Weekend Getaway: 15 Things to Do in Sonoma

February, 2019

Sonoma pairs small town charm with world-class wineries, restaurants and outdoor adventures. Spend a weekend wine tasting, farm-to-table feasting and town square shopping with some live music and off-the-beaten-path fun thrown into the mix – click through the gallery for 15 things to do in the town of Sonoma.

Two New Restaurants Opening on the Coast

Interior of Dillon Beach Coast Kitchen. Houston Porter

Fans of chef Matt Elias’ and Laine Ayre’s The Bodega food truck will be stoked to learn they’re now heading up one of the coast’s most destination-worthy cafes — Dillon Beach Coastal Kitchen.

The duo quietly took over at the historic Dillon Beach Resort earlier this year, transitioning from their mobile kitchen to a roomier brick-and-mortar spot. The 55-acre resort with a private beach has been a family-friendly destination for more than 130 years. In April 2018, a handful of native Marin County families, including Petaluma restaurateur Mike Goebel (locally of Brewsters Beer Garden), purchased the property. Ongoing renovations will continue into the summer under Goebel and operations director Brooke Gray (formerly of Nick’s Cove).

The resort cafe is already getting weekend warrior buzz. Inspired by farm and sea, Elias’ seasonal menu is a simple, family-friendly lineup of dishes like smoked McFarland trout dip with cucumber, dill, creme fraiche and crackers ($13), Bellwether Farms Ricotta Toast ($13) with marinated vegetables, clam chowder with fennel cream, bacon, potatoes and grilled focaccia ($15), Stemple Creek burger with Grazin’ Girl gorgonzola ($18), and their well-loved Bodega Sandwich,” a buttermilk fried chicken sandwich with smoky aioli, slaw, house pickles and a salad ($17). A vegetarian wrap with sheep milk yogurt and lentil hummus can get a pescatarian upgrade with crispy harissa shrimp. There are, natch, Hog Island oysters as well as Baked oysters; wine and beer on tap and less spirited drinks like an Arnold Palmer, local kombucha and coffee. Soft serve ice cream from Double 8 Dairy is a favorite.

So what about the Bodega food truck? Elias says they’ll be bringing their rig to the beach this spring, and the mobile kitchen will live on. 

If you want to head out, the restaurant is open for lunch and dinner Thursday through Sunday from 11:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. Dillon Beach Resort is about 30 minutes from Petaluma. 1 Beach Avenue, Dillon Beach. The resort’s general store and surf shop are also open for business.

Further south, Tony’s Seafood in Marshall is getting ready for their grand opening later this month. The 70 year-old restaurant is being resurrected by Hog Island Oyster owners John Finger and Terry Sawyer, who purchased it in 2017.

Chef Matt Shapiro (Marlow & Sons, Wise Sons, Walzwerk, Schmidt’s, Hog Island) will helm the kitchen. The 96-seat restaurant will face onto Tomales Bay and feature an open kitchen.

The menu will include classicsfish and chips (AK True Cod), an oyster po’ boy, a seasonal Dungeness crab roll (in season), oysters on the half shell and BBQ-ed, a crudo, linguine with clams—as well as personal touches, a daily “heads and tails” dish, a catch of the day, and land-based dishes like a Stemple Creek hamburger with tartar sauce. Local produce, much of it from the Marin Farmers Market, will inform accompaniments and specials.

The restaurant’s first Chef Dinner on Feb. 21 will feature a five-course menu highlighting McEvoy Ranch’s wines and olive oils. On March 7, Chef Shapiro pairs up with Far West Fungi to create a special mushroom dinner. Details at tonysseafoodrestaurant.com. 

Sonoma County Motel Named Among 10 Best in the US

A room furnished with 1960’s era decor at the Astro Motel, in Santa Rosa. (Christopher Chung/ The Press Democrat)

Motels, the iconic roadside inns of the mid 20th century, are making a comeback in the United States. After decades of steady decline following the arrival of the Interstate Highway in the 1970s, the once endangered lodging species has recently been brought out of its state of disrepair by design-savvy hoteliers. Renovated, reimagined, revived and retro (and a little pricier than their predecessors), modern motels are now popping up all over the country.

British daily newspaper The Guardian has tapped into the motor lodge trend with a travel reportage that lists 10 of the best motels in the U.S. Thanks to the revamped Astro Motel in Santa Rosa, Sonoma County is represented on this list. The mid-century modern motor lodge was named among the chicest motels in America in January and has also been featured in Vogue, Goop and Sunset. Click through the gallery to see what The Guardian had to say about the Astro, and a few other trendy motels in the United States – including in Napa Valley.

