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July 29th, 2010 by Catherine
While Catherine’s on a romantic getaway with her hubby, I’ll be manning the helm of the blog machine this week – stand back… Chatting with our guests each morning at breakfast about their many adventures exploring Northern California, I can’t help but notice that I’m hearing so many of our guests rave about so many of the same activities. And, not just adventures here in the Russian River Valley, but out on the Sonoma Coast, in the towns of Healdsburg and Sebstopol, up in the Dry Creek Valley and Alexander Valley, and even over in the Napa Valley – all easy drives from us and all chocked-full of great discoveries. Now, here’s the catch, everyone knows about our fabulous wines, Pinot Noir, Chardonnay, Syrah… but did you know that there is so much more to do than drink wine in wine country? Of course, you can’t come to the Sonoma Wine County without drinking some wine, and in no way am I suggesting you skip the wine. I’m just saying there’re lots of great finds in addition to tasting all of our fantastic wines! So, I’ve polled our guests and I’ve polled our concierge team and – are you ready? – we’ve come up with a list of the Top 10 Things to Do in California Wine Country (imagine reading this with a drum roll in the back ground!) other than WINE TASTING (gasp!)! Here goes…
- Blackberries – It’s blackberry season. They grow everywhere and they taste so good. Pull over on the side of the road and pick a few handfuls. You won’t be sorry. They taste like summer.
- Live Music Sundays at C. Donatiello Winery – Yes it’s a winery and yes you can drink wine. But, in addition to their stellar portfolio of wines, they manage to pull in some of the best acts in wine country for their FREE summer concert series.
- Zip-lining through the Redwoods – They’re big, they’re beautiful and you can see them from an all new vantage point – 100 feet up in the air!
 Zipping through the Redwood Trees
- Overlook at Lake Sonoma – Take in one of the most majestic views in all of wine country form the overlook at Lake Sonoma located a the north end of the Dry Creek Valley. And, if you happen to be there on a Sunday morning, enjoy a Ranger led bird walk.
- Olive oil tasting at Dry Creek Olive Company – Some of the best olive oil to be found, no designated driver required!
- Walk the lakes at Riverfront Park – Just a few miles down the road from us, this park is a nesting site for the great blue heron, North America’s largest wading water bird. Their nests can be spotted high in the trees.
- Windsor’s Thursday Music on the Green and Farmers Market – Great local produce and great bands. Bring a famous Farmhouse picnic or pick something up from one of the many vendors.
- Safari West – Home to over 400 wild and exotic animals. This 400-acre wildlife preserve is part zoo and part jeep safari adventure. Get up close and personal with a giraffe or cheetah.
 Getting up close and personal with a giraffe!
- Segway Tours of Healdsburg – Great itineraries and a travel speed where you can really enjoy the scenery. Added bonus, you get to brag to all your friends back home that you segwayed your way through wine country!
- Oysters Hog Island – Have an oyster picnic at a real live oyster farm. Never mind the fact that these are some of the best oysters to be found anywhere and the view is amazing!
 Have an oyster feed along the water's edge.
Have a great adventure!
Post by Joe Bartolomei
Posted in Food Musings, Uncategorized, Visiting Wine Country, Wildlife | No Comments »
July 22nd, 2010 by Catherine
Wine grapes are fabulous. Heaven knows we love what they turn into. Wine! (Ok, that’s stating the obvious…) But, one of the many things that makes our lovely Russian River Valley, and Sonoma County as a whole, unique, is our incredible diversity of agriculture and artisan produce. We farm- and our farming really speaks to the old world traditions of using the land for a variety of different crops, livestock and native habitats. More and more, we’re seeing the farmers and ranchers expand from one crop or one animal on the land to a variety of uses on one property.
On our ranch, where we’ve farmed for five generations, we have chickens for eggs and meat, antique apple trees, vegetable gardens, bee hives for honey and polination, prunes, plums, cherries, peaches and berries scattered about the property and lovely creeks with riparian habitats.
 Lettuces and Heirloom Shelling Beans
This kind of farming is wonderful, because it’s year-round. We have produce, eggs and meat every month of the year. But, I have to admit that this month and the next few months are just amazing and so incredibly bountiful!
 An heirloom squash and its delicious blossoms
More and more, it isn’t just the farmers that are re-diversifying, the wineries themselves are pulling back from grapes and grapes more grapes, and re-allocating land to commercial gardens, livestock and orchards. Both Quivira and Preston Wineries, up in Dry Creek Valley and Lynmar, just down the road from us, actually grow fabulous produce that they sell to top local restaurants. Here’s a link to a great article on Preston and what he’s up to.
