Listen to Picture Atlantic’s Single, “Billy Banker”

14225551_1215032411888483_4715319036013332146_n (1)Bay Area alternative indie band Picture Atlantic possess a rapid fire rock and roll sound that harkens back to the festive pop of British Invasion bands while repping an authentic West Coast brashness.
Recently, the band released the quick, acerbic and memorable “Billy Banker,” the second official single off the upcoming full length album, Assouf, due out October 21.
Take two minutes out of your Friday to hear the high-energy single below, and head over to Silo’s in Napa tonight to see the band perform with Napa natives and fellow indie rockers Anadel. The first fifty in the door even get that sweet show poster to take home.

Sept. 22-25: Cinema Blend in Kenwood

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An eclectic celebration of cinema and culture, the Wine Country Film Festival marks its 30th anniversary this year and offers four days of international and independent films screening in Kenwood. Highlights of this year’s film festival include Mexico’s submission to the Academy Awards, 600 Miles; the Mediterranean-set animated film The Prophet, produced by Salma Hayek; and The Seasons in Quincy: Four Portraits of John Berger, a vivid look at the philosopher written by Tilda Swinton. The fest also boasts several short films, live music, special guests and more, Thursday through Sunday, Sept 22–25, at various venues in Kenwood. $25 and up. wcff.eventbrite.com.

Sept. 23-25: Vintage Fun in Sonoma

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The second oldest festival in California, the Valley of the Moon Vintage Festival, is 119 years old, though it’s still a fresh mix of music, food and fun for the whole family. This year’s opening gala on Sept. 23 features ’80s dance band Notorious belting out the hits while attendees sample food and wine from local Sonoma restaurants. The party continues through the weekend, and features everything from 5k and 12k runs, grape stomps, the annual firefighter bucket brigade, art and music galore and a Saturday-night parade sure to light up downtown Sonoma. The community gets vintage Friday to Sunday, Sept. 23–25, Sonoma Plaza, First Street East, Sonoma. Free admission. valleyofthemoonvintagefestival.com.

Sept. 23: Sunny Sounds in Petaluma

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Petaluma native Stella Heath grew up on the jazz of greats like Louis Armstrong and New Orleans–infused swing and Gypsy music, and she incorporates all of that into her work as vocalist for French Oak. A worldly blues and jazz outfit, which also features members of Gypsy dance band Dgiin, French Oak is ready to unveil its debut album, Sunnyside, this weekend. Recorded in Santa Rosa and performed in both French and English, Sunnyside’s collection of standards and originals spotlights Heath’s magnetic vocals and the band’s tight rhythms, all of which is on display in an appropriately underground speakeasy-esque jazz club on Friday, Sept. 23, at the Big Easy, 128 American Alley, Petaluma. 8pm. $5. 707.776.4631.

Sept. 24: Visionary Work in San Rafael

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Twenty years ago, a group of Marin residents conceived of a plan to transform a piece of their community and connect with others through an art center. That idea is now known as Art Works Downtown, a multi-gallery space chock-full of talented artists and exciting exhibits. This weekend, the collective commemorates the last two decades with a new show, ‘20/20 Vision,’ that looks on the past, the present and to the future. The opening reception boasts live music from Danny Click, Jerry Hannan and Shana Morrison, art demonstrations and plenty of local food and wine. Saturday, Sept. 24, at Art Works Downtown, 1337 Fourth St., San Rafael. 6:30pm. $45–$55 and up. 415.451.8119.

Barleycorn’s Revenge

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Good and fed up with John Barleycorn last fall, I plowed him down in the ground and, as in the ballad by ol’ Robert Burns, “put clods upon his head.” Would that it was the end of him.

I was inspired by my visit last year with brewer Nile Zacherle, who experimentally grew barley on four acres of fallow Napa Valley vineyard land for his Mad Fritz beer (“Craft Malt,” Bohemian, Sept. 23, 2015) and tantalizing rumors of other such projects. Up in Ukiah, Mendocino Grain Project’s Doug Mosel has grown wheat for Almanac Beer Co., and says there’s interest from brewers for locally grown barley. Malted barley is, after all, the main ingredient in beer—besides water—and in an industry that constantly emphasizes pride of place like craft brewing, locally grown barley is sorely lacking.

Native to the Middle East, Hordeum vulgare, which is barley’s stripper name—wait, no, barley’s Latin name, sorry—grows just about anywhere that hay grows OK. Hay is for horses, while beer made from homegrown barley is for heroes. Besides a little honest toil, a bead of sweat or two off the brow, what could be easier?