Sweet T’s Sets Opening Date, Matheson Moves Closer

Two tasty riblets of restaurant news for this weekend:

Sweet T’s Sets Opening Date

It’s been a long, long wait for the grand opening of Sweet T’s 2.0 in Windsor, but the date has been set: March 7.

The original restaurant location in Fountaingrove burned to the ground in the 2017 wildfires. Owners have been slowly rebuilding their dream space in Windsor for more than a year, but hiring has begun and the doors are set to swing open to barbecue and other delicious Southern treats soon.

Read more about Sweet T’s journey.

A rendering of the parking lot and rear of the Matheson building
A rendering of the parking lot and rear of the Matheson building

Matheson Moves Closer

Chef Dustin Valette’s proposed 231-seat Healdsburg restaurant has moved a step further to being built. On Tuesday, the city’s planning commission approved a revised design plan by Valette and his business partners. Despite some vocal opposition, the commission voted 4 to 1 to let the project move forward, saying that it complied with local building guidelines.

According to Valette, the next steps for the project will be retail remodel, beginning this month, and final city permits to begin construction. Two condominiums planned for the third floor of the project have received conditional use permits.

Read more about the Matheson project.

The Best Sonoma Brunch Spots for Bottomless Mimosas

Breakfast salad of local lettuces, soft poached egg, crispy bacon, sauteed mushrooms, poached potatoes, fresh red onion, avocado, Pugs Leap chevre, and apple cider vinaigrette dressing and a mimosa at Estero Cafe in Valley Ford, California on Wednesday, January 27, 2016. (Alvin Jornada / The Press Democrat)

Sonoma County loves its wine, and thanks to brunch, we have the perfect excuse to sip sparkling before noon. We’ve compiled a list of the best local brunch spots for bottomless mimosas. We also threw in a few places that, while they may not go full bottomless, have unique cocktails for those heading out to weekend brunch. Click through the gallery for details. Did we miss one of your favorite spots for bottomless mimosas? Let us know in the comments.

We know “Sunday Funday” can be a great time to let your hair down, but remember to be respectful of fellow brunch guests and restaurant staff (go easy on those mimosas) and make sure that you have a designated driver or take advantage of your local taxi or Uber/Lyft service. Even better, take a ride on the SMART train to and from brunch (here are some other fun things to do close to SMART train stations).

DIY Days: 5 Things to Get You Crafting in Sonoma County

Are you pining to craft something besides an Instagram story or status update? Working with your hands to create a thing of beauty can be such a satisfying undertaking. Sonoma’s rich artisan culture offers plenty of inspiration. Here are some great items that might help you make good on your “I want to do that!” list—click through the above gallery for details.

Lagunitas, HenHouse and More: The Best Breweries and Taprooms in Petaluma

At Brewsters Beer Garden in Petaluma. (Heather Irwin/The Press Democrat)

There’s no denying it: Petaluma is a beer town. True, Santa Rosa has Russian River Brewing Co., but we’ve got Lagunitas, HenHouse and more. Even better, many of the town’s beer-drinking destinations are within walking distance of each other. From nationally known breweries to downtown taprooms, hops- and barley-fueled bliss is just around the corner.

In-N-Out Named Worst Fries by LA Times

The ketchup is hitting the fan after the L.A. Times ranked In-N-Out’s fries dead last among 19 fast food restaurants. 

(Looking for the best places for fries in Sonoma County? Here’s our list)

According to their Power Ranking of fries, here’s how the SoCal classic stacked up: “And bringing up the rear is In-N-Out. Before you tell me there’s a way to “hack” these fries, or somehow make them better, either by loading them with American cheese and secret sauce, or by ordering them well-done, I will grant this: It certainly doesn’t make the fries any worse. Just as dumping the fries into a dirt pile on the shoulder of a highway access road and running over that pile with my car would also probably not make the fries any worse.”

Fast food French fries, ranked. (Lucas Kwan Peterson / Stephen Lurvey)

Cue the freakout.

Starting with the Times’ food section social media intern, dissension ensued: “Hello I am the social media intern and have to share this but I totally don’t agree with it. here are @lucaspeterson’s fast food french fry power rankings.”

Not that we haven’t all thought it from time to time, because we have. They’re sort of meh when compared to the salt and grease bombs of, say, McDonald’s or Carl’s Junior, but worse than, say, Carl’s Junior? I think not.

Furor continued with angry Tweets about the wonders of the hand-cut, freshly made fries some see as heaven’s gift to creation. Granted, if you’ve ever been through a drive-thru watching some beefy kid hammering down the fry-cutter in the kitchen, you can appreciate the work involved and the simplicity of their fries.

