The Good Chit

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North Bay craft brewers have been among the first to take advantage of California-grown barley malted at Admiral Maltings. Billed as California’s first such malting facility in nearly 100 years, since Prohibition, the new-in-2017 business recently previewed Alameda’s newest watering hole—an attached pub showcasing dozens of craft brews already made with their product.

The lineup of breweries listed on the board at the Rake, named for the implement used in Admiral’s floor-malting process, includes a few familiar North Bay names along with a small roster from California’s over 800 craft-brew outfits. Although they’ve already serviced unsolicited inquiries from Southern California brewers, the priority is to provide malt to the Bay Area, explains Ron Silberstein, who is founder and brewmaster at ThirstyBear Organic Brewery in San Francisco, and cofounded Admiral with Dave McLean, founding brewmaster of Magnolia Brewing Company, and head maltster (sounds trendy, but it’s a traditional job title) Curtis Davenport.

Also key to the mission, says Silberstein, Admiral is certified to process organically grown barley, and sources the balance from sustainably farmed, no-till operations.

“We want to bring regionality back, terroir back, the farmers back to making the product for the local brewers. We want to do that in a sustainable way,” says Silberstein, “and we want to do it in a way that we think adds the most flavor components to the process, which is floor maltings.”

Very little malted barley, the main ingredient in beer, is made this way: on view through a massive window in the pub, the facility’s floor is covered ankle-deep in grain that is slowly “chitting,” or sprouting under innovative floor-based glycol temperature control. Picture a warehouse-size cat litter box—albeit filled with one of those natural, wheat byproduct litters—and you’ve got it.

And what are those flavor components? It’s a tough question, the maltsters admit, as malt aroma and flavor profiling is a new field even among the experts. You’ve got to taste it—in beers like Russian River Brewing’s fresh and grainy Key Grip pale ale and Lagunitas Brewing’s Spawn of Kashmir imperial pale ale, which is Lagunitas-strong at 8.0 percent alcohol by volume, but turned down a notch in hop volume compared to many Lagunitas products, with a creamy, though not too sweet, malt profile that hints of caramel and a fruity red apple skin note. Black Sands’ Oil as Embers coffee milk stout, this one from a new brewery in Lower Haight, is the kind of thick, delicious brew that our
local, organic ice cream has been waiting for.

Admiral Maltings, 651 W. Tower Ave., Alameda. 510.666.6419.

Graceful

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Blistering drama takes the stage at Santa Rosa’s Left Edge Theatre with the North Bay premiere of Ayad Akhtar’s 2013 Pulitzer Prize-winning drama Disgraced. Akhtar has taken the “friends drink to excess and soon truths are revealed” theatrical trope (see Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, etc.) and dragged it into the 21st century.

Amir Kapoor (Jared Wright) is a mergers and acquisitions attorney who’s changed his name and family history and abandoned his Muslim faith in an attempt to climb the corporate ladder. His wife, Emily (Ilana Niernberger), is an artist whose work is heavily influenced by Islamic culture. She’s eager to have her work displayed by Isaac (Mike Schaeffer), a museum curator and the husband of Jory (Jazmine Pierce), a fellow attorney at Amir’s firm.

All seems to be on track until Amir appears at a court hearing after repeated entreaties from his nephew (Adrian Causor) and under pressure from Emily for an imam accused of raising money for a terrorist organization. A short blurb in the New York Times about Amir is the catalyst for the action that ensues at a dinner party where Isaac wishes to share some happy news.

Akhtar manages to address issues of assimilation, cultural appropriation, Islamophobia, anti-Semitism, bigotry, racism, workplace inequity, misogyny and religious and political fundamentalism in 90 compact minutes. The action all takes place in Amir and Emily’s apartment with two short expositional scenes prefacing the play’s main moment—the dinner party. It’s a party that begins well enough, but after ugly truths are revealed, ends in a shocking act of brutality.

While the dinner-party setting may be stock, these characters are not. Director Phoebe Moyer and the cast take a no-holds-barred approach to the material, and it pays off. Each character’s complexity is refreshing and provides a worthy challenge for the experienced cast. The company is excellent in its portrayals of individuals who struggle with their core beliefs and the realization that they may not be who they think they are or—more frighteningly—that they are who they think they are.

That struggle was mirrored by the audience in post-show conversations. The best theater starts a dialogue, not just about the show, but of the issues raised. This production should lead to a lot of discussions and maybe some heated, but hopefully civil, arguments.

There’s no disgrace in that.

