Tina Caputo testing the aroma of various wines, checking for flavor notes. (Photo by Crista Jeremiason)
Methodology: It’s a tough job. Really.
With more than 400 Sonoma wineries producing thousands
of different bottlings each year, how did we settle on 2015’s best? It took lots
of tasting, and retasting, and assistance from the judges at The Press Democrat 2015 North Coast Wine Challenge, to come up with 100 great wines sure to please all palates and pocketbooks.
Sonoma magazine managing editor Linda Murphy and magazine contributor Virginie
Boone worked together to select the Top 100, taking into account their own tastings and
high-scoring wines from the North Coast Wine Challenge competition, held in April.
In addition to writing for Sonoma magazine and The Press Democrat, Boone is a contributing editor for New York-based Wine Enthusiast magazine, reviewing thousands of wines each year from Sonoma and Napa. Murphy, a two-time James Beard Award winner when she was the editor of the San Francisco Chronicle’s wine section, tastes as many wines, with her comments appearing in Decanter magazine and WineReviewOnline.com, among other publications.
Their mission was to spotlight 100 outstanding wines produced in Sonoma, from Sonoma-grown grapes, with a broad diversity in price, style, growing region and producer. Wines scoring 94 points and higher at the 2015 North Coast Wine Challenge were given strong consideration. All recommended wines were released in 2015.
– LM
Dry Creek Vineyard 2014 Sonoma County Fumé Blanc
$14
Its oh-so-friendly price and wide availability belies its greatness. When young, this Sauvignon Blanc has effusive floral, citrus and fennel aromas, succulent lemon-lime, grapefruit and pleasantly grassy flavors, with a lingering finish. With age, it becomes a multidimensional wonder. (LM)
Gary Farrell Vineyards & Winery 2014 Russian River Selection Russian River Valley Sauvignon Blanc
$28
Grapes grown in the Ritchie Vineyard were fermented in a combination of stainless steel
and neutral French oak barrels, giving the wine texture and depth. Floral aromas and vibrant lemon-lime, grapefruit, green melon and tropical fruit flavors combine for an energetic drink. (LM)
Geyser Peak Winery 2014 River Ranches Russian River Valley Sauvignon Blanc
$22
Made in relatively small amounts, it’s a delightfully light, well-rounded expression of the
variety, with a well-defined beginning, middle and finish. It has lime, mint and cilantro on
the nose, and the palate is all about fresh peach and citrus, finishing refreshingly crisp. (VB)
Grey Stack Cellars 2014 Rosemary’s Block Bennett Valley Sauvignon Blanc
$33
Really delicious and aromatic, with pear, mineral, floral scents and a full, juicy palate of
pear, citrus and exotic tropical fruit. The finish is scintillating and long. (LM)
J. Rickards Winery 2014 Croft Vineyard Alexander Valley Sauvignon Blanc
$21
It has admirable depth and minerality to go with crisp apple and pear flavors and a bracing lemon-lime tang. The addition of 5 percent Semillon lends a complex fig character, and a hint of vanilla adds interest. (LM)
MacLaren Wine Co. 2014 Dry Creek Valley Lee’s Sauvignon Blanc
$28
Name a wine after Mom, as this producer did, and it’s sure to be delicious — especially when it’s her favorite varietal. Bright and opulent, it exhibits pineapple, mango and tangerine character. From entry through finish, it has tangy acidity with bursts of lime zest. (VB)
Merry Edwards Winery 2013 Russian River Valley Sauvignon Blanc
$32
The “Queen of Pinot Noir,” Edwards also excels at Sauvignon Blanc. This voluptuous wine
offers crème brûlée and tropical fruit, layered and nicely textured. Generous and decadent, it finishes with minerality and creaminess. (VB)
Teira Wines 2014 Woods Vineyard Dry Creek Valley Sauvignon Blanc
$15
A crisp, assertive wine with lime and grapefruit flavors, hints of just-cut grass and fresh herbs, and striking acidity. The grapes come from vines planted by Clos du Bois co-founder Frank Woods. His daughter, Alexis, and her husband, Daniel Donahoe, own Teira. The name was inspired by daughters Thea and Keira. (LM)
VML 2014 Russian River Valley Sauvignon Blanc
$23
Best of Class winner at the 2015 North Coast Challenge, it was made by Virginia Marie Lambrix (VML) and offers racy grapefruit and lime character, with hints of tropical fruit, fresh herbs and kiwi fruit. The finish is clean and refreshing. (LM)
Roasted Carrot + Ginger Soup with shrimp, crème fraîche and shrimp cracker at Valette in Healdsburg. (Photo by John Burgess)
Sonoma offers a wealth of great dining options, but where to eat now — as in, right now? These eateries offer haute to casual cuisine and everything in between.
