LGBTQ Locals’ Favorite Spots in Sonoma County

Taylor Maid Farms, Sebastopol, California
(Photo: John Burgess)

Ask a few locals what to see and do in Sonoma County and their answers are likely to be as diverse as the types of grapes growing in our famous vineyards. Everyone has their particular favorites; their own hidden gems that will take Sonoma visitors on roads less traveled. This diversity in preference, naturally, also extends to our vibrant LGBTQ community.

Leading up to Sonoma County Pride (June 2-4), we decided to reach out to LGBTQ folks from throughout the county to discover their favorite local spots. Click through the gallery above for all the details. 

 

BottleRock 2017: The Year of the Craft Beer

BottleRock Napa Valley drew 120,000 music lovers over the three day Memorial Day weekend. As eighty bands served up a torrent of tunes on the festival’s four music stages — Maroon 5, Warren G,  House of Pain, Foo Fighters and Tom Petty fan favorites — festival food, wine, and craft beer helped to keep the energy up. The best local eateries served savory and sweet dishes for foodies while the Bay Area’s finest breweries provided ample wherewithal to wash it all down… oh so smoothly.

“I just love the beer selection this year; my favorite — Barrel Brothers HibisKISS beer — is a perfect brew for a sunny day,” enthused Jen Polston of Santa Rosa.

While brew aficionados tended to the ecstatic in their excitement for BottleRocks’s beer garden; brewers leavened their enthusiasm with a grain of the pragmatic. Partner John Lilienthal of 101 North Brewing, suppliers of Heroine IPA for the last three years, commented,

“It’s good exposure and worth the marketing dollars for us because they (festival-goers) buy enough beer for us to break even. And all craft beer was in the beer garden, so craft drinkers knew exactly where to go.”

Lagunitas, a sponsor of the three-day event, while no longer technically “craft” after their buyout by Heineken, continues to serve up some incredible beers. Despite Lagunitas’s disqualification as a “craft beer” due to brewery size, we’d like to unofficially grandfather them into the “craft” category — for their long and pioneering history as a Sonoma County “craft beer.”

Check out the gallery above for an inside look at the fun all the craft beer drinkers were having at BottleRock Napa Valley this year. 

10 Incredible Offstage Moments with BottleRock Artists

This year’s BottleRock Napa Valley festival featured an impressive lineup of musical talent and celebrity chefs.

To help BottleRock attendees prepare for the weekend fest and get the most out of the experience, we listed five BottleRock acts not to miss leading up to the festival and shared essential tips on how to survive three days of partying.

To make sure that you also got to “meet” your favorite acts offstage, we sent our nightlife photographer Estefany Gonzalez to snap portraits of 10 impressive BottleRock artists – just in case you didn’t get a chance to bump into them during the festival. Click through the gallery above to meet the artists. 

BottleRock 2017: 26 Favorite Crowd Photos

Going back to work after a three-day weekend is hard, especially if you spent it at the 2017 BottleRock hanging out in the sun, listening to great live music, sipping wine and beer and eating tasty food.

Now that you’ve had a day to come to terms with the festival coming to an end, our photographer Estefany Gonzalez has put together a BottleRock photo recap with our favorite crowd moments to get you through your first day back at work or help you remember a few moments the euphoria (or extra glasses of wine) may have made you forget…

 

5 Highlights From This Year’s BottleRock

If you follow Sonoma Magazine on Instagram, you probably saw Estefany Gonzalez, our music and arts reporter and photographer, buzzing around the 2017 BottleRock Napa Valley Festival this weekend snapping photos, meeting up with bands, and exploring the festivities and fashion on the festival grounds. Here’s Estefany’s top five highlights from this year’s BottleRock – and the one thing she regrets she missed: 

My Biggest Regret: Missing Foo Fighters Secret Set
I’m sorry to say that most of this year’s BottleRock attendees – including myself – missed the biggest BottleRock festival happening to date. I’m referring to the Foo Fighters’ secret and intimate two-hour set at the Blue Note in downtown Napa on May 26.