Joe and I have found, over the years of owning Farmhouse, that diversity really is what keeps it all interesting and inspiring. We spend a lot of our time at Farmhouse, working on programs and inn/restaurant/spa realated things, and we spend a lot of time out on the ranch, working with the farmers that keep all of those programs going.
What do you do to add a little diversity to your life? I’d love to hear about CSA adventures and any stories of beginning gardening or “getting back to the land”. Or, whatever else is interesting you right now.
Tags: diversity, family, farm fresh, Farmer's Market, farming, garden, honey, livestock, local, organic, rustic, sea salt, seasonal, tomatoes, wine country, winery Posted in Around the Farmhouse, Farmhouse Programs, Food Musings, Marketing Farmhouse, The Farm, Visiting Wine Country, Wine Country Blog | No Comments »
July 15th, 2010 by Catherine
Late July in the Farmhouse Inn gardens is something to see! Sonoma County Wine Country is in full bloom, and the gardens at Farmhouse Inn are exploding with color, variety and wildlife. Our gardner, Jana Mariposa, has provided the following account of who, what and where, all around our beautiful Russian River Valley property.
Many of our mid-summer flowers are in their full glory now, and we are all enjoying the mild weather. We are seeing many kinds of Butterflies: Swallowtails, California Sisters, and I’m hoping for some Monarchs, now that we have our Milkweeds for their dining pleasure. Some Butterflies, such as the Swallowtails and Monarchs, are very specific about which plants are suitable for their ‘children’; Monarch larvae can only feed upon Milkweed (Asclepias sp.), and the Pipevine Swallowtail larvae can only feed upon the native California Dutchman’s Pipe, which is growing happily inside the large yellow-flowering St. John’s Wort (Hypericum sp.) shrub on the West side of the Restaurant. If you are lucky, you may see the striking Blue-Black caterpillars with bright red spikes….but they are elusive, and like to stay in the shade.
The Tiger Swallowtails prefer plants in the Parsley (Umbelliferae) family; I am leaving many of the Parsley plants in the Culinary garden to go to flower and seed; the flowers attract dozens of kinds of beneficial insects, and the seeds are medicinal; and perhaps the Swallowtails will lay their eggs there and we will be able to see the stunning black/white/yellow/green striped caterpillars.
California Sister host plants are the various local Oak (Quercus sp.); Coast Live Oak, Valley Oak, and Black Oak are present on the Farmhouse Inn property.
West Coast Lady, Red Admiral, Lorquin’s Admiral, Mourning Cloak, Buckeye, and some Skippers have been seen in our Habitat Garden. Their palates are much more varied, as their larvae can feed on many kinds of both native and ornamental plants.
Of course our Hummingbirds think they are the ‘bosses’ of all the flowers in the garden….and they very generously share their territory with the Butterflies and other Pollinators. It takes a lot of variety to keep everyone happy.
It is a sad task to have to take out the ’spent’ Sweet Peas, that perfumed the air for 4 or more months…….but happily the Summer Vines are blooming and will continue to bloom until the frost. On the West Pool fence, the Scarlet Runner Beans are already providing nectar for the Hummers and other pollinators, and the Honeysuckle(Lonicera sp.) Black-eyed Susan (Thunbergia sp.), Morning Glory (Ipomoea sp.), and Purple Hyacinth Bean (Dolichos sp.) are all making their way up the fence for privacy and beauty.
Come and sit for a while in the Habitat Garden, and see how many kinds of flying gems will keep you company!
Here are a few of my favorite resources for this time of year:
The Natural Gardening Company will ship organic seeds from Sonoma County to you.
Creating an Organic Hummingbird habitat can be fun and easy with a little know-how.
The Halberg Butterfly Gardens are the perfect place to learn more about butterfly gardens, and you can visit when you’re in Sonooma County.
The folks at Beekind keep the bees on the Bartolomei’s Ranch. But their site has a wealth of information about bees, habitats and organic practices.