After growing, malting and brewing my own barley into a sort of beer, I am completely amazed that ancient civilizations ever discovered brewing in the first place, and having gone through the hassle, why they didn’t quit at once and go back to fermenting goat’s milk. Yak’s milk. Pinot Grigio—anything.

A SIMPLE PLAN

I bought a pound or two of barley at a farm-supply store, scattered the seeds over an area of 700 or so square feet and raked them in the ground with a sort of harrow, the design of which the less said, the better. And waited for rain.

On schedule, John Barleycorn got up again, and was easy to spot. Stout green blades of grass sprung out of the dirt, promptly catching the eye of a resident jackrabbit, also. For several months, I figured the well-mown barley crop was merely a donation to said bunny. Nevertheless, John Barleycorn, “weel arm’d wi’ pointed spears,” as our friend Burns put it, did sprout from the low-growing grass. By May, the seed heads had drooped and dried, and were ready to harvest.

This crop was too small even for the compact research plot combine operated by the Mendocino Grain Project that harvested Zacherle’s barley. I could have gone old-school with a scythe, but recalled what a grim (anyone?) failure it was when, years ago, I once tried mowing tall grass that way. I settled on kitchen scissors, which made for a slow-going spectacle. Indeed, I more than once heard a mocking voice—if only in my own head—quip, “That’s a hell of a way to brew a pint of beer, buddy!”

AN UNDERQUALIFIED PEASANT IN THE WRONG CENTURY

You’ve heard about separating the wheat from the chaff? Same goes for barley. The kernels had to be separated from the mass of straw I’d collected, but without machinery of any kind, I turned to ancient Egyptian murals for reference. One way to thresh a crop is to beat the straw with a stick, but I settled on stomping and hopping around on an oil-stained garage, or threshing, floor. For this step, there was no imagined voice to mock me—just a few imagined, sadly shaking heads.

But when I brushed aside the spent straw, something wonderful was revealed, and gave me an ancient thrill to behold: a healthy pile of perfect, golden grains. After winnowing the remaining chaffs and spikes, I had 12 pounds of barley to brew.

THE UNEXPECTED HABITS OF THE ENDOSPERM

But not just yet. To prepare the starchy endosperm of the grain for brewing, it must first be malted, a process I’d only vaguely understood to have something to do with sprouting. In pictures I’ve seen of the malting floors of Scottish distilleries, this looks picturesque and tidy enough; up close, sprouting barley—trigger warning!—resembles a tangled mass of wriggling white spiders, or, as a friend to whom I’d texted a photo of this said, “Will looking at this make me pregnant?”

While the chits, or rootlets, emerge from the kernel and search for Mother Earth, inside the grain the turgid acrospire reaches for the sky. So you can see where ancient pagan cultures might have got some of their racier religious ideas.

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TOASTED DUST-BUNNY BLUES

After it was dried and kilned, or whatever facsimile of this process I managed (most was air-dried or dried at low temperature in the oven, while a small portion was pan-roasted on a Coleman camping stove), the frizzy mass looked like something I’d brushed out of my cat’s tail. Then it was cleaned—again, tediously—through a sieve and brought to the Beverage People for grinding.

These homebrew suppliers charge only 10 cents per pound for the service, and their advice is free. If I’d asked it of them earlier, I might not have mashed my grain in water at 160 degrees Fahrenheit—a little too high, says the Beverage People’s Bob Peak, but probably not the reason I ended up with a wort, or unfermented beer, with the unimpressive specific gravity of 20 points. This would make a sort of beer, but almost a temperance beverage, a barley tea of 2 percent or so alcohol by volume (ABV)—perhaps it might aid the digestion, but not so nonalcoholic that the Feds wouldn’t crack down on health food stores for it, as they have for .5 percent ABV kombucha. Is my terroir telling me to tone it down?

A CURIOUS CULTIVAR

Another culprit could be the cultivar that I planted, a barley by the name of UC 603. According to a helpful pamphlet from UC Davis that I only consulted after the fact, UC 603 sports a long-haired rachilla, and, should you need to know, “the glume is longer than one-half the length of the lemma.” Released in the 1980s, it was bred to be resistant to net blotch, scald, powdery mildew and leaf rust, but is already susceptible to some of those—so look over your shoulder, UC 603. More to the point, UC 603 is a six-row feed barley, which means it’s higher in protein, less so in starch, which is all-important to beer making. I might have done better with a two-row malting barley.