As someone who openly confessed that I wouldn’t be stopping by any of the BottleRock after shows, I mentally kicked myself as I sat at the very back of the Jam Cellars stage on Sunday night watching the Foo Fighters play. It was almost incredible to imagine that the same band I saw so many people watch on LED concert screens from the culinary stage still would play a venue smaller than the Arlene Francis Center in Santa Rosa. I made a mental note for myself to stick around for more after shows next year.

https://youtu.be/44q-Oqq81bM

Martha Stewart Cooking with Macklemore and Ryan Lewis
The culinary stage at BottleRock Napa undoubtedly served up quite a few surprises. This year’s most exciting celebrity fusion was the Martha Stewart, Macklemore and Ryan Lewis mashup, which resulted in fans fighting over a piece of chicken Macklemore threw at the crowd. I couldn’t help but laugh when Macklemore mentioned this later on the Jam Cellars stage, before he played “Thrift Shop,” saying he was now friends with Stewart, even though she told him he couldn’t cook but he sure could dress well…

The Ayesha Curry Drake Parody 
… Oh, and then there was that moment when Ayesha Curry rapped to a Drake parody on the culinary stage, alongside hype man E-40 and husband Stephen Curry.

Getting Intimate at the JamPad Sessions 
Another highlight this year was the number of pop-up “JaMSessions” at the JamPad.

This particular stage (if you could really call it a “stage;” there was no clear divider between the floor and the performance area) offered short acoustic song sets from a number of musicians. It provided a closer and more intimate setting than the large stages most of these artists played earlier in the day.

Con Brio, Judah & the Lion, and Gnash were some of the artists who played this close-knit stage.

Panicking! At The Disco
If you followed Sonoma Magazine’s Instagram feed this weekend, you’ve already seen how epic the silent disco was, but let me elaborate.

When I first heard about the silent disco, I have to admit I was a bit skeptical. I mean, Tom Petty was playing the main stage when Outkast’s Big Boi and The White Panda kicked off Saturday’s silent dance party. After the loss of so many musical legends last year, was I really going to miss some of Tom Petty’s set?

Well, I did and let me tell you, I have no regrets. This was, after all, America’s largest silent disco that shattered the previous American record of 3500 headphones, with 5000 participants. Sure, I thought I’d look a little silly dancing around to no sound (at least that’s what it looked like to the people exiting the festival at this point) but once I saw everyone around me cutting loose I couldn’t help but join in.

Cue the ‘Que: It’s Always Beer Garden Season at Brewsters in Petaluma

Brewster’s Beer Garden in Petaluma. Heather Irwin/PD
Brewster’s Beer Garden in Petaluma. Heather Irwin/PD

Just two hours earlier and I’d have been witness to an entire goat splayed over an impromptu pit of bricks and coals at Brewster’s Beer Garden. This ancient style of cooking, using a metal cross, isn’t a sight for everyone, but cooking “asado al palo” —literally meaning barbecued on a spit” — is a Spanish tradition that makes for some of the tastiest grilled meats you’ll ever have.

This is serious pit master kinda stuff, and a far cry from the kind of cooking Chris Beerman, who heads the kitchen at Petaluma’s Brewster’s Beer Garden, was doing at the haute San Francisco restaurant Boulevard, where tweezers rather than Volkswagon-sized barbecues, were the norm.

But at this 350-seat outdoor beer garden in the heart of downtown Petaluma, he’s clearly in his element, frequently roasting entire beasts for the restaurant’s impressive barbecue dishes. Ranging from special goat tacos prepared for Cinco de Mayo, to wet-mopped chopped “whole hog” and smoked lamb, ‘que has clearly become Beerman’s culinary jam since moving from San Francisco.

Having tasted some of the very best — and very worst — barbecue that Sonoma County has to offer, I give Brewster’s high marks for flavor and technique. When it’s been a good long while since we’ve had a barbecued rib that actually fell off the bone without the use of a knife/hacksaw/gnawing, Brewster’s was a welcome relief; with smokey, saucy pork that acquiesces like a Georgia peach in August. As not to create a civil war among ‘que-thusiasts, Beerman makes a solid Texas-style beef brisket, St. Louis style pork ribs and even smoked Korean short ribs.

And even though there are also smoked beets, smoked wings, smoky pork belly, a smoky mezcal cocktail and smoked tea leaves, don’t bank on Brewster’s just being a barbecue spot.

Beerman, who was also exec chef at SF diner Citizens Band and donut-mecca, Pinkie’s Bakery, puts both skillsets to work making modern comfort classics that include his signature onion ring-topped mac and cheese, fried chicken sandwich and chocolate brownie sundae.

