The training of Ari Rosen

Ari Rosen owner/chef at Scopa and Campo Fina restaurants in Healdsburg
Ari Rosen owner/chef at Scopa and Campo Fina restaurants in Healdsburg (photo by Chris Hardy)

Chef Ari Rosen of Healdsburg grew up foraging and cooking with his family in Ukiah, where he fell in love with being in the kitchen alongside his mom. He then worked in one Italian restaurant after another, causing him to abandon periodic thoughts of going into law or medicine.

“My parents, without realizing it, gave me the ultimate culinary training,” says the 37-year-old chef. “I came back here because of my knowledge of the abundance.”

Rosen represents a new wave of rising young chefs, restaurateurs and winemakers in Sonoma. He’s passionate about creating dishes that are authentic as well as delicious, committed to sourcing ingredients locally, and fanatical about freshness. There is an ethical quality to how he runs his menus and brings his dishes to life: no corners cut, no food processed, no sleight-of-hand substitutes. It’s all the real deal.

“Sourcing within five or even 100 miles makes a difference,” he says of his produce. “That means they were picked ripe and not ripened in a warehouse. It makes my job easier and more enjoyable.”

For Rosen, the payoff comes from the loyal support of locals, who enjoy eating his soulful Italian fare, from his Nonna’s tomato-braised chicken to his house-made ravioli. He cares, and it shows.

“He makes the food speak for itself, and that’s the biggest compliment that anybody could give a chef,” says Franco Dunn of Franco’s One World Sausages in Healdsburg. “His places are run like a family, and his customers are like family also.”

Scopa was a hit right out of the gate when it opened in 2008. Then the busy Rosen and his business partner/wife, Dawnelise, had a daughter, Serafina, now 3. In 2012, the couple launched their second restaurant, Campo Fina, off an alley behind Scopa. More casual, Campo Fina boasts an outdoor patio where guests can enjoy small plates, bocce ball and la dolce vita.

“I saw the potential,” Rosen says of the al fresco courtyard. “It was about creating a beautiful space to enjoy summery Italian fare.”

Like Scopa, Campo Fina has garnered praise for its simple, rustic dishes, from charred octopus to roasted cauliflower with pine nuts, currants and anchovies.

Strolling around town in a T-shirt, jeans and baseball cap, the down-to-earth Rosen looks more like a Brooklyn cab driver than a top toque. He’s an unpretentious extrovert with a quick, analytical mind who enjoys finding out what makes people tick.

“I’m a big people person,” he says. “So when I’m talking, I have all my attention on that person.”

But the hard-working chef is all business as soon as he enters the kitchen.

“At work, I’m just extremely focused,” he adds. “In the kitchen, my mind is like a clock.”

That focus allows Rosen to create deeply satisfying dishes that pay homage to his many mentors, including his Italian mother, Karen.

“People think I’m a crazy perfectionist or control freak in the kitchen, but then they spend time with my mom and they understand,” he says. “It’s top quality or no quality.”

Rosen’s dad, Norm, is an attorney who practices family law in Ukiah and loves to bake desserts in his spare time. When he’s not working, he bakes Italian tortes and biscotti for both Scopa and Campo Fina.

When he was 7, Rosen and his family started foraging mushrooms in the hills between Willits and Fort Bragg. His dad had already attended a camp hosted by mushroom guru David Arora for foragers ready to move beyond the nervous novice level.

“Everyone should start very cautiously,” Rosen advises. “It’s like walking into a garden and eating leaves and flowers. Some will kill you, and there’s a few that will make you sick.”

After mushrooming, the family would continue to the coast to gather mussels, then bring the bounty back and cook it up with garlic and parsley.

“That was what I loved,” Rosen says. “And it’s the same as I do now.”

After the first rainfall each fall, Rosen’s eyes mist over as the first wave of “mushroom fever” hits.

“I start dreaming of getting porcini,” he says. “In the heart of mushroom season, my eyes are scanning terrain all the time.”

When the mushrooms are popping, Rosen will rise at 4 a.m., grab his knife and compass, and head out before dawn.

“You’re in the zone, and it’s meditative, because you’re only thinking of one thing,” he says. “As soon as you find one mushroom, you’re there … The hunt is on.”

