Nov. 21-22: Party Weekend in Marin

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Birthdays and anniversaries make the best parties, and Marin’s got both this weekend. First, Rancho Nicasio is celebrating 17 years of live music and great food with an anniversary weekend that also doubles as a birthday party for singer and longtime Rancho booker Angela Strehli, the “Queen of Texas Blues,” who’s called the North Bay home for 25 years. The stars will be out for this birthday bash, with Champagne, hors d’oeuvres and plenty of lively entertainment. The next night, Strehli takes the stage at Throckmorton Theatre to sing with the Blues Broads and keep the good times rolling. Saturday, Nov. 21, at Rancho Nicasio, 1 Old Rancheria Road, Nicasio, 415.662.2219. 6pm. $25–$30. Sunday, Nov. 22, Throckmorton Theatre, 142 Throckmorton Ave., Mill Valley. 7:30pm. $25–$40. 415.383.9600.

Nov. 22: North Bay Best in Petaluma

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Two months back, North Bay readers voted Misner & Smith as Best Folk Band in the Bohemian’s annual NorBay Music Awards. At the time, the duo of guitarist/vocalist Sam Misner and bassist/vocalist Megan Smith were out of the country, touring in Europe as part of a cultural exchange program that took them to Bulgaria. Now the pair is back in the states and ready to serenade the North Bay once again. They appear along with Sonoma County pedal steel guitarist Josh Yenne for a night of rich harmonies and heartfelt jams on Sunday, Nov. 22, at the Big Easy, 128 American Alley, Petaluma. 7pm. Free. 707.776.4631.

Wait and Sea

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All over the North Bay in recent days, crab committees have been meeting, boards of directors have been discussing, and nonprofit organizations have fretted over the question: What to do about our annual Dungeness crab feed?

The state delayed the opening of the Dungeness crab season indefinitely on Nov. 5 when a potentially fatal neurotoxin, domoic acid, was discovered in the Dungeness and in red crab, a year-round fishery which was also shut down. This was very bad news for a $60 million California crabbing industry, and especially for the commercial crabbers who haul the pots, but the closure has also rippled to dozens of crab feeds planned in the North Bay in coming months.

Some organizations have come to rely on the fundraising power of the popular Dungeness crab—tickets in the $40–$60 range are often sold out months in advance—and there is real pain afoot if the crustaceans aren’t available in time for the events, many of which are held toward the end of the commercial crab season, in February.

“This is not chump change we’re talking about, but some serious bucks for some serious projects” says Petaluma Rotary Club president Gary Brodie. His organization hosts an annual February crab feed in conjunction with a big raffle that has raised up to $35,000 for a range of programs: an annual $8,000 set-aside for gifts for needy kids around the holidays; a $5,000–$8,000 check to support a local free-dictionary program for third graders.

Brodie is hopeful that scuttlebutt about a season opener by early in the new year will bail out the crab season, even if the huge spike in demand could send the price through the roof. “At that point, we’ll find out if it’s going to reopen,” says Brodie, who owns an auto shop in Petaluma. “If it doesn’t, I’m sure we will replace the crab with some other food. We’re in wait-and-see mode.”

The Sonoma County Farm Bureau says it has been assured by its Bodega Bay crab wholesaler, the Tides Wharf, that come hell or high levels of domoic acid, there will be crab a-plenty at the organization’s Feb. 6 event.

“People want the crab and want to know what we are doing,” says Marisa Ruffoni, a spokesperson at the Farm Bureau. “We’ve gotten a few calls to see if we’re going to stick to it.”

They are. The Great Sonoma Crab and Wine Fest is in its 27th year and draws 1,200 or more people a year, Ruffoni says. The feed is held to raise money for scholarship and agricultural-education programs, and features a gigantic inflatable Dungeness crab that hangs above crab-laden tables at Grace Pavilion at the Sonoma County Fairgrounds. Ruffoni says the worst-case scenario is that the Farm Bureau may need to purchase crabs from Washington state (where there is no domoic disaster), via their Bodega wholesaler.

