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Sondra Bernstein of the Girl & the Fig: The Evolution of a Community Celebrity

June 2017June 2017
By Carey Sweet

As wildly popular Sonoma restaurant the girl & the fig turns 20 this year, restaurateur Sondra Bernstein celebrates a milestone and keeps her eye on new ventures. Click through the gallery above for highlights from the girl & the fig over the past twenty years. Read the full story below. 

It’s been a long and somewhat crazy journey from elegant fig and goat cheese salads to hearty bowls of hot ramen. Parts of the adventure have been nail-biters, spanning some dozen restaurant openings and closings and an employee roster that has burgeoned from an original 18 to 200-plus.

But as Sondra Bernstein prepares to celebrate the girl & the fig’s 20th anniversary this summer, she quotes the mantra that propelled her into entrepreneurship back in 1997.

“Doing one thing in life is boring.”

That belief partly explains her extraordinary ambition, as owner today of so many downtown Sonoma businesses, including the girl & the fig, Suite D catering company and pop-up restaurant, the fig rig food truck and, debuting late this summer, the Rhône Room wine bar in front of her produce farm on the southern edge of town.

Bernstein also owns the tiny but mighty fig café in Glen Ellen and is in the planning stages for a new ramen restaurant, Noodle Spring, tentatively slated to open this year in the “container park” retail center being considered for the Lanning Building site along Highway 12 in Boyes Hot Springs.

At age 56, she jokes about slowing down. But as she discussed her plans over a recent lunch at her flagship restaurant, “slowing down” sure sounded a lot like ramping up.

She mused that she was going to start writing a third cookbook this year, but got too busy. So instead, she jumped into something nearly as time-consuming: publishing a new quarterly newspaper called fig chronicles that waxes poetic about seasonal topics from “latte art” to seed saving, local farmer profiles, recipes, cocktail tips and uses for her own line of shrubs, vinaigrettes, fig cakes, spiced nuts, salted fig caramels, jams, Tuscan fig body lotion and goat’s milk soap.

Bernstein’s got new girl & the fig wines underway, for her private label showcasing her favorite local Rhône grape varietals. And since that isn’t enough, she has just started making wines in France to export.

She has also pushed herself into philanthropy in her free time. In December, she founded Sonoma FIG Foundation, which assists in funding for start-up entrepreneurs in food, farming, food media, wine and spirits, restaurants and artisanal food production.

And all along the way, when she squeezes in business meetings at her restaurants, it’s common to see her pause mid-sentence and take a photo of her plate, so she can publish the shot on the multiple websites she personally creates and maintains.

These days, Bernstein is a true community celebrity, though she has eschewed the spotlight for her work desk, charity efforts and rare relaxation time with her two dogs. 

Growing her businesses has just been a natural path, she explained, since she moved from Los Angeles and started working in the Italian deli at Viansa Winery in Sonoma-Carneros in 1993. In that role, she drew on her culinary and restaurant management degree from The Restaurant School in her hometown of Philadelphia, plus her previous restaurant management experience, and by 1997 she had moved up to become Viansa’s director of operations, growing customers from about 50 people a day to some 5,000.

“But if I was working so hard, I thought, why not for myself?” she said, noting that she has never really needed more than two to five hours’ sleep a night. She had met then-budding chef John Toulze, now her company’s managing partner and executive chef, at Viansa, so she grabbed him and went looking for a restaurant of her own. With a loan from her two brothers, she was able to open the first girl & the fig, in a 42-seat former pizza parlor in Glen Ellen.

“I had one Chardonnay, one Cabernet Sauvignon, and one Zinfandel to offer, since I had no money for a full wine list,” she recalled. “And I opened with a cheese bar at a time when only high-end places like Gary Danko were doing that. But how could we not show off Sonoma products? I fed people cheeses as they waited for tables, so they could taste how good they are.”

The bistro was a success from day one, and three years later, Bernstein was offered her dream spot, in the historic 1879 Sonoma Hotel on Spain Street where the girl & the fig packs in crowds today.

