Cook ’em yourself steaks (don’t worry, Chef Mark has a great video how-to) plus sides like creamed spinach, creme fraiche mashed taters, truffle mac and cheese. Signature cocktails, wine and beer. Pickup available Fri-Sun 3 to 7 p.m.

Willi’s Seafood: Clam chowder, peel and eat shrimp, lobster roll, curried crab salad roll, wine and beer, cocktails for 4. Pickup available Fri-Sun 3 to 7 p.m.

Monti’s: Tomato soup, burrata, mushroom pizza, Monti’s Cristo, oak roasted half chicken, honey glazed spareribs. Cocktails, beer, wine and cider. Pickup available Fri-Sun 3 to 7 p.m.

Grossman’s: NEW! Chinese chicken salad, chicken schnitzel, corned beef Reuben, pattymelt. “Family Meal” of Roast chicken with potatoes and salad or lamb kebabs. A la carte fresh baked bread, corned beef and pastrami. Bagels, natch with schmears and smoked salmon (we love the Brown Bag Brunch Kits). Bloody Mary, Mimosa and Bellini kits plus cocktails, beer and wine.

8 Things Local Wine Lovers Miss Right Now

Visitors enjoy a glass of Champagne at Korbel Winery in Guerneville, the oldest continually operating sparkling wine house in North America, established in 1882. That history gives Korbel the legal right to use the term “California Champagne” on its labels, even though the wines are not from Champagne, France. (John Burgess/The Press Democrat)

Although some coronavirus-spurred restrictions are being relaxed, Sonoma County’s winery tasting rooms remain closed, hospitality events and festivals are on hold and restaurant dining is limited to takeout and delivery. Wine lovers yearn for the old days — as in two months ago — when the bottles we wanted were easy and quick to get (well, maybe not Kosta Browne Pinot Noir or Peter Michael Les Pavots Bordeaux-style red blend), in myriad ways.

We don’t call this Wine Country for nothing.

In lieu of physically selling wine in their tasting rooms, producers have become adept at offering virtual wine tastings, porch deliveries and curbside pickups. Eateries sell bottles from their cellars along with take-home meals. Yet the social aspect has largely been missing: the conviviality of hanging with friends and making new ones over glasses of wine, not only at dinner tables, but at picnics at the coast, in wine bars, at our downtown celebrations with music and food trucks and at events where hundreds, if not thousands, of wines are available to taste for the cost of a ticket.

With spring-fever restlessness obvious, here are eight things fans of Sonoma County wines can’t wait to have again.

Tasting rooms at wineries

There is something magical about driving Sonoma’s country roads on a sunny spring day, surrounded by lush, leafy vineyards in the process of setting fruit for the year’s harvest. Downtown tasting rooms serve a noble purpose, but for me, there’s nothing like pulling into a winery driveway off a back road, inhaling the heady aromas of native fermentations that have been going since October and being greeted by the winery dog or human that sets the tone for an experience that’s as much about the people and place as it is about the wines. From a cordial greeting to a friendly farewell, visiting Sonoma County wineries is just plain cool.

Sunset thirst-slaking

It’s such a Sonoma thing, to enjoy dreamy, purple and pink sunsets along with a glass of wine and a knosh in hand. It’s a perfect end to what might have been a not-so-perfect day at work or with the kids. Paradise Ridge Winery in northern Santa Rosa does it right with its Wines & Sunsets Wednesdays, typically running May through October, at which Dan Barwick’s wines are poured alongside dishes prepared by a rotating group of gourmet food trucks (among them Sondra Bernstein’s Fig Rig, TIPS Tri Tip Trolley and Zazu Black Piglet), accompanied by live music. The 2020 calendar for Wines & Sunsets has been disrupted, of course, but proprietor Sonia Byck-Barwick hopes part of the schedule can be revived.

Paradise Ridge, as most locals know, was destroyed by the 2017 Tubbs fire. The Byck family rebuilt, then reopened the sculpture-studded estate last December, only to close again with shelter-in-place orders. “We were just getting back into the swing of things when the (order) was put in place, so naturally, it is not easy to be closed again,” Byck-Barwick said, noting the winery continues to sell its wines online for shipping or delivery.