“I have heard that some are trying to find crab from elsewhere, and I think that might be a wise backup plan,” says Jordan Traverso, a spokesperson at the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, which shut down the Dungeness and rock-crab fisheries. Traverso says the CDFW is itself in wait-and-see mode. “I really can’t say how long this closure will last,” she says via email. “The California Department of Public Health is doing testing, and once they see the levels go down to the point that it is not a significant human health risk, they could be compelled to lift the health advisory. Then the Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment could be compelled to change their recommendation to us regarding the closures. I really have no way of knowing how long that could take. We are operating from the recommendation of OEHHA.”

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Other organizations have looked past the crab in their worst-case planning. “We were just saying how we’re going to have to do something else,” says Kim Henson, chair of the Penngrove Social Firemen, which raises money for the local fire department. Henson, whose son is a San Francisco crabber, says the organization is talking about a steak dinner in Penngrove Park as an alternative to its February crab feed.

This isn’t the organization’s biggest fundraiser, says Henson, but adds that the Rancho Adobe fire department in Penngrove hosts a crab feed and fundraiser that it has come to rely on for purchasing equipment. The crab shutdown, she says, “will impact them greatly. They make around $10,000 a year and use it to buy critical equipment they need.”

In order to reopen the fisheries, state health officials need to see a two-week trend that would show that levels of the acid had dropped below 30 ppm. The OEHHA says it has been encouraged by the most recent tests undertaken by state health officials. “Thus far they remain above [30 ppm], but there has been some sign of improvement,” says Sam Delson, deputy director at OEHHA. “These crabs do process [domoic acid] through their system, but they have a slow metabolism.”

Time’s running out for the Novato Horsemen, which hosts an annual Valentine’s Day crab feed in February. “We haven’t made a decision, but we’ll have to make it by [this] week,” says Scott Colvin, a board member and past chairman of the organization’s crab committee. He’s not especially optimistic. “I don’t think we are doing it,” he says. Even if he season were to reopen, Colvin says, “the price of crab will be so astronomical—the numbers I’m hearing are up to $15 a pound.”

The Novato Horsemen event has been going on for at least 20 years, Colvin says, and worked with a broker in years past to supply the crab. “We’ve got to get on the phone with him,” he says. “This is a yearly deal, people call us and they expect us to do the crab. We’re kind of sitting here waiting and hoping for the best. It’s our first fundraiser of the year, and we usually make about $5,000 that we can put toward feed in our cattle program. We’re talking spaghetti, but we’re not going to make the money with that,” Colvin says.

As feed organizers fret, the state continues with its work as it emphasizes public safety. “We certainly sympathize with organizations that have a cherished tradition of holiday crab feeds,” Delson says. “We know that it’s a big tradition, and we certainly hope that the acid levels will reach a level where we can make a recommendation. I can’t say when that will be, and public health and safety is the overriding priority.”

The Bolinas Community Center is a relative newcomer to the crab-feed scene, having hosted two in recent years, but development director Randi Arnold says that the feeds quickly became the center’s leading fundraiser after its annual Labor Day blowout, netting $4,000 in 2013 and then about $14,000 the following year.

The center has already shifted gears to a blues-and-barbecue theme for its late January event, which, like all these events, takes months to organize and begins with contacting fishermen or fish brokers, and getting enough crab commitments to feed the crowd. The center sold 140 tickets to its last feed.

“We decided that it wasn’t worth the risk to put all that work into it if the crabs aren’t going to be edible,” Arnold says. “But we’re not set in stone. If by Dec. 31 it is lifted, crab would be our preference.”

Traverso stresses that the state is sympathetic to the crab-feed conundrum but isn’t lifting the ban until it’s safe to do so for everyone. “It would be awful if a number of people got sick at a fundraising event due to domoic acid,” she says.

State Sen. Mike McGuire has called a public meeting on Dec. 3 to address the ongoing crab crisis, from 3pm to 6pm at the Steele Lane Community Center in Santa Rosa.

Debriefer: November 17, 2015

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HELP WANTED:
POT CZAR

The state is getting serious about its freshly enacted medical marijuana policy—so serious that it now has a top pot job listed on the Department of Consumer Affairs that pays up to $125,000 a year for the right candidate.

