Summer 2023 Issue

Last Updated May 31, 2023
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Summer 2023

Summer 2023

One of my most cherished possessions is an old spiral-bound date book that my maternal grandmother, “Sweething,” used to record her favorite recipes shared by friends. Alongside her beautiful, ornate cursive are my own grade-school-script transcriptions of some of my favorite recipes of hers. I carefully unwrap this family heirloom every summer when I make her 14-day pickles, and it takes me right back to the happy hum of her busy kitchen.

As far back as I can remember I have collected cookbooks, often reading them like novels to quieten my mind before bed. My favorites share insights into the author—why they cook, and why they chose the recipes to include in the book. Just like the print version of Edible Marin & Wine Country, the visceral hit that I get from holding a cookbook in my hand is the key ingredient. My New York Times recipe app serves its purpose in a pinch, but the digital experience pales in comparison.

I learned from that same maternal grandmother the power of cooking for the people you love, and gathering them around the table. It delights my heart and soul to plan and cook meals for beloveds, friends and family, and a lot of my days are spent “cooking up” the next gathering. More recently, I have had the pleasure of being cooked for more often. Not as a part of a family or larger group, but as the one person for whom a meal is planned and prepared. Powerful stuff.

An especially bountiful crop of cookbooks and other books about food and drink have recently been published by local authors, so I was inspired to devote a large portion of this issue to the best “summer reading” assignment you may have ever been given. Move over, War and Peace

Read them, savor them, cook through them and by all means share the fruits of your happy labors with those you love.

Greens from the Sea

Who fancies their grilled oysters bathed in a briny nori compound butter? Or what about a salmon poke bowl with strands of fresh, crunchy...

Six California Kitchens

Six California Kitchens is the title of a recently released cookbook that features just what the title says, but instead of profiling the...

Tanya Holland’s California Soul: Recipes from a Culinary Journey West

(TEN SPEED PRESS, 2022) Photographs By Aubrey Pick We were going to write our own introduction to this excerpt and recipe from Tanya...

The Whole Duck--Inspired Recipes from Chefs, Butchers and the Family at Liberty Ducks

Marissa LaBrecque’s interview with Jennifer Reichardt, author of The Whole Duck: Inspired Recipes from Chefs, Butchers and the Family at...

The Rise of Napa Valley Wineries: How the Judgment of Paris Put California Wine on the Map

Laurie McAndish King’s interview with Mark Gudgel, author of The Rise of Napa Valley Wineries: How the Judgment of Paris Put California...

(Serious) New Cook

The Must Have New Cookbook for All (Serious) New Cooks By Kirsten Jones Neff Cammie Kim Lin’s children grew up appreciating good food. They...

Unique Eats and Eateries Of Sonoma County -The People and Stories Behind the Food

Travel writer Yvonne Michie Horn is a third-generation Sonoma County resident who makes her home in Jack London’s famed Valley of the Moon...

Sonoma Style: The Legend of Pax Mahle

Pax Mahle runs a calloused hand through disheveled hair and leans back into his seat. Natural light pours in through the glass garage door...

Escoffier Questionnaire: Chef Robert Price Buckeye Roadhouse, Mill Valley; Bar Bocce, Sausalito

Some people seem to wedge more life into their life. Robert Price, executive chef at Mill Valley’s Buckeye Roadhouse, is one of those...

What’s in Season: GRAVENSTEIN APPLES

It’s always a thrill to see heirloom varieties of fruits and vegetables called out on market signs and restaurant menus. The trend away...

Cherry on Top Contest

Find one of the little people in this “food as art” piece by Matthew Carden that is hiding in another location within this issue and enter...
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