After high school in Ukiah, Rosen went hunting for his Italian roots in the Piedmont region of northern Italy, where his grandfather’s family ran a restaurant. He planned to be there for three days and ended up staying a month.

Later, after graduating from college, he returned to Italy to visit his sister in Florence. Since he had always wanted to work in a restaurant, she urged him to take the plunge.

Rosen went to one of his favorite trattorias and offered to work for free. The Italians laughed at the “stupid American.” But after two cooks got fired, Rosen ended up cooking under chef Lorenzo Torrini and never looked back.

“It was like wildfire,” he says. “Lorenzo gave me all of my technical skills and artistic flair.”

Rosen continued his studies in the “school of hard knocks” under restaurant chef Luca Pecorini, learning the history behind the dishes of Italy. By 2004, he had returned to the West Coast, eventually landing at Santi restaurant in Geyserville and working alongside chefs Dunn and Thomas Oden, Dino Bugica (now at Diavola in Geyserville) and Liza Hinman (now at Spinster Sisters in Santa Rosa).

“We had so much talent going on in that kitchen,” Rosen says. “We were pushing to make the food as authentic as we could.”

When a restaurant space opened up on the Healdsburg Plaza, Rosen jumped on it, fulfilling his dream of opening his own “locals joint.”

“The hospitality business is like ‘Cheers,’” he says. “You want to come to a place where everyone knows your name.”

As different as Scopa and Campo Fina are (Scopa is cozy and warm; Campo Fina is more clean-lined and spare) inviting lighting blends with upbeat music at both to create a fun ambiance.

“There’s so much that goes into making a seamless experience,” Rosen describes. “The trick is to do it without making people notice it.”

Now rather than putting people to sleep in a lab or challenging them in a courtroom, Rosen provides his guests with terrific wine and delicious food, conversation and laughter. It’s an Old-World recipe and a joyous blend.

“I was always interested in creating ambiance and experiences with food,” says Rosen. “I just didn’t realize you could do that for a living.”

Like this wine? Try this wine.

While it’s tempting – and even fitting – to splurge around the holidays, wine is one of those expenses to play around with a little. Try these pairs – one wine for an all-out indulgence, the second smartly cost-conscious, and both perfect for the holiday table.

Pinot Noir for an Earthy Fall Dinner

If you like this:
Donum Estate 2010 Russian River Valley Reserve Pinot Noir ($90)
From a 16-acre patch of magic planted in the mid-1990s by Donum president and viticulturalist extraordinaire Anne Moller-Racke, this is the kind of earthy, soulful Pinot that will make a lifer out of you, brooding in blackberry, blueberry and menthol that will only get more divine with age. Only 76 cases were produced.

Then look for this:
Stemmler 2011 Nugent Vineyard Russian River Valley Pinot Noir ($44)
The secret about Stemmler is that it is farmed and vinified by the folks behind Donum. In this case the grapes are from the Nugent Vineyard, planted in 1997 to predominantly Dijon clones, with a handful of Pommard in there as well. A Pinot Noir vibrant in classic River Russian Valley cherry, the wine is a successful marriage between richness and restraint, fresh and full.

Gewürztraminer and Chenin Blanc for Thanksgiving

If you like this:
Dutton-Goldfield 2012 Dutton Ranch-Green Valley Vineyard Green Valley of Russian River Valley Gewürztraminer ($30)
So aromatic it could be bottled as perfume, this Gewürztraminer from the cool Green Valley is a spicy as it is floral, dry yet mouthwatering in tropical peach and jasmine. Able to stand up to all the Thanksgiving turkey variations, the wine’s acidity means it will also hold its own when assaulted by a riot of side dishes, from decadent Brussels sprouts with bacon to, if you must, yams smothered in marshmallows.

Then look for this:
Leo Steen 2011 Saini Farms Dry Creek Valley Chenin Blanc ($18)
Instead of the oft-chosen Gewürztraminer, consider for the turkey course a dry Chenin Blanc from the oldest Chenin vines in the Dry Creek Valley, made by Stuhlmuller Vineyards winemaker Leo Steen Hansen. For his own label, he has crafted a floral white abundant in acidity and texture, and layered in the flavors of fall, from apple and pear to honeyed beeswax.