Amy’s Kitchen
The “healthy” fast-food alternative created by Andy and Rachel Berliner of frozen-food giant Amy’s Kitchen is focused on an all-vegetarian (plus vegan and gluten-free) menu of double-stack veggie burgers, chili cheese fries, milkshakes, burritos, pizzas and salads that are good for the planet and a whole lot better for you than traditional fast food.
58 Golf Course Drive W., Rohnert Park,
707-755-3629, amysdrivethru.com
Yellowtail crudo with horseradish and beet blossoms at Applewood Inn, Restaurant and Spa in Guerneville. (Photo by Heather Irwin)
Applewood Inn
Take the road less traveled to this quiet Guerneville inn where “interpretive American” means a menu that is entirely inspired by the local seasons and flavors. If any chef is up to the challenge of creating a Michelin-star-worthy restaurant that’s both rustic and ambitious, it’s recent arrival Jamil Peden, whose dishes are as artful as they are delicious. The tasting menu is recommended, but a la carte dishes such as grilled octopus with Meyer lemon curd, capers and potatoes, and salmon with truffle lemon cream and celery leaf, can’t help but impress.
Enjoying cocktails and bistro bites inside this eclectic gallery of performance and visual art is a must-do in Healdsburg. Chef Ryan Fancher’s Barndiva restaurant vision has been adapted to a more casual model in the studio, with small plates of charcuterie and other appetizers served in a beautifully curated space.
237 Center St., Healdsburg, 707-431-7404, barndiva.com
Bird and Bottle
Expect a serious mashup of flavors and cuisines from the newest Stark Reality Restaurants group. Owners Mark and Terri Stark spent more than a year rehabbing this Santa Rosa restaurant space (previously Italian Affair), with an equal amount of thought given to the menu. Opening salvos include kimchee latkes with sour cream and garlic chives, chicken-fried oysters, smoked black cod schmear, and of course, the couple’s always-killer burger.
1055 Fourth St., Santa Rosa, 707-568-4000, birdandthebottle.com
Brew
We love the laid-back, inclusive vibe of this combo coffeehouse and pub. Sip on pour-overs and cold-brewed coffee from San Francisco’s Ritual Coffee Roasters, local microbrews and ciders that change frequently, and a selection of wine and tea.
555 Healdsburg Ave., Santa Rosa, 707-303-7372, brewcoffeeandbeer.com
East Wind Bakery
This Asia-meets-America bakery features homemade barbecued pork, curried beef, baked red bean and taro bao, kimchee- and Chinese sausage-stuffed croissants, Chinese sponge cake, garam masala-spiced sweet buns, Massaman beef and Thai chicken pot pies, pork banh mi and, well, you get the idea. Get there early because the goodies sell out fast. Phin Bar’s Vietnamese coffee (aka Asian rocket fuel) helps with the morning ho-hums.
3851 Sebastopol Road, No. 109, Santa Rosa, 707-709-6098, eastwindbakery.com
Citrus-cured scallops with grapes, radish, lime and Calabrian chile at Hazel restaurant in Occidental. (Photo by Heather Irwin)
Hazel
Two 800-degree wood-fire ovens are the beating heart of this off-the-beaten-path Occidental restaurant. Just months after opening, locals dubbed it a “new west county classic,” with hearty dishes such as whole branzino, short ribs with polenta, and creative pizzas. The ovens do double duty for baking bread and desserts (like chocolate chip cookies), and every Friday is Pie Day.
