CLOSED Ever wondered what exactly was in the pepperoni on your pizza? Probably better not to ask too many questions.
For that reason, we love the idea of a farm-to-table pizza takeout/delivery service that uses local meats, cheeses and produce for their creatively-inspired pies — including making their own pepperoni.
Cinnamon rolls with nutella at Borolo Pizza in Santa Rosa. Heather Irwin/PDBorolo Pizza farm to table pies also makes cinnamon rolls. Courtesy Photo.
The new owners of Borolo’s Pizza, a long-time Santa Rosa pizzeria, are bringing a sustainable, local philosophy to their original sourdough crust pies.
Working with farmers (including buying their own pigs), they’re creating one-of-a-kind pizzas including the Sonoma (spinach, mushrooms, onions, garlic, Estero Gold cheese), Pepperoni Blue Cheese with Point Reyes blue (surprisingly fascinating flavors that work), and possibly the world’s most perfect Hawaiian pizza, with Sonoma Meat Company bacon, organic pineapple and a bit of unicorn magic.
Borolo pizza, Sonoma Pizza. Heather Irwin/PD
We’re also fans of their house cinnamon buns, made with their own dough and topped with Nutella if you’ve got a sweet hankering. Pizzas come in medium and large, and range from $15 to $20 each.
Borolo’s Pizza is at 500 Mission Blvd. South, Santa Rosa, 707-539-3937, borolospizza.com.
Dessert crepe with lemon curd and caramelized apples at Bistro 29 lunch service in Santa Rosa. (Heather Irwin)
You have not had a crepe until you have had a French crepe. And you have not had a French crepe until you have had a buckwheat crepe. Fortunately, both are now available at lunch in downtown Santa Rosa at Bistro 29.
The longtime French cafe has reopened in recent weeks for lunch, adding to the boom of restaurant choices downtown, and we, for one, were among the first in line for both sweet and savory crepes (along with a duck burger, frisee salad, and Croque Madame).
If you’re not familiar with buckwheat, it’s a gluten-free fruit seed that’s related to the rhubarb family, though often used as a grain for things like porridge—which is as tragic as it being referred to as “groats” and being called a “superfood” by overeager nutritionists.
Buckwheat crepe at Bistro 29 in Santa Rosa. Heather Irwin/PD
Milled into a dark brown flour, the clever folks of Brittany make humble buckwheat actually taste delicious by adding eggs and milk to the mixture, resulting in a hearty wrapper for Swiss cheese, ham, sausage or whatever else is lying around the house. They really class it up by calling it a galette, rather than a crepe. Bistro 29’s version of the buckwheat crepe/galette is dairy free, and has even fancier things stuffed inside, like Gruyere, figs, lox and creme fraiche, pears or bacon.
We’re pretty partial to the sweet crepes, as well. Made with regular flour, they’re the light brown discs some of us remember from the 1970s, when the Magic Pan crepe restaurants were all the rage, and flambeed crepes Suzette seemed the height of culture. Here, simpler ingredients fill these gently folded pillows, stuffed with lemon curd, caramelized apples, butter, sugar and about ten other goodies. Though it’s tempting to order them all, a best bet is to pick one or two fillings and save the rest for another visit.
Chef/owner Brian Anderson has little pizza boxes if you’d rather grab your crepes to go, and sit outside on a warm afternoon—something we highly recommend.
Bistro 29 is at 620 Fifth St., Santa Rosa, bistro29.com, open for lunch Tuesday through Friday from 11:30 a.m. to 2p.m.
At the Cocoa Planet Chocolate Factory in the town of Sonoma no one will bat an eye if you order dessert first. Or if you order three desserts first. This is a confectionary, after all, and handmade chocolate is their trade, so eat all you want.
Edible shortbread “dirt” with chocolate pot de creme at Cocoa Planet in Sonoma. Heather Irwin/PD
Unfortunately for Willie Wonka fans dreaming of chocolate rivers and lickable wallpaper, Cocoa Planet’s tiny factory is a bit more dependent on shiny metal equipment than Oompa Loompas for their luxe bites of dark chocolate. They do, however, offer edible chocolate “dirt” along with decadent hot chocolates, chocolate tasting flights, chocolate creme brulee and chocolate cakes that would make August Gloop squeal with delight.
The exterior patio at the Cocoa Planet Cafe. Courtesy photo.The interior cafe at the Cocoa Planet Cafe. Courtesy photo.