“The new hotel owners were my customers, with no experience in restaurants. I was in the cafe dining room when they told me they wanted me, and I literally screamed,” she said with a laugh.

Quite quickly, however, she learned that her entrepreneurship would have plenty of hurdles, as she gambled with culinary ideas, spread herself thin with retail marketing concepts and navigated both fickle customers and a fickle economy.

Her plan was to open a Latin American tapas place called The Girl & the Gaucho, but the hotel owners insisted she stick with her own already popular cuisine. So she revamped the Glen Ellen space, instead, for the Gaucho idea. It lasted two and a half years, before she switched back to her signature cuisine, and what is now fig café. “People really did want Wine Country food,” she said. “Even though I do French, it’s country French, and so local that it’s really Sonoma.”

By this time, Toulze had kicked her out of the kitchens. Looking for more to do, Bernstein opened a girl & the fig on the Petaluma waterfront. That lasted 15 months.

“We did all kinds of demographic studies beforehand, but it never really took off,” Bernstein recalled. “Petaluma then was a coupon-early bird market, and discounting would have hurt our brand.”

This, and the Gaucho experience, led to another Bernstein mantra.

“I never focus on bad news,” she said. “Creativity makes you vulnerable, because people let you know right away if they like it or don’t. So you’ve got to just keep trying.”

Other short-lived endeavors included Figment in Glen Ellen, a shop selling her branded gourmet food products. But the space cost too much, and walk-in traffic was too slow. She and Toulze took over The Cottages of Old Sonoma bed-and-breakfast and its on-site deli in 2006, but in 2008, a drunk driver crashed into her Fig Pantry deli, abandoning his car amid the shattered gourmet food cases. Rather than rebuild, Bernstein sold the entire property.

“I took it as a sign,” she said. “It was hard to make money with the deli, since the cases always had to be completely full and beautiful and with restaurant-quality food. It was a lot to sell every day, so the staff ate really well.”

That same year, Bernstein took over operations for the historic The General’s Daughter in Sonoma and, looking back to her Viansa roots, turned it into an Italian-accented estate restaurant featuring produce from the property’s large gardens.

“Three weeks later, the economy tanked,” she said. “I had to lay off people. I could have stayed, I think, but it made more sense to finally hand it off (when the property was sold) in 2012.”

Not one to languish, Bernstein immediately jumped into a Kickstarter campaign to open yet another enterprise, Suite D, a space next to her catering kitchen on Schellville Road off Eighth Street East in Sonoma. She built it out into a commissary for her retail products, plus space for catering events, wedding tastings and pop-up dinners to honor legends like Julia Child and Paul Prudhomme and various local winemakers.

Last year, she and Toulze rolled out the fig rig, a food truck offering global bites like kimchee hot dogs, pork-beef chile fries, a shrimp po’boy and a ramen burger. The idea came from a team retreat at a Sonoma winery, where staff dreamed up ideas for new ventures. The inventive menu comes from her team of chefs, who like to create casual favorites for staff meals. Naturally, it also features Bernstein’s signature fig and chèvre salad, plus her confit.

“It’s easy, like catering,” she said of the faux wood panel-trimmed truck that makes appearances at wineries, state park events and its home base, the Lanning Building.

“Yes, I’ve closed more than I’ve opened,” she said of her career so far. “But I’ve always tried to bring all my staff along for the next adventure. It’s not rocket science; we’re just feeding people, but we try to feed people’s souls and energy, and give them a place to turn off the world for a few hours. I really want us all to be kind, warm and genuine, and I never want to take success for granted.”

ANNIVERSARY PARTY
For the “Fig-iversary” gala on Sunday, August 20, Bernstein is thinking in her signature ambitious style. Some 600-plus guests are anticipated for the gathering on the Sonoma Plaza, which will be set with long, communal tables.

Celebrating some of the girl & the fig’s most popular dishes, the menu will feature long-standing classics that have been customer favorites since she first opened her original
restaurant in Glen Ellen.