Somewhere between bar and barbecue, this Guerneville newcomer is quickly becoming a destination for its slow-smoked brisket, Carolina-style chopped pork, St. Louis ribs and chile-lime corn on the cob. And don’t miss the Reuben sandwich with spicy Sriracha Thousand Island dressing. The bar menu includes “fish tots,” sirloin burger and smoked-eggplant flatbread.
French pastries don’t get much more authentic than the ones made here. Baking buttery kouign-amann, brioche and croissants each day, and serving simple salads and sandwiches for lunch, make this small catering kitchen and restaurant a perfect spot for morning coffee and breakfast. Just be sure to get a few extra croissants for lunch. And dinner.
550 N. Gravenstein Highway, Sebastopol, 707-521-9348, pascalinefinecatering.com
Ahi tuna Poke at Santa Rosa Seafood Raw Bar and Grill in Santa Rosa. (Photo by Heather Irwin)
Santa Rosa Seafood Raw Bar and grill
It’s no surprise that the best seafood purveyor in Sonoma also has some of the best seafood dishes. It’s not an exaggeration to say that the fish tacos here are the best I’ve had; the ahi poke is practically still swimming. The fish and chips put any other version to shame. Try the pan-seared scallops with squash risotto or the teriyaki-glazed salmon, and you’ll turn up your nose at any other pallid version.
946 Santa Rosa Ave., Santa Rosa, 707-579-2085, sanfranciscocrabshipping.com
Valette
A-listers flock to this new temple to Wine Country haute cuisine (without the attitude). Charlie Palmer protege Dustin Valette grabs the spotlight with dishes that have more unexpected twists and turns than an Alfred Hitchcock movie. Go for the “Trust Me” tasting menu, which changes almost daily. Favorite dishes include seared Kobe beef with foie gras butter, house-made semolina pasta with spring peas, and Valette’s signature Day Boat Scallops en Croûte.
344 Center St., Healdsburg, 707-473-0946, valettehealdsburg.com
The Adam Richman Sandwich, with fried mozzarella, dirty sauce, fried chicken, ham and your ticket to cardiac arrest. Photo: Heather Irwin
The Gut Bomber
If you’re going to eat a sandwich that will stay with you for, oh, a week or two, let me make a recommendation: The Adam Richman at Ike’s Place in Santa Rosa (1780 Mendocino Ave., Santa Rosa).
To celebrate National Sandwich Day 2015, here’s a pick that will make you feel a little dirty. As in Dirty Sauce, Ike’s garlicy-mayo spread is just part of the secret mojo that goes into a list of 200-plus sandwich combinations that have made the Bay Area sub shop legendary.
The Adam Richman is a gut-bomber of fried (halal) chicken, honey, avocado, ham, dirty sauce and a Dutch crunch roll that’s an ode to former Man vs. Food calorie martyr. Add a couple fried mozzarella sticks just to make sure you’ve celebrated properly.
Though I’ve only ever eaten one, I’ll go out on a limb and say: Best. Sandwich. Ever.
Not up for that kind of culinary investment? Ike’s also includes a number of meaty and meat-free choices (including several nods to locals including the Charles Schulz, Luther Burbank and SRJC Bear Cub).
Lee’s Noodle House Banh Mi is a favorite Vietnamese-style sandwich
My Personal Favorite (besides a straight up turkey and Swiss): Banh mi. This Vietnamese-French hybrid is typically a baguette filled with pate, pickled vegetables, barbecued pork, jalapenos and cilantro. Pair with a tasty Vietnamese coffee and you’re good to go.
– Lee’s Noodle House: 1010 Hopper Ave. Santa Rosa, (707) 523-2358
– Simply Vietnam Express: 3381 Cleveland Ave., Santa Rosa, (707) 544-4585
Cuban Sandwich at Rumba Cuban Kitchen in Windsor, CA. Photo: Heather Irwin.
The Latin Sandwich Crew
The Cubano A grilled Cuban sandwich with roasted pork, ham, Swiss, pickles and mustard on real Cuban bread. Ai papi.Rumba Cuban Kitchen, 8750 Old Redwood Hwy, Windsor, (707) 687-5632.
