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Now for an amazing dinner recap. Once again, the awesome Chef Robin White helped us to plan our wine country stay, and she suggested a meeting with some of the folks from TasteLive!, Cailyn and Joel.  One of Cailyn’s suggestions was zazu, and after I checked out their website and found that Monday nights were their farm dinner, I was in.

Zazu Restaurant and Farm

From zazu’s website:

zazu is a roadhouse restaurant surrounded by 150 of sonoma county’s acclaimed wineries. At zazu, we are playful Americana and rustic Northern Italian inspired.

Russian River Valley Wine Growers Zazu Santa Rosa Farm Dinner

Located amongst the vines in Santa Rosa, zazu’s property includes a garden where some of the restaurant’s food is grown. The rest of the food is grown/raised at a farm just a few minutes away. The animals on the farm are fed vegetable scraps from the restaurant, making good use of anything that goes to waste. They have a really cute photo on their website of a pig eating yogurt. Check it out, trust me, it will make you smile.

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I am not sure if the above cat belongs to zazu, but it was friendly and kept us company for the few minutes we waited to go inside.

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zazu doesn’t open until 5:30, but Cailyn and Joel were able to get them to open a little early for us to have some wine at the bar.  Joel chose a delicious Rochioli Chardonnay which was pleasantly crisp without any buttery or oaky flavors at all.  Chef John Stewart also sent out a pork terrine with delicious grilled bread, grainy mustard, and pickled watermelon rind.

Rochioli Chardonnay

We loved meeting Joel and Cailyn and learning more about TasteLive! Joel and Eric also discovered that they may have some long lost relatives in common back in Ireland.

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TasteLive! is bringing wine lovers around the world together through live online tastings with people in the know. You no longer need to travel across the country to “meet” and taste with winemakers, you can just log on to TasteLive!

TasteLive!’s “About” Statement:

Our platform leverages the increasingly powerful social media tools of Twitter, Facebook, Posterous and other services to create a community that brings together consumers, bloggers, press, suppliers, brewers and winemakers across the world together to share in their favorite beverage. TasteLive! is a direct link between consumers and winemakers, no filter, no middle man.

Cailyn and Joel are also working on a fabulous event with the Russian River Valley Winegrowers, Grape to Glass. Lee, who is the Marketing Director for the RRV Winegrowers, stopped by to give me some information on the event, and if you are going to be in Sonoma August 20-22, you should go so I can live vicariously through you! I REALLY wish we had known about the event sooner, because I may have saved our trip to CA just to attend.

Cailyn, Joel, and Lee, all had to run, so the hubs and I enjoyed the farm dinner for two. We started with some fresh bread and butter.

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And then moved on to a grilled Caesar salad with an enormous crouton. I love grilled salads and have seen them a lot on our visits to California.

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The second course on the regular menu was a brisket sandwich, but I asked about a vegetarian option and they were more than accommodating presenting me instead with a beautiful, flavorful bowl of Israeli couscous with sweet corn and zucchini. The couscous had a light, lemony flavor, and I have been thinking about it for the past two weeks. I was literally laying in bed this morning thinking about how I can recreate it.

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We were too full for our own desserts, and I may have made our reservation a little close to our flight time, so we shared this gorgeous berry and peach crisp with brown sugar gelato. It was the perfect portion to get a few bites of juicy fruit, crumbly topping, and sweet, cool gelato. Yum.

While we were eating, Chef Stewart came out to say hi, and I wish we had more time to talk to him. He and his wife, who was out of town at a training, seem SO interesting and are incredibly accomplished in the food and wine industry, not to mention I love their commitment to local food and humanely raised animals.

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During dinner, we also took part in tasting their “Blind Wine” and failed miserably at guessing what it was. As I was sprinting out the door to get in the car to head back to Oakland, our very sweet waitress disclosed that it was a Chenin Blanc. I never would have guessed that, apparently I need to do more wine tasting 😉

Dinner at zazu was the perfect way to end our visit to Sonoma, and it is a restaurant that we may have missed otherwise.

