Farm to Table Dinners 2012

Tara Firma Farms
Tara Firma Farms
Tara Firma Farms

With a backdrop as stunning as a farm or historic garden, it isn’t hard to make our local bounty pretty swoon-worthy. Add some top-talent chefs and you’ve got farm-to-table dinners without compare.

Weber Ranch
Petaluma’s Della Fattoria
hosts a series of dinners at Weber Ranch each week from July 7 through mid-September. Dinner is served family style on a 25-foot table with platters of seasonal salads, pizzas, grilled meats and desserts made from the bakery’s pastry staff. $90pp and reservations fill up well in advance.  Details at dellafattoria.com or 763-0161.

Chosen Spot
Chef John Lyle presents a second year of Luther Burbank-inspired “Chosen Spot” dinners at the Luther Burbank home and garden in Santa Rosa on July 7, August 11 and Sept. 8. Five courses, $75pp, details at lutherburbank.org or 524-5445.

Quivira: Summer Farm-to-Table Dinner
Saturday, July 28th , 5pm – 9pm

$125 per person /  $105 Queue members

Guests get an in-depth look at Quivira’s Biodynamic farming practices and winemaking, complete with a multi-course wine and food experience prepared by local Diavola Chef, Ciara Meaney, using produce from the winery’s 1-acre garden. Meet Farm Manager Andrew Beedy, visit Ruby the resident feral pig and learn about biodynamic winegrowing philosophies from Winemaker Hugh Chappelle.

Want us to add yours? Email me or leave your comments below…

Big Bottom Bistro

Big Bottom Market
Big Bottom Market
Big Bottom Market
Big Bottom Market

Guerneville newcomer Big Bottom Market (16228 Main St.) has started dinner service Thursday through Saturday from 5-9pm. The menu has a number of Middle Eastern, African and Spanish dishes including lentil-walnut pate, Marcona almonds, a mezze platter with roasted red pepper hummus and yogurt salad, chilled cucumber soup with mint and yogurt, Moroccan Chicken tagine and apricot couscous. Executive Chef Tricia Brown also pulls out some American-style crowd-pleasers with pulled pork and bourbon-baked baked beans or green-chili turkey meatloaf.

Guatemalan Dinner at Jimtown

Jimtown Store (6706 Hwy 128, Healdsburg) hosts a buffet dinner featuring Pollo Jocon, a traditional Guatemalan chicken in green mole sauce, along with Rancho Gordo beans and rice, corn tortillas, pineapple empanadas, homemade tortillas and salsa and “palomitas and pepitas”,  a snack of popped corn and pumpkin seeds. July 12, 7:30pm, $25pp. A collection of hand-woven cloth will be available for purchase, and portions of the proceeds help AMIDI, an organization that helps Guatemalan women and girls. 433-1212 for reservations.

Ike’s Place open in Santa Rosa

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Bay Area sandwich sensation, Ike’s Place, is finally open.

Housed in the former Merv’s Little Super (1780 Mendocino Ave., Santa Rosa), it’s a location rich with history. And now, rich with Dirty Sauce.

The 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. As in so legendary, it’s SF Castro location faced eviction from neighbors tired of the lines out the door.

So what to order? Faced with a dizzying selection of both meaty and meat-free choices (including several nods to locals including the Charles Schulz, Luther Burbank and SRJC Bear Cub), the choice for a food writer sort of leaps out: The Adam RichmanWith fried (halal) chicken, honey, avocado, ham, dirty sauce and a Dutch crunch roll, it’s not a stretch to say: Best. Sandwich. Ever.

It’s been a long, long, long wait, but we’re glad to welcome owner Ike Shehadeh and the Ike’s Crew.

Oh, and BiteClub’s nominating the “Merv’s Lil Super” (with Slim Jim’s, sliced hot dogs, mozzarella sticks, Dirty Sauce, hot sauce and just a dash of malt liquor) as a sandwich worth considering.

1780 Mendocino Ave. at Dexter St., Santa Rosa.

K-J taking over Shimo

Wine Pairing at Kendall Jackson Wine Center

A K-J cafe? Jackson Family Wines will take over the former Shimo Modern Steak location in Healdsburg. The 241 Healdsburg Avenue space is slated to become a “culinary cafe” showcasing orchestrated food and wine pairings, a menu of small bites and a curated selection of locally made products including cheeses, breads, charcuterie and chocolate.