The factory recently opened a small indoor cafe and outdoor patio serving all manner of their vegan, gluten free, non-GMO chocolate bites as well as more savory dishes including cheese and charcuterie plates, gougeres (French cheese puffs, $7), soups, salads, cassoulet, French dip with prime rib, crepes, Croque Monsieur and quiche.
Cheesy gougeres at Cocoa Planet in Sonoma. Heather Irwin/PDCassoulet at Cocoa Planet in Sonoma. Heather Irwin/PD
What makes the cafe space especially unique, however, is that all of the food is gluten-free—from the baguettes to the gougeres. The facility is also wheat, peanut-free, and the dairy they use for lattes and hot chocolate is lactose-free (or you can order almond milk). So for special diets, Cocoa Planet is even more of a treat.
Mandarin orange chocolate latte at Cocoa Planet in Sonoma. Heather Irwin/PD
They recently added a wine, beer, port and chocolate pairing menu, featuring their four of their five chocolates: salted caramel, vanilla espresso, deep dark truffle, mandarin orange. Flights pair each of the chocolate discs with recommended wine pairings, from deep reds to a cappuccino stout beer, sparkling wine and heartier after-dinner port-style sips. Two oz. pours are $6-8, and 5 oz. pours are $12-20. Wine and beer is also available by the glass.
Grab a few of their CocoaMint discs, which are only 100 calories (like all of their chocolates), for dessert. Or an appetizer. Or your entire meal. We won’t judge.
Cocoa Planet Tasting Room and Modern French Cafe: Open Thursday through Sunday from 11:30am to 6pm. 921 Broadway, Sonoma, 707-343-7453, cocoaplanet.com. Limited factory tours are available by appointment for parties of 8 guests or fewer, 707-343-7453 for details.
Cocoa Planet Cafe and factory in Sonoma. Courtesy photo.
As if a day off from kitchen duty isn’t enough for mom (or dad), bottomless mimosas, grilled lamb and chicken and waffles should pretty much seal the deal. Here are our top brunch picks for Easter Brunch in Sonoma County for April 16, 2017. Reservations are strongly recommended if you plan on getting a good seat.
SANTA ROSA
Franchettis’: For $11, the “Sweet Plate” includes cinnamon swirl bread French toast, syrup with mango and pineapple, coconut chips and whipped cream with a choice of fruit, home fries or greens salad. Prix-fixe for $28 includes Beef Wellington with poached eggs and asparagus salad and salmon lox with sliced red onions and whipped cream cheese. Regular menu and a la carte menu also available. Closed for dinner. 1229 Dutton Ave., Santa Rosa, franchesttis.com.
John Ash and Co.: Coming with an assortment of house-made brunch breads from pastry chef Casey Stone, starters include potato latkes, onion soup and fennel crepes. For the main course, rosemary and garlic marinated grilled lamb chops, black pig bacon and prawn omelette as well as fried chicken and buttermilk waffles are on the menu. 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., 4330 Barnes Road, Santa Rosa, vintnersinn.com
Mark West Lodge: Local caterer Brass Spatula will be cooking up Easter brunch at the Mark West Lodge this year from 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. The menu, priced at $60 for adults and $25 for children, includes prime rib with horseradish sauce, spinach and mushroom quiche and baked eggs with sweet potato, sausage and kale hash. For those with a sweet tooth, there will be pecan praline French toast with maple syrup, strawberry shortcake trifle and sweet breads. 2520 Mark West Springs Rd., Santa Rosa, themarkwestlodge.com
SONOMA
El Dorado Kitchen: From 9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m., Chef Armando Navarro will be featured in a 3-course prix fixe menu including eggs benedict with braised spinach and smoked salmon and a Maine lobster sandwich on a telera roll with bacon and lemon aioli. They will also be serving craft cocktails like a Bellini with white peach purée. Dinner will also be available from 5:30 p.m. to 9 p.m., $55 per person. 405 First St. West, Sonoma, eldoradosonoma.com
Ramekins: Stations include fresh, custom-made omelets, buttermilk waffles with pecan-maple syrup and Dijon crusted pork. Family-friendly atmosphere with Easter cookie decorating. Adults $65, children $25, reservations are required. Two seatings at 10 a.m. and 12:30 p.m., 450 West Spain St., Sonoma, ramekins.com
Santé at Sonoma Mission Inn: For the Sunday buffet from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., enjoy live entertainment while digging into a jump shrimp cocktail, classic deviled eggs or assorted antipasti, spicy capicola (pork) and imported artisan cheeses. There will be chef-attended stations featuring smoked fresh water eel, pastrami style cured salmon, and smoked rainbow trout salad. Carving stations are also available which include roasted filet mignon beef with house-made pastry and mushroom sauce. To finish off the meal, there will be over 15 desserts to choose from including passion fruit crème brûlée, lemon custard tartlets and dark chocolate dipped strawberries. 100 Boyes Blvd., Sonoma, fairmont.com
PETALUMA
Della Fattoria: Della Fattoria will not be doing special orders this year. However, those who want to pick up their Easter cookies, hot cross buns, carrot cake, coffee cake and other bakery treats can still do so Friday through Saturday in the Della Lounge. They are taking reservations for Easter brunch and will be seating large groups in the Della Lounge. 141 Petaluma Blvd N, Petaluma, dellafattoria.com
HEALDSBURG
Mateo’s Cocina Latina: The breakfast menu from 9 a.m. to noon offers the classic Huevos Rancheros and house made green chorizo while the larger lunch menu from noon to 3:30 p.m. serves tacones with carne asada, pork carnitas quesadillas, pacific oysters and fresh, local ceviche. 14 Healdsburg Ave, Healdsburg.