Tags: bee, bounty, butterfly, farm fresh, Farmhouse gardens, garden, gardener, gardening, honey bee, hummingbird, Jana, July, organic, parsley, Russian River Valley, Sebastopol, summer garden, sweet pea, wine country Posted in Around the Farmhouse, Farmhouse Programs, Visiting Wine Country, Wildlife, Wine Country Blog | No Comments »
July 8th, 2010 by Catherine
Doesn’t eveyone just love the idea of a Wine Country picnic? You and your sweetheart tucked in amid the vineyards and the rolling hills of Sonoma Wine Country, or out on the Sonoma Coast, toasting your everlasting love with Russian River Valley sparkling wine (or maybe pinot noir), nibbling bites of locally made Laura Chenel cabecou cheese, hand-crafted salumi and Farmhouse cured olives… Well I do. Throw in some lovely Russian River Valley spring or summer weather and nothing to do for the rest of the afternoon and I don’t think there’s much that can beat it.
For some time now, I’ve been asking our fabulous team of chefs to come up with the “Perfect Wine Country Picnic”. Which, now that I look back, is sort of a lot of pressure. Not just the “Ok” or “Fine Wine Country Picnic”, but perfect. Definitive. A brown tote bag filled with a lovely selection of delectable foods, all prepared by us or our friends. And, easy to prepare, maintain, tote and enjoy. So, ok, a little pressure.
We’ll they’ve finally pulled it together. We offered our first picnics to guests about two weeks ago. And, the feedback’s been worth the wait. I’ve even packed one off to the beach myself- and loved it! The picnic changes with the whims of the chef, but always includes salumi, olives, local cheese, house-made hummus or something similar, fresh greens and a vinaigrette, seasonal fruit from our ranch or a neighbor, flatbread and the most amazing desserts from Patti (right now it’s a decadent chocolate brownie). We offer some great wines that you can purchase to take along, or, if you’ll be picnicking at a winery, pick up wine there.
 Copain Winery
Our concierge team is equipped with a list of our very favorite spots. From Copain Winery, up on a hill overlooking the Russian River Valley, to Quivira Winery, deep in Dry Creek Valley, where you can picnic in the biodynamic vegetable garden overlooking their vineyards, to the Armstrong Redwood Forest
 Armstrong Woods, Redwood Forest
or, my favorite, out on the Sonoma Coast… we can send you in a million great directions. Oh, last Monday, we packed up and headed down to Marshall to Hog Island Oyster Company where we added briny, fresh sweet water oysters to the mix.
.jpg) Oysters at Hog Island
(If you visit their website, download their clam chowder recipe. I brought home 5# of clams and made their chowder with carrots and celery from my garden….So crazy good! But that’s another post…)
Summer’s heating up, the produce coming in from our farm is incredible, the winery gardens are in full bloom or full swing, and, doesn’t a picnic just evoke magical images of timeless, laid back, romance and good old fashioned fun?
I’d love to know some of your favorite picnic ideas and locations- around here, where you are now, or around the world.
Tags: Armstrong Redwood Forest, Armstrong Redwood Grove, beach, biodynamic, cheese, children, coast, Copain Winery, farm fresh, Farmer's Market, farming, get away, local, olives, picnic, pinot noir, produce, Quivira Winery, Redwood Grove, salumi, sparkling wine, tomatoes, wine country, wine tasting, winery Posted in Around the Farmhouse, Farmhouse Programs, Food Musings, Marketing Farmhouse, Picnicking, Uncategorized, Visiting Wine Country, Wine Country Blog, Wineries, winery friends | No Comments »
July 1st, 2010 by Catherine
When you look Farmhouse up on Trip Advisor, or visit us on Facebook, you’ll find a common thread among many of the posts. Why are guests loving Farmhouse? Our location in the heart of Sonoma County’s Russian River Valley? Sure. Great Michelin starred food and comfy rooms? Definitely. But, the thing that keeps guests raving about their stay (check, they really are…) is the incredible level of service that our team provides. Through every department, we absolutely love to exceed expectation. From the delightful young men who will escort you to your room and provide a little property information on the way, to our amazing team of concierges (six of them, on staff to arrange anything your heart desires) to our restaurant team and its devotion to creating not just meals, but incredible experiences, to our spa, filled with passionate therapists and all the season’s bounty, Farmhouse strives to evolve and improve constantly.
I love that about this place! Almost ten years into Farmhouse and the guest experience gets better every single day. Our newest, and perhaps most exciting, program has just launched. So far, the feedback is incredible. You know how we’re always talking about a Farmhouse stay being “experiental”? Well this new program really speaks to that goal.