But does it make them taste better? It’s a divisive issue for all In-N-Out lovers, and a spirited debate was inevitable.

“Anyone who says there’s no room for ethics and accountability in modern-day mass media kindly check today’s Los Angeles Times bravely yet truthfully stating that their most popular and beloved regional fast food restaurant’s fries are absolute ass,” said @llamsoyd in return. Smell that burn.

So who ranked number one? Five Guys.

Possibly a generous #3 on my list, Five Guys’ fries always tend to be a little limp and oily, especially after steaming in a bag for a few minutes. According to the Times, Arby’s comes in at #5, with the Midwest’s Steak ’n Shake #4 (well deserved), Del Taco at #3. McDonald’s is at #2. Carl’s Junior ranks #6 and Burger King #10, both of which I find incredibly unpleasant to eat due to their odd coating.

As you can see, finding consensus isn’t easy and everyone has an opinion, no matter how wrong they are.

Here’s the thing, though. What exactly do we expect a fry to be? If it’s an actual unadulterated potato fried in oil, then most fast-food restaurants would fail miserably, adding up to 20 other ingredients to their fries. That includes things like beef flavoring, rice flour, corn syrup and hydrolyzed milk, along with a number of preservatives and stabilizers.

Five Guys and In-N-Out don’t use any of that stuff, listing only potatoes, oil (peanut for Five Guys, sunflower for In-N-Out) and salt. That’s it. So how is one #1 and the other dead last?

The debate rages on. And on. And on.

The Best Places for French Fries in Sonoma County

A Harvard professor said recently that the ideal serving size of french fries is six. With a side salad. That might be fine if you’re an elf, but for serious pommes frites fanatics, it’s all or nothing. Sonoma County has no end of great fries, best served with aioli, but we won’t pass up some homemade ketchup — or even a little Heinz 57. Whether they’re thick or thin, peel on or peel off, fried in duck fat or canola, we’ve found some of the region’s best. Click through the gallery for details. Did we miss one of your favorites? Let us know in the comments. And check out the L.A. Times ranking of fast food fries – it fired up quite a few In-N-Out fans… 

Sustainable (M)eats in Downtown Healdsburg

5/16/2012: D1: PC: Conchinita Pibil, by Mateo Granados, at Mateo’s Cocina Latina in Healdsburg, served with a rhubarb inspired margarita. The dish features slow-roasted pork marinated in annatto seed with homemade tortilla and cinnamon-cured red onions.

I’ve never butchered an animal before. But not that long ago I watched as third-generation Yucatan butcher Mateo Granados expertly trimmed away the fat of a slab of beef in the chilly backroom of his Healdsburg restaurant, Mateo’s Cocina Latina.

The makeshift butchery of his seven-year-old restaurant is cooler than fall’s brisk outside temperature—perfect drinking weather. Someone hands me a Yucatan-inspired cocktail made of tequila and spices, and I’m immediately transported to an exotic paradise. That’s when Mateo passes me a thinly sliced piece of the freshly trimmed tartare, my senses recognizing grass, dirt and muscle as I swallow the piece whole.

“I have a 700-pound beef hanging in the walk-in,” Mateo tells me on a follow-up visit.

Mateo Granados, owner of Mateo's restaurant in Healdsburg
Mateo Granados, owner of Mateo’s Cocina Latina restaurant in Healdsburg. (Photo by Chris Hardy for Sonoma Magazine)

Mateo butchers every single piece of meat that makes its way into his kitchen. “Everything comes [to the restaurant] whole—from the kidneys to the tongue,” says Mateo. And like his father before him, Mateo uses every part of the animal—from the blood to the bones. “Everything is usable,” he says.

“Mateo is unique in many ways, including that he purchases an entire carcass and breaks it down himself,” says Pamela Torliatt, co-founder and partner at Progressive Pastures, the Petaluma-based farm that exclusively raises animals for Mateo.

Sourcing only locally raised, grass-fed meat, Mateo doesn’t skimp on great ingredients. It shows. His menu is a unique reflection of the French techniques he learned while cooking at Masa’s and Dry Creek Kitchen, combined with the resourcefulness of a butcher’s son.