Rating (out of 5): ★★★★

Unlicensed Contractor Nabbed in Santa Rosa, State Seeks Additional Victims

The Contractor’s State License Board arrested Tony Van Dang, 30, of Santa Rosa on Friday on charges that he has violated numerous state laws that regulate contractors’ work.

In a release, the CSLB says the multiple charges (four felonies and seven misdemeanors) “are the result of three consumer cases in Santa Rosa and Sebastopol where Dang allegedly took more than $26,000 from the consumers and provided minimal landscaping work before abandoning the jobs.”

Under the Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution, Dang is innocent of all the charges unless and until he is found guilty of them. 

State law requires than any contractor job undertaken for more than $500 must use licensed labor. At the time of his arrest Friday, Dang was already in hot water with the CSLB over unlicensed-work charges stemming from a 2017 undercover sting in St. Helena. His Santa Rosa business is called the Perfect Yard, and he was arrested without incident on Friday by the Santa Rosa Police Department after a CSLB investigator responded to a Perfect Yard posting on craigslist.

In their release today, the CSLB notes that “likely there are many other consumers who’ve been victimized by Dang.” The board asks anyone who’s hired Perfect Yard to contact CSLB investigator Amanda Martinez, Am*************@*****ca.gov.

The board maintains a portal for consumers to check the license status of contractors at www.cslb.ca.gov.

Dodd: Turn off the Power Next Time

“There’s far more areas ready to burn in Sonoma County than that burned,” says Sonoma County Supervisor James Gore. “And there’s far more communities that are more in harm’s way than Coffey Park ever was.”

Egads, that’s scary talk coming from the Fourth District supervisor and freshly minted head of the five-member BOS. Gauging from fire-burn maps put out by Cal-Fire, it’s pretty clear that that Windsor, which Gore represents, dodged a flaming bullet in October.

But what of this year, or the next? In the “new normal,” what’s actually being done to prevent or mitigate against future North Bay fires?

Lots, says State Sen. Bill Dodd, who represents Napa and parts of Sonoma county that got scorched. Dodd was himself evacuated and numerous of his neighbors, he says, lost their homes to October’s fires.

The North Bay legislative team in Sacramento has been doing yeoman’s work since the fires to address numerous fire-fallout questions, issuing bills that grapple with an “ember alert” early-warning system, that enact various fire-insurance reforms, and that provide property-tax bridge relief from the state to municipalities now dealing with a cratered tax base to fund the local schools.

And last week Dodd was in Santa Rosa with others from the delegation—Rep. Jim Wood, Sen. Marc Levine—to talk up SB 894, the “downed power line bill,” says Dodd, which offers the most tangible antidote to any future wildfire that may burden the region.

The bill would require utilities such as PG&E to turn off the power when weather conditions reach a critical mass of high temperature, low humidity and high wind. Those factors were all in play on the dread night of October 8, 2017.

“We know,” says Dodd, “that perhaps every fire was started by downed electrical lines in our grid. What we don’t know until the investigations’ over is who is at fault.”

Shutting of the power because it’s hot and windy and dry, Dodd concedes, is a problematic process fraught with the specter of frustrated customers hollering about false alarms. But it’s also a protocol that’s regularly deployed in states that deal with a lot of tornado activity. And in California, too: After the San Diego fires of 2003, the city used a number of available grants, Dodd says, to deploy micro weather stations that provide real-time data on wind speed, humidity and air temperature. Since 2003, San Diego hasn’t faced the fire fury, but Dodd notes that they’ve shut down the power more than a few times because of fire-friendly weather conditions.

There are also complicating factors owing to the power needs of hospitals and the hospitality sector, he says. They’ll have to “be thinking about becoming more resilient.” Translated: Buy a backup generator or a few of them.

Still, since as Dodd notes most wildfires that impact high-population areas begin in the rural interface, that’s where utilities such as PG&E ought to be focusing their turnoff attention. Under SB 894, “the utilities are going to have to get smart about where those turnoff points are,” he says, “and that urban areas aren’t necessarily shut down.”

Selector Dub Narcotic Is Playing a Surprise Show in Santa Rosa

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With a list of music credits longer than your arm, songwriter, bandleader, record label owner and all-around indie icon Calvin Johnson has spent the last 30 years setting trends and representing the best of DIY culture with his label K Records and his bands Beat Happening, the Halo Benders, the Hive Dwellers and others.

When the Olympia, WA, native was in Sonoma County in 2016, Johnson unveiled his latest musical concoction, Selector Dub Narcotic, which boasted a DJ-oriented sound that mixes dance club beats and Johnson’s droned vocals delivering eccentric lyrics.