The Torta at Homemade Tortilla in Santa Rosa
The Torta
This taco-truck staple is worth seeking out. Filled with meat, cheese, and other goodies the two best I’ve found..
– Homemade Tortilla: The Pambazo is a four-napkin feast with chile-sauced soaked and fried bread filled with chorizo and potatoes (papas con chorizo, $6.95). Don’t miss a side of curtido, a fermented Salvadoran slaw similar to sauerkraut (2770 Stony Point Ave., Santa Rosa, (707) 521-9977)
– Nuevo Sazon: Torta Ahogada, a roll dipped in tomato sauce, stacked up with carnitas, onions and refried beans. Insane. At the West End Farmer’s Market on Sundays (check the Facebook page to make sure they’re at the market).
Tra Vigne restaurant in St. Helena will close Dec. 20, 2015. Photo: Scott Manchester
After nearly 30 years as one of Napa’s most legendary restaurants, Tra Vigne, will close Dec. 20. Despite months of rumors, news officially broke last week that the restaurant will shut its doors after property owner Bill Harlan decided not to renew the restaurant’s lease.
Chef Christopher Kostow of The Restaurant at Meadowood. Chris Hardy
JUST IN: The space will be taken over by The Restaurant at Meadowood’s Chef Christopher Kostow and Restaurant Director Nathaniel Dorn for a yet-to-be-named restaurant project focused on more casual, celebratory dining experiences. Harlan is the owner of Meadowood as well as cult winery Harlan Estate.
Kostow plans to continue his role at the three-starred Michelin restaurant, along with wife Martina. “We will continue our work here, unabated, at The Restaurant at Meadowood. We are looking at this new project first and foremost through the lens of St. Helena and then through that of the Napa Valley as a whole,” said Kostow.
The new restaurant is slated for a 2016 opening.
While Napa awaits a newcomer, however, one of Tra Vigne’s first partners, Kevin Cronin, reminisced about the decades of celebrity sightings, life-changing introductions, and first jobs for many of Wine Country’s elite. A Wine Country institution, it was hub for up-and-coming winemakers in the Napa Valley, as well as a see-and-be-seen spot for celebrities throughout the ’80s and ’90s.
“A lot of big names started their careers there,” he said. Michael Chiarello was the first executive chef, if that’s any indication. And while the restaurant had lost some of its luster in recent years, the closure is a tough one for many to swallow.
“It’s a tragedy,” said Cronin, who left Tra Vigne in 2006 to open Rosso Pizzeria and Wine Bar with chef John Franchetti (also a Tra Vigne alum), but has kept close ties to the current partners. “It was like Camelot in the early days,” he said. “It was an epic time, and (the closure) is the end of an era,” he said.
The restaurant’s onetime guest list included Robert Redford, Robert Mondavi, Danny DeVito, and Francis Ford Coppola. Even Julia Child made an appearance once, asking to meet everyone in the kitchen and shake their hands. “She had an impact on every person she touched,” Cronin said. “She knew who she was supposed to be for people.”
Stories come easy for Cronin, who describes the property as one of the most beautiful in America. A life-changing moment for him: having dinner with Andre Tchelistcheff, one of California’s most important winemakers, credited with defining the enduring style of Napa wines. “He talked about pinot noir like sex. It was like magic, and one of the most amazing moments in my career,” he said. A large group of old-timers plan to meet at the restaurant on November 20th, Cronin said.
Acre’s cortado coffee drink is one of the 10 best in Sonoma County. Photo: Jenna Fischer
Somewhere between artisanal coffee pour-overs with a side of smirk (no cream, no sugar you cretin) and a cotton candy Frappuccino are espresso-based coffee drinks. Punched up with milk, a few spices, cocao powder or (mostly) natural syrups, they’re cool weather sippers to warm your heart and hands.
After a highly-unscientific poll of friends, family and social media, here’s a list of the 10 Best Coffee Drinks in Sonoma County...favorites that pass the BiteClub taste test (in no particular order).