We call it our “Winery Friends” program. Clever, huh? We’ll, if you have a better name, send it our way… But, here’s how it works. We’ve collected information, over the last year or so, on the Russian River Valley wineries that our guests just rave about. Then, we polled Geoff, our MS, and Megan, our sommelier, on their favorite local wines. Then Joe and I sat down and thought about the actual people that we like the best at the tons of wineries around us. Where all of those criteria converged- great experience, great wine, great people- we circled the winery. Then, we made a bunch of calls.
Basically, the premise was simple. When Joe and I and our staff show up in your tasting room, you roll out the red carpet. We want you to do the same for our guests. That reserve wine you open for us, open for them. That impromptu tour, or grape tasting, or sample from the barrel, offer it to them. And, just about everyone we approached was incredibly enthusiastic. So, you might be asking, “What do the wineries get in return?”. Ha! Another win, win. They get to come over a couple of times a year and have their wines featured during a private tasting for our guests. Plus, we promote their events and promotions to our guests. So, we send them our fabulous guests to taste and maybe buy their wine, and then they get to come over to Farmhouse to meet them again.
These wineries are all open to the public. No appointments required (that was another critical point in being chosen to participate) They’re all nearby. And they’re all treating Farmhouse guests like old friends. Just like we think it oughta’ be.
Here’s the list of wineries. You night like to peruse them before you visit. Some are little, some are bigger, some are in their second or third generation, some are quite new, but they’re all really special.
Arista… C. Donatiello…Copain… Hartford Winery…Iron Horse… J Vineyards… Lynmar…Porter Creek… Russian Hill Estate…Thomas George… Woodenhead
Tags: arista, c. donatiello, copain, family, get away, hartford winery, iron horse, j vineyards, local, lynmar, porter creek, russian hill estate, Russian River Valley, thomas george, wine country, wine tasting, woodenhead Posted in Farmhouse Programs, Marketing Farmhouse, Visiting Wine Country, Wine Country Parties, Wine at Farmhouse, Wineries, winery friends | No Comments »
May 28th, 2010 by Catherine
A year ago today, we opened The Barn (whew!), and I started this blog. What a day! And what a year! I consistently look back and marvel at just how naive Joe and I were- over and over and over… after every phase of expansion… from the day we bought Farmhouse until today. We always think we have it all figured out… lucky we’re quick adapters. Farmhouse really is the “University of Farmhouse”. We continue to grow and to learn. Fortunately, we also continue to meet and recruit excellent mentors and team members who rise to the challenge and help us keep charging forward.
While construction and interior remodel during a recession was truly an excellent experience (the contractors and designers were both on time and under budget… ) selling that new room inventory was a whole different ball of string. Joe, I and our team, have had to really adjust our thinking to move from a high-end inn to a small hotel (which has actually been unbelievably fun!). Instead of just sitting back and waiting for the phone to ring (which is what we always did), we had to come up with strategies to get Farmhouse out to new markets and create and expand a new guest/customer base. We’ve historically been really fortunate with the press and accolades that we’ve gotten, and that’s just driven people to us- oh, and it doesn’t hurt that we’re smack in the middle of the Russian River Valley… Then we could just concentrate on providing an excellent experience for them once they got here… But at eighteen rooms, rather than just ten, and in a recession to boot, some tactical changes needed to happen.
So this past year has been truly event filled. We’ve tried some new things that have been aces and we’ve come up with some really bad ideas (oh well!) We’ve taken our reputation on the road and introduced Farmhouse to some incredible new people-
We’ve reached out to new markets through donations to and participation in various charitable events around the country. Just last weekend Joe and I attended both the Croquet Tournament for Make a Wish, held at Sonoma Cutrer winery and the Gala for Meals on Wheels at the Fort Mason in San Francisco. We donated weekend packages to the auctions and our chefs participated in preparing the incredible food served. We had a great time, met some amazing people and got the word out about Farmhouse to a brand new group of folks. We’ve been getting out and doing a lot more of that sort of thing- turns out it’s nice to get out now and then…
Our trip to New York was insanely cool- we’ve gotten such amazing response from editors. Just about everyone we met with has committed to a story over the next six months! I’ll keep you in the loop, but we did get a little spa story in the May Vogue Magazine already!
 Farmhouse in Vogue, May 2010.
We’ve learned, through our new and wonderful friends at Kurtz-Ahlers and Associates that the travel agencies are alive and thriving- if you can connect with the right ones! We’ve travelled to LA, where we met an extraordinary group of Virtuoso and American Express Centurian Agents. Talk about incredible knowledge- these agents plan the most exotic and complicated trips for people who really know how to travel! Luckily they’ve been interested in us and many have visited and are now sending clients our way! Joe and I are off to Dallas next week to meet with agencies there!
