Sonoma Wine Country Weekend 2012

If you’re wondering where all the chefs and winemakers are this weekend, you’ll find them at Sonoma Wine Country Weekend (August 31-Sept 2). Here’s you guide to the action…

Friday: Lay a base for the partying to come (and trust us, there will be partying) at easy-going winemaker lunches on Friday throughout the county. On Friday night, Francis Ford Coppola Winery hosts a Starlight Supper Club dinner under the stars. Live dancing, Pride & Joy play and chefs Carlo Cavallo (Sonoma Meritage) and Jeff Mall (Zin) and Josh Silvers (Petite Syrah) do a whole pig roast, Tuscan brick chicken and sausage, old-fashioned potato salad and more by the pool. $95, tickets here. 

 Saturday: Taste of Sonoma at MacMurray Ranch, 11am to 4pm. As someone who’s done this multiple times and made some tragic mistakes of over-indulgence, the key to getting through 170 wineries and 60 chef pairings is to make a plan of attack and pace yourself throughout the day. Vets know to go early (food sometimes runs out later in the day, and the crowd gets thick). Break up the eat-drink fest with Wine Talks, a rip to the Gloria Ferrer Bubble Lounge and a stop by the Steel Chef Competition featuring Steve Rose of Vineyards Inn, Carlo Cavallo, Crista Luedtke of boon eat-drink and Steven Snook of Kenwood Inn and Spa.  Tickets: $150. 

Sunday: Sonoma Valley Harvest Wine Auction at Chateau St. Jean, 1-7p.m. Bollywood is the theme of this year’s epic auction in it’s new location at Chateau St. Jean. Look for plenty of bright colors, flavors and a busting bazaar set up for the event. Auction lots include a racing day, helicopter tour and one-on-one with Dr. McDreamy (aka actor Patrick Dempsey); an aerial tour of Sonoma and private winery tour of Envolve with the Bachelor’s Ben Flajnik; a 10-course Chinese new year feast with Lance Lew of NBC Bay Area and of course lots and lots of great wines. $500 per person.

 Want to know what the Maharaji are eating for dinner? We did too. Here’s the menu:

Thai marinated lobster – Chef Doug Keane, Cyrus

Chicken Momo: Yeti Restaurant

Curry and red chili lomo with paneer: Ramekins

Saffron roasted cauliflower puri:  Chef Duskie Estes, Zazu

Salad with figs, goat cheese and pomegranate vinaigrette: Catherine Venturini, Olive and Vine

Rock Shrimp and heirloom squash lasagna: Chef Carlo Cavallo, Meritage

Spice-braised lamb with black lentils, pea shoot and radish salad, Vadouvan curry vinaigrette: Chef Josh Silvers, Petite Syrah

Caramelized peach tart with basil creme fraiche, Octavio Alcantar, Barndiva

Mango Saffron Ice Box Cake, Chai Shortbread: Moaya Scheiman, Andrea Koweek of Crisp Bakery

Madrona Manor

Madrona Manor, the demure Victorian bed and breakfast tucked among the vineyards of Westside Road, has stars in its eyes. And Michelin is written all over them.

As Sonoma County’s most critically-acclaimed restaurant, Cyrus, prepares to serve its last meal in October, Madrona’s executive chef Jesse Mallgren (who has won a single star since 2008) is bringing together a culinary all-star team  that includes a new pastry chef, food and beverage manager and mixologist, in addition to his own proven talents in modernist Wine Country cuisine.

Luxe Libations for Less: You don’t often get Prada for a Payless price, but top shelf artisan cocktails for $11? New mixologist Pam Bushling’s a brainy bartender with a science degree and a passion for small producer/importers like Petaluma’s Tempus Fugit who make a coveted violet liqueur. Drinks include the Lola, a sexier margarita with watermelon, tequila, mezcal, lime and Hawaiian lava salt rim; a herbaceous basil-infused gimlet and the Casagrande, Makers Mark with ginger-infused syrup, estate made limoncello and Bundaberg ginger beer.  And we’re just saying, she’s got a way with hard-slapping those herbs.