WEST COUNTY & SONOMA COAST
Easter Bunny Camp: Crafts, face painting and an Easter egg hunt in the garden for kids 3-7, $10, and reservations are required. Bunny Brunch in the main dining room includes breakfast bunny pancake, egg and cocoa for kids, and plenty of goodies for adults too. 7751 CA-1, Little River.
Rocker Oysterfeller’s: Weather permitting, brunch will be served from 10am to 3pm on the patio (rain just moves the party inside). Two courses for $32pp, includes choice of powdered sugar beignets with strawberry rhubarb compote, Hangtown Fry, buttermilk fried chicken with bacon cornmeal waffles, crab cake Benedict, Smoked Brisket hash, mimosas, plus egg hunt and chalk art. 14415 Shoreline Highway, Valley Ford, CA at the Valley Ford Hotel. Reservations highly recommended, rockeroysterfellers.com or 707-876-1983.
Timber Cove Resort’s Coast Kitchen: A la carte brunch menu goes all out with fried quail and waffle with chili maple syrup, cheddar and bacon orzo mac and cheese, roasted leg of lamb, Coast Kitchen burger potato leek soup and their original “Easter Berry Cocktail with juniper gin, Chambord, raspberries, yogurt, honey and lemon juice . 21780 Highway 1, Jenner, 707-847-3231, coastkitchensonoma.com.
Zazu Restaurant and Farm: Pork belly chilaquiles, wild shrimp and grits, corned beef hash, bruleed cinnamon French toast with huckleberry maple syrup and oyster po’boy with bacon fat tartar sauce, $29 per person. 6770 McKinley St., Sebastopol (at the Barlow), zazukitchen.com
Take a trip back to the 1920’s, learn to paint with a renowned artist and celebrate a new indie-rock record, it’s all possible before the end of April. Click through the gallery above for all the details.
Covered with ashes, a bakery case filled with croissants and pan dulce were about all that’s left of Eduardo Garcia’s Sonoma sweet shop.
A late-night blaze totaled Garcia’s Bakery Monday, resulted in severe damage to the business, with smoke and heat damage to the reception and dining areas and the complete destruction of the kitchen, according to the Press Democrat.
But that’s not the end of the bad news. The bakery also housed the popular pop-up pizzeria, New Haven APizza, run by Eduardo’s brother, Fernando. The pizzeria had recently expanded their hours to include lunch after a warm reception by locals.
Surveying the damage, Joelle C. Hanley, Vice President of Operations for property manager Meridian Commercial Property Management, said: “the kitchen is totally destroyed.” The shopping center is owned by Kasson Ranch, LLC, she said.
While Hanley wouldn’t allow reporters inside to see the kitchen “for liability reasons,” her phone video showed the entire kitchen blackened, insulation and beams hanging from the ceiling, and a floor covered with debris left from the blaze. Firefighters were able to keep the fire from spreading to other units in the small shopping center.
Speaking through an interpreter, Eduardo waxed philosophical about the loss of his business, saying, “Well, we can’t do anything about it except wait for everybody’s insurance companies to work it out.”
Paula Wolfert and Emily Thelin. Photo: Eric Wolfinger
By Kathleen Hill
What if you were an internationally famous cookbook author and then all of a sudden one day you couldn’t remember how to make an omelet?
