Lemongrass chicken noodle bowl at Corner Cafe in Santa Rosa. Heather Irwin/PD
(Update: Now known as Savor, the restaurant is focused exclusively on Vietnamese cuisine. You’ll find simple, fresh and tasty fare along with boba, milk teas and slushies. A recent remodel has updated the look and feel of the spot).
Tasty Vietnamese food at a donut shop? It’s a thing at Savor Vietnamese restaurant in Santa Rosa.
Though it seems like an odd pairing, there’s a long history of immigrants from southeast Asia opening donut shops that also serve the foods of their homeland. You can thank Ted Ngoy, a Cambodian refugee who is widely credited for not only building his own donut empire in the 1980s but providing seed money for hundreds of other immigrants to purchase the high-profit sweet shops throughout the state.
Formerly known as Corner Park Cafe, Savor had a slightly different trajectory, owned by longtime donut-maker Frank Whigham and his Cambodian wife, Champa, for more than a decade. The couple typically worked 18-hour days, sticking to fresh donuts of every strip. At 89, Frank was ready to retire, recently transferring ownership to Kanha Kien, another Cambodian who owns Santa Rosa’s Yo Panda. The Corporate Center Drive cafe offers — you guessed it — donuts and Vietnamese food.
Go for the pho, barbecue pork banh mi, fresh rolls, and noodle bowls, but save some room for mango shaved ice, a specialty. Mango ice cream is shaved into impossibly thin stacked ribbons of flavor, topped with a pile of fresh mango and sugar syrup. They’ve also got a taro root version with strawberries that’s a more exotic take.
Of course, you can’t leave without a couple of donuts too. 4275 Montgomery Dr, Santa Rosa.
There was a time when kids and wine country was not a great pairing. But that is changing. A new breed of family-friendly wineries are now welcoming wine-loving parents and their (well-behaved) offspring for some fun in the vineyard — children sipping grape juice while parents relax, wine in hand. Click through the gallery to discover the most kid-friendly wineries in Sonoma and Napa.
After more than 25 years of farming Pinot Noir and Chardonnay high above Timber Cove and Fort Ross on the rugged ridges of the Sonoma Coast, Flowers Vineyards & Winery has opened its first public tasting room.
Just south of downtown Healdsburg, the sprawling 15.5-acre property features a main hospitality house nestled into a grove of redwoods, an on-site winemaking facility, indoor and outdoor seating, gardens and a wood-fired oven.
The former VML Winery site at 4035 Westside Road is stunning, with natural and modern design elements in an open, inviting setting—framing expansive views of Mount Saint Helena.
Husband and wife duo Walt and Joan Flowers found a home for their vineyards on the extreme Sonoma Coast, first planting out their Camp Meeting Ridge vineyard in 1991 at an elevation of 1,450 feet. Their second vineyard, Sea View Ridge, was planted at an elevation of 1,872 feet seven years later. Both feature a mix of the the coastal terroir-driven Chardonnays and Pinot Noirs Flowers is best known for — produced by head winemaker Chantal Forthun with 100 percent native yeast and minimal intervention.
That aesthetic will be echoed at the new tasting room, through a culinary pairing program led by chef Jamil Peden (Campo Fina, Woodfour Brewing, Applewood Inn).
The tasting room will be open every day from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. with a limited number of walk-in appointments available. Reservations are recommended. For more information, call 707-847-3661 or visit flowerswinery.com.
Pork sisig at Tambayan Filipino restaurant in Larkfield. (Heather Irwin/The Press Democrat)
If you’re jonesing for some lumpia, halo-halo or adobo chicken, there’s a new spot in Larkfield offering up authentic cuisine from the Philippines. Tambayan, which means “hang out” in Tagalog (the native language of the South Pacific island chain) opened in April.
Since then, the family-run restaurant has been quietly serving up both familiar and “what exactly is this?”dishes to neighborhood diners.
Meat lumpia at Tambayan Filipino restaurant in Larkfield. Heather Irwin/PD
On a recent visit, we fell in love with their rib-sticking breakfasts (silog) noodle bowls, beef satay and off-beat specialties like pan-grilled milkfish, pork sisig (minced pork with rice, onions, and mayonnaise) or laing with dried taro leaves, coconut milk and pork.
It’s best to go in with an open mind and hungry belly because some of the best dishes require a bit of trust if you’re not familiar with the eclectic cuisine of the Filipino culture.
Trade and settlement have brought together traditional island flavors (taro, coconut milk, banana leaves, banana sauce, fish) with influences from China (egg rolls, rice, soy sauce, steamed buns), Spain (adobo) and America (Spam — you’re welcome).
Fresh roll at Tambayan Filipino restaurant in Larkfield. Heather Irwin/PD
There are frequent off-menu additions that sometimes need a little explanation, but it’s worth having an adventure trying something like mung bean cookies or lechon belly (rolled pork belly that’s much like porchetta).
Other favorites include fried spring rolls with ground meat (Lumpia Shanghai), Pork Adobo — fall-apart meat cooked in soy sauce and vinegar with rice) and banana sauce on everything. Condiments are definitely part of the experience, and contrary to its name, banana sauce is a lot like sweet ketchup.