The supper is also a fundraiser, with 50 percent of the $75 ticket purchases being donated to charities guests can select, including Pet’s Lifeline, La Luz Center, the Sonoma Valley Community Health Center, the Sonoma Valley Education Foundation, and Bernstein’s own Sonoma FIG Foundation. Tickets are available to the public here. 453 First St. E., Sonoma, thegirlandthefig.com

The “Fig-iversary” menu:

Local Artisan Cheeses and House-Crafted Charcuterie with marinated olives, pickled vegetables, FIGfood condiments, Figcake, baguette.

Heirloom Radishes from Farmer Friends (including the Fig Farm) local butter and sea salt

Fig & Arugula Salad toasted pecans, Laura Chenel chèvre, roasted pancetta and fig-port vinaigrette

Crispy Duck Confit from girl & the fig’s 1997 menu with puy lentils, cabbage, mustard vinaigrette

Vegetarian Entrée Option on Request

Fig Crisps, Brownies, Blondies, Cookies baked in the fig kitchens

Rhône Wines from local winemakers

Posted in Food + DrinkTags: girl and the fig, Sondra Bernstein, Sonoma, sonoma restaurants, things to do in sonoma county

Are These the “Coolest Things to Do” in Santa Rosa, Sonoma, Petaluma and Rohnert Park?

June 2017July 2017
By Sonoma Magazine Staff
Lagunitas Taproom in Petaluma on Friday afternoon. (JOHN BURGESS / Sonoma Magazine) beer

SFGate just released a list with the “coolest thing to do” in every major Bay Area city (with a population of 10,000 or more), and Petaluma, Rohnert Park, Santa Rosa and Sonoma made the cut.

 Lagunitas Taproom in Petaluma on Friday afternoon. (JOHN BURGESS / Sonoma Magazine) beer
A visit to Lagunitas Taproom in Petaluma made SFGate’s list. (John Burgess)

On the lookout for “unique” and “best” things to do in each city, SFGate highlighted Lagunitas in Petaluma, The Green Music Center in Rohnert Park, Charles Schulz Museum in Santa Rosa and Jack London State Historic Park in Sonoma (although the park is actually in Glen Ellen…).

Here’s what SFGate had to say about each locale:

Petaluma
Embrace your Bay Area beer drinker stereotype at Lagunitas

It’s one of your go-to grocery store beers, so why not pay a visit to where Lagunitas is made? There’s a taproom and free brewery tours given daily. Or just hit up the store to grab a few bottles of something you haven’t tried yet.

NIKKI ANDERSON Wide shot of the lawn seating area at Weill Hall at the Green Music Center at Sonoma State University 2014
The lawn seating area at Weill Hall at the Green Music Center in Rohnert Park. (Nikki Anderson)

Rohnert Park
Pack a picnic for the lawn seats at Green Music Center

The unique indoor/outdoor space of the Sonoma State concert venue gives you plenty of fun options. Sit indoors for an up-close concert experience, or bring your own dinner for the lawn seats. If you’re not in the mood to cook, you can preorder a boxed meal from Boudin.

Quinn Davis, 3, gets a big hug from Snoopy during the kids New Year's Eve celebration at the Charles M. Schulz Museum in Santa Rosa, California on Saturday, December 31, 2016. (Alvin Jornada / The Press Democrat)
Quinn Davis, 3, gets a big hug from Snoopy at the Charles M. Schulz Museum in Santa Rosa. (Alvin Jornada)

Santa Rosa
Battle the Red Baron with Snoopy at the Charles M. Schulz Museum

Peanuts fans can’t miss an opportunity to spend the day at the Charles M. Schulz Museum, founded in the town where Schulz lived from 1969 until his death. Don’t miss the replica of his studio, recreated just as he had it.