That’s exactly what happened to the legendary cook, author, and culinary historian, Paula Wolfert, a friend and resident of Sonoma. Recently profiled in the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post and San Francisco Chronicle, Wolfert has publicly acknowledged her battle with dementia and Alzheimers in recent years.
But let me tell you about the Paula I know.
Wolfert grew up in Flatbush, New York, where her mother fed her a rather boring diet of melon, iceberg lettuce, and cottage cheese. Early on, she decided she wasn’t made for that kind of food, but it wasn’t until she took some cooking classes that she was inspired to learn about cuisine.
“While I was at Columbia my mother gifted me with six Saturday morning classes with Dione Lucas who was a Cordon Bleu trained chef,” Wolfert said in a recent email. “Later I quit going to school and worked for her full time for free before switching and working for (James) Beard.”
Yes, that James Beard.
Wolfert didn’t just sit in New York and research Mediterranean cuisine at the library, however. She moved to France and Morocco for several years, befriended home cooks, and told us their stories through nine best-selling cookbooks she wrote between 1973 and 2011.
But in her personal life, Paula was starting to forget things more and more.
In 2010 biographer Emily Kaiser Thelin began on an epic project to document the author’s life in some 50 recipes, in a just-released book called “Unforgettable” after learning of Wolfert’s diagnosis. Paula confessed to Thelin, who had worked with her at Food & Wine Magazine, that she had dementia, and Thelin popped the question asking Wolfert to allow her to write a book about her and her culinary adventures, thinking the world needed to know of this “renegade life.”
Friends also saw Wolfert changing.
A day came when, with our Tuesday Lunch Bunch, the now 79-year-old Paula couldn’t figure out how much money to put out to pay her bill. The longtime group of women artists, designers, writers (and an economist thrown in for good measure) could only gently help her count and try to remember in that moment.
While she knew she had been having trouble remembering some things, these were startling indications that perhaps her problem had progressed, and scared all of us.
This could happen to many of us, we knew, but Paula had been sharing so much of herself through her books and teaching that several friends wondered what was ahead.
Being Paula, she immersed herself into researching dementia and Alzheimer’s with the brilliance and energy with which she had researched the culture of food in so many countries.
She still tries to get us all to follow various medical diets she finds, one of her favorites being Bulletproof Coffee (black coffee blended with grass-fed butter and MCT oil). According to Paula, her UCSF doctors say that with everything she is doing, her problem is progressing more slowly than other people’s, which is good news.
Paula doesn’t stop. She leads a monthly “Memory Café” and practices “yoga, qigong, and recently added a class called Jin shin Jyutsu,” all at Sonoma’s Vintage House Senior Center.
At lunch on a recent Tuesday Paula blushed a little and admitted: “There has been some interest” in making her story into a movie. All of the recent front page publicity reconnected her with the 12 core members of her Alzheimer’s Association group that toured the country raising awareness of early symptoms, as well as with a few old friends, most of whom she has been in touch with anyway via FaceTime and Zoom. (Paula gathers no moss – saying “Skype is old fashioned.”)
Sounding like she was back at her mother’s dining table in Brooklyn, Paula exclaimed, “None of us sit around feeling sorry for ourselves, because what’s the point?”
And by the way, she can cook again, following her own recipes one step at a time. She whispered, “Those recipes are hard!” Most of her readers and fans knew that.
Continuing her busy life, Paula Wolfert and Thelin, will be at Sonoma’s Readers’ Books on Saturday, April 22 at 2 p.m. discussing the book. The afternoon will be co-sponsored by Readers’ and the Last Wednesday Food Group.
Wolfert gives Emily Thelin all the credit for convincing her to work on the book with her, showing super patience, putting on the Kickstarter campaign, assembling a crew to make a video and super photos for the book, writing it, publishing it, and hiring publicists to schedule interviews. Paula also seems to relish the attention that she has enjoyed for years, obviously feeling that her life and work are being validated.
What an inspiration!
All author and publisher income from sales of this book will be donated to the International Dementia Alliance. For her Readers’ Books appearance go to 130 East Napa Street, Sonoma. 939-1779. Tickets for the Shed dinner will be available at healdsburgshed.com/gather/events.
Chocolate Easter Bunny Army. Chefs Jeff and Susan Mall, formerly of Zin Restaurant in Healdsburg, making chocolate inspired by their time in Baja Mexico. The new company is called Volo Chocolate, located in Windsor, and each bar is made by hand. Heather Irwin/PD
A chocolate Easter bunny army is being raised, recruit by delicious recruit, in the Windsor chocolate kitchen of Jeff and Susan Mall. Sitting at attention, the milk chocolate rabbits stare silently ahead on sheet pans, awaiting the candy carnage to come.