The position would serve a bureaucracy to be in place by 2018 under a set of state laws passed this year, and would serve “at the pleasure of the Governor,” according to the job posting. Responsibilities are vast and include “oversight, policy, operations and management” of the soon-to-be created Bureau of Medical Marijuana Regulation. “Applicants must demonstrate the ability to perform high level administrative and policy functions effectively.”

An emergent high-tech medical-cannabis industry cheered the move as a clear indication that the normalization of a cannabis culture in California is afoot.

“California’s medical-marijuana industry has gained itself a reputation as being loosely regulated, oftentimes at the detriment of patients and business owners,” says Seth Yakatan, CEO of Kalytera Therapeutics, a California company that’s developing synthetic cannabidiols (CBDs) to treat conditions ranging from osteoporosis to Prader-Willi syndrome. “If this budding industry is to be taken seriously, California’s Bureau of Medical Marijuana Regulation will need to be properly funded and managed, and this recent announcement by the California government indicates a desire to make sure that happens,” Yakatan says.

KILLER ARGUMENT

Two big recent developments in the land of the state-sanctioned killing of its citizens: As expected, Gov. Jerry Brown’s administration offered capital punishment a lifeline with the announcement last week that it had hashed out a so-called single-shot execution protocol to replace a three-drug cocktail that has yielded unpleasant results in several executions gone awry around the country. Now the state plans to flood the bloodstream of the condemned with barbiturates and be done with it.

Days after the state issued its updated execution protocol, the three judges of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit ruled on the Jones v. Davis case, which had argued that delays and arbitrary application in the implementation of the death penalty in California was itself an act of cruel and unusual dimensions, and therefore unconstitutional. The appeals court kicked the case back to the single-judge circuit court from whence it had emerged, without actually addressing the constitutional issue raised in the original suit.

The Death Penalty Information Center (DPIC), a national clearinghouse for all things capital punishment, reports that the appeals court couldn’t rule on the constitutionality of the death penalty because of procedural rules that prohibit it from considering what it called “a novel constitutional rule” built in to the lawsuit—that interminable delays can add up to a violation of the Eighth Amendment.

“The appeals court decision sends the case back to the district court,” reports the DPIC, “to address other challenges to the constitutionality” of the conviction and death sentence of Ernest Jones, who remains on death row in San Quentin—one of 749 condemned lives in limbo in California.

As the federal courts sort out constitutional issues, 2016 will likely see two competing state ballot initiatives pegged to capital punishment: one would replace the sentence with life without parole; the other seeks to limit appeals and other roadblocks to a speedy death.

Letters to the Editor: November 18, 2015

One Child Rule

I was moved to tears by the article on the increased population growth in Petaluma (“The Road Ahead,” Nov. 11).
I lived in Petaluma as a young woman in the 1970s, and it was too crowded back then! How about educating all races, socioeconomic groups and ages about the destruction of our planet on which we all depend? We have normalized overcrowding, pollution, noise, crime, animals going extinct and fighting over resources. How about only allowing newcomers who have one child or none?

Sebastopol

Dying Tradition

Some traditions are positive and make society stronger, but some have proven to weaken our character, damage our health and are cruel to others. The tradition that we must scrutinize today is the merciless killing of billions of farmed animals, and particularly poignant this month, the Thanksgiving turkey.

What was traditionally seen simply as “food” by older generations requires deeper reflection and examination with new eyes. Much like chickens bred for their meat, turkeys are overcrowded in windowless, filthy buildings and forced to live in their own waste. Suffering and misery is all they know.

As people become aware of the wretched conditions birds endure in the poultry industry, companies are attempting to appease customers by describing turkey meat as “humane” or “free-range.” Unfortunately, these labels are largely insubstantial and unregulated, and animals are still debeaked, de-toed, violently handled and sent to a frightening, painful slaughter under these “humane” labels.

Tradition should uplift and strengthen a community. As long as a tradition causes suffering, it is hindering our entire society’s ability to thrive. By practicing compassion, love and kindness, we can create a society where our holiday traditions facilitate a better world, for ourselves and all species on earth.