The malting process is where things most likely went awry, but it’s hard to say exactly how, since there are so many variables in temperature, timing and so on. Again, it’s a wonder that ancient Mesopotamians and Germanic tribesmen alike figured it out without a BS in fermentation science.

If God created wine, it doesn’t follow that the devil made beer; worse, it seems that beer was designed by committee. A committee of nerdy engineers. Drunk, nerdy engineers.

RICE TO THE RESCUE

Peak suggested I add rice extract to boost the alcohol potential of the ale without affecting the flavor profile. I settled on three pounds of rice extract and one pound of light dry malt, and fermentation proceeded without a hitch thereafter. (I had planned to add hops that were grown quite locally in my yard, but like the groundhog of lore, they came up in spring and, not finding it to their liking, retreated once more into the ground. So I brewed with purchased, mellow Golding hops, plus a smidgeon of Columbus and Spalt.)

After adding a dash of corn sugar to produce CO2 bubbles in my “Ranch barley Sonoma Valley terroir amber ale,” I brought a bottle to the Bohemian to get the staff’s reactions.

“Rooty” described the richly colored, amber ale’s aroma best; “sarsaparilla” put a sweeter spin on that. It’s malty, all right, but “fleeting,” with a hint of lemon that develops after time in the glass. Confusion reigned as to which was which when I cracked open a bottle of curiously citrusy, amber Altbier I’d made with purchased malt, and brought for thirsty Bohos in case “ranch barley” was a flop.

The dry finish was noted to drop off, like Budweiser—which makes sense, since Bud is made with a good helping of rice, too. But that rooty, malty flavor, like a soft caramel candy that’s just been dug up from the gravelly clay loam soil? Maybe that there’s the terroir—a fuzzy concept in beer, for sure, as fuzzy as the logic of growing, malting and brewing one’s own barley in the North Bay.

Of course I’ll try it again.

Fest First

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Sour and hoppy beers are sharing the stage with a lineup of funky jazz bands at the first-ever Fünkendänk Oktoberfest, happening next month at SOMO Village Event Center in Rohnert Park.

Gordon Biersch cofounder and HopMonk owner Dean Biersch and RateBeer.com founder Joseph Tucker conceived of the idea, a twist on the traditional German harvest celebration, as a way to spotlight what are today the two most innovative craft beers being produced in the United States.

“We think they’re great companions, not only because they’re the two most popular styles of beer right now, but they’re also balanced flavors,” says Tucker of the sour and hoppy selections. As he explains, sour beers cleanse the palate after hoppy brews coat the tongue, and hoppy beers smooth out the prickly flavors of the sours.

Biersch adds that the event is taking a page from Belgian brewers, where wild yeast produces more random flavors in the beer, in contrast to the German practice of precise beer making.

“You don’t expect to taste exactly the same beer every time around,” Biersch says. “I think that’s appealing to the small-batch beer culture happening right now; rather than looking for the same flavor every day, [people are] looking for the nuance.”

When hoppy and sour beers first emigrated here from Europe, American brewers pushed the flavors to their extremes. Tucker notes that beer makers are now concerned more with balance, subtly and complexity in their flavors.

“We’ve arrived with sour,” Tucker says. For German beer purists, Biersch will also be pouring traditional Hefeweizens and pilsners from huge oak barrels.

Fünkendänk Oktoberfest not only highlights these flavors from breweries like HenHouse, Lagunitas, Marin Brewing, Russian River and many others; it also boasts a lineup of nationally touring bands to add to the party atmosphere.

Headlining Fünkendänk is New Orleans institution Galactic, a funky favorite of the Crescent City for more than two decades who have cultivated a massive following. Also from New Orleans, Big Sam’s Funky Nation mixes in everything from hip-hop to rock ‘n’ roll into their jazzy grooves. Frontman Big Sam (pictured) is a veteran of the Dirty Dozen Brass Band, and his ensemble’s credentials could fill a jukebox.

Brooklyn Afrobeat soul band Pimps of Joytime also make their way to the North Bay for the show. Local trad and Gypsy-jazz groups the Dixie Giants and Royal Jelly Jive do their thing as well.

“These are jammy bands, great technical bands and super fun,” Biersch says. “The focus is to get the party started and make this an annual event.”

Fruitful Return

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Fruit Bats began as songwriter Eric D. Johnson’s four-track tape solo project in 1997, evolved into a full band in 2001, spawned five well-received indie folk-rock albums over the course of 10 years and then went silent in 2011 when Johnson suffered a family tragedy.

