Affronti Closes, Cafe Lucia to open

Affronti/ Jeff Kan Lee
Affronti/ Jeff Kan Lee
Affronti/ Jeff Kan Lee

(This  article appeared in the PD, by Diane Peterson…I’m reprinting it here)

Lucy Fincher of Healdsburg and her brother, chef/owner Manuel Azevedo of LaSalette in Sonoma, have taken over the lease at Affronti restaurant in Healdsburg and plan to open it as Cafe Lucia later this fall, serving Portuguese cuisine with a Wine Country twist.

Azevedo will oversee the kitchen, where Jason Santos, a recent graduate of the Culinary Institute of America at Greystone, will serve as the Chef de Cuisine.

Fincher, a Healdsburg native who has lived in the town for the past 20 years, will run the front of the house. A former paralegel, Fincher started off her career in the restaurant business.

Fincher’s husband, Tracy, works for Clos du Bois Winery and started his own catering business, Hot Rod Barbecue, last year. The couple has two daughters, ages 12 and 14.

Located behind La Crema Tasting Room, Cafe Lucia will seat45 and an additional 35 outside on an all-season patio. The kitchen is currently under renovation, with a stove and a hood being added by the landlord.

The siblings plan to offer value-oriented food and a wine list that will draw heavily from Portugal as well as from the Healdsburg area.

“There needs to be a restaurant that appeals more to the locals,” said Azevedo, who received a Michelin Bibb Gourmand award for LaSalette. “The price will be fair, it’s comfortable and has real food.”

The menu starts off with a choice of three small “Tasca” plates, such as sardine paté, white anchovies and pickled vegetables, for $15.

Starters will range from $7 to $12, and entrees will be in the $20 to $25 range. Some of LaSalette’s signature dishes will anchor the menu, such as the Chourico-Crusted Scallops and the Oven-Roasted Branzino, a Mediterranean fish, but Azevedo expects the menu to develop in time.

“It will evolve and pick up its own personality,” he said. “It’s not LaSalette opening a new location. It’s about Lucy opening her first restaurant.”

According to a message on the restaurant’s voicemail, chef/owner Jude Affronti of Affronti will continue to serve sandwiches and salads at the Parkpoint Club, 196 Foss Creek Circle, in Healdsburg.

Cafe Lucia is located at 235 Healdsburg Ave. Tentative opening date is Nov. 1.

Late Summer Farm Forum

Local food celebrities Clark Wolf and Marcy Smothers gather some of the county’s most influential purveyors, writers, farmers, advocates and activists to discuss the future of food and farming in Sonoma County.

This Late Summer Farm Forum will be held Wednesday, Sept. 26 from 5-7:30pm at the Petaluma Seed Bank (199 Petaluma Blvd North).

On the panel:
– Carrie Brown, The Jimtown Store
– Dr. Frank Chong, President of Santa Rosa Junior College
– Michele Anna Jordan, PD Columnist, author and radio host
– Paul Kaiser, Singing Frog Farm
– Kendra Kolling, Nana Mae’s Organics
– Tony Linegar, Sonoma County Ag Commissioner
– Don McEnhill, Russian Riverkeeper
– Sam Mogannam, Bi-Rite Market
– Marlena Spieler, Food Writer
– Paul Wallace, Petaluma Seed Bank

Suggested donation: $15

Late Summer Farm Forum Save the Date from Scott Mitchell on Vimeo.

Top Chefs Compete at Kendall Jackson

Top Chef contenders Ryan Scott, Eli Kirshtein and Casey Thompson compete at the 2012 Kendall Jackson Heirloom Tomato Festival Cookoff against challenger Justin Wangler, KJ’s executive chef. Ultimately, Thompson won the day, but all the dishes were spectacular. Take a look at the lineup.

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Square Belly Food Salon

Hey BiteClubbers.

For a long time, I’ve thought about how cool it would be to have a Culinary Salon in Sonoma County — a place where like-minded folks could come and talk about whatever aspect of the food scene they’re interested in. Maybe its food politics. Maybe gossiping about the local restaurant scene. Maybe you want to get the word out about a local purveyor you’ve fallen in love with.

I also wanted a forum to chat about some of the things I’m passionate about at the moment. This month I’m super hot on Water Kefir, and want to share that with you. Next month, maybe it will be home brewing or figs, or whatever. Rather than just reading about it, I’ll try to bring the people I write about to you.

Square Belly Food Theater is the result of all that. It’s a fun way to connect the food community IRL. Its a series of salons and culinary how-tos at the Arlene Francis Center that are either low or no cost (we do accept donations for the AFC and to defray the cost of supplies, etc.).

Our mission is merely to have fun, share our food passions and bring together like-minded folks.

The first Salon will be held Wed, Sept. 19 at 6:30pm. There’s no set agenda, but we hope to see anyone who wants to hang out and chat, help us format future salons, etc.

PIX: Chef Tables in the Vineyard with Mario Batali and Guy Fieri

Chef Tables in the Vineyard at the Kendall Jackson Wine Center brought together dozens of Sonoma County’s best chefs with Guy Fieri and Mario Batali for a record-breaking fundraiser for Fieri’s Cooking With Kids program on September 14, 2012.

Wish you were there? Stroll through some pictures from the night that will leave you salivating.

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Pizzando Healdsburg

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Pizzando in the Healdsburg Hotel opened last week after several menu dry-runs at sister property, Spoonbar! Louis Maldonado is exec chef for both properties, with former Petite Syrah toque Ben Davies in the kitchen and former A-16 pizza whiz Liza Shaw.

More than a pizzeria and less than a white-tablecloth experience, Pizzando hits the sweet spot in between with impressive appetizers like oil-poached albacore; unctuous slow-braised pork shoulder with pickled plums and caraway roasted squash draped with lardo (all $9).