Bangkok coffee drink at Flying Goat, one of the best in Sonoma County coffee culture. Photo: Ben Seto, FOCUS:SNAP:EAT
The Bangkok: Sweetened-condensed milk meets lushly-roasted coffee for a taste that’s both exotic and familiar. Flying Goat, 324 Center St., Healdsburg; 10 Fourth St., Santa Rosa.
The Valentino Coffee drink at A’Roma Roasters in Santa Rosa. Photo: Jenna Fischer
The Valentino: Gelato, espresso, and coconut syrup blended with whipped cream, A’roma Roasters, 95 Fifth St., Santa Rosa.
The Pumpkin Latte at Taylor Maid Coffee. Photo: Taylor Maid Coffee
Pumpkin Latte: Fall in a cup, with organic, house made pumpkin syrup, Taylor Maid Farms, 6790 McKinley St., #170, Sebastopol.
The Kicker at Dutch Brothers Coffee, one of the best coffee drinks in Sonoma County. Photo: Jenna Fischer
The Kicker: Espresso and Irish cream served up with a side of youthful enthusiasm and short shorts at Dutch Bros. Coffee, 1300 Mendocino Ave, Santa Rosa.
Bella Rosa White Lavender Mocha. Photo: Bella Rosa
White Lavender Mocha: A white chocolate mocha with just a hint of floral lavender. Inside their recently-opened cafe and roastery. Bella Rosa Coffee Company, 5491 Skylane Blvd. #116, Santa Rosa.
Aztec Mocha at Plank Coffee in Cloverdale. Photo: Matt Riney
Aztec Mocha: Dark chocolate, three types of chiles and rosewater make this mocha a standout. Plus, we just love the agro-chic interior. 227 N. Cloverdale Blvd., Cloverdale.
Mint to Be Vietnamese Coffee from Phinbar. Photo: Heather Irwin
Mint to Be: Vietnamese Iced Coffee (aka rocket fuel) meets muddled mint and homemade organic condensed milk. You’ll want two, but drink with caution if you plan to sleep in the next two days. PhinBar, West End Farmer’s Market (817 Donahue St., Santa Rosa) on Sundays from 9a.m. to 2p.m.
Cafe Latte at Brew Coffee, Tea and Beer in Santa Rosa. (Heather Irwin/The Press Democrat)
Just a Latte: Two faves for this simple drink of espresso and milk with no frills. Rosso Rosticerria, makes it proper, and if you get there early enough, you can sip it with the world’s greatest bacon scone, 129 N. Dutton Ave., Santa Rosa. Brew Coffee and Beer for their carefully curated seasonal espresso that makes the whole thing extra special. 555 Healdsburg Ave., Santa Rosa
Acre’s cortado coffee drink is one of the 10 best in Sonoma County. Photo: Jenna Fischer
Cortado: Served in a 4oz tumbler (a little bigger than a shot glass), this little caffeine shooter is an espresso with a bit of steamed milk and foam. ACRE Coffee, 21 Fourth St., Petaluma, acrecoffee.com
Want a few more? You got it.
Cuban Coffee with Cream at Rumba Cuban Kitchen. Photo: Heather Irwin
Roast turkey. Mashed potatoes. Gingerbread. For many Americans, these are the dishes of which holiday feasts are made. But for four Sonoma families, Christmas and Hanukkah food traditions go way beyond such staples to reflect their diverse ethnic, cultural and religious backgrounds. Sonoma is a melting pot of must-have holiday fare that binds families and communities together. Mexico in Sonoma
Irma Flores Garcia’s traditional Mexican dish for Christmas is her bacalao. (Photos by Chris Hardy)
For Irma Flores Garcia the traditional holiday dishes she prepares for her family are a link to another life. Eight years ago, she left San Andrés Timilpan, 50 miles outside Mexico City, and moved to Los Angles with her two children. In 2010, they headed north, to Sonoma, in search of better job opportunities.
“I had heard that Sonoma was a beautiful place, peaceful and safe for children,” the Spanish-speaking Flores Garcia said through an interpreter.
Described by her friends as a go-getter, the outgoing mother of two works as a hairdresser while taking English and computer classes at La Luz Center in Sonoma. Despite her intensely busy schedule, the 44-year-old takes special care to prepare the sometimes labor-intensive holiday dishes of her homeland.