Cabernet Sauvignon for Christmas Dinner
If you like this:
Sequoia Grove 2008 Cambium Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon ($140)
Here is a dark-black, classically intense Napa Cab that’ll sing when served with standing rib roast and all the fixings, especially if the wine has a bit of age (which this one does) and is decanted. Cambium is a mouthful of black cherries and cinnamon toast, with luxurious streaks of bittersweet chocolate, too. Rich and full in the most hedonistically impressive way, it’s a treat to you and those gathered ’round for this once-a-year occasion.

Then look for this:
Sequoia Grove 2010 Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon ($38)
Not everything has to be over the top. Sequoia Grove’s more mainstream, youthful Cab will equally delight on your holiday table, with plenty of blackberry fruit and smooth, ripe vanilla and clove, with a touch of smoky oak on the finish. It’s approachable without decanting.

Sparkler for New Year’s Eve

If you like this:
Roederer Estate 2004 Brut L’Hermitage Anderson Valley ($47)
One of the estate’s top cuvées, a sparkling blend of 52 percent Chardonnay and 48 percent Pinot Noir, and vintage-dated, this is among the classiest of bubblies to have on hand, a testament to California fruit treated Champagne-style. Go all out and enjoy it with caviar and oysters or a rich raclette; don’t let a precious sip goes to waste.

Then look for this:
Donkey & Goat 2012 Lily’s Cuvée Anderson Valley Pétillant Naturel ($24)
Now for something completely different: Berkeley’s Donkey & Goat Winery has been turning heads for making all sorts of delectable wines, perhaps most especially for this, its Pét Nat, as its commonly called. Pétillant Naturel is a classification of sparkling wine made without additives (no sugar, no yeast), sometimes called méthode ancestrale. This one sources Chardonnay from Anderson Valley’s Deep End district. It’s a light, low-alcohol offering that will help you celebrate all night and minimize the suffering the next day.

Chardonnay for a Crab Feast

If you like this:
Three Sticks 2011 Origin Durell Vineyard Sonoma Coast Chardonnay ($48)
Fermented in a concrete egg, this second vintage of Three Sticks’ under-300-case-production Chardonnay, from two hand-selected blocks of Durell Vineyard, is aged in stainless steel, giving it a combined sense of fresh acidity and creamy mouthfeel. A bit of a splurge, it’ll rock your table, its flavors a study in Chablis-like wet stone and perfumed orange rind.

Then look for this:
Saracina 2012 Unoaked Mendocino County Chardonnay ($18)
This crisp, vibrant Chardonnay has a pretty nose of pear, Granny Smith apple and pineapple, with soft textures that make it deliciously quaffable. While it may smell and taste very much of summer, its richness – all fruit-based, not from oak, thank you – makes it an easy-to-consume pairing alongside wintertime’s crustacean bounty.

Guess who’s coming to dinner

Tommy Smothers, Guy Fieri, or Tom Waites, who would you invite to your Holiday dinner? (Alvin Jornada / The Press Democrat)

It’s the conversation that makes a holiday feast a lasting memory — the storytelling, the one-liners, the toasts.

If we imagine inviting one more person to our holiday table, just who from Sonoma would liven it up?

Dan Kosta

“Is Tommy Smothers available?” quips Dan Kosta, co-vintner of Sebastopol’s  Kosta Browne Winery, of the well-known comedian who with his brother, Dick, formed the Smothers Brothers and kept 1960s audiences in stitches.

“You gotta have entertainment and humor…,” Kosta added.”It would have to be someone with a sense of humor … I don’t like taking the holidays too seriously. ”

Kosta plans to celebrate Christmas at home with his wife, Alli, and their three children, Mazie, 7, Maggie, 5, and Sean, 4.

“We like to have the kids wake up on Christmas morning in their own beds, to their own tree and presents,” Kosta says. “Christmas dinner is usually fairly early and we’re most likely still in our pajamas, enjoying braised short ribs and great wine.  Surprise!”

Duskie Estes

Duskie Estes’ pick would be celebrity chef Guy Fieri, with his white-blonde spiky hair and larger-than-life personality.

“Guy would enliven any table,” said Estes, the chef of Sebastopol’s Zazu restaurant.  “We cook well together. He doesn’t step on my toes, and he can make a mean taco al pastor. That’s a sure-fire way to my heart!”

