A Seed to Table Story of One Pattypan Squash in Sonoma County

Roasted summer squash with an almond romesco-style sauce and pepitas from Natalie Goble of Peter Lowell’s and the soon-to-open Handline Restaurant in Sebastopol. Heather Irwin/PD
Roasted summer squash with an almond romesco-style sauce and pepitas from Natalie Goble of Peter Lowell’s and the soon-to-open Handline Restaurant in Sebastopol. Heather Irwin/PD

Last May, a tiny pattypan squash seed was planted just off Bones Road in Sebastopol.

Over the next few weeks, that seed, along with hundreds of others, was nurtured in the warmth of Chef Natalie Goble’s Two Belly Acres Farm greenhouse, sprouting tiny leaves until it could withstand the unpredictability of June weather in Sonoma. Once replanted in the loamy soil, pesky gophers were kept at bay as blossoms formed, bugs nibbled, the sun shone and summer rolled on.

June turned to July, and miniature versions of the summer squash — pattypan, zucchini and crooknecks — grew by leaps and bounds, waiting patiently among the vines for their closeups at nearby Peter Lowell’s Restaurant, or the forthcoming Handline Restaurant in Sebastopol.

Natalie Goble at Two Belly Acres. Beth Schlanker/PD
Natalie Goble at Two Belly Acres. Beth Schlanker/PD

Whether we think about it or not, behind every apple, every plum, lettuce, tomato and summer squash is a seed-to-table story. There are pests to control, weeds to pick and the backbreaking work of harvest before our produce sits neatly on a grocery shelf, at a farmers market or on our plates at a restaurant.

We wanted to know that story, about a single row of squash planted on a farm just off Bones Road, in west Sonoma County, that went from humble to haute in just a 5-mile radius.

Seed to table

Two days earlier, at the home of Goble and Lowell Sheldon, co-founder of Peter Lowell’s, a pile of summer squash from that single row of zucchini, crooknecks and pattypans had been roasted and diced, then covered with a sauce that Goble calls “smothered squash,” something between a romesco and a Oaxacan mole made with almonds, pumpkin seeds, tomato puree, spices and garlic. She’s trying out the dish for the couple’s soon-to-open casual eatery, Handline. The “Coastal California” restaurant has been a work in progress for more than a year and will focus on seafood, handmade tortillas and local produce.

Goble’s is the kind of dish that takes advantage of the bumper crop of squash about to descend on Handline and nearby Peter Lowell’s, which the couple also owns. Simple, but flavorful, it’s an incidentally vegan dish that showcases squash as a flavor carrier — something it’s well suited to do.

Squash blossom, Dawn Heumann
Squash blossom, Dawn Heumann

Unlike many some restaurants that get their produce from markets, Handline and Peter Lowell’s are committed to using Two Belly Acre’s entire harvest, even if that means summer squash in just about every dish during the height of the season. It’s something many home gardeners have experienced.

“Squash is of the moment at the farm, and I love its versatility, from shaved raw, battered and fried, and even blended,” said Goble. “I can do pretty much anything with it to showcase its flavor and texture,” she said.

Seasonal tsunamis

“Squash is a great vehicle for flavor,” said Joe Zobel, chef at Peter Lowell’s. The eight-year-old Sebastopol restaurant has become known for its commitment to using local produce, especially from its farm. During the summer, about 60 percent of the produce comes from Two Belly Acres farm.

That can lead to seasonal tsunamis at the restaurant.

Seasonal squash, Beth Schlanker/PD
Seasonal squash, Beth Schlanker/PD

“You can’t just grow a small amount of it,” said Zobel. He has been receiving boxes of squash for several weeks, which will continue well into September. Starting in August, he estimates they will receive 20 to 30 pounds a week from Two Belly Acres.

Sound like a lot? When he first started cooking at the restaurant two years ago, the farm was producing three times as much squash. “We’ve gotten better at staggering the harvest,” he said, with a sigh. Nearly 100 pounds of squash per week proved, well, challenging.

With today’s harvest, he has made mushroom broth for the squash crudo, pickled summer vegetables and squash polpette that’s almost too pretty to sully with a fork. At its heart, it’s a fancy sort of vegetable soup with squash fritters, but in this guise, there’s no doubt this is some pin-up worthy produce.