Dessert Accompli: The Manor’s liquid nitrogen ice cream cart is nifty, but a one-time wonder. New pastry chef Emmanuel “Manny” Fimbrez is a 28-year-old confectionary wunderkind from SF’s tony Saison. Like Mallgren, he loves deconstructed dishes that mix whimsy, texture, temperature and flavors in surprising ways. Unfettered by a dessert menu (his are included in the tasting menu), he isn’t shackled to brownie sundaes and lava cakes, instead offering a lacquered brioche beehive filled with sweetened sheep’s milk cheese, honey and topped with shattered “milk glass”. Sound complicated? It is. And that’s the point. You can eat Oreo’s and pudding pops at home. We loved his frozen “cookie milk”, rice-infused ice cream and bouche de noelish “Chocolate”. See pix below…

Lounge Menu: The restaurant’s tasting menu is still a steal by most upscale Wine Country restaurant standards, but the a la carte lounge menu features many of the dining room’s dishes including Suzuki Crudo with local uni, fresh wasabi and bean flowers ($13), basil steamed lobster ($17), seared Japanese mackerel ($12) or grilled dry aged beef with mung bean risotto and fennel pollen ($24), along with cheese courses and desserts ($12) available on their picturesque porch or small interior lounge. Manage your expectations: This isn’t an all-you-can-eat buffet, but little nibbles of precise, carefully crafted dishes from Mallgren’s kitchen. 

Stuff the Stuffy: The fresh, young team at Madrona are decidedly unstuffy, though they can certainly button it up for more starched clientele. They’re quick to point out, however, there’s no dress code (we’re comfortable if you’re comfortable is their motto), diners are invited to walk around the kitchen gardens and sprawling landscape, and Mallgren has even left a space on the menu described as “previously occupied by a foie gras dish”.  You’re welcome to interpret it however you’d like. Five courses too much fun? The bed and breakfast has 22 well-appointed rooms should you need a place to crash after your four-hour meal.

– The Garden: Nearly every multi-starred chef has their own culinary garden, and Mallgren has one of the prettiest we’ve seen. Estate-grown produce including pears, herbs, berries, tomatoes and citrus make up about 20 percent of the total menu.

Want to check it out? Madrona Manor, 1001 Westside Rd., Healdsburg, (707) 433-4231. www.madronamanor.com

One note: Keep in mind this isn’t a bar, but a small interior lounge and outdoor patio seats at a bed and breakfast, so it’s not the place for your bachelorette party. More like a pre-dinner cocktail with your sweetie. The inn is sometimes booked by large parties, and therefore closed to the public, so call ahead to make sure they’re open.

 

Speakeasy coming to Petaluma


“Speakeasy” will take over the former Thai restaurant in Putnam Plaza. The project is slated to be a tapas-style restaurant co-created by Roger Tschann (of Grizzly Studios) and Amber Driscoll. Look for an October/November opening.

Cochon Heritage Fire 2012 PIX

Sonoma’s John Stewart and Duskie Estes were among the chefs participating in Cochon Heritage Fire 2012 on Saturday, August 25 in Napa.

Check out the carnivorous wonderment that included goat tacos, rabbit, a heritage pig stuffed with truffles, beef “sushi”, butcher demos, cocktails, lamb and much more.

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Food News of the Moment

Mario, you're smizing at me....

Mario Likes a Smizer: How to run your life efficiently has a lot to do with a chef running a kitchen efficiently. Mario Batali’s rules of how he runs the kitchen without yelling or drama. And how he can size someone up in a minute or so. Do you have gentle, smiling eyes? NYTimes

Guy’s Big Campus Nosh: Fieri creates “Guy Fieri on Campus” a fast-casual dining concept at 15 college locations in the next five years. Not surprisingly, the first is in New Jersey. QSR Magazine

Calistoga Food Trike serves Caucasian food. No really. Like from Caucasus. Napa Valley Register

Miami New Times food critic axed in favor of more “digital coverage”. Call it the Yelp-ing of food journalism. Or maybe the beginning of a less Anton Ego era. Either way, kind of a bummer. Eater

Artisan Vegan Cheese? Is this even possible. Apparently so…Bay Area Author and TV personality Miyoko Schinner shows how anyone can make their own repertoire of cheeses that are sliceable, meltable and totally delicious in her new book Artisan Vegan Cheese.  Anyone craving the consistency and sharp flavors of conventional dairy cheeses but for health reasons need to stay clear of lactose and high cholesterol or are vegan by choice now have fool-proof recipes that deliver the tastes they desire. From brie to ricotta to parmesan, see why Artisan Vegan Cheese is featured in the September ‘12 issue of VegNews Magazine. To see Miyoko in action, please click on the Delicious TV link:  http://delicioustv.com/vegan-mash-up/

PS: This column is of course not called News of the Food because that would be ripping off our friends at the Bohemian. Beware of un-caffeinated moments where you think, “Hmmm, what a great name despite the fact that it sounds kind of familiar…”  If you have a better name, let me know.