Social Media is King (or Queen, or something). We’re still totally clueless about how it really works (thank you almost 1200 Facebook Fans for bearing with our lame posts) but we’ve hired an Expert to come in and set us straight (fingers crossed!).
And that all just scratches the surface of our new initiatives and ideas. We’ve also done something that we’re VERY excited about. We’ve promoted our amazing Guest Services Manager, Meilani Naranjo into a brand new Revenue Manager position and we’ve hired Tamera Shaw as our new Guest Services Manager. Tamera is charged with implementing a host of new programs, all designed to better serve you. She’s already got a Bell Team in place so we will now offer Bell Service, Room Orientation and Turn Down (starting early June!), She’s expanding retail to offer picnics and a host of cool Farmhouse-style retail items for you and she’s working with our team to bump or level of service to the next level (stuff like this is what I live for!)
The home ranch continues to expand. We’ve budded some pinot noir grapes to an interesting varietal called trousseau and will be selling that to one of our very favorite wineries, Arnot-Roberts- we’re looking forward to seeing that on Farmhouse’s wine list one day! We’ve expanded our garden from one acre to two- and have added a whole slew of new vegetables and fruits, all of which will end up on our guests plates. Our flock of chickens has expanded from 10 to 250. Yes, that’s a big jump! We have a good friend, Marc Felton of Felton Acres, who’s brought his flock of Heirloom Breed layers to our orchard. They’re happily munching grasses, bugs and whatever else they’re finding out there, and the eggs are fabulous! They’re also nicely fertilizing our apple orchard…
And the very best news it that naive but lucky, we’ve come out of our first year as a grown-up “hotel” stronger, more polished and better than ever. And, shockng, but true, we had a great time figuring it all out. Farmhouse has always been, and continues to be, one fantastic adventure. Joe and I come in every day, excited and enthusiastic about what the day will bring. And we’re rarely disappointed. Farmhouse is such an exciting collaboration between our extraordinary team and the new mix of guests that every day brings- It’s a continually evolving entity, and sitting at the helm of the whole thing is one fantastic place to be!
Posted in Around the Farmhouse, Farmhouse Programs, Marketing Farmhouse, Uncategorized, Visiting Wine Country, Wine Country Blog | 1 Comment »
February 25th, 2010 by Catherine
 Images of our new spa taken by photographer Edward Duarte
In partnership with Francis and Alexander (of Auberge du Soleil, Calistoga Ranch, Solage, and Mansion on Peachtree fame, just to name a few) Farmhouse, or rather I, get to announce the launch of our fabulous new farm-to-table spa- Spa at Farmhouse, by Francis and Alexander. Romantic couples treatments, girls getaways or individual therapeutic healing, our new spa embraces and celebrates it all! Exciting, huh? Well, it really, really is for us. Spas are hard. Really hard. I should know. My brother, Joe and I have been at this for nine years. And we’re just getting it right.
 Peggy Francis and Loma Alexander
Joe and I bought the then rundown and oh so creepy (but loaded with potential and a great location in the Russian River Valley Wine Country!) Farmhouse back in 2001 (Valentine’s Day was our first day of ownership), with an incredibly optimistic business plan and about $.50 to update the entire property and realize our “vision” (oh my!).
For what seemed like the worst, but turned out to be the better, we didn’t have the upfront money to simply come in and fix everything that was wrong . We had to do it bit by bit, as we earned the money. But, in retrospect, we could have spent millions- and we’d have spent it all wrong. Our first “direction” for the property “Wine Country Chic Amid the Vines” (what does that even mean?) involved a lot of shiny fabric that couldn’t be burned with a blow torch or stained with squid ink… (apparently we didn’t have much faith in our guests-to-be…) Although we’ve always emphasized local, seasonal and organic- for ages, we just didn’t know how to take that out of the restaurant and into the rest of the business.
We”ll, through endless fits and starts, we’ve finally come to a point where Farmhouse is a truly Farm-to-Table property-wide. Meaning that the food and products from the farm, ours and our neighbors, make their way into every corner of the business. From breakfast to spa to dinner to the product you use in your after dinner bath, the farm is present.
 Early winter honey from the bees on our ranch
Last year we added the Barn, redecorated and re-renovated the Cottages and restaurant- and last but far from least, we’re finally launching the spa we’ve been dreaming of.