Penngrove

18–0

I saw Oldtymer’s letter about my story (“Busted Again,” Nov. 4). I would like to respond. I have been through the courts many times for growing and supplying medical marijuana to low-income patients. Every single time the case has been dismissed. Oldtymer, you have characterized me as being a greedy person, and all about making money. Only one problem, oldster! There is no money. The district attorneys in all my cases would have pursued the charges if they had seen criminal activity. And they did not. The fact is, 18 felonies dismissed is overwhelming evidence of my compliance with the law in each and every case. That’s why the district attorneys dropped the charges: because I didn’t break any laws.

Oldtymer, if you are broke and can’t afford medical marijuana, I will provide it for you. You’ll have to get a recommendation from a doctor. My lawyer informed me that even after the new laws go into effect, I’ll still be able to give medical marijuana out to my collective members, farm-to-patient.

Forestville

Write to us at le*****@******an.com.

Pilgrims’ Progress

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Want to have a real locavore Thanksgiving? Best set your sights on next year. At this point, the key is whether you’re really going to make those acorn crackers with chèvre and prickly pear chutney in time. You’ll probably want to start gathering the acorns on Black Friday—at the very latest.

The acorn appetizer recipe, largely sourced from foraged ingredients, is one of 11 from a West Marin Thanksgiving menu featured in the autumn issue of the Inverness Almanac. A minty yerba buena julep kicks off the celebration, chips and crackers precede the meaty mains (more on those in a minute) and panna cotta rendered from candy cap mushrooms closes out the feast with a dessert that’s definitely not grandma’s pumpkin pie.

“You are foraging year-round to make this menu,” says farmer and menu co-author Molly Myerson, who created the menu with Leah Fritts. Fritts hails from the Sierra Foothills town of Paradise and has worked at and enjoyed restaurants up and down the coast, most recently as maitre’d at Sir and Star in Olema, a post she left to focus on events management and “helping to support and grow
the amazing creative talents of West Marin, from chefs and farmers, to musicians, artists and naturalists.”

Fritts credits Myerson with most of the recipes. “She was able to paint the picture and with my experience in restaurants (mostly loving them and eating in them), I was able to offer suggestions, and a few personal touches I felt would be intriguing and delicious.”

Myerson grows vegetables and tends to a thriving quail-egg enterprise at Little Wing Farm on an acre in Bloomfield, between Petaluma and Tomales. The dinner, Myerson says, is grounded in a traditional Thanksgiving menu, with upgrades and substitutions plucked from the obscurity of the deep woods and meadows of the greater Point Reyes wilderness and beyond. You’ll pour a rich, spicy sage gravy over that wild turkey stuffed with porcini, fennel and apple, as you reach for the rosehip-cranberry sauce.

Myerson, 34, is a native of Washington Heights in upper Manhattan, and has been farming in the North Bay for eight years. Her home neighborhood is definitely known more for its Cubano sandwiches and plantain-based platters of mofongo than prickly pear chutneys and mushroom tortes.

Myerson graduated from Bard College and headed west without any of the knowledge that would come to sustain her and her farm, she says. She supplies produce to the Point Reyes Station restaurant Osteria Stellina, and quail eggs to numerous Bay Area businesses. Her knowledge was earned through accrued “dirt time”—walking, finding and digging in West Marin.

Though Myerson loves foraging, she knows it’s a touchy subject because its popularity can trample the land. Foraging should be slow food, with an emphasis on the sloooow.

“People come here and don’t respect that there are people who have been watching over and tending to forage spots for decades,” Myerson says. “The pushback comes from a good place: the invasive species of out-of-town foragers. The menu is not an invitation for everyone in San Francisco to come here to forage rosehips.” Instead, it honors the idea of intentionality around food, she says, with a menu that respects the land and those who live from it.

“It’s all about how you forage,” Myerson says. “You are on the land you love, and you protect [it], and you are getting food from that land as you harvest in a respectable way.”

Of course, there are shortcuts and supermarkets that will help you out, but if you want to get hardcore about it over the course of the year, you’ll need to shoot or otherwise acquire a deer; you’ll have to dive for an abalone—for which a license is required, and a guide if you haven’t done it before; and you may be driven to man-grab one of the numerously unhinged wild turkeys that seem to wander about everywhere.

The abalone will be crusted and feature a crab-butter dipping sauce (give it up for the currently toxic Dungeness and rock crab as you bow your head in prayer this year), while the venison will be matched with roasted salsify root and huckleberry.