John Lyle: The Backstory on the Chosen Spot Chef

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Trailing a swirl of clover and alfalfa confetti behind his midnight blue Volkswagen convertible Chef John Lyle is on a mission to make hay into ice cream. The Rumplestiltskinian concept came to him while walking through a barn and eating a nectarine. 

“I thought ‘Oh my god, these flavors of hay and stone fruit would go together perfectly. I want to share this’,” he says, pulling his car into the parking lot of a Roseland ice creamery that specializes in unconventional flavors like corn, rose petal and cheese.

Equal parts chef, social advocate, artisan food prophet and produce cheerleader, Lyle is the red-headed whirling dervish behind Hardcore Farm to Face. Born from the success of a series of dinners honoring Luther Burbank, he’s created a company who’s mission is to support local farms and non-profit organizations by inviting the public to elaborate farm-to-table pop-up dinners. The star of the show, of course, is the freshly picked, plucked and artisan-crafted foods from Sonoma County. From the farm to your face, so to speak. This fall, his company will put on several more dinners, including a Harvest Moon dinner on September 30, benefitting the AIDS Nutrient Bank at Food for Thought and Welcome Table, a dinner and farm tour benefitting the Jewish Community Center’s teen program on October 7. He’s also planning a Sunday pay-what-you can brunch at Bloomfield Farms starting in mid-September. (Find details on all the upcoming events here).

Unloading the wind-beaten bale from the back of his car (much of which is determined to adhere to the interior) he begins explaining his hay ice cream idea to ice cream maker Jorge Alcazar of Frozen Art. “First you steep the hay in warm milk, right?” he says. The two huddle for the next five minutes confabbing about the finer points of ice cream making and getting the essence of hay into the final product, which will be served with a fresh nectarine galette at his Chosen Spot pop-up dinner. 

But that’s just one of seven courses Lyle has planned. And with only three days before the event, he’s got half a dozen ranchers to visit, servers to coordinate, nearly 2,000 Facebook fans to update on his latest ripe find and rows of crops to nibble before he sleeps.

Working out a la minute ingredients for his next six courses, Lyle heads to Redwood Empire Farms in Bennett Valley. He makes a beeline to a French plum tree heavy with fruit and picks one of the small, dark plums. “Soon,” he says, moving toward the black berry bushes, and greeting young owners Ariel and Jeff Russell. At their nearby veggie patch at Kick Ranch, we walk through fields of green padrone and sweet red Jimmy Nardello peppers. Tasting the sweet, vegetal Nardellos, Lyle puts in an order, then jumps into the car and heads for the nearby Triple “T” Ranch. There he strolls through Asian pear orchards, rows of heirloom tomatoes, potatoes, lettuces, green beans and more peppers tasting everything. Putting in more orders.

Ranchers say he’s one of the few chefs who’ve have actually come to their fields, tasted, squeezed, and looked at the produce. He’s as excited–maybe more–about their products as they are. In return for his continued cheerleading, they often let him glean wild plums or blackberries, or offer up special items.

With no formal culinary training, the 41-year-old worked his way up the restaurant ladder, working in craft services in Los Angeles, a Guerneville pizzeria, Lisa Hemenway’s Fresh and the ill-fated XXV in downtown Santa Rosa before taking on the challenge of catering dinners for 100. That, of course, was after careers in biochemistry and as a coi pond expert. Suffice to say that Lyle’s eclectic history makes for great dinner conversation–should you ever find him outside a kitchen.