The wood-fired does double duty for entrees and meats which include a crackly-crusted burrata pizza with lemon marmalade ($16); fried chicken legs with spicy vinegar sauce (all meats $16); pork ribs glazed in fennel pollen honey and hamachi collar (the meaty neck area of a tuna) . Save room for veggies sides (all $6) including slow-roasted tomatoes with melted Cresenza cheese (a perfect early fall dish) and fennel braised in oxtail broth.

Don’t skip the drinks. Mixologist Cappy Sorentino is cocktail hero with his bottled aperitifs — bold, undiluted sippers like the Negroni, Bourbon Milk Punch (made with clarified milk, bourbon, lemon and bitters that will have you lapping up the last drops like a kitten) and Aperol Sour with gin, grapefruit, Aperol and lemon (all $8).

301 Healdsburg Ave, Healdsburg, 922-5233. Open daily for lunch and dinner starting at 11:30 a.m

 

Slow Food Picnic

On Saturday, Sept. 15, 2012 Slow Food’s Fresh Picnic is a sit-down family-style feast featuring some of the Bay Area’s best chefs including Ryan Farr of 4505 Meats, Liza Hinman of Spinster Sisters, Christopher Kostow of Meadowood and Dennis Lee of Namu Gaji in San Francisco. Local food producers Nightingale Breads, Foggy River Farms, Bohemian Creamery and Ramini Mozzarella will be features in addition to Anthill Farms Winery and Claypool Cellars. Alice Waters and Carlo Petrini will speak at the event, held at Rancho Mark West.

Tickets are $95 for Slow Food members, $125 for non-members, but reduced price tickets for farmers and under-30 food activists are available. Details at slowfoodrr.org.

Chef Tables in the Vineyard at KJ TomatoFest 2012 include Fieri, Batali


All-star chefs converge for Chef Tables in The Vineyard on Friday, Sept. 14, 2012,  co-hosted by celebrity chefs Guy Fieri and Mario Batali. It’s a food-tastic fantasy league of talent that includes more than a dozen of Wine Country’s top talents cooking individual meals for each table. The event is part of a weekend-long celebration of tomatoes at Kendall Jackson Wine Center that includes the annual Tomatofest on Saturday, Sept. 15. 

“Everyone is bringing their A-game,” said K-J executive chef Justin Wangler, who has helped organize the menus and 22 chefs, along with the challenging logistics of having the winery’s kitchens undergoing extensive renovations. With more than a hundred varieties of heirloom tomatoes grown on the K-J property, chefs are taking inspiration from the varied flavors, textures and colors of the height-of-the-season fruits.

On the roster are Cyrus’ Douglas Keane, culinary eduator John Ash, Kendall-Jackson executive chef Justin Wangler, Dino Bugica of Diavola Pizzeria, Perry Hoffman of Napa’s Etoile, Jesse Mallgren of Madrona Manor, Josh Silvers of Petite Syrah, Jeff Mall of Zin, Adam Mali of Mandarin Oriental SF, Mark Stark of Stark’s Steakhouse, Dustin Valette of Dry Creek Kitchen, “Top Chef” star Casey Thompson and many others. Each chef cooks for a table; diners won’t find out which chef will be cooking for them until the night of the dinner.

Fieri’s and Batali’s menus are closely guarded secrets, revealed only at the dinner itself. But other chefs’ plans include dishes like a haute Caprese (mozzarella, basil and tomatoes) BLT salad from Zazu’s John Stewart, beefsteak tomato and beef steak carpaccio from Wangler and a caramelized tomato tart tatin from Mark Stark. Other dishes on the three-course menu include Zin’s shrimp and grits; grilled Monterey calamari with coconut, mint and lime green salad; uni pasta with tomato confit from Hana Japanese chef Ken Tominaga; and Wagyu beef, mung bean sprouts and tomato confit from Keane. Each course will be paired with K-J wines.

“Even with tomatoes being the common theme for this dinner, just how different all the chef’s styles and techniques are. A lot of chefs have requested to bring their own equipment, everything from liquid nitrogen, a grill named Big Red, several immersion circulators, to a Huli Huli roasting machine from Oahu,” Wangler said.

The event is a benefit for Fieri’s Cooking with Kids Foundation, which encourages kids to develop healthy eating habits to address childhood obesity and works to strengthen families through sharing quality time in the kitchen.

“Mario really understands all the components of cooking, and the impact it has on family and especially kids. I feel he sees the big picture, that everyone needs to know the life skills of cooking, and how empowering kids to cook can give them the confidence and self esteem they need to be successful in the future,” Fieri said.

Tickets range from $350 per person to $3,000 for VIP tables with Fieri and Batali. VIP diners at the celebrity chef tables will also be given a behind-the-scenes reception with Guy and Mario before dinner. TICKETS FOR THE DINNER INCLUDE ADMISSION TO THE HEIRLOOM TOMATO FESTIVAL, WHICH IS SOLD OUT TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC.

Both the dinner and the Heirloom Tomato Festival on Saturday will be held at the Kendall-Jackson Wine Center, 5700 Fulton Road, in Fulton, and guests must be at least 21 years of age to attend. Details and tickets online at www.kj.com/tomato-weekend or by calling (866) 287-9818.

Glendi Ethnic Fair

The 23rd annual Glendi Ethnic Food Fair on Saturday Sept. 15 and Sunday, Sept. 16 at St. Seraphim Orthodox Church in Santa Rosa.

Celebrating all things Greek, Eritrean, Russian, Serbian and Middle Eastern, you can dine on a world of ethnic goodies from gyros to piroshki and try their new Baklava Sundae, a sweet-treat that’s delicious in any language.

Admission $5, children under 12 free, 90 Mountain View Ave., Santa Rosa.