Grief-stricken over his wife’s miscarriage, Johnson abandoned the laidback, summery sounds of Fruit Bats for a 2014 solo album, simply titled EDJ. Still, the Fruit Bats moniker clung to Johnson’s psyche, and at the beginning of this year he announced that the band that had long defined his musical output would return. Last May, Fruit Bats released their sixth record, Absolute Loser, to critical praise. Despite its downtrodden title, Absolute Loser is actually a stunningly evocative pop record of full-bodied ballads and smoothly textured indie-rock gems that sonorously retrieve Johnson’s spirit from the depths it had fallen.

Aside from Fruit Bats, North Bay audiences know Johnson best as one of the principal organizers of the excellent Huichica Music Festival that since 2010 has annually gathered the best indie musicians from around the Bay Area and beyond to Gundlach Bundschu Winery in Sonoma. Now fans get a chance to see Johnson back in his natural form when Fruit Bats play on Saturday, Sept. 24, at HopMonk Tavern,
230 Petaluma Ave., Sebastopol. 9pm. $18;
21 and over. 707.829.7300.

Pot 101

According to ProCon.org, the number of medical marijuana users in California is approximately 800,000, or 2 percent of the total population. Based I think that number could easily grow to 20 percent, if barriers to obtaining care are overcome.

It’s my perception that there is still a vast population that does not know that they can benefit significantly from certain types of medical marijuana. To look at only one issue, research suggests that migraine headaches may be linked to an endocannabinoid deficiency. Endocannabinoids are cannabinoids (analogous to THC, CBD, etc.) produced within the body. Sometimes, under a condition known as clinical endocannabinoid deficiency syndrome, the body stops producing sufficient endocannabinoids, which can lead to various health problems. As a result, the body needs plant-based cannabinoids to mitigate those health conditions. Same as a diabetic needs insulin, some people need cannabinoids to balance their health.

Understanding that cannabis can help is the first barrier to get over. Then you can ask, is there a dispensary near me that has products that will benefit me? How do I know which questions to ask? Will they laugh at me behind my back? Will I find someone who can answer my questions with some degree of clarity?

The first thing you need to access cannabis is a doctor’s referral. A Google search (“medical marijuana card” plus “Santa Rosa”) will give you multiple options. I go to Compassionate Health Options on Fifth and E streets, across from the parking lot behind Russian River Brewing Company.

Once you have your card, you will need to visit a dispensary. Mercy Wellness (Cotati), OrganiCann (Santa Rosa) and Peace in Medicine (Santa Rosa and Sebastopol) are among the better-known locations in Sonoma County. (Petaluma and Healdsburg do not have dispensaries.)

The hard part is getting over the anxiety of your first visit. Embrace your newness. Ask dispensary employees if they have anyone experienced with new patients. Don’t be afraid to ask questions.

Last week, I went to two dispensaries in Sonoma County and presented myself as a first-time patient. I was underwhelmed. My wine-industry friends talk about creating a “memorable guest experience” for new and returning visitors. Some of the local dispensaries need that same vision.

So if things don’t feel right, politely excuse yourself and try another location. Eventually, you will find that memorable guest experience and a regimen that works for you.

Michael Hayes works for CBD Guild. Contact him at mh*******@*****st.net.

Napa Is Hopping

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It’s not all wine in Napa Valley. The area’s craft beer scene is on the rise.

Barry Braden was running a restaurant in San Diego when he met brewer Alex Tweet, formerly of Ballast Point and Modern Times breweries. The two quickly bonded over hoppy beers, relocated to Northern California and opened Fieldwork Brewing in the industrial setting of west Berkeley in February 2015.

“It’s been going really well for us,” Braden says. “And one of the great things about our license, which is a small beer manufacturer license, is that we have the opportunity to open up to six what we like to call satellite taprooms.”

In addition to the Berkeley spot, Fieldwork opened its first satellite taproom in Sacramento in August, and now the brewery is working on its second satellite location, at the Oxbow Public Market in Napa.

When Braden and Tweet open the new Napa taproom sometime in mid-October, they’ll be joining a small but dedicated group of Napa brewers, such as Napa Smith Brewery, Napa Palisades Saloon and nano-brewery Tannery Bend Beerworks.

One of the reasons Fieldwork wants to open these taprooms is to present and talk about their beer the way they want. Being able to control the process from grain to tap is a priority for the brewery.

Directing the narrative of the many brews that Fieldwork offers is also important, since it produces many distinct and uniquely flavored beers. One of their rising stars is a Petit Verdot Grand Gose, a spin on the salty-tart beer originally from Germany, in which wine grapes are added.