“You should come see our garden sometime,” he says, between running back to the open kitchen and a smoker with a perfectly lacquered ham hock he occasionally peeks at. At his Petaluma home, he’s growing some of the restaurant’s produce, while sourcing the rest of the menu from local farms, ranches and producers including Filigree Farms, Alchemist Farms, Marin Sun Farms, Nicasio Valley, Stemple Ranch and the darlings-of-the-moment, CHEVOO goat cheese made with Aleppo-Urfa chili and lemon.

The infused olive oil chevre stars in the smoked beet salad ($11), with frisse, mustard greens and walnuts, with the olive oil also serving as an ingredient in the dressing. A must order.

Other favorites

Pork Belly with Cheese Curds: What could be a hot mess on a plate comes with two large pieces of crispy belly, Romesco sauce and fluffy Beecher’s Cheese curds. The snap peas on the bottom serve as a tasty foil to all the decadence.

Fried Chicken Sando ($14): The best fried-chicken sandwich, probably ever. Crispy-yet-juicy chicken, slab bacon, melty goat cheddar, garlic mayo, Della Fattoria bun. Eat quickly so as not to require sharing.

Beer cocktails: On a hot day, there’s just about nothing tastier than a beer. But add, say, pear cider to a crisp pale ale ($7, Pear Pressure) or a nitro cold brew to coconut porter ($9, Surf Bro) and you’ve got an afternoon made for bocce and bluegrass (both of which are featured at the sprawling garden).

Cocktail cocktails: Seasonal cocktails with a side of obsession. Beverage director Alfie Turnshek can talk for hours about how he infuses buttered popcorn into rum for his “Cineplex” ($9), which is a take on rum and Coke with a movie theme. Or the mole bitters, made with chocolate and cinnamon in the Petaloma ($10), made with tequila, mezcal, grapefruit and lemon-lime soda. Big city cocktails with a small town prices (nothing over $10). There’s also a huge selection of craft beers on draft from near and far, including Anderson Valley, Henhouse, 101 North and Bear Republic.

Brownie Sundae: Usually strictly kid-stuff, this grown up version has Valrohna chocolate, Three Twins ice cream, graham crumbles and more chocolate on top. Doesn’t have to be nearly this delicious, but is.

If you go

The space is immense, with a plethora of picnic-style tables. Great for a group, or if you’re interested in being social. A bocce court for grown-ups and a kids’ area to let the tots go nuts. Brunch served on Saturday and Sunday. Abbreviated lunch menu starts at 11:30 a.m. and goes until 5 p.m when the larger dinner menu emerges. Kids menu with chicken fingers and other tasty kid grub. Dogs welcome. Weekly music events Friday through Sunday regularly; every other Thursday is Bluegrass and Bourbon.

Know that: This busy restaurant can get crowded, and service can range from enthusiastic to dismissive depending on the time of day and staffing. Plating can also get a little haphazard when the kitchen is really humming. Parking can also get tight, but there are several overflow lots. Finding the restaurant is tricky, since there’s not much signage from the street.

Overall: Brewster’s Beer Garden is a new go-to beer garden with room for the whole family (including Rover), great barbecue and a top-shelf chef. Reasonably priced cocktails and plenty on draft make it doubly delicious.

229 Water St. North, Petaluma, 707-981-8330, brewstersbeergarden.com. Open Tuesday through Sunday from 11:30 to 10p.m., midnight on Friday and Saturday.

15 Sonoma Beer Releases You Should Know About This Summer

Three beer glasses filled with Cooperage beer
A selection of Cooperage Brewing Company beers. (Photo courtesy of Cooperage Brewing Facebook)

The sun is out, temperatures are rising, and local breweries are gearing up for the busy summer season with new tasty brews. Click through the gallery above for Sonoma beer releases you should know about this summer. 

Escape to Paris at the French Flea Market in Sonoma

Francophiles are sure to flip over the French Flea Market’s showcase of antiques and vintage wares as over 30 antique dealers converge at Cornerstone Sonoma this weekend.

Hosted by Cornerstone’s French-inspired boutique Chateau Sonoma, the weekend aims to transport buyers and window-shoppers alike to a classic Parisian flea market, such as Marché aux Puces de Saint-Ouen. 