Note that it can take hours to gather enough of the berries for one pie. But you will experience the taste of that pie differently, Myerson says, even if it actually tastes the same as what you’d buy in four minutes at Whole Foods.

Try to wrap your head around that one as you start to gather the acorns. It will be worth it, Myerson insists—and may reveal your inner “balanoculturalist,” your archaic acorn eater, who appreciates the nutritional value of the nut of an oak and is willing to work for it.

“The process is part of the reward,” Myerson says. “You are changed by the food.”

Stylish Kids

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The eateries and wineries came first. Then came the women’s boutiques. Now there’s Littlefour, a new store in Sebastopol’s Barlow center that’s brimming with colorful children’s clothing and accessories.

Owner Danielle Rodrigues, 36, has been designing women’s and children’s clothing for most of her life. She began her career in San Francisco, then relocated to Vallejo where cheaper rent allowed her to create a live-work studio and storefront called Littlefour. She recently moved to Sebastopol to open Littlefour’s flagship store and be part of the community. As newcomer, she exhibits wide-eyed infatuation with Sebastopol.

“I came for the day and immediately fell in love with the town and what the Barlow was doing,” she says. “After some online sleuthing, I learned that a big chunk of the businesses in the Barlow are women-owned and operated, and that just made me want to be part of it even more.”

The Vallejo store still exists, but Sonoma County is now Rodrigues’ home. She got her start selling designs on Etsy and aims to dress children in her signature prints and styles.

“I solely made women’s clothing for years and found myself with tons of scrap fabric that I loved too much to get rid of. Children’s clothing seemed like a no-brainer for these scraps. I listed a few things on Etsy and it just took off.”

The store’s current children’s clothing selection includes colorful headbands, tiny harem pants and bloomers, and dresses and beanies that all feature original graphic prints, some of them drawing on ikat and Navajo designs.

“Kids are way more fun to dress,” she says. “They are more open to taking chances than adults.”

In addition to her own line, Rodrigues carries clothing and accessories with a playful, tongue-in-cheek vibe for the sophisticated mom and dad.

Located in one of the Barlow’s most remote corners, Littlefour feels spacious and a little empty. That might be intentional.

“I don’t want Littlefour to be just another boutique,” says Rodrigues. “I want to eventually host classes and workshops by local artist, host pop-ups featuring our designers and have monthly movie nights. I want it to be a fun place to hang out in, learn some things, and hopefully you’ll leave feeling inspired.”

With the recent influx of San Francisco transplants into Sebastopol’s already bohemian scene, a crowd of stylish parents and their offspring is almost guaranteed.

“There is a definite need for something a little more young, hip and fresh,” she says of Sebastopol’s emerging fashion scene. “Sebastopol has great vintage stores, a couple of very stylish boutiques and options for the older population, but not for the younger crowd.”

Littlefour, 120 Morris St., Sebastopol, Ste. 100. 707.861.9886.

A John Trubee Primer

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For an artist who’s insisted on going it alone for most of his career, John Trubee took his time creating his own record label. Founded in 2013, Trubee Records is the horse’s mouth for the songwriter’s lyrical lunacy and musical madness, and these three releases are the perfect starting point for the curious listener.

‘A Blind Man’s Penis and Other Smash Hits, John Trubee & the Ugly Janitors of America

This album is the perfect starter kit for anyone interested in Trubee’s music. Spanning decades and collecting songs that have long since gone out of print, the record opens with the infamously offensive “Blind Man’s Penis,” done up in its original, classic Nashville recording. Other tracks feature longstanding Trubee collaborators like vocalist Mark Langton and pedal steel guitarist Chas Smith, and the songs range from the silly to the serious. Trubee rails against normal ninnies on “Little Boy Melvin Rides Again” and posturing mallrat teens on “Your Stupid Friends.” In between these tirades, Trubee’s lyrics reflect deeper longings and emotions on tracks like “High Tide” and “Song of the Tiger.” There’s true beauty in these tunes, and Trubee’s evolution is on full display here.