The House of Happy Walls museum at Jack London State Historic Park in Glen Ellen. (Jack London State Historic Park)
The House of Happy Walls museum at Jack London State Historic Park in Glen Ellen. (Jack London State Historic Park)

Sonoma
Step inside Jack London’s world at Jack London State Historic Park

While this park is technically in Glen Ellen, it’s too good to leave off the list. Hidden in the hills are the ruins of Wolf House, the famous writer’s dream home. Construction was nearly finished when the house went up in flames. The ruins are haunting. In contrast is the House of Happy Walls, a smaller home built for the Londons after the loss of Wolf House, that has been lovingly turned into a museum.

See the full list here. What do you think, did SFGate get it right? What is the “coolest thing to do” in Petaluma, Rohnert Park, Santa Rosa and Sonoma?

Posted in Santa Rosa, What's New in Wine CountryTags: beer, coolest thing to do in Bay Area, coolest things to do in Sonoma County, eat, entertainment, events, petaluma, restaurant, restaurants, rohnert park, santa rosa, SFGate, Sonoma, sonoma county, sonoma county food, sonoma county restaurants, things to do, things to do in sonoma county

New Glamping Site Offers Luxury Experience on the Sonoma Coast

June 2017July 2017
By Sarah Stierch

Imagine this: you return to your campsite after a long hike along oceanside trails ready for a nap. However, there is no sleeping bag in your tent. Instead, there is a bed with a memory foam mattress and down bedding. That’s what naptime is like at Terra Glamping on the Sonoma Coast.

Nestled just off of Highway 1, near Sea Ranch, the property has ten safari-style tents, all with ocean views and porches, allowing for whale watching, stargazing, bird watching, or just drinking a beer and watching the world go by.

Hiking, golf, and horseback riding are some of the many activities that the area offers, and nearby Gualala has a handful of art galleries showcasing Sonoma County artists. Or head on a scenic drive to Annapolis Winery (707-886-5460; 26055 Soda Springs Rd.) to grab a bottle of Zinfandel for sipping over campfire s’mores in the evening.

You can still enjoy the fun of “traditional” camping: bring a cooler full of your favorite drinks and use the on-site pop-up kitchen to prepare your campsite foods. Not a campfire cooking type? No problem. Head to Gualala to dine at the eccentric and romantic St. Orres (707-884-3303; 36601 CA-1) or to Sea Ranch for a bar bite and beer at the Black Point Grill (707-785-2371; Sea Ranch Lodge, 60 Sea Walk Dr.).

For the primadonna’s in the crowd, don’t worry – there are hot showers and flushing toilets. But, you won’t have wifi, only cell phone service, so use it as a good excuse to unplug and enjoy the scenery. If you need a little extra luxury, reserve an oceanside massage.

Terra Glamping is primed for romantic getaways and friend-focused fun, however, it is family friendly. No pets are allowed. Rates start at $250. terraglamping.com

For more glamping experiences in Sonoma County, click here. 

Posted in Sonoma Hotels, Things To Do in Sonoma, Trip IdeasTags: Accomodations, camping, glamping, Gualala, highway 1, hotel, local, luxury, north bay, north coast, ocean, outdoors, Sea Ranch, sonoma coast, sonoma magazine, things to do, things to do in sonoma county, travel

Thai Like You’ve Never Tasted at Sebastopol Pop-Up

June 2017August 2019
By biteclub

Sebastopol’s Ramen Gaijin will host another pop-up concept later this month called Khom Loi, featuring regional Thai cooking.

Owners Matthew Williams and Moishe Hahn-Shuman — who started their ramen shop as a pop-up several years ago at Woodfour Brewing—just announced the event, which will take place later this month. Inspired by travels in Northern Thailand and Laos, the food will focus on Chiang Mai and nearby Laos, with nods to Central and Southern Thailand.

Unlike the recent Mexican street food pop-up, Khom Loi (which translates as ‘floating lantern’) is a project of Williams Hahn-Shuman — meaning that if all goes well Khom Loi could you know, maybe become a new restaurant. Maybe. Cocktail ninjas Matt Berger and Scott Beattie will be creating Thai-inspired beverages to pair with the menu.

We’re stoked because Thai cuisine seems to have gone the way of Chinese food — becoming rather bland, Americanized imitations of itself. When we mentioned this to Williams, with a bitter lament over ketchupy pad Thai and peanut butter sauce, he laughed knowingly, “It’s nothing like that,” he said.