5/16/2012: D1: PC: Tostada with Ground Beef Yucatan Picadillo, by Mateo Granados, at Mateo's Cocina Latina, served with a Michelada.
Tostada with Ground Beef Yucatan Picadillo, by Mateo Granados, at Mateo’s Cocina Latina, served with a Michelada. (Photo by Christopher Chung/The Press Democrat)
Lamb heart and potatoes are served at Mateo's Cocina Latina in Healdsburg, Calif. Saturday, June 25, 2016. Mateo's Cocina Latina is beginning to offer sustainable feasts that include every part of the animals butchered for the dinner, including suckling pig brain mousse and pigs tails. (Jeremy Portje / For The Press Democrat)
Lamb heart and potatoes are served at Mateo’s Cocina Latina in Healdsburg. (Photo by Jeremy Portje for The Press Democrat)

An “honest” man, Mateo grew up watching his father rise at 2am to butcher animals in the family’s manzana before walking off to sell it in the mercado by 6am. It was the family business where Mateo learned not to waste a thing—something that he continues to practice today in his own kitchen, a rarity among chefs who often don’t have the time nor the knowledge to butcher every protein they use on their menu.

Mateo and his father in the butchery. (Photo courtesy of Mateo Granados)

“Butchering is the most important part of the kitchen,” he says. “I wanted to do my own butchering because I don’t think it’s really done anymore—it’s done by machine.” That means you can find Mateo most days in his kitchen. There, or picking vegetables from his half-acre garden at home that’ll eventually get used in his kitchen. It’s not an easy job, he admits, to source locally and sustainably, but it’s how he was raised. “I grew up using local ingredients, and that’s why I decided to practice it,” he says.

Fried cow parts are served at Mateo's Cocina Latina in Healdsburg, Calif. Saturday, June 25, 2016. Mateo's Cocina Latina is beginning to offer sustainable feasts that include every part of the animals butchered for the dinner, including suckling pig brain mousse and pigs tails. (Jeremy Portje / For The Press Democrat)
Fried cow parts are served at Mateo’s Cocina Latina in Healdsburg. (Photo by Jeremy Portje for The Press Democrat)

Growing up in what he calls the “bread basket” of the Yucatan, about an hour from Merida, Mateo was raised by two generations of butchers. His father and all six uncles “owned the majority of the butcher stores in town” and taught him to respect the animal. That’s why the chef makes it a point to visit every farm from which he sources his meat. The mass-produced stuff, where there’s more fat than meat, just isn’t for him.

Mateo will make a point to trek out to Petaluma to visit Progressive Pastures, or Acorn Ranch in Anderson Valley to check on how the pigs are being raised. “He picked that first animal himself,” Pamela tells me about the first time they met in September 2013.

It’s also why you won’t currently see any chicken on his menu. His former poultry producer was slaughtering their animals overseas, and once Mateo learned of this practice, just couldn’t continue to use the product. “It’s not what we do; it’s not what we support,” he says. His last shipment of chicken was eight months ago.

Live seaweed salad is prepared at Mateo's Cocina Latina in Healdsburg, Calif. Saturday June 25, 2016. Mateo's Cocina Latina is beginning to offer sustainable feasts that include every part of the animals butchered for the dinner, including suckling pig brain mousse and pigs tails. (Jeremy Portje / For The Press Democrat)
Live seaweed salad is prepared at Mateo’s Cocina Latina in Healdsburg. (Photo by Jeremy Portje for The Press Democrat)

That change didn’t really hurt Mateo, but only drove his creativity. Since his menu is always changing with the season, he’s learned to adapt quickly by what arrives each morning. So if you fell in love with that slow-braised oxtail with capers and olives during your last visit, don’t expect to see it on his menu again (or at least for a while). Instead, Mateo makes it a point to turn irregular dishes that aren’t on many menus, or part of many American diets, into favorites. Pamela says her favorite dish is the beef heart, which she says he prepares as tender as filet mignon.

Everything from blood sausage to chicharrones has appeared on his menu, which is a unique reflection of Mateo himself – blending his Yucatan upbringing as a butcher’s son with the French techniques he learned in the decade he spent at Masa’s. There are French, Spanish, Lebanese and Maya influences in dishes like salbuches, empanadas, and cochinita pupil. He fondly refers to his cuisine as “Yucatan food using my French technique with ingredients made in America.”

While his butchering style might reflect a humbler man, Mateo is anything but. Once you get him talking about his food, he can’t help but brag; of course, there’s reason to. His cuisine is an amplified version of the farm-to-table movement our palates in the Bay Area have come to love, from the farm-fresh vegetables to the sustainably raised meats. “People have no idea what this restaurant does,” he tells me.

Childlike in his enthusiasm for great food and even better conversation, it’s hard not to fall in love with Mateo. And guaranteed he’ll be there in the kitchen, butchering something for the night’s menu, when you stop by.

This article was originally published on kqed.org/bayareabites