“You have to have a lot of ideas,” said Zobel. Other dishes in his squash portfolio include linguine with summer squash, Marin Coast Coon Stripe shrimp and squash blossoms; summer squash budino (pudding) with preserved plums, smoked morel mushrooms and corn polenta; tempura squash fritto misto with ricotta stuffed blossoms; and bone marrow broth with squash crudo.

Because the squash just keeps on coming.

Squash dish at Peter Lowell's in Sebastopol. Beth Schlanker/PD
Squash dish at Peter Lowell’s in Sebastopol. Beth Schlanker/PD

Where the magic happens

There’s still a lot happening a few miles away at Two Belly Acres. In the hot July sun, in what was once an apple orchard, Natalie Goble walks on the dirt between rows of chard, kale, baby tomatoes, onions and the squash.

This was where she grew up, where her father tried his hand at farming, where her brother had his “field of dreams” baseball field and, finally, the two acres of farm she, her brother and his girlfriend have rehabbed into a nearly year-round source of produce for the restaurant. If the gophers don’t get it first.

Goble reaches into a tangle of hairy leaves to snap off a pattypan squash, bright yellow with scalloped edges. She rolls it around in her hand, smiling. “It’s so pretty, so sunny,” she says, carefully sidestepping a new row of summer squash seedlings just beginning to sprout.

Still warm from the sun, this little pattypan that grew from a seed on a small farm on Bones Road is destined for another box of produce delivered to the restaurant, prepared by the chef and served up all summer long, until the last squash is harvested and another crop comes into focus.

But that’s another story.

(featured photo of Two Belly Acres Farm, photo: Dawn Heumann)

Annie Leibovitz and Family to Open Art Gallery in Healdsburg

If all goes according to plan, an orange eyesore on Healdsburg’s main drag will be converted to an art gallery by the family of celebrity photographer Annie Leibovitz.

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A former machine shop at 444 Healdsburg Avenue is the future site of an art gallery and creative space of which famed portrait photographer Annie Leibovitz is an investor, in Healdsburg. (Photo by Alvin Jornada)

Leibovitz’s niece, Megan Steinman, will oversee the revitalization and operation of the space at 444 Healdsburg Ave., the former home of the Healdsburg Machine Co. , where rotary machines were made to crush and destem grapes.

Steinman and other members of her family, including her famous aunt, Leibovitz, purchased the rusted, 80-year-old building and announced plans to refurbish it and install a gallery and event space that would also offer symposiums, performances, author readings, perhaps even movie nights.

“It will be like a town hall for creativity,” Megan Steinman said, adding there “could be a chance” that Leibovitz’s photos will be on display.

“It’s super possible but it’s not the curatorial direction,” she said. “We are a family-run organization, interested in bringing art to Sonoma County. The space will be run by me, curated by me and artists selected by me.”

Steinman, 38, an independent curator and creative producer, expects the gallery to open in 2017.

The Food King of Outside Lands: Your Guide to OL Eats

With more than 80 restaurants, 40 wineries and 28 breweries, Outside Lands gourmet music festival (Aug 5-7, 2016) is as much about eating and drinking as it is about seeing bands. And for many gastronauts, it’s the entire point of walking miles around Golden Gate Park, alternately freezing and sweating, trying to hit as many restaurants as possible for three exhaustingly delightful stomach-filling days.

As opening day approaches, I spoke with Ari Feingold, who has spent most of the last nine years working with Bay Area restaurateurs — from Michelin-starred chefs to food trucks — to create the gastro-wonderland called Taste of the Bay Area.

What makes for a great menu item?
“The key is being able to eat it with one hand,” said Feingold. though its not a deal-breaker, it gives eaters a chance to be mobile, dance and walk around.

What’s it like in the hours before the gates open?
“I work on this year round, and we go from planning to execution, fully set up and ready to go, so actually its a pretty calm moment. All the work is in the time leading up to it, but once you’re on site, there’s almost like a calm,” said Feingold.

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Is it hard for vendors like Rich Table to go from white tablecloth service to a small booth feeding thousands?

Many vendors are not accustomed to doing food at that kind of scale, and for both old and new vendors, so the OL team meets with the restaurants early on to work on layout, operations and logistics. “When they get to the event they are 100 percent ready for service, and that’s a commitment the festival has to make,” said Feingold. A small team of about 5 people work on the advance preparations, and about 20 onsite.