Fieri is a household name thanks to celebrity TV; he hosts the Food Network’s “Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives” show. Locally, he’s known for his two Santa Rosa restaurants – Tex Wasabi’s and Johnny Garlic’s –  and Johnny Garlic’s in Windsor.

For Thanksgiving, Estes and her family make turkey BLTs, which she claims is the best expression of turkey. “The ‘T’ is turkey, not tomato,” she says, adding that homegrown lettuce and the addition of avocado elevate the sandwich to celebration-level fare.

Marcy Smothers

Tom Waits, legendary American singer-songwriter and occasional actor with the distinctive growling voice, is Marcy Smothers’ choice of guest.

“Waits is one of Sonoma County’s treasures,” says Smothers (who has in the past shared a holiday table with Tommy Smothers).

“Waits is an original and, I’d venture to guess, a fine raconteur. It would be a treat to hear him muse on any subject and bonus points if he’d sit at the piano and sing.”

Smothers, a radio host, home cook and author, says she plans to celebrate the holidays at home with other foodies — friends, family and a few wild cards.

“We have a tradition of expressing gratitude,” she says, “but with Tom (Waits) there, I imagine we’d be tippling and toasting more than usual.”

A Mission Christmas

The Mission San Francisco Solano in Sonoma. Photo: Kent Porter
The Mission San Francisco de Solano in Sonoma, Christmas carolers leave the chapel by candlelight after one of four services at the historic mission in downtown Sonoma. (photo by Kent Porter)

There are no headliners booked for the hottest ticket of the holiday season in Sonoma.

It’s just neighbors, children to elders, standing shoulder to shoulder, singing traditional Christmas carols to the collective light of scores of flickering candles dancing on the whitewashed adobe walls of the historic Mission San Francisco de Solano.

By candlelight, within this primitive, strikingly unadorned chapel, on this one night of the year, time is suspended.

Celebrating “Christmas at the Mission” is an enchanting experience because of its simplicity. No flash, no commercial hustle or fussy food, just the camaraderie of community and seasonal cheer followed by cookies and cider across the street at the old Toscano Hotel, which also is open and decorated with a Christmas tree. Twinkling luminarias help light a path between the mission and the hotel, giving the plaza a softly festive glow.

“When you go to that event, it’s like one big happy family,” says Sonoma city historian George McKale. “There are so many familiar faces. You forget what’s going on in the outside world.”

The short, non-denominational service is as simple as the mission chapel itself, a minimalist, Mexican military-style church built by Gen. Mariano Vallejo in 1840 after the original 1823 mission church founded by Father Jose Altimira was destroyed.

As attendees enter the dimly lit chapel, past the mission’s original holy water font on the left, everyone over 12 is presented with a lit candle. As they move forward and the chapel fills, the narrow space slowly illuminates, candle by candle, until the room is radiant with warm firelight. The experience is sweetly moving.

As visitors enter the dimly lit chapel and pass the mission's original holy water font, everyone over 12 is presented with a lit candle.
As visitors enter the dimly lit chapel and pass the mission’s original holy water font, everyone over 12 is presented with a lit candle. (photo by Kent Porter)

“Without that mission, Sonoma probably wouldn’t be here,” McKale says. “(It) has this special feeling that goes back to the roots of this town. It doesn’t matter what religion you are. It’s magical.”

There is no charge for tickets for the December 14 event, although they are only available for several hours on the Saturday morning before Thanksgiving; this year it is November 23. You must pick up tickets in person at the mission; only 200 are available for each of four services, the first of which begins at 4:30 p.m. and the last at 7:30 p.m.

Michelin Bib Gourmands 2013

English Pea Soup at Chalkboard Bistro in Healdsburg ©heather irwin
English Pea Soup at Chalkboard Bistro in Healdsburg ©heather irwin
English Pea Soup at Chalkboard Bistro in Healdsburg ©heather irwin
English Pea Soup at Chalkboard Bistro in Healdsburg ©heather irwin

Restaurants wait with bated breath each year for the royal conferring of Michelin stars by the French guidebook company. Literally it can change a restaurant’s status overnight — either for better or worse. The precursor, however, are the Bib Gourmand awards, which are the pathway to stars, and a recognition of good value, excellent food and top-notch service.