The spa has been, by far, the toughest thing to get our arms around. When we purchased Farmhouse, our then marketing consultant convinced us that we needed a “spa”. Guests of a “Wine Country Chic” Inn wanted massage! Well, that sounded good to us. So we hired a local massage therapist to head it up, got some phone numbers from some local therapists and voila! Most of our rooms were too small to fit a massage table, so our “spa” moved all over the property, each location weirder, colder and more remote than the last.
Finally, about 5 years ago, Joe and I decided to give our little spa a home at last. Still, with no budget, we committed our vast and completely under utilized “event center” (that’s a whole other story) to the spa. We built some walls, painted them sky blue and yellow (I know, what was I thinking), brought in a wonderful local woman to “manage” it, and called it a day. With grand dreams of farm-to-table treatments, utilizing our own cream, eggs and honey, Joe and I waited. And waited. And, what we ultimately found out was that spa is easy to talk about and as hard to make happen as a Michelin Starred restaurant. See, we’re learning as we go!
 Outdoor massage, fireside on a Barn deck
This time, I think we’ve done it right. We turned to Myra Hoefer again for the interior design. Weathered wood floors, creamy wainscotted walls and fresh, farmy accents have evolved our two spa rooms into cozy, warm and simply lovely spaces. Our great room has been transformed into a haven for relaxation. Comfy chairs, ottomans and sofas invite guests to choose one of our many lovely spa, art or design books off our huge farm table (or bring a book of their own) and stay a while.
 One of our lovely new spa rooms, designed by Myra Hoefer
Well, I’m so pleased and proud of the partnership that we’ve created and that’s resulted in our incredible new spa! Please, take a look at our new spa menu, an actual masterpiece by Francis and Alexander. We think it’s simply delightful- and hope you’ll join us soon and take advantage of one of our new treatments. They’re all so exciting and will make you feel divine. ”Catherine’s Favorite” really is my favorite. Every time I have it my five year old daughter makes me bring her a towel with the delicious scented oil for her to sleep with (cute, huh?). But the Carrot, Carrot, Carrot is wonderful too. Loma actually has added a fresh carrot eye treatment and has been finishing it up with a carrot muffin. So Carrot times 5? Maybe too much. Then again, maybe not.
Tags: carriage house, consultants, farm fresh, farm-to-table spa, Farmer's Market, farming, Francis and Alexander, get away, Girls Get Away, Girls Retreat, holiday, honey, myra hoefer, new room, Spa Party, Spa Retreat, Therapeutic Spa, wine country Posted in Around the Farmhouse, Farmhouse Programs, Spa at Farmhouse by Francis and Alexander, Uncategorized, Visiting Wine Country | No Comments »
September 23rd, 2009 by Catherine
So, back in January, Rod and I decided the kids were big enough, and the economy was getting tight enough that we’d finally invest in that sexiest-of-all-vehicles, the Fleetwood tent trailer. Yes, the one your folks, or your neighbors, or that somewhat geeky person that you knew had. Or maybe someone really cool, but my associations are pretty geeky.
 There she is in all her camping glory!
So, on a really dismal, pouring-down-rain-day (because when I decide it’s time, it’s time, rain or not) we loaded up the kids (Helen in a black cat suit, tail, ears and all) and trekked down to our local seller of RVs. And lo and behold, there on the lot, all popped out and splendid in it’s fabulous navy blue and burgundy trim with its oh so homey curtains and linoleum, was our soon-to-be home away from home.
Do you think we were aspiring to great adventures in Yosemite or the Grand Canyon? Treks down into Monterey or up into Eureka? Nope, we just wanted to camp at the coast. And that’s all we ever do. Ten or more times now since January. Down to Doran Beach, up to Wright’s Beach. Our friends (and especially my brother Joe, who also has a tent trailer, was our inspiration, and travels all over the greater American West with it) have come to find our very limited selection of destinations a little boring. Maybe even a little weird.
 The view from our campsite.
But not us. We love it. This past weekend, we were out at Wright’s Beach. Spot number nine. Eight has better views of the insanely dangerous surf and astronomically huge waves- and occasional whales- but nine is cozy, tucked in and has its own little fairy forest where the kids explore and play endlessly.
The weather, this past weekend, was epic. The first night, Friday, while we were all fast asleep in what has become a really beloved little home, Sonoma County and beyond was attacked by a totally out of character September lightening and thunder storm. We awoke to a pattering of soft rain and a lightening show, over the ocean, that was beyond cool. It lasted for hours, and we sat around the revived camp fire, all bundled in our foul weather gear, sipping wine and feeling like we were a million miles from Wine County in late summer.