Now, Selector Dub Narcotic returns of the North Bay for a surprise last-minute show on Wednesday, Jan 31, at Brew in Santa Rosa. The show will feature two equally unconventional supporting bands in the form of Santa Rosa art rock act Hose Rips and quirky Sebastopol songwriter Big Kitty. Baked goods, beer, coffee, and other food and beverages will be available.

This intimate show is likely to fill to capacity quickly, so show up early on Wednesday, Jan 31, to Brew, 555 Healdsburg Ave, Santa Rosa. Doors open at 6pm, music starts at 7pm. All Ages. $10-$20. For more info, click here.

Day of Prayer and Action for Condemned Author Jarvis Jay Masters

Supporters of author and death-row inmate Jarvis Jay Masters today called for a statewide day of prayer and action for Masters as they implored Governor Jerry Brown and Attorney General Xavier Becerra to take up his cause.

Masters has been in San Quentin since the early 1980s and was implicated in the murder of prison guard Howell Burchfield in 1985. That earned him a capital charge and he spent two decades on San Quentin’s notorious “Adjustment Center” before being transferred to the East Block in 2007, where most of the state’s nearly 800  condemned men are held. He has maintained his innocence all along and has written a couple of books about his experiences in prison and his rough childhood. One of his big supporters is the American Buddhist Pema Chodron.

The website www.freejarvis.org provides a portal to send a letter to Brown and/or Becerra asking that they tune in to Masters’ plight. He did not prevail in his latest appeal to the California State Supreme Court in 2016. An email from the group of Jarvis supporters reports that he is in poor health as a result of his latest hunger strike, which he initiated in November.

I toured San Quentin’s various death houses a couple of years ago and spent some time with Masters interviewing him outside his cell. I’d been a fan of his 2009 This Bird Has My Wings and really couldn’t believe it when I walked by his cell on the ground floor of the East Block. I extended greetings from a fan of his in New Orleans who had first turned me on to Masters’ books and he lit up in a huge, warm smile. He showed me his writing kit—a bucket for a chair, a pen, a writing cap he always wore. Buddhism had helped him to deal with the intensity of the isolation and stress of the experience.  “Spiritual grounding is a real, real enduring force if you ever find yourself in a situation like this,” he told me.

The state’s execution protocols remain in limbo owing to ongoing issues around the constitutionality of the practice.

Mikey Pauker Reaches New Musical Heights on Latest Album

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Pauker_Lovetography_10_17_nowm-35-531x354Berkeley folk and world music artist Mikey Pauker is already known in the Bay Area for his open-hearted melodies and catchy reggae beats, though fans are in for a different musical dimension when Pauker unveils his new album, ASCENSION, with an album-release concert on Jan 25 at Key Tea in San Rafael.
Drawing on influences that range from Bob Marley to The Police, Pauker’s output up to this year have heavily relied on electronic flourishes, yet ASCENSION departs from that aesthetic with a raw instrumental sound captured in live recording sessions under Grammy-nominated producer Warren Huart.
Thematically, ASCENSION takes inspiration for the outpouring of communal strength and resolve that manifested after the North Bay wildfires as well as the hurricanes that impacted Texas and Florida earlier in 2017. With a background in Yoga and mystical practices, Pauker’s sound aims to elevate the listener’s spirit with devotional songwriting.
Be the first to hear ASCENSION’s uplifting music when Pauker plays a full band set tomorrow, Jan 25, featuring opening act Annie Anton and a post-set DJ party at Key Tea, 921 C St, San Rafael. 7:30pm. All Ages. $20 at the door. For details and tickets, click here.

Cali Growers Association Sues State Ag Dept over Acreage Flip-Floppery

In what may be the first cannabis-related lawsuit of the legalization era, the California Growers Association yesterday sued the California Department of Food and Agriculture over the late-game decision by Ag to lift acreage limitations on growers for a few years, so as not to welcome the dreaded onslaught of Big Bud. The charge: “Defendant CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF FOOD AND AGRICULTURE has promulgated a regulatory loophole that eviscerates the statutory five-year prohibition overwhelmingly approved by California voters.” Check out the court filing below: [pdf-1]

Jan. 25: Grizzly History in Santa Rosa

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It’s too bad that the only place you can see a grizzly bear in California today is on the state flag (or in a zoo). Still, tales of encounters with grizzlies from 19th-century settlers and adventurers endure today thanks to people like educator and researcher Susan Snyder, whose book “Bear in Mind: The California Grizzly” has inspired an exhibit of the same name at the History Museum of Sonoma County. Snyder gives a lecture titled The California Grizzly: 19th Century Hero & Antagonist, which paints a rugged and thriving portrait of the grizzly, on Thursday, Jan. 25, at 425 Seventh St., Santa Rosa. 6:30pm. $10–$15. 707.579.1500.