“Some of these restaurants are very expensive, and you can’t get in, but they’re all offering food in the $5 to $20 range, and its easier to access that cuisine,” he said. “You can eat Evan Rich’s (Rich Table) food for $10!”

How do you keep it interesting every year?
“We feel like its our obligation to make it better,” he said. When OL started, they looked at the landscape and realized there was no reason a festival had to be full of frozen food. As one of the first big festivals to make food a huge priority, OL has evolved into a food festival as much as a music festival. “At this point, it’s grown beyond all of our imaginations,” he said.

How do people apply to be a vendor?
More than 90 percent of food vendors return each year, so there is always a wait list. But the team looks for diversity in culinary and menu options, where the restaurants are in the Bay Area and the price point. “This is a real microcosm of top tier chefs selling right next to pop-up restaurants without brick and mortar restaurants,” Feingold said.

This year, there were more than 200 applications for only a few spots. “Every vendor serves a unique purpose,” he said. One newcomer is The Farmer’s Wife, from Sebastopol, at the festival farmers market.

Outside_Lands_2015_04714_JORGPHOTOAre there any white whales?
Not really, says Feingold. “It’s fun to get some time out of the restaurant, and a community is built to have fun in the park.”

Favorite restaurants?
“I couldn’t even limit it to 20,” he said, though he gets excited just like anyone else for newcomers.

BiteClub’s Guide to Outside Lands

The DL: Calories be damned you’re gonna walk it all off just getting from one food region to another. We usually start the day with a beer from Beerlands (breakfast of champs!) followed by a trip around the polo field restaurants, which get really busy later in the day. Once you’ve laid a solid base, head for Winelands and Cheeselands for a little upper crusting, as well as the new Outside Clams. We’re usually jonesing for a few sweets by then, so go back through the pass (hitting Bacon Lands and Cocktail Lands on the way, along with the GastroMagic Stage) with a destination of Chocolands. This area is usually a bit less nutty, and is a nice spot for a respite. Next be on your way to Hellman Hollow to find a few nibbles at EcoLands, and into the narrow pass through on the way back to the Polo Field. As evening rolls around the open area around the Sutro Stage cools off and you can hit the food trucks and vendors in Lendley Meadow. Repeat as necessary.

Coolest Upscale Experience: New this year is Forest Feast, a four-course dinner with the award-winning restaurant Trestle. The intimate, four-course menu includes falafel salad, corn soup, King salmon, braised beef shortribs, peach cobble, chocolate mousse and several wines. There are two seatings per day, and tickets are limited to $48 people per seating. Prices are $175 per person and include champagne, wine pairing and dinner. via http://sfoutsidelands.com/taste#trestle

What’s New: Belcampo Meat Co.: Bini’s Kitchen, Fine & Rare, FK Frozen Custard Bars, Four Barrel Coffee, Itani Ramen, Koja Kitchen, Rove Kitchen, Smooth Detour, Farmer’s Wife, The Japanese Pantry, Trestle, Mozzeria, Homestead Cookies, Il Morso, Outside Clams (seafood).

Food On Stage: GastroMagic is a mashup of food, music, comedy and cocktails, with performances by musicians and chefs in a more-chaotic-the-better, usually unscripted set. This year, look for a chef cook off with ugly produce and food waste; a Prince tribute band and purple yam ice cream from Humphry Slocombe, and a repeat of the massively awesome Big Freedia Bounce Brunch where this gender-bending bounce queen pelts the audience with beignets and booty shorts.

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Since many of the vendors have been around for years, we can tell you a few of our longtime faves…

Baconland: Bacon Flights
Charles Chocolates: S’mores
Little Skillet: Fried chicken and waffles
Namu street Food: Korean Fried Chicken
Nombe: Ramen Burgers
Pica Pica: Arepas
Rich Table: Porcini Donuts with Raclette Cheeese
Rosamude Sausage Grill: Poutine
Wise and Sons: Bagels and Schmear, Pastrami Cheese Fries
Bacon Bacon Truck: Chocolate covered bacon
Curry Up Now: Sexy Fries
Del Popolo: Pizza (always a massive line)
Humphry Slocombe: Secret breakfast ice cream
Senior Sisig: Pork Sisig
Chairman: Steamed baos
Frickle Brothers: Fried Pickles
Guittard Chocolate Company: Melted Chocolate bars

Is Napa Hitting Restaurant Overload?