In Mexico, the main Christmas celebration happens on the night of Dec. 24, when families gather for a midnight dinner. Flores Garcia brought this tradition to Sonoma, where she prepares a feast of pozole (a rich, smoky pork and hominy soup), tamales, buñuelos (fried dough sprinkled with cinnamon and sugar), fruit salad and warm fruit punch. The meal also includes two dishes that are Christmastime favorites in Mexico City: romeritos and bacalao.
“These dishes are traditional to our region and my family,” Flores Garcia said. “I learned to make them from my mother when I was around 17 or 18 years old.”
Bacalao combines dried salt cod, tomatoes, onions, green olives, chiles and garlic to create a deep, flavorful stew.
Romeritos are fried patties made with dried shrimp, boiled red potatoes and a wild plant called romerito, which is similar to rosemary. The patties are served with a red sauce made from negro and ancho chiles. The Mexican preparation of baccalao combines dried salt cod, tomatoes, onions, green olives, chiles and garlic to create a deep, flavorful stew.
Along with son Joshua, 16, and daughter Yurhitzia, 13, Flores Garcia’s Christmas celebration typically includes her two brothers, Alfred and Noe, who also live in Sonoma, and her sister, Rocio, who stayed in Los Angeles. Sometimes, her parents come to visit from Mexico.
“I prepare everything myself, but when we go to L.A., my sister shares in the cooking,” she said.
The feasting continues on New Year’s Eve, when Flores Garcia roasts a turkey.
“First, I marinate it in orange juice,” she said. “Then I stuff it with ground beef, ground pork, sausage, dried apples, green olives and pine nuts.” The cooked turkey is garnished with pineapple slices and cherries.
For Flores Garcia and her family, these dishes are a way of strengthening their roots. “These traditions will not get lost no matter where we go, if we keep them and share them with others,” she said.
Liguria in Santa Rosa
Sandra Traverso of Santa Rosa creates her own Italy inspired flavors.
Sandra Traverso has lived in Santa Rosa for more than 40 years, yet her holiday table is laden with dishes from Northern Italy.
Her family came to the United States from Liguria when she was 6, settling first in New York, then San Francisco and the East Bay. She made Sonoma County her home in 1972, when her husband, George, joined the family business at Traverso’s Gourmet Foods & Liquors in Santa Rosa (it closed in 2011).
At 67, the retired teacher still has vivid childhood memories of her family’s Ligurian Christmas meals.
“On Christmas Eve, there was a big celebration of mostly seafood dishes,” Traverso said. Christmas Day dinner was an all-day affair, starting with salumi and pickled vegetables, followed by ravioli in porcini mushroom sauce, roasted capon or veal, a fruit and cheese course and finally, panettone (a dried-fruit-studded sweet bread) and an assortment of biscotti.
“Then you’d just kind of pass out,” Traverso recalled.
Sandra Traverso’s ravioli.
Although the number of courses has been pared down over the years, Traverso still prepares many of the traditional dishes. Typically included in the family feasts are the couple’s two grown children, Michael and Andrea, and four grandkids.
“We go to Mass in Healdsburg, where Michael and his wife, Elizabeth, live, and then have a beautiful fish dinner at their home,” Sandra said. “They both love to cook. Sometimes I make cioppino, or risotto with prawns and mussels.”
Then Sandra and George host the annual Christmas Day feast in Santa Rosa.
“We have an early dinner with the traditional antipasti, roasted meat, vegetables, salad, fruit, cheese and, of course, panettone, biscotti, chocolates and espresso,” she said. “And we always try to do the ravioli, because my husband loves it.”
In years past, she made the pasta from scratch, but now Traverso buys fresh ravioli from Genova Delicatessen in Walnut Creek. She still makes her mother’s mushroom sauce in the traditional way, sauteeing onions, garlic and herbs, then adding a browned piece of beef roast, tomato sauce, red wine and softened dried porcini mushrooms, leaving the pot to simmer for four to five hours.
These dishes, Traverso said, are ingrained in her family’s culture. “For Italians, this is a time to come together and enjoy each other, along with wonderful conversation and food.”