More details coming soon, or go to ramengaijin.com.

Posted in BiteClubTags: pop up, ramen gaijin, Sebastopol3 Comments on Thai Like You’ve Never Tasted at Sebastopol Pop-Up

Bao. Pineapple. Pineapple Bao at Santa Rosa Bakery

June 2017August 2019
By biteclub
Macao Burgers at East Wind Cafe. Courtesy photo.

East Wind Cafe has expanded their menu again with even more yummy baonuts (on the weekend) and Macau Burgers for lunch.

This weekend, they’ll have Piña Colada Baonuts with Coconut Glaze and fresh pineapple, Ispahan Baonuts with rose water glaze and filled with raspberry and longan, and Curry Beef Baonuts. The rotating schedule of flavors for these fried bao buns also includes Cardamom Glazed w/Lemon Curd, Thai Peanut Sauce Glazed w/Banana and Peanut Butter, Kalamansi Glazed w /Passion Fruit custard, White Pepper Glazed w/Chocolate pastry cream, Coconut Glazed w/fresh pineapple, and White Chocolate Glazed w/Thai Iced Tea pastry cream along with Curry Beef Baonuts.

Needing an excuse to eat lunch out, we stopped by for a Macau burger, which is a bit more like a really good sloppy Joe than a burger. Available in Sriracha Honey Pork, Chop, Korean Beef and Tamarind chicken, they’re served on sweet “pineapple top” bao buns — which actually have no pineapple, but the sweet top layer looks like the outside of a pineapple.

With greens and pickled veggies, they’re a hearty handful. Especially with a couple tarts, almond gelatin with lychee, a mango buttercream bun and, well, the list is endless.

3851 Sebastopol Rd., #109, Santa Rosa, 707-709-6098, eastwindbakery.com. Open 8am to 4pm Wednesday through Friday, 9am to 4pm Saturday and Sunday.

And a little PPAP in case you haven’t already been pineapple penned.

Posted in BiteClubTags: bakery, Burgers, east wind3 Comments on Bao. Pineapple. Pineapple Bao at Santa Rosa Bakery

7 Best Sonoma Beer Venues to Take Dad for Father’s Day

June 2017June 2017
By Jess Poshepny Vallery

Father’s Day can be a tough gift-buying holiday. What do you get for the dad who has everything – from all the power tools he’ll ever need to the perfect “man’s” grill? A fine leather wallet or gift card might suffice, but nothing says “I love you Dad” like a day spent with family – beer in hand. Click through the gallery above for Sonoma beer venues to take your Dad for some barbecue, live music and – of course – great beer this Sunday.

Posted in Food + Drink, Sonoma BreweriesTags: 2 TRead, Barrel Brothers, Bay Area Beer, Bay Area Beer Events, Bay Area Breweries, bear republic, Beer Blog, Beer Buzz, beer country, beer craft, Beer Food, Beer Garden, Beer Local, Beer Writer, Breweries, breweries with food, Brewsters, Ca Beer, CA Craft Beer, Carneros’ Brewing, Cooperage Brewing, Craft Beer, Craft Beer Blog, Crooked Goat Brewing, Drink Local, father's day, father's day gifts, Gifts for Dad, Grav South Brewing, healdsburg, Healdsburg Beer, Henhouse Brewing, Jess Vallery, lagunitas, Moonlight Brewing, Moxie Lady, New Breweries, NorCal Beer Geeks, Petaluma Beer, Petaluma Hills, Rincon Valley Tap Room, russian river brewing, santa rosa, Santa Rosa Beer, Sebastopol Breweries, shady oak barrel house, Sonoma, Sonoma Beer, Sonoma Breweries, sonoma county beer, Sonoma County Beer Events, Sonoma County Beers Plow Brewing, Sonoma County Breweries, Sonoma Craft beer, Sonoma Events, sonoma magazine, Sonoma Springs Brewing, St. Florian’s Brewing, taproom, Taprooms, Taprooms with Food, The Block, third street aleworks, travel, Travel Writer, Where to take Dad on Father's Day, Windsor, Windsor Beer, Woodfour1 Comment on 7 Best Sonoma Beer Venues to Take Dad for Father’s Day

Will RateBeer’s Corporate Move Hurt Its Santa Rosa Festival?