Ninebark Restaurant has opened in Napa. Photo: Ninebark
Ninebark Restaurant has opened in Napa. Photo: Ninebark

Is downtown Napa hitting restaurant overload?

This week two high-profile restaurants have closed in downtown Napa, Atlas Social and Ninebark. Both opened in 2015, with much fanfare and high-profile backers, but with a seeming flood of upscale eateries opening almost weekly in the small-but-exploding downtown area, could this be the first sign of the restaurant bubble popping in Napa? Or Wine Country in general?

Ninebark in Napa (PD file)
Ninebark in Napa is a conde nast reader favorite for 2016 (PD file)

Atlas Social, a project of restaurateur Michael Gyetvan, seemed a sure win after the successes of Azzurro Pizzeria and Enoteca and Norman Rose Tavern. It wasn’t.

Basically, it’s become a challenge just to decide where to eat, and with so many high-dollar entrants into the game, where to spend your money — even when money is no object.

Also closed, at least temporarily, is Ninebark, which opened in the fall of 2015 with celebrated New York chef Matthew Lightner. Publicists announced June 29 that the restaurant will be doing a “necessary but temporary closure” without any further details — leading to plenty of head scratching, since the company that owns it, AVROKO Hospitality closed another restaurant in the same spot (starting as Fagiani’s, then pivoting to The Thomas) less than two years after opening.

A quick survey of Napa County’s restaurant inspections from 2009 to 2016 does show a steady increase in the number of eateries in the county (though it includes everything from gas stations to Michelin-starred spots), with an ongoing drop throughout the county and the city of Napa in 2015. If the trend continues, it could truly signal a change. Since it’s hard to quantify (350 reported restaurant inspections in 2009 to a peak of 474 in 2014 and a decline to 466 in 2015 and 325 so far in 2016), I can only say that anecdotally, it’s not hard to feel the land-grab for attention from new restaurants hitting its zenith. And a drop off looming ahead.

Ninebark Restaurant has opened in Napa. Photo: Ninebark
Ninebark Restaurant has opened in Napa. Photo: Ninebark

With that zenith, is increasing competition for attention by critics and eaters. Most recently, Curtis de Fede’s Miminashi, Ca’Momi Osteria and Two Birds/One Stone have taken on plenty of limelight, along with the further afield openings of Charlie Palmer’s Harvest Table (St. Helena), the continued Michelin hubbub around the Restaurant at Meadowood. Meanwhile, established heavy-hitters like La Toque, French Laundry, Press, Michael Chiarello’s Bottega, Bouchon, Mustards, Zuzu, Auberge du Soliel and Oentori have become destinations, and relative newcomers like Torc, 1313 Main, Evangeline and Sam’s Social Club remain on the radar.

Basically, it’s become a challenge just to decide where to eat, and with so many high-dollar entrants into the game, where to spend your money — even when money is no object.

Not surprisingly, we’re hearing much of the same in Healdsburg, where the restaurant scene is also hitting capacity, with several more restaurants on the horizon, and lots of recent openings spreading out the attention rather than focusing it on any one restaurant.

Atlas Social Club Restaurant in Napa opened in January 2015
Atlas Social Club Restaurant in Napa opened in January 2015

Like any city, there’s a natural turnover, and not everyone will survive, but with more newcomers on the horizon, including a new steakhouse by Charlie Palmer at the forthcoming Archer Hotel in Napa, the CIA/Copia Restaurant and Michael Chiarello’s new food project in Yountville, competition is slated to get even tougher.

What’s your take? Survival of the fittest? Bubble bursting? Or just a fluke. Sound off.

Farm-to-Glass Drinks at Duke’s Spirited Cocktails in Healdsburg

Sorrel cocktail at Duke’s Spirited Cocktails in Healdsburg. (Photo: Ian Eddy)

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Move over tasting rooms, there’s a new cocktail bar in the Burg. Duke’s Spirited Cocktail Bar has opened at 111 Plaza St. on the Healdsburg Square.

Keeping up the 90-year tradition of successive bars at the location (it was formerly John & Zeke’s, followed by the very short-lived Scout), cocktails are king, here, though ordering a well gin and tonic might get you a sidelong glance.