“A bright spot is that we kept our gates open so neighbors can continue to visit Marijke’s Grove, our outdoor sculpture garden, while social distancing, of course. We feel it is a lovely reprieve from the stress many people are feeling.”

Weekly community concerts

We do it in Cloverdale, Healdsburg, Petaluma, Santa Rosa, Sonoma, Windsor and elsewhere: gather one night a week, from May through Labor Day, to listen to live music, order bites from food trucks, shop from local farmers and, of course, drink wine. Community commingling is a salve for the soul, particularly in a time like this, and it’s best shared with great wine and food. Tuesdays in the Plaza (Healdsburg), Summer Nights on the Green Concerts (Windsor), Sonoma Tuesday Night Market (Sonoma), Cloverdale Friday Night Live and Santa Rosa Wednesday Night Market are among the seasonal events on hold for now, yet all hope to resume when it’s safe to be out and about in crowds. Did I mention there’s always wine?

Shopping at, not from, wine shops

Local retail wine stores without food-service licenses were forced to close in March. Many offered online purchasing and shipping, but for people like me, that wasn’t a substitute for perusing aisles and reading the back labels on bottles and “shelf talker” notes on the wines from the producer, retailer or wine critic. Grocery stores including Oliver’s Market, Safeway and Raley’s continue to offer a nice range of wines. Shops with food including Willibees Wines & Spirits and BevMo do the same. Yet I’ve missed the in-person shopping experience, from mom and pop shops to Santa Rosa’s warehouse-sized Bottle Barn. Reopening will do us all good.

Taste of Sonoma

This day-long gorge-athon of wine and food, held in early September each year, draws locals and visitors from around the country for its embarrassing richness of gustatory pleasures. Wineries, restaurants and caterers converge for “Taste,” and you might not be hungry or thirsty for a couple days after. The annual event, conducted by Sonoma County Vintners and initially scheduled this year for Sept. 5 at the Kendall-Jackson Wine Estate and Gardens in Santa Rosa, was canceled because of prohibitions on large events amid the coronavirus pandemic. The event is a treasure, a showcase for Sonoma’s most talented winemakers and chefs. Stay tuned for the 2021 date of this marvel of an event. 855-939-7666, tasteofsonoma.com

Passport to Dry Creek Valley

At this grandaddy-of-them-all wine event that began in 1990, each “passport” purchased gives the holder access to what has grown to 40-plus wineries pouring their finest, accompanied by gourmet food and live entertainment over two days in April. There was a time when postmarks on mailed ticket requests — and later, FedEx overnight arrivals — determined who received a passport and who did not. Passport 2020 was canceled, so mark your calendar for April 24-25 for the 2021 event. Other Sonoma County AVA marketing groups have created similar events, among them the Sonoma Valley Vintners & Growers’ Signature Sonoma event, postponed until May 13-16, 2021. drycreekvalley.org/events/passport-dry-creek-valley, sonomavalleywine.com/signature-sonoma-valley

Wine Road Barrel Tasting

This two-weekend, February-March event is a marvel, drawing crowds since 1978 to taste and purchase Alexander, Dry Creek and Russian River valley wines that aren’t yet ready to drink. Out of the barrel, many of these mostly red wines are raw, tannic and mouth-puckering. By the time they are bottled, a year or two later, they’ve rounded out, become complete and are fine values for those smart enough to buy them, at discounted prices, when the wines are still in barrel. The second weekend of this event was canceled this year; those booked for the second weekend look forward to the 2021 event, set for March 5-7. wineroad.com

Enjoying wine in restaurants

Diners have benefited from the ability to order takeout from their favorite restaurants, though these businesses have struggled mightily to stay in the black and keep their staffs employed during the shutdowns. Wine, beer and liquor sales traditionally offset skyrocketing food costs in the restaurant industry, and without table service, eateries have experienced a double-whammy financial blow because they can’t hand-sell wine. I’ve missed the services of sommeliers and servers who point me to interesting wines, those that complement the dishes I’ve ordered, and tell a short story about a producer that convinces me to try the wine. Also missed: wine by the glass. Restaurants have been allowed to sell full, sealed bottles of wine as part of their takeout/delivery efforts. But what if I want just one glass and don’t want to invest in a bottle? Reopening of restaurants will solve that problem.