Raised in a house where, he says, cube steak, bottled dressing and iceberg lettuce were the only things in the refrigerator, he spent hours wandering and foraging in the fields around his house, tasting everything. Hives or a stomach ache were merely part of the learning process. He watched Julia Child and Yan Can Cook after school, mimicking the TV chefs in the school cafeteria. As a special treat, he’d sit for hours in the shower stall with a fresh pomegranate, picking each seed. “They were like my grandma’s garnets. Like jewels I could eat,” he says.

That youthful exuberance about food hasn’t waned, but grown stronger as he plans each dinner with exacting detail. “I want to bring the person eating the food closer to the farmer and the farmer closer to the person eating,” says Lyle. “It’s corny but true.”

Bodega Seafood Art & Wine Festival

The Bodega Seafood Art & Wine Festival, Northern California’s largest seafood feast, celebrates its 18th year August 25, 26, 2012.

– More than 25 wineries and a dozen breweries pour
– 15 restaurants and catering companies offer seafood classics including barbecued oysters, crab cakes, Key Lime calamari, chowder
– Juried arts and craft show
– Musical entertainment: Wonderbread 5, Mitch Woods and the Rocket 88s, Steve Lukcy and the Rhumb a Bums
– Carnival of Chaos and TED speaker and entertainer Robert Strong

Proceeds from the event supports two important causes — Stewards of the Coast and Redwoods, which works in partnership with the California State Parks in the Russian River/Sonoma Coast region, and the Bodega Volunteer Fire Department.

ADMISSION:
Adults: $12 in advance, $15 at the gate; Seniors over 60 $10 in advance/$13 at the gate; Teens 12-18 $8/$10; Under 12 free.

Buy tickets online

16885 Bodega Hwy. Bodega,
10am to 6pm Saturday, 10am to 5pm Sunday

Alice Waters in Healdsburg

Sunset Breeze House
Sunset Breeze House
Sunset Breeze House

Sunset magazine food editor Margo True talks kitchen gardens, the Edible Schoolyard Project and healthy green living with chef and culinary legend Alice Waters on Saturday, August 25th at 4pm in Healdsburg.

The event showcases the 2012 Sunset Idea house built by Blu Homes, which exemplifies Waters’ commitment to sustainability. The first 500 visitors to the Alice Waters event will receive autographed copies of her book In The Green Kitchen (while supplies last).

Buy tickets to the 2012 Idea House Open House online (tickets must be purchased to attend the Alice Waters event) or at the home. $17 per person, children under 12 free. Pickup Shuttle (approx at the top of the hour, every hour from 10:00am-4:00pm) at the Sonoma County Park & Ride Lot at Healdsburg Ave. and Grant Ave. More details online at bluhomes.com/sunsetopenhouse.

Outside Lands Food Trends 2012


What Sonoma is to organic kale and heirloom tomatoes, San Francisco is to culinary trends of the bold, sometimes bizarre and universally-copied.
And one of the biggest stages for what we’ll be seeing in food this fall often debuts at Outside Lands, the Bay Area’s biggest music/food fests each August.

Here’s what trends are hot, hotter and hottest for 2012.

Thighs are the new breast: Chicken thighs were every, every, everywhere. Sure, they’re cheaper than breasts, but they’re also a whole lot tastier, and less prone to drying out. Namu Gaji, Nombe, Tacolicious, etc.

Fried chicken and bacon just keep getting better: Farmer Brown’s Fried Chicken and Waffles is a sell-out fave every year for a reason. Buttermilk waffles and tender, juicy fried chicken are the star-crossed lovers of the food world. Rarely in synch, but when they come together, it’s magic. And bacon? It’s moment seems to keep shining on, because hey, can you ever really get enough bacon? Bacon, Bacon got it so right with bacon gravy poutine and chocolate covered bacon that was at once crispy and meltingly soft. How do they do it?

Poutine: Canadians have long mocked us for our ketchup addiction when it comes to fries. They know what we don’t: Gravy and cheese are so much better on the humble potato. Or mayonnaise (aka aioli). Especially when it mixed with truffles and available in convenient pump form. Can I have one of those for my kitchen?

– Tacos are the universal meat carrier: The tortilla is quickly outclassing bread as the best conduit for getting meat products from the grill to your face. Korean barbecue, pulled pork, fish, fried chicken…whatever. Throw it on a tortilla and you’re good to go.