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Interior of Duke’s Spirited Cocktails in Healdsburg. (Photo: Nat and Cody Gantz.)

Duke’s is all about seasonal craft libations, aka farm-to-glass drinks that include herbs, fruit vinegars, fruit purees and top shelf artisan booze.  A couple examples: “Darling Nicki” ($11) includes Mezan Panama run, chai tea, Hamilton 151, Leopold’s Tart Cherry and Spirit Works Sloe Gin; “Rangpur More” ($11) with Opihr gin, rangpur lime shrub, pink peppercorn, saffron bitters and house tonic; or the “Barely Legal” ($12) with Charbay Meyer lemon vodka, Giffard Lychee, yuzu, lemon and grapefuit. I’m getting parched just writing this.

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Sorrel cocktail at Duke’s Spirited Cocktails in Healdsburg. (Photo: Ian Eddy)

Wine, beer and ciders are also on the menu for traditionalists, as well as non-alcoholic housemade sodas (burdock root beer, grapefruit) and teas. Don’t expect much in the way of food, because this is clearly a bar, and not a restaurant (and trust us, there’s no lack of dining options in Healdsburg), but small bites include pickled veggies, mixed nuts, chips and salsa and Noble Folk ice cream sandwiches. Open late, but no one under 21 allowed inside.

111 Plaza Street, Healdsburg, 707.431.1060, drinkatdukes.com.

More Sonoma Wine Country Restaurants and Dining Reviews on BiteClubEats.

Duke’s Spirited Cocktails in Healdsburg serves seed-to-glass cocktails in Sonoma County Wine Country. Heather Irwin
Duke’s Spirited Cocktails in Healdsburg serves seed-to-glass cocktails in Sonoma County Wine Country. (Photo by Heather Irwin)
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Afterglow cocktail at Duke’s Spirited Cocktails in Healdsburg. (Photo: Wendy White)
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Duke’s Spirited Cocktails in Healdsburg serves seed-to-glass cocktails in Sonoma County Wine Country. (Photo by Heather Irwin)

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Handline: SoCal Meets NoCal Seafood Coming

Roasted summer squash with an almond romesco-style sauce and pepitas from Natalie Goble of Peter Lowell’s and the soon-to-open Handline Restaurant in Sebastopol. Heather Irwin/PD

As restaurateur Lowell Sheldon walks through the construction zone that will soon become Handline, the only visible reminder that this space was once a Foster’s Freeze is a small room on the western end of the building. The 1950’s powder blue tiles are, at least for now, still on the exterior, and the ghosts of a million soft serve cones and chili cheese fries hang heavy in the air.

Come September, this room will become a tortilleria, where Sheldon’s partner, Natalie Goble and her staff will make authentic, house-ground corn tortillas by hand each day.

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Those tortillas will be part of the carefully-curated “coastal California” menu that Sheldon (owner of Peter Lowell’s Restaurant in Sebastopol) and Goble have been developing for more than a year.
Slated for an early fall opening, the fast-casual restaurant pays homage to Northern California’s bounty of seafood and artisan farms, along with nods to Southern California’s burger and taco culture and a few hat-tips to the historic Foster’s Freeze that once stood on the property.

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As Sheldon walks through the rest of the building, showing the massive production kitchen, walk-up counter, beverage bar and indoor seating area, the vibe is quite different. The highly stylized interior is made with reclaimed wood, giant soji-like panels that slide open to the outside, a spot where a tree will stand indoors, and the yet-to-be-built garden and patio areas, it’s clear that the space is the culmination of years of planning.

Ceviche
Ceviche

Though its more than a month before the restaurant will open when I meet up with Goble and Sheldon, it’s already clear the food is going to be pretty special. At the Sebastopol home of the couple, Goble has made a preview feast of some of the items she’s been developing, including fish tacos, ceviche and smothered summer squash.  A opening menu on the table also includes raw and cooked oysters, chicken and bean tostadas, pastured beef and vegan burgers, fisherman’s stew, roasted padron peppers and of course, soft serve ice cream.