By morning, the sun was out, everything was dry-ish and the lightening from the night before seemed like a dream. Except for the fact that all of our neighbors couldn’t stop talking about it. Wright’s Beach is like that. It’s set up like a little neighborhood. And as often as not, all of the kids form an instant pack and all of the grown-ups meet on the beach at some point, and it gets very friendly. Which we usually like.
 Rocco flying a kite with our neighbor, Mike.
Tags: children, coast, family, farm fresh Posted in Uncategorized, Visiting Wine Country, Wildlife, Wine Country Blog | No Comments »
September 4th, 2009 by Catherine
Yes, and breakfast and lunch too! We’re sold, we’re excited, we’re totally turned on. How did this come about, you might ask. Well, slowly actually. We’ve been reading about the health benefits of various seaweeds and sea vegetables- they’re really high in trace minerals and vitamins, and they’re reputed to have wonderful, medicinal qualities. But, we haven’t been able to commit to integrating it into our daily routines. Until this past weekend.
In an effort to regroup and come down from a really crazy summer/year, Rod and I rented a little house up at Sea Ranch for a week.
 The view from our house
Sea Ranch is one of our absolute favorite spots in the world. Just an hour away from Forestville, but a whole world away from our day to day. Seven days of nothing but rugged coastline and, beautiful beaches, totally isolated, but surrounded by a really exciting, eclectic community. When things get crazy, we pack and head up the coast. We eat, we drink and we just hang out together. And inevitably, we encounter something new and exciting that comes home with us. No, not the snake.
 Helen and her "beach pet" a small, friendly snake
At the Gualala Farmer’s Market last Saturday, we were pleasantly surprised to find a small but thriving community of
 Biodynamic for 32 years.
biodynamic and just plain-old farmers, beekeepers and environmentalists all working together and producing/creating a diverse and beautiful collection of crafts and edibles. Of course we picked up loads of dry farmed tomatoes, lacey lettuces and absolutely gorgeous coastal berries and some fantastic pickles.
 Wild halibut tacos with local tomato salsa, shell beans and, of couse, kombu!
But, what really caught our attention, were two different stalls. One with beautifully crafted containers of salt and what looked like a seasoning mix. And one with bags and bags of dried seaweed and vegetables piled in big baskets.
The first turned out to be a new venture, The Mendocino Sea Salt Company,
 Bob and Lora La Mar, and their bounty
started by Bob and Lora La Mar when fishery closures forced their commercial fishing business to close its doors. Rather than dry up and move away, they discovered another sea harvest. Salt! Bob takes the boat out into deep areas off the Mendocino and Sonoma Coasts and gathers water. He brings it ashore and through a painstaking and meticulous process, crystalizes the salt, extracts it and packages it for sale. Lora, who’s a passionate cook, has created a blend, using locally harvested seaweeds, ground and blended with the salt. At first taste we were hooked. We picked up some salt and some of the blend, which they call Seasoning Sand, and we’ve been using it on everything. It’s local, it’s amazing and it’s healthy! They’re bringing in samples. I”m hoping to start using it in the restaurant.
The other stall housed Gualala Seaweed Products. Founded by the self-proclaimed, and I think actually Renaissance woman, Donna Bishop, they sell all kinds of edible seaweed and seaweed products. Donna does all of the harvesting, drying and processing herself. We picked up some of her Kombu- which is particularly great added to beans, while they’re cooking, stews and soups.
If you haven’t tuned into seaweed yet, look into it. It doesn’t just taste good, it’s easy to use, really versatile, and a super-powerhouse. Best of all, for me anyway, now we can get it locally!
 Helen and Rocco having a tong battle. Things get interesting when we're just hanging out...
Tags: beach, children, coast, coast house, family, Farmer's Market, farming, get away, Gualala, Mendocino, Sea Ranch, sea salt, seaweed, tomatoes Posted in Food Musings, Restaurant Happenings, Visiting Wine Country, Wildlife | No Comments »
August 11th, 2009 by Catherine
I know, that sounds really cute. Gotta get my Farmer’s Market fix? Or what? I go postal for want of fresh picked peas? I go into fits from the absence of perfectly ripe heirloom tomatoes perched, all fragrant and enticing, on my kitchen counter? Well yes. Actually. I realize that that’s just kind of precious. I live in Wine Country, it’s all about the “lifestyle”, here, right? So we put on our big straw hats, grab our chic, but totally organic market baskets, and we head to the market to see and be seen by other fabulous Wine Country-lifestyle-types, while we purchase perfectly peeled, dewy produce and feel so good about “doing the right thing”. Isn’t is just so green to be addicted to the Farmer’s market?