This ain’t no stale pretzel and mustard set-up. K-J Executive Chef Justin Wangler has an all-star chef team lined up for the new property that includes Tracey Shepos (cheese) and Robert Nieto (chocolate, pastries). He’ll tap into K-J’s expansive culinary garden, expanding line of house made goodies and network of top purveyors throughout Wine Country. The cafe will also be a retail outlet for a line of grape seed oils, flours and cookies from sister company, WholeVine–a project of JFW chairman Barbara Banke and former Chalk Hill Estate co-owner Peggy Furth to both minimize winery waste (grape seeds, skins) and create a healthy food product.

Wangler has already decamped to the Shimo kitchen, having moved his operations (temporarily) to Healdsburg several weeks ago while the Santa Rosa Wine Center kitchens undergo major upgrades and renovations slated to last through next fall. There’s no word on when the cafe will open yet, but it seems reasonable to expect sometime next year.

A sample cafe menu submitted to city planners includes  Drakes Bay Oysters with Kendall-Jackson verjus mignonette; Liberty Duck rillettes, Potato leek tortas with chardonnay grape seed oil and lemon aioli; Bellwether Farms Carmody Fondue with crostini; red and white fries with cabernet ketchup; WholeVine Grape skin flour pretzel bites, a Devil’s Gulch porchetta sandwich with pickled farm vegetables; Mama Frisschkorn’s caramel corn and lime Madeleines. And we should probably mention they’ll be serving wine with all this food.

Meanwhile, winemaker Pete Seghesio’s proposal for a meat and salumi cafe and store on the site of the former Post Office is cooling its heels for another month. Healdsburg City Planners will consider the “Healdsburg Meat Co.” at its next meeting in July. Sehgesio’s cafe and store also includes–you guessed it–a wood-fired pizza oven and wine tasting by-the-glass wines. In case you’re keeping track, that’s the third wood-fired cafe concept in Healdsburg in the last month.

Midtown Cafe, Santa Rosa


Remember the basement rumpus room…that shag-rug den of wonder? It was awesome until you started inviting people. Suddenly you’ve got the fat kid spilling Orange Crush, the weird kid picking his nose and scratching up your 45s and that annoying girl from down the block parading her friends through. Ugh.

Let’s just call the Midtown Cafe the newest rumpus room in Santa Rosa. But by telling you, but I’m expecting you not to f-it up.

A pop-up within the Midtown Cafe on Fourth Street in Santa Rosa, “After 5” the newest project of Superburger’s Bill Cordell. Come dusk, the barbecue gets ‘queing, the beer starts flowing and the yam tots start frying.

If you made it to Blue Label at the Belvedere before it vanished into the ether, you’ll get the vibe immediately. The old pinball board hangs on the wall, vintage tunes play and a Magic Eight Ball sits on the table waiting to tell your future. Like Blue Label, here, the menu is an eclectic a mash-up of old school comfort food, salty-fried bits, funked-up burgers and imaginative entrees from Cordell and Neil Allensworth (a Blue Label alum) who are obviously having fun with their food.

Start the night with grazers like a homemade sirloin meatball with melted gorgonzola in the center, simmered in North African marinara ($6); Chinese BBQ sweet cherry pork sliders ($5) on Hawaiian rolls; or yam tats with tamarind sauce ($5).

Salads include a blue cheese wedge with bacon and “fun garnish” ($6/$12 for entree size) or the Tijuana Caesar with shaved ham and a cold soft-boiled egg criss-crossed with anchovy. The dressing misses the raw egg, but makes a solid dipper for your tots.

The best bets for sandwiches are Soda Pop Pulled Pork with apple, pear relish ($11) that’s sweeter than your mom on a Sunday and the tarragon fried chicken sandwich with artichoke garlic mayo ($10).  Mains of ‘que and fried chicken are hearty, with a pound each of either pork ribs or brisket ($14).

Burgers, however, are Bill’s bread and butter. Though it may seem odd to be competing with himself (Santa Rosa’s Original Superburger is directly across the street), Midtown’s are griddled rather than char-grilled and give nods to old Santa Rosa with the Heavenly Hamburger Broiler Burger and the Hotel La Rose Burger with avocado, mushrooms, Swiss and smoked bacon. The French burger sports double cream Brie and caramelized onions. ($10-$14)

You can get the salads and burgers for lunch, but dinner is a better bet when Neil’s in the kitchen. There’s an outdoor patio, wine and beer on tap. Thriller thumps in the background and there’s this feeling that maybe, just maybe, you’ve found the best place on earth for to kick back and have a nosh in the ‘hood.

Just don’t tell the nose-picker kid.

Midtown Cafe After 5, 1422 4th Street  Santa Rosa, 545-2233. Open daily after 5pm. Duh.