June 2017June 2017
By Tom Edwards

Last week it was announced that Anheuser-Busch InBev (AB InBev), a multinational beverage and brewing company, had acquired a stake of RateBeer, a leading ratings website that compiles users’ reviews of beer. The craft beer community was quick to respond to the purchase – with outrage. What does this acquisition signal, as part of a growing trend in corporate acquirements of stakes in local craft breweries, and what will the effect be on RateBeer’s annual, and wildly popular, beer festival in Santa Rosa? Local beer enthusiast Tom Edwards reflect on these questions.

Craft beer drinkers are particular about their brews. If you look at the evolvement of beer production in America, you can see why. For decades, large breweries kept decreasing the quality and diversity of American beer to increase profits; forcing beer lovers to look abroad for coveted microbrews — a wariness of “Big Beer” forever entrenched in their minds.

Following the relatively recent emergence of a band of brewery brothers – and sisters – pioneering the production of artfully crafted American beers, the big breweries have had to rethink their strategy. Despite owning a majority of the beer market, Big Beer could not afford to ignore the craft competition as hordes of consumers abandoned their flashy displays for local microbrews.

And so, a new beer business mantra took hold: “if you can’t beat ‘em, buy ‘em. Due to the capital-intense nature of commercial brewing, the plan was simple and effective: with so many up-and-coming breweries hungry for funding, there were plenty of competitors willing to submit to Big Beer.

Over thirty craft breweries have now been bought by either Anheuser-Busch InBev, MolsonCoors, Heineken (which recently bought full ownership of Petaluma-based Lagunitas Brewing Company), or one of the many powerhouse beverage conglomerates.

Until recently, and despite their skepticism toward Big Beer, a majority of craft beer fans remained in the dark about which one of their favorite breweries had turned into a corporate proxy. But the Big Beer backlash has now re-emerged, and it is fast gaining in speed.

Craft breweries, however, are only one piece of the beer puzzle. Distribution companies are now being invested into, and overarching guidelines regarding which beers be shipped or rejected further complicate the prospect of “free market” brews.

Even the casual realm of homebrewing has been added into the mix, as exemplified by the purchase of Northern Brewer – one of the nation’s leading homebrew suppliers – by AB InBev. Following the purchase, Northern Brewer stated on their social media that consumers can now buy special homebrew kits to “replicate” some of their favorite beers, such as those from Goose Island and Elysian.

This development has generated a heated climate within the industry, with many bars and taprooms pulling beers from “sellout” breweries, or turning to online forums to underline the importance of independence. In the midst of this boiling tension on the American beer scene, RateBeer recently announced, with a tweet so casual in tone it might just as well have been a review for the latest honey blonde, that they have sold partially to AB InBev.

As a user-generated beer rating website, RateBeer carries major weight for craft beer drinkers wanting an assessment of a product’s value based on the input of fellow beer enthusiasts. Pliny the Younger, from Santa Rosa’s Russian River Brewing Company, showcases this perfectly: people are willing to travel from across the country and around the world to wait hours in line for a beer that is consistently rated #1.

Immediately following the RateBeer news, a sizable portion of beer makers took to the internet to make their opinion known, most notably Sam Calagione of Dogfish Head, a brewing company based in Milton, Delaware, and Sonoma County-based Bear Republic Brewing.

Citing a breach in integrity, breweries were demanding that their beers be removed from the RateBeer website, prompting an immediate refusal from RateBeer’s Executive Director Joseph Tucker, who lives part time in Santa Rosa and hosts the annual RateBeer Best festival in Santa Rosa.