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Goble spent months studying how to make authentic corn tortillas at El Molino Central in Sonoma, where owner Karen Waikiki (also of Primavera Tamales) is revitalizing the art of stone ground corn tortilla making. Though the women who deftly flatten and flip the corn masa into thick tortillas make it look easy, Goble says its a true art that takes years to perfect. Having worked for years at Peter Lowell’s, she brings that restaurant’s fastidious farm-to-plate philosophy to the restaurant as well.

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It’s almost painful to pull ourselves away from the lush, rockfish ceviche with fresh avocado Natalie has prepared, and the roasted squash that comes from her family’s nearby Two Belly Acres Farm with charred onion and pepita sauce is, well, something we’ve been obsessing about for weeks.

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Though there’s still plenty to do before opening, Goble and Sheldon already have a clear vision, a solid menu and the passion to make Handline a solid addition to the burgeoning Sebastopol dining scene—one tortilla at a time.

Handline Coastal California restaurant, opening in September, 935 Gravenstein Hwy., Sebatopol, Website.

5 Gorgeous Outdoor Rooms to Enhance Your Backyard

Meditation room
Sometimes a space needs to be set aside for peace and contemplation. This outdoor room sets the stage for personal downtime. (Image via Decoist)

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With summer in full swing, many of us spend most of our days – and nights – in our backyards. Whether barbecuing, throwing a party or just enjoying the night sky, the weather in California can make a backyard feel like just another room in the house.

Luckily, it can be just that. Here are five outdoor room ideas that will turn your backyard into an extension of your home:

Outdoor Kitchens

natural stone outdoor kitchen design

This outdoor cooking space features a pizza oven as well as a barbecue. (Image via livinator.com)

Outdoor kitchen

The pergola with hanging plants, lights, and a fire pit make this outdoor kitchen a cozy gathering place for chilly evenings. (Image via FurnitureFashion)

Outdoor Living Rooms

Outdoor living room

A section of patio has been set aside for this outdoor living room which features curtains for privacy, recessed lighting, and a large stone fireplace. (Image via Wagner Design Group)

Outdoor living room

Wicker furniture with sun and rain resistant pillows create an open air living area to enjoy during summer months. (Image via Pottery Barn)

Fire Pit Areas

Fire pit

This fire pit area takes the idea of an outdoor living room and makes it seem more like a comfortable campground. (Image via Designrulz)

Fire pit

Precisely placed pavers and a custom fire pit make this outdoor living space enjoyable and aesthetically pleasing. (Image via Woodys)

Outdoor Bedrooms

Country Living

A hammock has been turned into a daybed in this unique example of an outdoor sleeping space. (Image via County Living)

Outdoor Bedroom

A wooden gazebo is outfitted with mosquito netting and curtains, making this outdoor area suitable for a summer siesta as well as a full-night’s sleep. (Image via Party Buzz)

Meditative Spaces

Meditation room

Sometimes a space needs to be set aside for peace and contemplation. This outdoor room sets the stage for personal downtime. (Image via Decoist)

Meditative space

This more-permanent, but still open, meditation room with a water feature will bring calm to any set of frazzled nerves. (Image via Fresh Homes)

Double-Duty: 5 Summer-to-Fall Outfits

Are you ready for back to school shopping? I’m not. Why not prolong that summertime feeling a bit longer – these local finds are designed to make your summer to fall transition easier.

Michael Kors Alston Maxi Dress

Michael Kors Alston Maxi Dress 
Maxi dresses are easy to throw on and can be dressed up or down. Paired with heels and long earrings, you have an event-worthy outfit. Or grab comfortable sandals, toss a denim jacket into a tote bag, and you’re set for the entire day no matter the temperature.

To Buy: $140.00, Macy’s, 800 Santa Rosa Plaza, Santa Rosa.

Charter Club Flamingo Shirt Dress

Charter Club Flamingo Shirt Dress
Who doesn’t love flamingoes? Here’s an example of a retro-inspired shirt dress from Charter Club that says summertime, but will look equally great in the fall with a cardigan and ballet flats. The navy color is a great contrast for the pops of pink.

To Buy: Now $51.99, Macy’s, 800 Santa Rosa Plaza, Santa Rosa.

Ralph Lauren Denim Fit & Flare

Ralph Lauren Denim Fit & Flare
Repeat after me. Fit and flare. This style is universally flattering. Nipped in at the waist to highlight your shape, wear it now as is. Come fall, add a cropped blazer, even tights and ankle boots, when the temperatures really drop.