Houston-Style Hanukkah
When Stephanie Kramer moved from Houston to Santa Rosa in 2011, she made sure to bring her electric griddle. She knew she would need it for her annual latke-making parties.
Stephanie Kramer of Santa Rosa spices up Hanukkah with Tezas flavors.
Kramer, 31, is a rabbi at the Congregation Shomrei Torah in Santa Rosa, and making potato pancakes for family and friends is an important part of her Hanukkah tradition. “I’ve been making latkes since I was probably 4 years old, with my mom,” she said.
Back in Houston, Kramer’s mother, Lynn Goodman, hosts up to 50 people for the family’s annual latke-making festivities. In Santa Rosa, the parties are somewhat smaller, with a handful of families from her temple joining Kramer, her husband, Adam, 5-year-old son Micah and 1-year-old daughter Noa. Similar to her mother’s gathering, Kramer’s party involves frying dozens of latkes and devouring them on the spot. Later, they light the menorah and sing their blessings.
“We don’t fry the latkes until the party starts,” Kramer said. “Everyone gathers around in the kitchen and we throw them on the griddle. As they come off, people eat them right away, because that’s when they are the most delicious.”
As with many traditional dishes, she said, there is no written recipe. Kramer peels and hand-grates potatoes, then mixes in eggs, grated white onion, flour, salt and pepper.
“You want a nice consistency that will hold together enough to fry them,” she said,” but not too dense.”
Along with the latkes, Kramer likes to make nontraditional versions. “I have this great recipe that uses zucchini and cheddar cheese,” she said. “They’re not as crispy as the ones made from potatoes, but they are very savory.”
Kramer’s latkes with fresh applesauce.
Almost as important as the latkes are the toppings that go along with them.
“My family has always done sour cream and applesauce,” Kramer said, “but since I’ve lived here, that’s changed a little bit. Until I moved to Sonoma, I don’t know if I had ever had homemade applesauce, and now I can’t imagine not having it. We’ve also had the latkes with compotes from the girl and the fig (restaurant in Sonoma).”
Kramer sometimes cooks a brisket for the parties, but usually, it’s all about the pancakes.
“Because you only get latkes once a year, people really like to eat them as a main course,” she said. She serves them with a simple green salad, and “because we’re in Sonoma County, a bunch of wine.” Foraging in Forestville
Most people choose the wines to accompany holiday dinners based on the dishes they’ll serve. Guy Davis, owner and winemaker at Pinot Noir producer Davis Family Vineyards in Healdsburg, created a new family tradition when he did it the other way around.
Guy Davis of Forrestville switches up his family traditions.
“My wife’s father always made prime rib for Christmas dinner – he passed away before she and I met – so I’ve carried on that tradition for her,” Davis said. “We are always drinking Bordeaux reds with the prime rib, and we wanted something to go with Pinot Noir.” Because earthy fungi go so well with Pinot, the starter course became mushroom soup.
“When you make a rich mushroom soup, you’re not as hungry to eat some massive prime rib,” Davis said. “The consommé has become our tradition since we moved to the Russian River Valley from Seattle 25 years ago.”
The family lives on its vineyard at Laguna Ridge, between Graton and Forestville.
While it may sound simple, the consommé takes several days to make. Davis begins the week before Christmas, when he forages for wild mushrooms on the vineyard property and other secret Sonoma locations.
“They’re sautéed and sweated with sweet onions and shallots, deglazed with sherry, then steeped and reduced overnight,” said Davis, 56, who honed his culinary skills working in the kitchen of a French restaurant during college. “It’s simmered and further reduced through Christmas Day to give a heavenly aroma to the house, then finished with truffle salt and served with a little chive garnish.”
Davis played with various cooking techniques for the prime rib before discovering a “magical” recipe in Thomas Keller’s “Ad Hoc at Home” cookbook, which involves searing the meat with a blow torch before cooking it for several hours at an extremely low temperature. While the consommé simmers and the prime rib bakes, he and his brother make brunch.
Davis begins the week before Christmas, when he forages for wild mushrooms on the vineyard property and other secret Sonoma locations.