‘Nude Woman Exdocrius, John Trubee and the Ugly Janitors of America

This record represents Trubee’s latest output, recorded in Los Angeles and Cotati in 2013, and it’s probably his heaviest effort to date. Sprawling guitars, eight-minute jams and passionate lyrics all come together for a supremely satisfying album. Stunning San Francisco vocalist Laurie Amat lends her operatic voice to songs like “People Are Idiots,” a gem that will get stuck in your head for weeks. Inspired by the idea of Mary Poppins singing about morons instead of spoonfuls of sugar, Amat’s twirling, twinkling pipes are a blessing for Trubee, and expands his vision with comedic prowess on other tracks like “Hag Marcella,” a light-hearted romp about doing in a former co-worker that’s not unlike the Beatles’ “Maxwell’s Silver Hammer.” If you’re wondering what “exdocrius” means, it’s a made-up word, a piece of Trubee’s imagination that illustrates his cracked sense of humor.

‘Continuing Where the Beatles Left Off . . . , Gloop Nox and the Stik People

This album goes all the way back to Trubee’s earliest days in his first high school band. Described as progressive rock with a juvenile sense of humor, the band was short-lived. In 2011, Trubee reunited with fellow founding member Jim Nevius and a host of seasoned New York musicians to record the old tunes anew. Steeped in the classic sounds that Trubee grew up on in the 1960s, the record also hints at the weird musical world that Trubee would go on to cultivate, with songs like “Ex-Lax Superstars from Hell Vomiting in Ecstasy.”

Immigrant Song

One reason Brooklyn is among the best films of the year is that it makes an eloquent argument in favor of the classic movie-studio style without being a slavish pastiche of the way movies were once made.

Saoirse Ronan plays Eilis Lacey, key to the beauty of Brooklyn, director John Crowley’s adaptation of Colm Tóibín’s novel of the same name. Eilis is a determined, intelligent Irish girl who immigrates to New York in 1951 with the help of a priest named Father Flood (Jim Broadbent). Fresh off the boat, she finds work at a fancy department store and learns bookkeeping at night.

Eventually, Eilis meets Tony Fiorello (Emory Cohen), an Italian-American who she falls in love with. After a year acclimating to Brooklyn, Eilis has to return to County Wexford because of a family crisis. Back home, she’s a new and confident woman, and gains the attention of a propertied young man James (Domhnall Gleeson).

Crowley’s use of unbraced camera in scenes of emotional conflict—the slight shake to give immediacy—refreshes the classic-era movie studio compositions and gives them a feel of reality. The harmonious palette of creamy, balanced colors keep you rapt. Crowley seems to believe that a movie about Ireland and the Irish should have the color green in abundance, and not just to complement the colors of his red-headed, pale-skinned star.

Brooklyn isn’t about nostalgia; it’s a lived-in past, and you can observe things we’re better off without, such as a week in steerage class on an ocean liner with rotten food and shared bathrooms. The film honors its namesake borough’s past, but there’s a lesson for the present: a gentle reminder that many of us are descended from the kind of immigrants who are feared and denounced by politicians in America today. Our good luck is the fruit of their sorrow and homesickness.

‘Brooklyn’ is playing at Summerfield Cinemas, 551 Summerfield Road,
Santa Rosa. 707.525.8909.

Roadside Attraction

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Last January, Fork Roadhouse moved into a spot on Bodega Highway outside of Sebastopol that had been a revolving door of restaurants that couldn’t make the spot work. Fork has made it work.

The homey restaurant’s hearty but refined breakfast and lunch make it a Sonoma County destination. Like nearby Peter Lowell’s, the restaurant exemplifies a West County culinary aesthetic: local farms and meat and border-crossing food that’s simple yet thoughtfully prepared.

This month, the restaurant opened for dinner Thursday through Saturday, and it’s an instant hit. While the roadhouse is as friendly and casual as ever, you’re advised to make a reservation, because the place books up quickly.

The dinner menu carries over some of the popular lunch items, like the burger with caramelized onions ($13) and the signature pork belly and fried-egg taco ($6 for one; $11 for two), but goes deeper with dishes like braised short ribs, grilled fish and rack of lamb.