Save room for halo-halo. This traditional dessert combines crushed ice, evaporated milk, coconut strips, sweet beans, gelatin and a scoop of purple yam ice cream. Just trust us that this is the most surprisingly delicious dessert you’ve never had before.
Returning to her family’s roots as the owners of a traditional beer hall in Wisconsin, Crista Luedtke German-style bratskellar, Brot, is mix of on-trend design, quirky charm and classic Bavarian dishes.
Luedtke and chef de cuisine Joey Blank have distilled the menu into a “best of” playlist that includes potato pancakes, spätzle, sauerbraten, schnitzel, creamed herring and sausages. Mit kraut und bier. Lots of Deutsches bier.
The name Brot translates to “bread” in German, but for Luedtke it refers to more than just a loaf of rye. It also translates as “livelihood,” something she’s been putting a lot of thought into. As the owner of the Boon Hotel, Boon Eat + Drink, El Barrio (a tequila bar) and a former partner in Big Bottom Market, Luedtke has made it her mission to bring a destination-worthy vitality to the river town.
With new restaurants continuing to pop up along the river, schwanky glamping sites, boutique hotels and shops, Guerneville is gaining the polish that Luedtke has long hoped it would. For that she’s been both lauded and demonized by longtime locals, but never counted out.
Taking over the former 3 Alarm Grill restaurant that closed in 2018, Luedtke has overhauled the interior, adding seating and adding creative touches like a wall of cuckoo clocks and creative paneling to evoke the outline of the Alps. Old German movies play silently in the background and jars of white asparagus pickle in mason jars near the beer taps. It’s cute without feeling overly precious.
Dishes at Brot in Guerneville. Heather Irwin/PD
The “livelihood” theme carries through to the 20% service charge that allows her to pay the staff a living wage. In these days that offer a limited pool of local staff, surging food costs and horrifying rents for commercial space, many restaurateurs find themselves providing more of a public service than getting rich.
Since opening in late May, the menu has already changed slightly, with a stone fruit salad added to the menu, a few tweaks to ingredients, a few beers added to the menu. But overall, the idea is to stay true to the comfort foods her family has eaten for generations. It’s a welcome addition to the melting pot of cuisines in town, and a testament to the fortitude that Luedtke continues to show in her adopted hometown.
Plus, her mom — who helps in the kitchen — makes some truly legit potato pancakes.
Best Bets
Bavarian Pretzel ($7): A trendy menu item that usually amounts to a microwaved piece of bitter dough slathered in mustard. This gets it right with a bit of snap on the outside, but soft bready goodness inside. Served with butter and mustard for dipping and just enough black salt to season — but not overwhelm.
Flammkuchen ($14): An Alsatian-style flatbread smeared with fromage blanc, red onions, speck (a type of ham) and Emmentaler cheese. A cracker crust and plenty of aromatic cheese make this a perfect pairing for a stein of beer and house pickles.
Potato Pancakes ($9): Everyone has an opinion about potato pancakes. Thick, thin, big, little, shredded or mashed, our tastes bend to familiarity. These thin, uniform patties are crispy at the edges and soft at the center without the greasiness that often weighs down this iconic dish. Sides of thick apple butter and creme fraiche slathered on top elevate these to epic status. With a side of smoked Mount Lassen Trout, they’re even better.
Obatzda ($9): Soft cheese mixed with butter, paprika and onions. It’s beer cheese at its best, and the official Oktoberfest dip, dontcha know. Served with crunchy pretzel chips and a few slices of radish so you can pretend you didn’t just eat a ball of cheese and butter.
Stone fruit salat at Brot in Guerneville. Heather Irwin/PD
Käsespätzle ($9): Spätzle mixed with all the cheese. If you’re new to spätzle, it’s a lot like pasta, but fluffier. Egg batter is poured through a sieve to create tiny dumplings. Mixed with cheese and breadcrumbs, its essentially German mac and cheese.
Fischplatte ($17): Brot has two “boards” — a cured meat “charcuterie” board and a fish board. If you’re a seafood fan, the combination of smoked trout, cured salmon and creamed herring with pickled vegetables is a taste of the old country. Having lived in Germany as a child, the herring awakened a sensory memory of eating pickled fish and sour cream while watching Sesamstrasse (Sesame Street).
Buckwheat Spätzle ($18): A simple, but hearty dish with brown butter crumbs and wild mushrooms.
The Wurst Plate ($18): Finely-ground pork sausage from Journeyman Meat Co., thick-cut sauerkraut and warm German potato salad. Perfection.
Broasted Half Chicken ($24): Though it wasn’t quite what we expected — broasted means different things in different places including fried with some sort of crust — this was the most flavorful roasted chicken we’ve ever had. The meat, through and through, was tender and juicy and flavored with tarragon and other herbs. Served on the bone with wilted greens and a bread dumpling (that frankly seemed a little tacked on). A must-try.