“They’re totally solid, so you can eat their ears off,” says Susan Mall, co-owner of Volo Chocolate, with a wink. Made with a pinch of cinnamon, Mexican sea salt, milk and cacao beans from the Chiapas region of Mexico, they’re more than just basket filler. These are gourmet, bean-to-bunny chocolates, each made by hand in a tiny chocolate factory where the couple roast, grind and process the cacao beans they fell in love with while working as chefs in Baja.
If the names sound familiar, it’s because the Malls were the former owners of Zin Restaurant in Healdsburg. The longtime eatery closed in 2014, allowing the couple to spend 18 months at Rancho Pescadero, a remote Mexican resort where they operated a farm-to-table restaurant and farm. While in the Chiapas region they fell in love with the local cacao, frequently used in a drink called “pozol,” made with corn, water and local cocoa, something appreciated since Aztec and Mayan times.
It was a short leap for Jeff, an avid tinkerer, to embark on a mission to learn chocolate making using the famed Chiapas cacao. How hard could it be, he surmised? Using his chef instincts rather than any real recipe, he created a passable chocolate on his first try.
Chefs Jeff and Susan Mall, formerly of Zin Restaurant in Healdsburg, making chocolate inspired by their time in Baja Mexico. The new company is called Volo Chocolate, located in Windsor, and each bar is made by hand. Heather Irwin/PD
“We thought, imagine if we used instructions… it would be really great,” he says. Instead, it was absolutely inedible. So he went back to puttering with his own ideas of how to make a great chocolate bar using local ingredients, then roasting and processing the beans into a refined, chef-driven bar. Originally branded as “El Jefe” chocolate, the couple enlisted the help of eager resort guests to hull the beans with their bare hands, winnowing the chaff with an old hairdryer, grinding the beans with a manual whetstone and tempering the chocolate on a steel table. Though their production was minuscule, eager patrons bought more than a thousand of the crudely made, but delicious bars.
“If it hadn’t worked the first time with the chocolate, I probably would have given up,” Jeff says.
The couple returned to Sonoma County last August with plans to modernize their chocolate making into something more commercially viable, but with the same bean-to-bar process. With a little internet advice, some homemade tools and a few bags of cacao, Volo Chocolates was born.
The Easter Army
It feels almost cruel to be taking this busy couple away from their massive orders of bunnies on a Tuesday morning before Easter. Just a few months after launching the business, they’ve got pickups later that afternoon, with a pop-up at Relish Culinary Adventures and more chocolate bunny deliveries on Saturday. In all, they’re planning to make more than 100 of the tasty critters, four at a time, by the end of the week. That, and the other orders for their six other flavors of chocolate bars: Dark Dark with local candied orange peel, Dark Milk Chocolate, Dark Milk Chocolate with Roasted Almonds, Mocha (made with Flying Goat coffee) and Dark Chocolate Salted Caramel Crunch. The 2.6 oz bars range from 62-73 percent pure chocolate.
Volo Chocolates is not a slick, streamlined kitchen with spanking new equipment. Located inside an office park off Shilo road that Susan calls the “Gourmet Ghetto,” they’re friendly with nearby micro-producers including Firefly Chocolates, Barrel Brothers Brewing, Tierra Vegetables and Moustache Bakery.
Like other scrappy startups, they’ve found ways to create their own small-scale equipment. A ShopVac and wheatgrass juicer purchased on Ebay have been combined using duct tape and perseverance into a makeshift grinder/separator for the chocolate nibs. An old peanut butter grinder processes cocoa butter and nibs into chocolate liquor, and a rumbling contraption once used in a dentists office shakes the bubbles out of the chocolate molds. He found the rabbit molds online, as well.
“I love to build stuff,” says Jeff. He and Susan, having worked in the restaurant business for most of their lives, also appreciate thrift and making the most of small kitchen spaces. Their chocolate factory is only about 500 square feet, with nearly every empty space utilized.
Chef-y Chocolate
“We come at this from a chef perspective,” says Susan. “It’s a true advantage,” she says, allowing them to be more experimental and play with interesting flavors rather than be constrained by the current chocolate trend of only using single-sourced beans and one or two ingredients, for a purer chocolate experience.