Some argued that because RateBeer’s content – up to this point – had been open and user driven, it wasn’t tailored to benefit any particular investor or producer. But even a simple beer blogger can understand the importance of a website’s behind-the-scenes metrics. In the case of a AB InBev, potentially having their finger on the pulse of visitor traffic could prove to be immensely valuable to the multinational brewing company. 

One thing is for certain: disapproval surrounding RateBeer-style buy-ups is thicker than a partially fermented barleywine and, with continued criticism from industry notables, what will this mean for RateBeer’s Santa Rosa festival? Will breweries look past the cash-driven business tactics that continue to shake up the industry, or will a collective foot be put down in flat out refusal?

To be continued…

Posted in What's New in Wine CountryTags: beer news, RateBeer, Ratebeer Best, sonoma county beer

Classic Movie Night With Symphony Music & Wine Comes to Sonoma

June 2017June 2017
By Sarah Stierch
Huichica Music Festival, Gundlach Bundschu Winery, Sonoma, CA, 6/2/12

When the New York Times reviewed Charlie Chaplin’s romantic comedy film, City Lights, in 1931, they noted that the movie theater was filled with “roars of laughter” and that it was a “joyous night.”

Big laughs and joy can be expected by film buffs and music lovers alike when Gundlach Bundschu Winery shows City Lights among their vineyards on Saturday, June 24.

The romantic comedy is considered Chaplin’s finest work and one of the greatest films of all time. A silent film, it will be accompanied by a live performance from the Sonoma County Philharmonic, which will perform the musical score created by Chaplin.

City Lights stars Chaplin as his famous Little Tramp character, who falls in love with a blind girl, all the while developing a dramatic friendship with an alcoholic millionaire.

Guests can sip on Gundlach Bundschu wine and enjoy food from local food trucks as they watch the film and enjoy the live music as the sun sets. Guests are asked to bring low-back chairs or blankets to sit on and warm clothes, as Sonoma nights can get chilly.

The event serves as a fundraiser for the Sonoma County Philharmonic, a 65-member all volunteer orchestra that presents free and low-cost concerts throughout Sonoma County. Tickets are $75. socophil.org

Saturday, June 24, Gundlach Bundschu Winery, 2000 Denmark St, Sonoma 95476.

Posted in Things To Do in SonomaTags: entertainment, events, film, food and wine, local, Music, north bay, north coast, outdoors, Sonoma, sonoma county, sonoma magazine, things to do, things to do in sonoma county

Event Photos: North Coast Wine & Food Festival

June 2017June 2017
By Sonoma Magazine Staff

Well-known Wine Country chefs and wineries mixed it up with foodies and wine-lovers at Saturday’s North Coast Wine & Food Festival in Rohnert Park. Click through the gallery above for some of the event highlights, and read more about the event here.

 

Posted in What's New in Wine CountryTags: north coast wine, North Coast Wine & Food Festival, sonoma food, sonoma restaurants, sonoma wine, things to do in sonoma county, wine and food fest, wine and food festival, wine tasting

9 Soon-to-Open Sonoma Restaurants, Wineries, Breweries & Hotels We’re Stoked About

June 2017July 2017
By Sarah Stierch

Summer in Sonoma County is about to get even better. As we speak, nine new businesses are getting ready to open their doors to local and visitors alike. From wineries and breweries to restaurants and hotels – even a comedy club – we’re super stoked about these new additions to the Sonoma scene. Check out the slideshow above to discover 9 new local businesses to experience this summer. 

Posted in Food + Drink, Sonoma Breweries, Sonoma Hotels, Things To Do in Sonoma, Trip Ideas, What's New in Wine CountryTags: beer, Beer Buzz, beer country, Breweries, comedy, Craft Beer, dine, dining, eat, food, food and wine, hotels, kenwood, local, north bay, north coast, petaluma, restaurant, restaurants, santa rosa, Sonoma, Sonoma Beer, sonoma county, sonoma county beer, sonoma county food, sonoma county restaurants, sonoma magazine, sonoma valley, sparkling wine, things to do, things to do in sonoma county, wine, wine country, wine tasting, wineries

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