Rummaging flea markets is a tradition for the French who, with Gallic intensity, explore markets in cities and villages to find an overlooked Hermes scarf, a post-Cubist gouache, an old pottery jug, a rhinestone tiara, an ebony cheese knife. 

At Cornerstone, French-born musician Michel Saga provides an antique box organ soundtrack for a weekend of perusing the creme de la creme of bric-a-brac, exotic curios and antiques on display.

From vintage clothing to antique pottery, vendors come from throughout the Northwestern US to barter and bargain their wares to shoppers. Prices are reasonable: items are sold at wholesale prices with the hopes that everyone leaves avec un petit souvenir.

Realizing that treasure hunting can be energy intensive, the market serves sausages and rosé to quaff with your beret at a rakish tilt.

The French Flea Market takes place May 27 & 28, 10AM-5PM. The market is free. 23588 Arnold Dr., Sonoma. chateausonoma.com

Going to BottleRock? Don’t Miss Checking Out These 14 Breweries

BottleRock Napa’s “the first taste of summer” is easily one of the Bay Area’s most popular music festivals. Lucky ticket holders – the festival has been sold out for some time – are in for 3-days of great music, culinary delights and demonstrations and a plethora of fine wines and brews.

Eighty bands will rock the festival’s 4 music stages; commercial celebrity chef and superstar pairings will be featured on the culinary stage. Music headliners include Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, Foo Fighters, Maroon 5, Modest Mouse, Ben Harper and the Innocent Criminals and Ani DIFranco; among the celebrity chefs to grace the culinary stage will be Martha Stewart, Jose Andres, Ayesha Curry, Hubert Keller, Cindy Pawlcyn, and Bryan Voltaggio. Ticket holders can view Martha Stewart preparing a dish live with Macklemore and Ryan Lewis!

We’ve compiled a list of 14 breweries (many of them local) that you shouldn’t miss out on while you’re rocking out to your favorite bands.

All craft beers will be in the beer garden. Looking for some local beers from Sonoma breweries? Try the Barrel Brothers Brewery‘s new Belgian-style “HibisKISS.” 101 North Brewing will be serving up their popular Heroine IPA. Santa Rosa’s Seismic Brewing will pour their brews in the beer garden and Golden State Cider from Sebastopol will serve ciders for those in need of something less hoppy.

Our neighbors in Napa will feature Napa Smith Brewery, Napa Palisades Beer Company, and Barrel and Sons Brewery‘s new refreshing Pils. Other Bay Area breweries not to miss at the festival: Mare Island Brewing, Fieldwork Brewing, Altamont Beer Works, Fort Point Beer Company and Drakes. Angel City Brewery and Karl Strauss Brewing will represent Southern California at BottleRock.

For more information on BottleRock festivities, food vendors, chef’s stage performances and pairings, and musical acts, click here.

5 Rising Bands You Don’t Want to Miss at BottleRock

With the 2017 BottleRock lineup including heavy hitters like Maroon 5, Foo Fighters and Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers, it’s easy to miss all of the amazing up-and-coming bands playing at this year’s music festival.

Though main stage acts are cool to catch, it’s good to remember most of them started on smaller stages before they made it big.

As with most festivals, it’s hard to choose where to head and which new bands to see, when so many different ones are hitting the stage at the same time. So, we took a look at the long list of more than 80 bands on this year’s lineup poster, and picked a few toward the bottom of the list that we think you’ll be glad you made a detour to see.

888

Why you should catch them: Formed from the remnants of Drop, Dead Gorgeous, a band who played on The Vans Warped Tour and all throughout the United States, the members of 888 leave behind gritty guitar riffs and raspy vocals to form a new project.

The band is composed of former Drop, Dead Gorgeous singer Danny Stills, drummer Danny Cooper and synth player Aaron Rothe.

Though the trio continued with the mentioned instrument roles, with the exception of Stills joining in on the synth and moments when all members pick up a pair of drumsticks, their sound is nothing like the previously mentioned band.

The group’s new tunes are layered in synthesizer beats, melodic vocals and catchy hooks with infectious beats and are bound to have you dancing along.

Song you hope they play: What a better anthem to cut loose at a festival than “Gold,” with the opening lines of the song boasting “a creature of the night, anything goes.”

Fun fact: Though the band no longer plays hardcore music, the members still do some serious headbanging during live sets, so much so that their hair appears permanently freeze framed.