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Magrit Mondavi Book Release

Robert Mondavi Winery celebrates the release of Margrit Mondavi’s new book, “Margrit Mondavi’s Sketchbook: Reflections on Wine, Food, Art, Family, Romance and Life” with a book signing and event at the winery on July 11th, a day before public sales begin online.  Upon purchasing the book, guests can meet, take photos with and request to have their book signed by Margrit. The evening also features a Q&A moderated by KKSF-AM’s ‘Dining Around’ host Joel Riddell with Margrit and book co-writer Janet Fletcher. Festivities continue with live music, house-made charcuterie, appetizers and wine. The book retails for $35.

 The book signing will take place in the winery’s Vineyard Room from 5 p.m. until 7 p.m. on July 11th.  The book will be available to purchase in the winery’s Appellation Room during this time and on robertmondavi.com and Amazon.com beginning on July 12th.

Margrit Mondavi, wife of the late Robert Mondavi, has created a collection of personal stories and sketches based on diary entries and reflections about her life with Mr. Mondavi at their winery.  Margrit’s book is written in the spirit of the Robert Mondavi Winery’s belief that food, wine and the arts should be celebrated in everyday life.  Reflecting on her long and fulfilling life in the Napa Valley, Margrit’s book shares personal and defining stories from her life, providing a deep look inside the rich history of the winery.  A number of Margrit’s close friends helped compile her memoir, including a forward by renowned chef Thomas Keller, and Janet Fletcher’s writing contributions. A portion of the proceeds from book sales at the signing event will benefit the Napa Valley Opera House.

Sur La Table Pop-Up

Sur La Table’s Chef Les Goodman and Farmhouse Inn’s Pastry Chef Pattie Taan host a pop-up dinner June 27, 2012 at 6:30pm.

This 3-course, sit down dinner will focus on farm fresh ingredients and highlight the very best of the season. Chefs Les and Pattie will be shopping at local farms and farmers markets, and the best and freshest ingredients they find will dictate the evening’s menu. Guest are invited to help in the preparation of the meal or just sit back, relax, and enjoy the show.

The price of the dinner is $55pp, and attendees are invited to shop at the store after-hours on the night of the dinner with a 10% discount.

Details and registration: http://www.surlatable.com/sku/1039585/Pop-Up-Dinner

Foie Fight Isn’t Over

Guillermo Gonzalez of Sonoma Artisan Foie Gras / Christopher Chung PD
Guillermo Gonzalez of Sonoma Artisan Foie Gras / Christopher Chung PD
Guillermo Gonzalez of Sonoma Artisan Foie Gras / Christopher Chung PD

Just days  before the July 1 foie gras ban goes into effect, the national non-profit Animal Legal Defense Fund has filed a complaint with the California Attorney General’s office asking her to sue foie gras industry advocates who they claim are disseminating false and misleading information about humanely produced foie gras. Named in the complaint: Napa’s Ken Frank of La Toque, Guillermo Gonzalez of Sonoma Artisan Foie Gras, Rob Black of the Golden Gate Restaurant Association and New York’s Hudson Valley Foie Gras.

Why? The timing of the complaint comes just days after foie gras enthusiasts seem to have found some support in Sacramento. Though the legislature pushed aside last minute efforts to overturn the bill in 2012, there are reports that at least one legistlator, Sen. Lois Wolk of Davis may be interested in authoring legislation to repeal the ban in 2013.

“I don’t like single-product bans, period,” Wolk told McClatchy Newspapers on Sunday. “These are never easy issues, usually characterized by a lot of intense feeling and not much fact. The chefs have been very open in how to approach this, and now we have a chance to look at this.”

With a new round of chef pushback, animal rights activists including the ALDF have continued to fight against “gavage”, the practice of force feeding geese used for foie gras production. ALDF’s complaint asks Attorney General Harris to use her power to commence civil enforcement action in superior court against the industry advocates under California’s Unfair Competition Law.  For each false or misleading statement addressed in the attorney general’s complaint, the court has the power to impose fines of up to $2,500. The ALDF has also filed a complaint with the Better Business Bureau.

This brawl ain’t over folks. Expect more fierce foie fighting to come.

Recent foie stories in the news:

Atlantic: The Last Days of Foie Gras

There May be Hope: Grubstreet

Foie Fight Over: Press Democrat

Food Trucks at NASCAR


It’s a trucking weekend at the former Infineon Raceway this weekend as mobile kitchens from around the Bay Area hit the tracks. Throughout the Toyota/Save Mart 350 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series trucks including Awful Falafel, Marks the Spot, Sift Cupcakes, Street Eatz and Cheese Gone Wild will be serving up everything from wood-fired pizza to hand-rolled sushi.

Highway 121 and Sears Point Road, Sonoma.