Fieldwork also excels at hop-forward IPAs and double IPAs, and nontraditional saisons, such as the Rancher Farmhouse Ale, which incorporates fresh lemon and black pepper aromas, and the refreshing Salted Cucumber Ale. All told, Braden estimates that Fieldwork has made 115 distinct beers since opening less than two years ago.

“Our whole thing is to rotate beers so the people visiting the taproom can always expect to see something new on the tap list. That’s the fun part,” says Braden.

Fieldwork is also dedicated to serving the beer as fresh as possible. That’s why you won’t see Fieldwork beers in cans or bottles at the supermarket, though a huge part of their business in Berkeley are the growlers and increasingly popular crowler cans that the brewery fills onsite.

For Braden, the Oxbow location is essential to the decision to move to the North Bay, and he’s excited to join the community there. “The city of Napa was very high on our list,” he says, “though for us, it has to be about location.”

“There’s a lot of demand for craft beer in Napa,” Braden says. “I think Napa is an underserved market, and I’m hoping we can carve out our own little niche there.”

Listen to Picture Atlantic’s Single, “Billy Banker”

Bay Area alternative indie band Picture Atlantic possess a rapid fire rock and roll sound that harkens back to the festive pop of British Invasion bands while repping an authentic West Coast brashness. Recently, the band released the quick, acerbic and memorable "Billy Banker," the second official single off the upcoming full length album, Assouf, due out October 21. Take two minutes out of your Friday...

Sept. 22-25: Cinema Blend in Kenwood

An eclectic celebration of cinema and culture, the Wine Country Film Festival marks its 30th anniversary this year and offers four days of international and independent films screening in Kenwood. Highlights of this year’s film festival include Mexico’s submission to the Academy Awards, 600 Miles; the Mediterranean-set animated film The Prophet, produced by Salma Hayek; and The Seasons in...

Sept. 23-25: Vintage Fun in Sonoma

The second oldest festival in California, the Valley of the Moon Vintage Festival, is 119 years old, though it’s still a fresh mix of music, food and fun for the whole family. This year’s opening gala on Sept. 23 features ’80s dance band Notorious belting out the hits while attendees sample food and wine from local Sonoma restaurants. The...

Sept. 23: Sunny Sounds in Petaluma

Petaluma native Stella Heath grew up on the jazz of greats like Louis Armstrong and New Orleans–infused swing and Gypsy music, and she incorporates all of that into her work as vocalist for French Oak. A worldly blues and jazz outfit, which also features members of Gypsy dance band Dgiin, French Oak is ready to unveil its debut album,...

Sept. 24: Visionary Work in San Rafael

Twenty years ago, a group of Marin residents conceived of a plan to transform a piece of their community and connect with others through an art center. That idea is now known as Art Works Downtown, a multi-gallery space chock-full of talented artists and exciting exhibits. This weekend, the collective commemorates the last two decades with a new show,...

Barleycorn’s Revenge

Good and fed up with John Barleycorn last fall, I plowed him down in the ground and, as in the ballad by ol' Robert Burns, "put clods upon his head." Would that it was the end of him. I was inspired by my visit last year with brewer Nile Zacherle, who experimentally grew barley on four acres of fallow Napa...

Fest First

Sour and hoppy beers are sharing the stage with a lineup of funky jazz bands at the first-ever Fünkendänk Oktoberfest, happening next month at SOMO Village Event Center in Rohnert Park. Gordon Biersch cofounder and HopMonk owner Dean Biersch and RateBeer.com founder Joseph Tucker conceived of the idea, a twist on the traditional German harvest celebration, as a way to...

Fruitful Return

Fruit Bats began as songwriter Eric D. Johnson's four-track tape solo project in 1997, evolved into a full band in 2001, spawned five well-received indie folk-rock albums over the course of 10 years and then went silent in 2011 when Johnson suffered a family tragedy. Grief-stricken over his wife's miscarriage, Johnson abandoned the laidback, summery sounds of Fruit Bats for...

Pot 101

According to ProCon.org, the number of medical marijuana users in California is approximately 800,000, or 2 percent of the total population. Based I think that number could easily grow to 20 percent, if barriers to obtaining care are overcome. It's my perception that there is still a vast population that does not know that they can benefit significantly from certain...

Napa Is Hopping

It's not all wine in Napa Valley. The area's craft beer scene is on the rise. Barry Braden was running a restaurant in San Diego when he met brewer Alex Tweet, formerly of Ballast Point and Modern Times breweries. The two quickly bonded over hoppy beers, relocated to Northern California and opened Fieldwork Brewing in the industrial setting of west...
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