Pork Schnitzel ($22): Too many restaurants are attempting schnitzel when they really shouldn’t. It takes an experienced hand with both the meat and the breading. We tend to be squeamish in the U.S. about using veal, which is the more traditional and more tender meat for schnitzel. Pork unfortunately tends to dry out, though this version, with a grilled lemon and potatoes is laudable.
Sauerbraten ($27): One of the best dishes on the menu. A hunk of braised beef that falls apart faster than a jealous bridesmaid, topped with crispy shallots and pickled cabbage.
Mandelkuchen, an almond cake with lemon quark, seasonal fruit at Brot in Guerneville. Heather Irwin/PD
Mandelkuchen: Sweet, moist almond cake with lemon quark and seasonal fruit. (Again, stone fruit, not quite ripe, but still tasty).
Black Forest Pot de Crème: My dad ate all the Luxardo cherries as we shared this dish around the table. Ugh. Rude. Otherwise, a creamy, cool, delicious chocolatey treat.
Needs Improvement
Stone Fruit Salat ($10): They may have jumped the gun a couple weeks on the stone fruit, since our nectarines were a little crunchy, but the idea of mache greens with herbed quark (similar to cream cheese) and toasted buckwheat, dressed in riesling wine, is the essence of summer.
Red Cabbage Kraut: We like our kraut funky. Cabbage salad is fine, but it isn’t kraut. Sweet-sour, red kraut is one of my favorite things in the universe, and I was sad not to have more of it. Red cabbage salad kept falling off my fork and making me even more sad.
Great Pairings
It would be thoughtless to not include the incredible list of German beers on tap. Luedtke has gone to great lengths to have not only the proper glassware, but traditional wheat beers, lagers and pilsners, many of which come from Bavarian brewmasters Schneider Weisse.
German wines are well represented with riesling, Gruner Veltliner, Spatburgunder, Rotburger and bubbles. It’s rare to find German reds, and they’re worth a try. Aromatic whites are a special find.
Information: Brot, 16218 Main St, Guerneville, 707-604-6102, brotguerneville.com. Open for dinner only, but lunch is slated to begin soon.
7/15/2013: B1:
PC: Sofia Pomares, 4, reaches for a French flag waved by her mother, Fabiola Pomares- Sotomayor, while celebrating Bastille Day at Chateau St. Jean on Sunday, July 14, 2013 in Kenwood, California. (BETH SCHLANKER/ The Press Democrat)
July 2019
This July 14, as has been the custom for more than 200 years, people in France will line rivers, rues and boulevards to celebrate all things French during La Fête Nacional. In Paris, they’ll picnic to the sound of symphonic music on the Champs de Mars, see firework displays from the Eiffel Tower, and then dance the night away with firemen at the Bals des Pompiers. (Those French, they sure know how to party.)
Meanwhile, in the United States and other Francophile regions in the world, people will don berets and striped shirts, drink wine, play pétanque, maybe even wave the tricolore flag, all the while wishing they were really in France (or as effortlessly stylish as the French). In Sonoma County, possibly the closest thing to Provence on this side of the Atlantic (or at least, that’s what we like to think), French-Americans and Francophiles alike can attend a variety of Bastille Day events. Click through the gallery for details and Vive la France!
Guests enjoying cold drinks on the patio overlooking the Russian River at Stumptown Brewery in Guerneville, on April 20, 2013. (Alvin Jornada / The Press Democrat)
Summer is kicking into gear in Sonoma County. Time to sip on a cold one on a shaded patio or at a lively bar – we’ve lined up a few favorite beer venues for summer fun. Added bonus: we asked each spot for a summer brew recommendation. Click through the above gallery for details.
It’s time to get your summer on and Sonoma stores can provide some shopping inspiration. Here are some unique buys to help you take the heat outside and feel stylish while doing so. Happy Sonoma Summer! Click through the above gallery for details.
Lynzie Brodhun, left, and her sister Lexi Brodhun drink beer and listen to live music at Brewster’s in Petaluma on Sunday, September 9, 2018. (Beth Schlanker/ The Press Democrat)
Sonoma County has no shortage of excellent live music venues and, just as in the greater Bay Area, the local music scene is diverse. Fans of bluegrass, reggae, hip-hop, rock, and soul — and everything in between — can count on finding a concert here. And, this being wine country, you can pair your music experience with great food, wine and beer. In addition to larger venues like the Luther Burbank Center for the Arts, The Green Music Center, The Mystic and SOMO Village, music lovers should make time to explore the smaller stages at local restaurants and bars. Click through the gallery for some of our favorite local spots for live music.
Summer is officially here. What could be a better excuse to open a bottle of your favorite rosé?
To highlight some outstanding Sonoma County rosé producers, we’ve been breaking it down by region. First up was Russian River Valley Rosé, made mainly from pinot noir grapes. Next, we drove north to the wine regions of Alexander Valley and Dry Creek Valley to sample different varieties of pink wine. Finally, let’s explore the Sonoma Coast, a favorite among fans of seafood and Northern California beaches, and a great region for growing cool-climate grape varieties. Click through the gallery for some of our favorite Sonoma Coast rosés.