Things get even more interesting on Saturday nights, when the restaurant focuses on a particular cuisine or region. This past Saturday, it was south of the border: Mexico, El Salvador and Peru. The food was great. I went for the pupusas, masa griddle cakes stuffed with chipotle-pomegranate pulled pork and beans ($13). It was not the traditional Salvadoran style, but plenty good. The entrée-size Handlebar Farms lettuce salad with Baja prawns, avocado, corn, pinto beans and cilantro-lime dressing ($15) was also a winner. Also on the menu was leche de tigre, coconut-milk black-cod ceviche ($12), chile rellenos stuffed with Preston Farms kabocha and spaghetti squash ($17), and a trio of tacos—fried rockfish, Korean short ribs, and mushroom and caramelized onions ($12).

With its dinner menu, Fork Roadhouse
is now a real roadside attraction.
9890 Bodega Hwy., Sebastopol. 707.634.7575.

Nov. 21-22: Party Weekend in Marin

Birthdays and anniversaries make the best parties, and Marin’s got both this weekend. First, Rancho Nicasio is celebrating 17 years of live music and great food with an anniversary weekend that also doubles as a birthday party for singer and longtime Rancho booker Angela Strehli, the “Queen of Texas Blues,” who’s called the North Bay home for 25 years....

Nov. 22: North Bay Best in Petaluma

Two months back, North Bay readers voted Misner & Smith as Best Folk Band in the Bohemian’s annual NorBay Music Awards. At the time, the duo of guitarist/vocalist Sam Misner and bassist/vocalist Megan Smith were out of the country, touring in Europe as part of a cultural exchange program that took them to Bulgaria. Now the pair is back...

Wait and Sea

All over the North Bay in recent days, crab committees have been meeting, boards of directors have been discussing, and nonprofit organizations have fretted over the question: What to do about our annual Dungeness crab feed? The state delayed the opening of the Dungeness crab season indefinitely on Nov. 5 when a potentially fatal neurotoxin, domoic acid, was discovered in...

Debriefer: November 17, 2015

HELP WANTED: POT CZAR The state is getting serious about its freshly enacted medical marijuana policy—so serious that it now has a top pot job listed on the Department of Consumer Affairs that pays up to $125,000 a year for the right candidate. The position would serve a bureaucracy to be in place by 2018 under a set of state laws...

Letters to the Editor: November 18, 2015

One Child Rule I was moved to tears by the article on the increased population growth in Petaluma ("The Road Ahead," Nov. 11). I lived in Petaluma as a young woman in the 1970s, and it was too crowded back then! How about educating all races, socioeconomic groups and ages about the destruction of our planet on which we all...

Pilgrims’ Progress

Want to have a real locavore Thanksgiving? Best set your sights on next year. At this point, the key is whether you're really going to make those acorn crackers with chèvre and prickly pear chutney in time. You'll probably want to start gathering the acorns on Black Friday—at the very latest. The acorn appetizer recipe, largely sourced from foraged ingredients,...

Stylish Kids

The eateries and wineries came first. Then came the women's boutiques. Now there's Littlefour, a new store in Sebastopol's Barlow center that's brimming with colorful children's clothing and accessories. Owner Danielle Rodrigues, 36, has been designing women's and children's clothing for most of her life. She began her career in San Francisco, then relocated to Vallejo where cheaper rent allowed...

A John Trubee Primer

For an artist who's insisted on going it alone for most of his career, John Trubee took his time creating his own record label. Founded in 2013, Trubee Records is the horse's mouth for the songwriter's lyrical lunacy and musical madness, and these three releases are the perfect starting point for the curious listener. 'A Blind Man's Penis and Other...

Immigrant Song

One reason Brooklyn is among the best films of the year is that it makes an eloquent argument in favor of the classic movie-studio style without being a slavish pastiche of the way movies were once made. Saoirse Ronan plays Eilis Lacey, key to the beauty of Brooklyn, director John Crowley's adaptation of Colm Tóibín's novel of the same name....

Roadside Attraction

Last January, Fork Roadhouse moved into a spot on Bodega Highway outside of Sebastopol that had been a revolving door of restaurants that couldn't make the spot work. Fork has made it work. The homey restaurant's hearty but refined breakfast and lunch make it a Sonoma County destination. Like nearby Peter Lowell's, the restaurant exemplifies a West County culinary aesthetic:...
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