– Multi-level food trucks with wood fired ovens inside are hella cool: Del Popolo was the “wow” factor of the weekend — a custom-built, two-story pizza truck with a wood-fired oven inside. The line reflected everyone’s fascination.

– Wine in a bag is waaaay better than beer. Especially when you can wear it around your neck in a plastic pouch. And squeeze it like a bota bag into your friend’s mouth. Or you know, pour it in a glass. House Band Wines are our new favorite drink for festivals. Speaking of which, we’re liking the trend of moving away from crummy, overpriced beer and watered down cocktails to artisan wines and craft brews. This year, Beerlands kicked off (featuring our own Russian River Brewing) and Winelands was wall-to-wall with tasters grabbing primo pours from Windgap, Preston, Gloria Ferrer, Medlock Ames, Navarro, Sinskey and Bonny Doon (we couldn’t even get close to The Scholium Project). We like that.

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– Smore’s are even better cold: You thought melted chocolate and marshmallow were tasty? Try eating the whole thing enrobed in another layer of chocolate. We dare you to eat more than one. Sharon’s Chocolate Shop.

– Lamb is the new pork: There’s a certain type of food audience that relishes watching a burly butcher hack a roasted lamb to pieces in public. Stand too close and you might get a flick of crispy goodness on your shirt. The Whole Beast was universally acknowledged as the star of 2012 with their Lamb Poutine, topped with cracklings and goat cheese.

– Rice crispy treats can benefit greatly from a little fried pigskin. And Apple Jacks: 4505 Meats can do no wrong. But adding their crispy pig skin chicharrones to a Krispy treat? Evil. Bacony evil.

– Mole plus pickles. Who knew? Those Frabulous Frickle Brothers keep kicking it with fried pickles and tasty sauces. Our favorite newcomer this year was a sweet, spicy mole.

Kinda Tired, But Still Kickin’ It: Cupcakes, Ironic Tater Tots, Mac and Cheese.

I Can’t Forgive: Brass Knuckle for not having the Crack Bar this year. Booo.

Cochon Heritage Fire 2012

Cochon Heritage Fire // All Rights Reserved // Galdones Photography
Cochon Heritage Fire // All Rights Reserved // Galdones Photography
Cochon Heritage Fire // All Rights Reserved // Galdones Photography

Cochon Heritage Fire, the second largest COCHON 555 event, will again celebrate heritage breed animals from goats, lamb, pig, rabbit, forged mushrooms and wild birds on Saturday August 25th from 3:30pm to 6:30pm. The fourth annual outdoor event spotlights wood-fired whole animal theatre cooking, butchering, family-owned wineries, artisan foods, craft beers and spirits. The River Terrace Inn of Napa in the wine country, sets a stunning stage for this years event.  Guests will spend their afternoon nestled against the vines that run along the banks of the Oxbow River in the heart of Napa Valley, minutes away from downtown. With 14 chefs from around the country participating, Heritage Fire is national, but local in flavor.

Participating chefs include Sonoma’s John Stewart/Duskie Estes, zazu farm + restaurant Grand COCHON winners in ’11, COCHON Napa winner Lars Kronmark of the Culinary Institute of America at Greystone; chef Jordan Mackey of Cuvee Napa; John Fink of The Whole Beast; Kim Wiss of Antica Napa and COCHON “King of Porc,”Jason Vincent, Nightwood in Chicago.

Also returning is Dave the Butcher of Marina Meats in San Francisco, who will host the butcher demonstration and guest-favorite “Team Toast”, under the helm of Peter Jacobsen of Jacobsen Orchards in Yountville.

Following Cochon Heritage Fire, the celebration continues next door at Restaurant Cuvee in Napa. The After Party is hosted by chef Jordan Mackey, and features an exclusive menu with items like plancha-fired shrimp & grits, BBQ Ribs and watermelon slaw, flights of select wines, brews and spirits. On Sunday, Jordan hosts the first-ever Heritage Hash Brunch, an elaborate feast featuring a menu of wood-fired plancha dishes including Heritage hash, farm eggs, Johnny Cakes and a heirloom Bloody Mary bar.

When: Saturday, August 25, from 3:30pm to 6:30pm
Where: Hosted at the River Terrace Inn, 1600 Soscol Avenue, Napa.
Information: www.cochonheritagefire.com
Tickets: Are $150 per person. Click here to purchase