“It’s like single source vineyard wines,” says Jeff. “We tasted more than 100 single source bars, and it wasn’t us. We ended up thinking, ‘Maybe they should have added a few more ingredients.’ ”
“We wanted to make chocolate people want to eat, and we want them to want more,” he said. ‘That’s the fun part of this, experimenting and being a chef,” he says.
Much of what they’ve learned about making chocolate has come from trial and error as well as a website called chocolatealchemy.com. The site offers “hacks” for making chocolate-making equipment from other machinery. “There are a lot of newer people in the chocolate industry that come from tech. They’re coming at this from an open source perspective. We’re all sharing information,” Jeff says.
As the couple dives back into production later in the morning, the smell of chocolate fills every nook and cranny of the space, and it’s hard not to surreptitiously stick a finger into the still-warm molds that Susan is carefully placing slivered almonds atop. So hard.
Volo Chocolates are currently available online at volochocolate.com, Relish Culinary Adventures, Dry Creek Vineyards, Bella Winery, Wilson Winery, Rodney Strong Winery, Ferrari-Carano Winery and Jimtown Store, or at a pop-up on April 15 at Relish. The bunnies are $10 each.
Spoiler alert: the happy people in the picture are not the Sonoma Magazine staff – it’s actually Buena Vista Winery’s Living Extravaganza performers – but this is pretty much what we look like when celebrating. Pretty much.
Most of the time, the Sonoma Magazine staff is a pretty humble bunch. After all, it’s hard to get hit by hubris when you’re surrounded by such natural, cultural and culinary splendor. Nevertheless, every now and then, we feel that some (well-deserved) self promotion is in place. Today is one of those days.
Spoiler alert: the happy people in this photo are not the Sonoma Magazine staff – it’s Buena Vista Winery’s Living Extravaganza performers – but this is what we look like when we celebrate. Pretty much. (Photo courtesy of Buena Vista Winery)
Following the news that Sonoma Magazine is a finalist for three national magazine awards from the CRMA, we recently found out that we have been nominated for six Maggie Awards; the most prestigious publication awards in the West. A three-time Maggie award-winner, Sonoma Magazine is nominated for the 2017 Maggies within the categories “Best Regional & State Magazine,” “Best Feature Article,” “Best Interview or Profile,” “Best Editorial Illustration,” “Best Editorial Photograph,” and “Best Overall Publication Design.”
As if that wasn’t enough to make our egos expand dramatically, Sonoma Magazine is now the number one magazineon Sonoma County newsstands; selling more copies per issue than any other national magazine – including People magazine. Sonoma Magazine currently sells three times more copies per issue than Sunset, more copies than Real Simple, Oprah, and Martha Stewart Living – combined, and more copies than Esquire, Dwell, Vogue, Cosmopolitan and Vanity Fair – also combined!
The cherry on top? Sonoma Magazine has won an SPD (Society of Publication Designers) Merit Award for Best Photo Illustration for “The BIG Guide to Cheap Eats.”
That’s all. End of brag. Want to find out what all the fuss is about? Sign up for a Sonoma Magazine subscription here.
Downtown Sonoma is a must-visit in California, according to the Los Angeles Times.
Listed on Monday on the Times’ California Bucket List, a “daily guide to essential California adventures,” Sonoma Plaza joined Golden State destinations such as the Grammy Museum in downtown L.A., Malibu’s Paradise Cove, Tadich Grill in San Francisco and Sutter’s Fort in Sacramento.
Why did Sonoma make the list?
“Sonoma, just 45 miles north of San Francisco, has a bustling central plaza, the last Franciscan missions and a unique revolutionary history,” says the LA Times, and shares the story of the 1846 Bear Flag Revolt and the many ways in which visitors can learn about California history in the Sonoma State Historic Park. The Times also mentions the bistros, tasting rooms and shops on the Sonoma Plaza. Click through the gallery above for more Sonoma Plaza highlights.
Other Northern California destinations that made the California Bucket List include San Francisco’s Alcatraz, Golden Gate Bridge (by bike), Ferry Building, City Lights bookstore, Lands End, Castro district and cable cars, the Campanile in Berkeley, Glass Beach in Fort Bragg, the Samoa Cookhouse in Humboldt County, Lake Tahoe, the Trees of Mystery in Klamath and the Chandelier “drive-thru” Redwood Tree in Leggett.
LA Times’ travel writers will continue to add destinations to their California bucket list throughout the year. We can think of quite a few Sonoma County spots to add to the list – which ones would you include? Let us know in the comments!