“Kyle comes to our house every year with his wife, and we have a tradition where he and I do the shopping and decide whether we’re going to do eggs Benedict or make waffles,” he said.
After brunch, Davis said, “We break up the prep work and assign jobs, because everybody loves to cook,” including his wife, Judy, and their adult sons Cole and Cooper, who work at the family winery. “When everybody’s hungry again, around 2, we have afternoon grazing on appetizers with sparkling wine.”
Dinner is usually served around 5 p.m., starting with the mushroom consommé and moving on to the prime rib and an ever-changing array of side dishes.
“We have our traditions, going all the way back to my wife’s family and the prime rib,” Davis said, “but there are still some new dishes we’re collecting.”
After moving from San Francisco to Santa Rosa last year, Hoang Cao and Paula Cruz-Cao couldn’t find the strong iced coffee drinks they craved.
Photo by Erik Castro
They experimented with brewing Vietnamese iced coffee at home, and Hoang, who is first-generation Vietnamese-American, was struck by inspiration: Why not make condensed milk instead of using canned? No surprise, the sweet and creamy blend of dark-roast coffee and condensed milk over ice — ca-phe sua da — was a hit with friends. In July, the couple launched Phin Bar, a pop-up devoted to the craft of cocktail-inspired Vietnamese iced coffees.
“Los Angeles and New York have farm-to-coffee cocktails but no one had brought that concept here,” Paula said. To make the drinks, Hoang steeps ground beans in a phin (pronounced feen), a stainless-steel, single-cup filter popular in Vietnam. With the finesse of a hotshot bartender, he shakes up coffee, ice and condensed milk in a cocktail shaker.
Photo by Erik Castro
The minimal menu includes the popular Phin & Earl, black coffee, condensed milk and an Earl Grey tea-infused syrup. Versions with muddled mint or lavender syrup and nondairy coconut condensed milk appeal to vegans and lactose lovers alike. Most of the ingredients are organic and sourced locally: The milk is from Clover Stornetta in Petaluma, the beans from Taylor Maid Farms in Sebastopol.
Find Phin Bar at the West End Farmers Market in Santa Rosa every Sunday through Dec. 13 and the Petaluma Farmers Market every other Saturday through Nov. 21. The company also caters and offers delivery.
“The response has been great,” Paula said. “People have told us this was much needed in Sonoma County.”
#1. The Inn Above Tide, Sausalito.
Conde Nast Traveler readers chose their top 30 hotels in Northern California, and several Sonoma County locations made the list. View more information on each hotel at www.cntraveler.com. (Photo courtesy Conde Nast Traveler)
Mendocino’s Brewery Gulch Inn has been voted the third best hotel in Northern California among the readers of Condé Nast Traveler.
More than 128,000 readers participated in the magazine’s annual readers’ choice awards, casting votes for 9,242 hotels. The winners and the listings appear in its November issue and online.
The Brewery Gulch Inn is a contemporary redwood lodge located on a bluff that overlooks the Mendocino coast. Rooms at the lodge are priced at more than $300 a night.
Other area hotels also were noted in the regional listing. The Vintners Inn in Santa Rosa placed 10th, the Farmhouse Inn in Forestville ranked 12th, h2hotel in Healdsburg was 14th and Madrona Manor in Healdsburg placed 16th.
Sonoma magazine was recognized for editorial excellence at the annual Folio Awards in New York last week.
The magazine received the Eddie award in the category of Best Full Issue among regional consumer magazines for its September 2014 harvest issue. The contest is staged by Folio, a magazine that focuses on the magazine industry.
“This award recognizes a creative and dedicated team of writers, photographers, editors and designers who make Sonoma magazine what it is,” said Catherine Barnett, Sonoma’s editor. “And I love that we won for our harvest issue, which so captures the sense of place here.”
The March/April 2015 issue of Sonoma magazine received an honorable mention in the same category. Other honorable mentions went to Sactown Magazine in Sacramento, Dorado in Durango, Colo., and Time Out New York Kids in New York.
Sonoma magazine is owned by Sonoma Media Investments, which also owns The Press Democrat, Petaluma Argus-Courier, Sonoma Index-Tribune and North Bay Business Journal.