Actually, that’s not it at all. Eating fresh, seasonal food, grown or made by people you know and like, is addictive. Not gotta have my Twinkie addictive, but it becomes a sort of food for your soul as much as anything. Plus, our Farmer’s Market is just so much fun! We go to Sebastopol and Occidental. Western Sonoma County. The Green Capital of America. More kids per capita than any other towns anywhere. Barely even Wine Country at all. Not to say that Wine Country doesn’t have it’s share of Farmer’s Markets that are more, say, glamorous. But they’re not over here in West County.
Sunday morning is all about the market. We roll out of bed, load up the kids and the stroller, grab coffee and a donut at My Friend Joe’s (yes, an actual donut. Helen likes the ones with sprinkles,
 Pink sprinkles for Helen thank you very much
Rod goes for Old Fashioned and Rocco will take anything we give him. For me, it’s those greasy double-fried apple fritter things. I know it’s gross, but it’s only once a week… And, we’re on the way to Nutrition Nirvana…) and head for Sebastopol.
The Farmer’s Markets are a weekly festival. Music, food, crafts and incredible produce grown by dynamic farmers. We load Rocco into the stroller/shopping cart (the super-grubby, falling apart thing that used to be Helen’s) and away we go.
First stop (always, can’t be missed or skipped) Hector’s stand, for honey sticks. $.25 each. Everyone gets two. Helen is in charge of choosing flavors and passing out. We also get spring garlic, sweet onions and lemon cucumbers from Hector.
 That's Hector
Next, once the kids are good and sticky, we make our way all the way to the end of the market. Got to see who’s got what. And it gives the kids a chance to “check out the scene”.
While we sort of “troll” the market, we decide the menu for the week. We have to be strategic- because we’re committed to eating everything we buy. Before next Sunday. Beautiful squash blossoms? Great, what are they going into? And when?
This week’s Sunday dinner ended up being our favorite salad of yellow wax beans (the ones tinged with green that are unbearably fresh and sweet tasting) and grilled fresh, wild Copper River salmon with a sorrel aioli.
 Full Circle Breads
The salad is one we live on in the summer. My grandmother made it religiously every Sunday for my uncle. When she had beans in the garden, anyway. We called it “Cuncia”. I’m not sure where it got the name, but it’s basically tender green beans with sweet onions, olive oil and red wine vinegar. The trick it tossing the beans with the oil and vinegar and salt when they’re still warm. They get the most amazing flavor. In my family you could add canned tuna- the really good Italian stuff packed in oil, you could add potatoes, starchy ones, so the potatoes break up and coat the beans, pesto (that’s from my great grandmother, who put pesto on everything), and that’s it. End of the line. Can’t add anything else. Well, we do. Tomatoes, olives, cucumber, you name it, it all works and is really good.
The sorrel aioli or mayonnaise is also a basic at our house. Pretty much every Sunday Rod makes some form of aioli from whatever herbs we find: nettles, sorrel and basil are standard for us with our eggs and some McEvoy olive oil. We smear it on everything all week.
 Jill from Crescent Moon Farm
Anyway, back at the market… We make our stops at Crescent Moon for all of our hot fresh and dried ground chili peppers (we use a lot of peppers) and heirloom shelling beans, Laguna Farm for lettuces and the sweetest carrots you’ve ever had-their corn is fantastic too.
Then we head over to see Mateoat his Yucatan Tamale cart for “Farmer’s Market Huevos Rancheros”. Fresh duck eggs, housemade tortillas, fresh salsa, peppers from Cresent Moon. You get the picture. And an agua fresca- this week was peach and thyme.
We eat while the kids dance in the fountain with the other jillion half naked, tribal toddlers and pop in for occasional bites and slurps. There’s always live music. Sometimes its great, sometimes it’s not, but the kids always love it, and actually we do too. The Farmer’s Market, like the seasons themselves only lasts a short while. We anticipate its arrival, we mourn its departure and we sure make the most of it while it’s here.
Tags: beans, children, eggs, farm fresh, Farmer's Market, honey, live music, local, Occidental, peppers, seasonal, Sebastopol, tomatoes Posted in Food Musings, Visiting Wine Country, Wine Country Blog | 1 Comment »
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