This year’s Bib winners for Wine Country include Biteclub faves Backyard (Forestvilles ), Bistro Jeanty (Yountville), Bistro 29 (Santa Rosa), Boon Eat + Drink (Guerneville), C Casa )Napa), newcomer Chalkboard (Healdsburg), Cook (St. Helena), Cucina Paradiso (Petaluma), Glen Ellen Star (Glen Ellen), Hot Box Grill (Sonoma), La Salette (Sonoma), Monti’s Rotisserie (Santa Rosa), Oenotri (Napa), Redd Wood (Yountville), Risibisi (Petaluma), Sazon (Santa Rosa), Scopa (Healdsburg), The Girl and The Fig (Sonoma), and Willi’s Wine Bar (Santa Rosa). There are a number of restaurants we assume were too new to include (or about to get starred), but Spinster Sisters (Santa Rosa) is clearly missing from the list. Hmmmm…

Supper Clubs: Black Plum, Suite D

blackplum
Black Plum Supper Club in Occidental happens each Thursday.

Supper Clubs are the new underground dinners. Similar in concept, they’re one-off food and wine events in intimate settings with just a handful of invitees. The difference: No super secret handshakes to get in. One of the most intriguing is the Black Plum Supper Club in Occidental. it pops up each Thursday night at Howard Station Cafe, billing itself as “refined West County cuisine”. And refined it is. Chefs Emma Uribe and Jeremy Whitcomb, both alums of Peter Lowell’s Restaurant in Sebastopol, serve up $35 prix fixe, seasonal menus that include dishes like leeks with salmon roe, pears with hazelnuts and chicory, octopus with cecci beans and quince with creme anglaise. You can secure your spot with a call to 889-6729 or go to blackplumsupperclub.com.

Can’t get enough of pop-up supper clubs? Suite D, a private room run by the folks at Sonoma’s ragingly popular Girl and the Fig are featuring a series of dinners at the event space including a Harvest Dinner on Nov. 8 and 9, an all lobster dinner on Dec. 19 and a Southern Supper on Nov. 14 and 15. For details and tickets go to figsuited.com.

Mondavi: The Mandarin Edition?

mondaviRobert Mondavi, the iconic Napa winery,  is now offering its signature tour in Mandarin Chinese each Friday and Saturday  at 10:30a.m. Visitors see the famed To Kalon Vineyard, tour the winemaking cellars and enjoy a seated tasting of three wines with a Mandarin-speaking wine educator. Curious about other translations? Private tours are also available in Cantonese, Japanese and French by appointment. Admission in $30 per guest and reservations can be made online at robertmondaviwinery.com or 800-228-1395.

Chef Shuffle: J Vineyards

Chef Erik Johnson is the new top toque at J Vineyards in Healdsburg
Chef Erik Johnson is the new top toque at J Vineyards in Healdsburg

Chef Erik Johnson is the new top toque at the J Vineyards property in Healdsburg, which includes the popular J Bubble Room. The former executive sous chef at Healdsburg’s Dry Creek Kitchen, he replaces Jason La Bue. A frequent teacher at Relish Culinary Adventures (and Bohemian Club chef alum), he’s gearing up for his first J Vineyards class, “Get Ready for Thanksgiving) from 6:30 to 9:30p.m. on Nov. 2. It’s a great chance to brush up on your holiday cooking skills and get a tasty three-course meal in the process. Details on this and other classes, as well as Bubble Room appointments at jwine.com/events. The cost of the Thanksgiving class is $110 per person.

Halloween Balls for Hunters and Headless Horsemen

huntersballHalloween is a perfect time for masked balls, and two we’re preparing our gowns for: The Diavola Supper Club Hunter’s Ball and Costume Party, on Saturday October 26th and Coppola Winery’s Masquerade Ball, also on the 26th (oh, our glass slippers will have to run fast!). The Hunter’s Ball, held at the Odd Fellow’s Hall in Geyserville features a family-style seasonal menu (we smell game) by Chef Dino Bugica and music by former Dire Straits guitarist Jack Sonni. Tickets are $85 per person, with tickets available online.

Coppola’s event bills itself as “Sleepy Hollow meets Great Gatsby” and will include a live DJ, fortune teller, costume contest and themed lounge. Tickets are $125 available online. The following day, a family-friendly event at the winery is always a major draw: The Harvest and Halloween Carnival from 11am to 2pm. Its just $10 per child and includes pumpkin decorating and costumed fun.