To Buy: $125, Macy’s, 800 Santa Rosa Plaza, Santa Rosa.

Saltwater Sandals by Hoy

Saltwater Sandals by Hoy
In Sonoma County warm temperatures can span into September; sometimes even early October. I’m not giving up my sandals yet. A fond memory from my childhood, Salt Water Sandals by Hoy have been a cult classic since the 1940’s. These leather sandals are simple, classic, and water resistant—the main selling point for me (outside of the vintage feel).

To Buy: Less than $40, Santa Rosa Shoes, 2255 Cleveland Avenue, Santa Rosa. (don’t walk – run to nab a pair before they’re gone for the season!)

Karena Ballet Flats

Karena Ballet Flats
On a quest for the perfect pair of ballet flats? The Karena from Rainsong Shoes in Healdsburg, will gracefully take you from summer to fall.  The pointed toe elongates the legs and the fun laces will make you channel your inner ballerina and dance, dance, dance.

To Buy: $129, Rainsong Shoes, 117 Plaza Street, Healdsburg, raninsongshoes.com

Five Perfect Poolside Wines under $20

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Cowabunga.

At times we just can’t resist doing a cannonball off the diving board. Couple that with a refreshing splash of wine, and you’ve got yourself an extraordinary sun-kissed summer day.

Here are 5 poolside wines under $20:

Cycles Gladiator, 2015 Central Coast Chardonnay, 13.5%, $11. A tasty wine that’s a steal at this price. The stone fruit makes it a standout, with just the right oak treatment: light. While it’s not complex, it is layered.

Edna Valley, 2015 Central Coast Sauvignon Blanc, 13.7%, $15. Grassy, with notes of grapefruit, lime and mineral. It’s a refreshing quaff, great for the budget-minded.

Sidebar, 2015 Russian River Valley Rosé, 12.5%, $21. This is knockout, a bone dry rosé with aromas and flavors of watermelon, strawberry and mineral. It finishes crisp, with a lingering note of strawberry.

Lindeman’s, 2015 Bin 85 Pinot Grigio, 12.5%, $11. This pinot grigio has bewitching aromas of jasmine and white nectarine. Notes of apple and pear in the mix. Delightful. Finishes crisp.

DeLoach 2014 California Chardonnay, 13.5%, $12. This chardonnay is floral with a kiss of orange blossom and, on the palate, notes of honeydew melon and pear.

Francis Ford Coppola Reinvents Virginia Dare Wines

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How dare he? Because he’s Francis Ford Coppola.

The master movie storyteller is spinning another tale, this one of Virginia Dare, the first white child born of English descent in what would become the United States, in 1587. He’s artfully doing it through wine, and in a way only FFC can.

In 1835, a winery opened on Roanoke Island in North Carolina. It produced a range of wines, including Virginia Dare, made from Scuppernong grapes that grew wild throughout the South. The wines were sweet and had an oddly pungent aroma that wouldn’t sell in California today, yet they were immensely popular until Prohibition.

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The brand was sold several times, and eventually abandoned in 2011. Coppola scooped it up and began telling Virginia Dare’s “story” via four wines released in 2014: The White Doe (Chenin Blanc and Viognier), Manteo (red blend), Two Arrowheads (Viognier and Roussanne) and The Lost Colony (Malbec and Syrah), each with a Colonial-era story behind it.

A year later, Coppola fessed up that the wines were made at the former Geyser Peak Winery in Geyserville, which he purchased in 2013. He renamed the place Virginia Dare Winery, without any connective tissue to North Carolina, Scuppernong or Virginia herself.

Coppola's Virginia Dare Winery in Geyserville. (facebook.com/VirginiaDareWinery)
Coppola’s Virginia Dare Winery in Geyserville. (facebook.com/VirginiaDareWinery)

“The myth of Virginia Dare always intrigued me, and as a child I remember the wine because of the pretty blond girl on the label and the ‘Say it again, Virginia Dare’ jingle they used to advertise on the radio,” Coppola said. “My goal is to revive the brand so that it isn’t lost to future generations.”

Today, the flagship wines are the 2014 Russian River Valley Chardonnay and 2014 Russian River Valley Pinot Noir (both $25), tasty and made more cheerful by the smiling face of Virginia on the label. She likely died at a very young age, but hey, that’s moviemaking.

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