Don’t worry, although zazu was our last dinner in Sonoma, I still have plenty more wine country posts coming up!

Now that blogging is done for the day, I am off to volunteer at the MSPCA and then for a massage!

What are you up to this weekend?

Tags: Dining out, restaurants in wine country, Sonoma, Sonoma County, Travel, wine

Good evening everyone! I am busy getting ready to head to my mom’s tomorrow for Christmas, so I am posting about one of my favorite meals of this past autumn, a post you may remember from Emily’s blog. I loved this part of our last wine country trip, so I hope you don’t mind rereading if you have already seen it. I will be back tomorrow with my review of Wine Secrets. I am done with work until MONDAY!!!!

 

Travel is one of the things that makes my world go round, and the travel I do often focuses on three things, food, wine, and the outdoors. Our most recent trip was to San Francisco for the Foodbuzz Festival, a gathering of food bloggers where eating, drinking, and blogging talk filled the days. Following the festival, my husband and I took our second trip in two months to California’s wine country.

Wine country in November offers a sharp contrast to the East coast. Autumn was alive and well, but the temperatures were near 70 making it easy to wander around vineyards and to take hikes along the Sonoma coast. All of the outdoors activity made for extra large appetites, and I was more than willing to take part in wine country cuisine.

On the last day of our trip, we had lunch reservations at the Wine Spectator restaurant at the Culinary Institute of America at Greystone in St. Helena. The history and architecture of the CIA building is interesting and impressive.(The following information was provided on a handout at the CIA Greystone building. Completed in 1889, Greystone Cellars was once the largest stone winery in the world. After a phyloxera epidemic and prohibition kept the winery dormant until after the Great Depression when the winery was passed amongst several owners before gravity-flow winery was back in production. In 1950, the Catholic teaching order, the Christian Brothers, purchased the winery to increase the production of their well known wines, brandies, and ports. In 1990, just after an earthquake that made a portion of the building unusable, the Christian Brothers brand was acquired by Heublein, Inc. Through the generosity of Heublein, the CIA was able to acquire the building, surrounding grounds, and the 15 acre merlot vineyard for roughly 10% of its $14 million dollar valuation in 1993.The 90 foot high entrance atrium displays flags that represent the major wine producing regions of the world.

CIA Greystone Napa Valley   Greystone Napa Valley CIA

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The food and beverages were outstanding and local, as you might expect from one of the most well known culinary schools in the country.

I started my meal with a Lost Coast tangerine wheat beer which was light, fruity, and refreshing, a perfect contrast to all of the wine that we had tasted earlier in the day. We also ordered “Today’s Temptations”, a selection of the chef’s choice of starters which included smoked salmon lollipops, dates with blue cheese, polenta with a beautiful roast tomato sauce, and shots of cauliflower soup.

Lunch at the CIA Greystone Napa Valley Culinary Institute of America, Greystone

For my entree I ordered two appetizers, pumpkin empanadas with pumpkin seed salsa, cumin-lime crème fraiche, and cilantro salad and an apple salad with spiced walnuts, endive, shaved celery, and walnut-Dijon vinaigrette.

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My husband had the pan roasted day boat scallops.

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Everything was delicious, and it was a fun experience to watch chefs in the open kitchen as they moved briskly about preparing food.

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After lunch, we took some time to wander around the building. A chef’s dream-come-true culinary store with every tool and gadget imaginable resides on the first floor of the main building. I stayed away as we had limited ourselves to carry on luggage! You can also view the Vintner’s Hall of fame and the grand entrance. While we were visiting, all of the students were gearing up for a big event with chefs from around the country. I wanted to stay!

Even if you don’t consider yourself a huge foodie, I would definitely recommend a visit to the CIA Greystone and the surrounding area. In addition to food and wine tastings, you can take a walk through a petrified forest, visit a geyser, and spend a lot of time in the great outdoors taking in beautiful scenery and fresh air.

Tags: CIA, Dining out, Food, Napa Valley, restaurants in wine country, Travel, wine country, wine tasting

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