Home on the grange

Cindy Daniel, owner of the Shed, draws some draft wine from the fermentation bar. (photo by Chris Hardy)

New in Sonoma County since last spring are two food and drink centers – one in Sebastopol, the other in Healdsburg – offering delicious one-stop intrigue for locals and visitors alike. Haven’t been to either yet? Here’s a visual feast of what you’ve been missing.

The Barlow

Zazu Kitchen and Farm owner Duskie Estes, right, with chef Doug Richey at the new restaurant location at The Barlow in Sebastopol. (photo by Christopher Chung)
Zazu Kitchen and Farm owner Duskie Estes, right, with chef Doug Richey at the new restaurant location at The Barlow in Sebastopol. (photo by Christopher Chung)

Sebastopol, the town best known for its once-bountiful apple orchards, is now ground zero for food-and-wine purveyors, with the launch of the ambitious Barlow Center on 12 acres and just a stone’s throw from downtown.

(See even more pictures in our gallery)

The center has been welcoming tenants to its 18 buildings in spring, creating a new “maker hood” where Highway 12 meets Morris Street.

Barlow developer Barney Aldridge created the food-and-wine center to provide a deeper connection between consumers and some of their favorite products, from beer and wine to ice cream and bacon. The current mix of 30-some businesses also includes a clothing boutique and bookstore, two art galleries and a yoga-Pilates-dance studio.

The half-dozen original buildings of the former apple cannery underwent major renovations and structural upgrades; the rest of the complex was constructed from the ground up in a hip, industrial style with high ceilings and lots of metal and glass.

–       Guayaki Yerba Mate – Fair Trade beverage company that sources the herbal energy-boosting drink yerba mate (with the “strength of coffee, health benefits of tea and euphoria of chocolate”) from South America

–       Kosta Browne Winery – among the most sought-after producers of Sonoma County Pinot Noir and Chardonnay

–       Spirits Works Distillery – a microdistillery producing its own gin and whiskey from organic grain

–       Taylor Maid Farms – for the coffee and tea-obsessed, this roaster offers tours, barista training classes, community-driven events and an espresso bar

–       Village Bakery – a longtime Sonoma County favorite for pastries and sandwiches

–       Woodfour Brewing Company – bistro and brewery with an ever-changing menu of beers on tap

–       Zazu Kitchen + Farm – where chefs Duskie Estes and John Stewart create whimsical food and their own line of bacon and salumi

 Healdsburg Shed

Cups and saucers at The Shed cafe and store (photo by Chris Hardy)
Cups and saucers at The Shed cafe and store (photo by Chris Hardy)

Healdsburg’s Shed, which opened in spring, provides farmers and foodies with everything they need to live the Sonoma lifestyle: a market and cafe, a kitchen and garden shop, and a grange-hall-like gathering space.

Cindy Daniel, who owns the Shed with her husband, Doug Lipton, said the pair grew the concept over some 15 years. Their goal? To create a lively venue inspired by good farming, good cooking and good eating, to celebrate the land and the people who grow things.

–       Cafe – serving fresh, vegetable-driven cuisine for breakfast and lunch with a less-is-more philosophy, from waffles and pizza to meze plates, to be enjoyed indoors or on one of the outdoor decks

–       Fermentation bar – the place to sip wine and beer on tap, plus locally made kefir and kombucha

–       Front patio – where picnic tables provide a casual spot for friends to share a meal with wine.

–       Garden shop – to the rear of Shed, stocked with pitchforks and organic seeds, reminiscent of a well-thumbed Smith & Hawken catalog

–       Market and take-out larder – stocked with smoked fish and foods in various stages of preparation, along with produce from local farmers

The cooking store at The Shed cafe and store (photo by Chris Hardy)
The cooking store at The Shed cafe and store (photo by Chris Hardy)

–       Modern grange space – upstairs, designed for the community to gather for workshops, films and concerts, and dinners on the last Sunday of every month

–       Retail kitchen store – stocked with everything from clay pots to fresh spices, evoking the meticulous retailing sensibility of Williams-Sonoma

–       Wooden mill – imported from Austria, it grinds locally grown grains for artisan breads and polentas