Recommended if you like: The Unlikely Candidates, Vinyl Theatre, Night Riots.

BISHOP BRIGGS

Why you should catch her: With an electric stage presence and commanding voice reminiscent of a young Florence Welch, Bishop Briggs is a must-see act at this year’s festival. The London-born singer, whose stage name is inspired by the town in Scotland from which her parents hail, started writing her own songs at the age of seven after discovering her love for performing at a Karaoke bar in Tokyo.

At the young age of 24, she speaks well beyond her years and writes soulful, heart-wrenching lyrics speaking of self-reflection. Briggs has contagious, high-powered energy during performances that’s hard to match. Try and keep up with Briggs during her set but be warned, the singers’ feet hardly seem to touch the ground as she leaps around the stage.

Song you hope she plays: While the song “Darkside” speaks of pain and putting up a cold front to keep from getting hurt, the lyrics also explain Briggs’ writing style as she chants “Welcome to my dark side, we’re going to have a good time.”

Fun fact: No horses were harmed in the music video for “Wild Horses.” Despite the song name, the video for the song features plastic carousel horses instead of live ones.

Recommended if you like: Tove Lo, Halsey, Florence and the Machine.

CON BRIO

Why you should catch them: After spending the majority of last year playing big-name festivals such as Bonnaroo, Lollapalooza, and Fuji Rock in Japan, the seasoned Bay Area festival champions Con Brio return to Northern California to play a hometown festival. Singer Ziek McCarter’s dance moves rival those of a young Michel Jackson and pair beautifully with the remaining six-piece band members. The San Francisco-based number has an infectious and catchy sound that’s bound to have you craving funk tunes for weeks after you see them. Though the band has catchy high- energy brass instrument driven songs, some songs touch upon hard subjects such as the Black Lives Matter movement, with songs such as “Free & Brave,” a political anthem inspired by the death of McCarter’s father at the hands of East Texas police.

Song you hope they play: “Money,” which McCarter wrote about financial struggles while trying to pursue his dreams, is both relatable and danceable with a catch clap-along intro.

Fun fact: Con Brio means with great energy and vigor in Italian, and by the end of this band’s set, you’ll understand why the name is relevant.

Recommended if you like: James Brown, Royal Jelly Jive, Pimps of Joytime.

DREAMERS

Why you should catch them: Daydreaming though decades of time is the best way to describe the Los Angeles-based trio Dreamers. The group blends pop, punk and psychedelic riffs to create a genre the band refers to as “cosmic rock.”

With hazy, at times gritty and an illustrious story telling video elements to songs, the band leaves you feeling as though you’ve just woken up from a nap with refreshing new takes on rock n’ roll. Since the group’s start back in 2014, the band’s had a somewhat manic touring schedule and were playing festivals long before dropping a full-length album, which shows just how infectious and energetic their sets are.

Song you hope they play: “My Little Match,” an older track from the band’s self-titled 2014 EP, is a bit more punk-inspired than the rest of the band’s songs and is fun to bounce around to.

Fun fact: The video for the song “Wolves,” was shot during a marathon one-day session at a biker bar in New Jersey and edited together with animations singer Nick Wold made on his laptop.

Recommended if you like: Arkells, Finish Ticket,Talkie.

FITZ & THE TANTRUMS

Why you should catch them: Chances are you’ve heard the Fitz & The Tantrums single “Hand Clap,” on the radio over the past few months. With the mix of two singers, creative brass instrument arrangements and catchy contagious lyrics, it’s no surprise the band’s songs have often been featured in commercials and earned them spots on Festivals such as Las Vegas’ Life is Beautiful and Chicago’s Riot Fest.

It’s hard to pinpoint a specific musical category for the band’s sound: at times their songs scream indie pop, but their tunes also feature funk, soul and blues elements.

The band’s set offers a little something for everyone. Live shows often include crowds of all ages. It’s the perfect band to drink a beer with your parents or cut loose with your college friends.

Song you hope they play: No Fitz & The Tantrums concert or painful trip to the DMV would be complete without “The Walker,” a song with a video featuring an aggressive reaction to the line at the DMV.

Fun fact: “MoneyGrabber,” off the band’s first album Pickin’ Up the Pieces, was used in an episode of the TV show Criminal Minds in 2010.

Recommended if you like: Passion Pit, Young The Giant, Neon Trees.