Jan. 27: Sentimental Rock in Sonoma

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Not any band can go on hiatus for over a decade and return with a covers album that’s embraced by both fans and critics, but New York indie-pop veterans Luna are not any band. Led by esteemed songwriter Dean Wareham (Galaxie 500), the band’s new LP, A Sentimental Education, marks a return to music after 13 years and proves that the outfit is still as subtle and hypnotic as ever. This week, Wareham, who played last year’s Huichica Festival, and Luna are in the North Bay for a concert presented by (((folkYEAH!)))) on Saturday, Jan. 27, at Gundlach Bundschu Winery, 2000 Denmark St., Sonoma. 6:30pm. $37. 707.938.5277.

The Good Chit

North Bay craft brewers have been among the first to take advantage of California-grown barley malted at Admiral Maltings. Billed as California's first such malting facility in nearly 100 years, since Prohibition, the new-in-2017 business recently previewed Alameda's newest watering hole—an attached pub showcasing dozens of craft brews already made with their product. The lineup of breweries listed on the...

Graceful

Blistering drama takes the stage at Santa Rosa's Left Edge Theatre with the North Bay premiere of Ayad Akhtar's 2013 Pulitzer Prize-winning drama Disgraced. Akhtar has taken the "friends drink to excess and soon truths are revealed" theatrical trope (see Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, etc.) and dragged it into the 21st century. Amir Kapoor (Jared Wright) is a mergers...

Unlicensed Contractor Nabbed in Santa Rosa, State Seeks Additional Victims

The Contractor's State License Board arrested Tony Van Dang, 30, of Santa Rosa on Friday on charges that he has violated numerous state laws that regulate contractors' work. In a release, the CSLB says the multiple charges (four felonies and seven misdemeanors) "are the result of three consumer cases in Santa Rosa and Sebastopol where Dang...

Dodd: Turn off the Power Next Time

“There’s far more areas ready to burn in Sonoma County than that burned,” says Sonoma County Supervisor James Gore. “And there’s far more communities that are more in harm’s way than Coffey Park ever was.” Egads, that’s scary talk coming from the Fourth District supervisor and freshly minted head of the five-member BOS. Gauging from fire-burn maps put out by...

Selector Dub Narcotic Is Playing a Surprise Show in Santa Rosa

With a list of music credits longer than your arm, songwriter, bandleader, record label owner and all-around indie icon Calvin Johnson has spent the last 30 years setting trends and representing the best of DIY culture with his label K Records and his bands Beat Happening, the Halo Benders, the Hive Dwellers and others. When the Olympia, WA, native was in Sonoma...

Day of Prayer and Action for Condemned Author Jarvis Jay Masters

Supporters of author and death-row inmate Jarvis Jay Masters today called for a statewide day of prayer and action for Masters as they implored Governor Jerry Brown and Attorney General Xavier Becerra to take up his cause. Masters has been in San Quentin since the early 1980s and was implicated in the murder of prison...

Mikey Pauker Reaches New Musical Heights on Latest Album

Berkeley folk and world music artist Mikey Pauker is already known in the Bay Area for his open-hearted melodies and catchy reggae beats, though fans are in for a different musical dimension when Pauker unveils his new album, ASCENSION, with an album-release concert on Jan 25 at Key Tea in San Rafael. Drawing on influences that range from Bob Marley to...

Cali Growers Association Sues State Ag Dept over Acreage Flip-Floppery

In what may be the first cannabis-related lawsuit of the legalization era, the California Growers Association yesterday sued the California Department of Food and Agriculture over the late-game decision by Ag to lift acreage limitations on growers for a few years, so as not to welcome the dreaded onslaught of Big Bud. The charge: "Defendant CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF FOOD...

Jan. 25: Grizzly History in Santa Rosa

It’s too bad that the only place you can see a grizzly bear in California today is on the state flag (or in a zoo). Still, tales of encounters with grizzlies from 19th-century settlers and adventurers endure today thanks to people like educator and researcher Susan Snyder, whose book "Bear in Mind: The California Grizzly" has inspired an exhibit...

Jan. 27: Sentimental Rock in Sonoma

Not any band can go on hiatus for over a decade and return with a covers album that’s embraced by both fans and critics, but New York indie-pop veterans Luna are not any band. Led by esteemed songwriter Dean Wareham (Galaxie 500), the band’s new LP, A Sentimental Education, marks a return to music after 13 years and proves...
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