Thursday, June 4, 2009

day ten

Time to head home!
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We started off with a drive into San Francisco. As we were getting ready to cross the Bay Bridge, we got stopped at a toll plaza, where the guy behind us tapped the rental car! Ryan told him to pull off at the next exit past the toll plaza for us to get his information, but the first exit was on the left hand side, and the guy was driving a pretty nondescript dark car. Fortunately he was able to follow our car (being bright red and a convertible), and he happened to be a nice enough guy that he really did follow us to the exit we turned off at (the first one on the right) and gave us his information. The car looked okay, just a small indentation in the plastic of the bumper, but we didn’t want to take any chances.
We headed into Chinatown to pick up a wok at the WOK SHOP. They didn’t open until 10 (like everyone else in California it seems), so we checked at a couple of trade shops that had opened early. The woks there were fairly disappointing, so we waited around at the WOK SHOP until they opened… and man was it worth it! We picked up a cast iron wok, made all in metal and all in one piece (including the handles) for $15! The owner was fabulous as is our new piece of cookware, and if anyone is ever looking for a wok, we will definitely recommend them.
After Chinatown, we zipped off to the airport, and it was time to fly home.

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

day nine

We walked around Sonoma for a little bit, but as nothing opens before 10 am, we didn’t get to do much (which was too bad because we had hoped to pick something up for Henry from the Three Dog Bakery). We headed for Napa, where we walked around their town center in search of a charm for Emily’s charm bracelet. We found one of a bunch of grapes. We didn’t have anything else to do, so we stopped in at the yarn shop, Emily picked up a book, and then it was late enough for us to go to lunch.
Lunch at Mustard’s Grill… amazing. So many things looked great on the menu, so we started out just ordering appetizers. Urban Spoon reviews had strongly encouraged the ahi crackers, which were thin tostada crackers with seared ahi rolled in black sesame seeds on top, sprinkled with thinly sliced scallions and red bell peppers and drizzled with wasabi crème fraiche.
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Another table had ordered the onion rings, which came out looking much like those from the Pine Club, except less greasy and with some extra spices in the coating.
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They were served with apple ketchup, which was a little difficult to eat (we ended up mixing the two on a plate and using a fork rather than dipping) but was also delicious. We had asked for a bottle of Qupe cuvee; we enjoy the Qupe line and thought we’d keep in the California theme, but they were out of it, so we ended up with a bottle of Goat-Roti from South Africa that was a similar blend. After the appetizers, we were both still really hungry and excited to check out the other dishes. Ryan order quail that had been roasted and rubbed in flavorful Cajun seasoning with mushrooms and a mushroom wine sauce drizzled on top sprinkled with raisins. He thought it was like the best chicken he had ever eaten.
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Emily ordered ravioli with a citrus mint butter sauce and asparagus, along with some pickled onions.
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We were still not stuffed to the gills, so we were handed dessert menus. The waitress began to walk away, then came back, suggesting that we get the lemon lime tart with “that ridiculously tall brown sugar meringue”, because, as she put it, we are “kinda foodies”, and that is their house dessert.
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This was probably our favorite meal of the trip. Fortunately, they have a cookbook; although the onion rings aren't in it,they are in a newer book, Appetizers.
Lunch had taken 3 hours, so we decided to go ahead and try to check in at the Meritage Resort, even though we were an hour early. They let us in, and we changed into our swimsuits and headed for the spa. Photobucket
Like Mission Inn, Spa Terra had a bit of a bathing ritual, but this was not co-ed, and not quite as nice.
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There were showers and then a Jacuzzi, which neither of us could figure out how to turn the jets on in, followed by a wet steam room, which was much easier to breathe without the eucalyptus of the first. We met back up in the reception room and lounged in bathrobes while sipping on lemon water. At 5:00, it was time for our tension tamer massages, which focus on the neck-shoulder area for 45 minutes. At the conclusion, it was suggested that Ryan spend 20 minutes in the Jacuzzi if he didn’t want to be sore tomorrow because he had needed so much work, so we headed to the pools.
We went swimming for a little bit, then headed inside to grab dinner. We were so ready to be home that we chose to get burgers. That, combined with Ryan’s Dayton tee led to the couple sitting next to us to ask if we were from Ohio and what brought us out. The man, a Nebraska native, paid for our salad and burgers to celebrate our honeymoon. The only thing we had to pay for was our dessert, which was a Valhrona chocolate flourless lava cake.
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We finished packing and headed to bed.

Wines for 3 June 2009:
Goat-Roti, Rhone Blend, South Africa, 2005 – We tried to order a Qupe Rhone Blend but they were out and gave us this bottle as a substitute. It was very good and we would both drink it again.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

day eight

We started the day with another breakfast at Ramekins consisting of oranges, blueberries, yogurt, and granola with blueberry muffins. Once we had eaten breakfast, we headed down to the car to drive to Healdsburg.
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We headed to Unti, a winery that specializes in Rhone varietals that Ryan’s boss had recommended. Everything we tried was drinkable—they even had a grenache rose which we didn’t hate. We were informed that they make only 7000 cases of wine per year, the most of any variety being 1600 cases of their zinfandel. This was by far the best winery that we had been to and we ended up buying a whole case of various wines.
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We asked the guy guiding the tasting if there were any good restaurants nearby. He suggested Diavola in Geyersville, so we went to check it out. They had very good crunchy breadsticks that they served with chili oil.
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We ordered a cheese flatbread served with olive oil and balsamic vinegar for an appetizer. Emily ordered a brisket panini with horseradish aioli and tomato while Ryan had a tri-tip, chicken, and sausage skewer with toasted polenta. We finished the meal with a lemon cheesecake served with nectarines and apricots.
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After lunch, we headed to the Healdsburg Plaza to walk around the stores. We stopped in a jewelry and gifts store where we ended up buying a neat centerpiece tray. While there, Emily discovered a really cool jewelry artist named Michael Michaud who makes molds out of various leaves and plants and makes jewelry out of them (Emily really liked the eucalyptus necklace). There was yet another dog boutique (Three Dog Bakery in Sonoma, Fideaux in St. Helena, Vineyard Dog in Napa, and now The DogHouse in Healdsburg).
Next we headed to Michel-Schlumberger to try a vertical tasting. The roads to get there were much more winding and through the hills than the rest—a lot like Ryan had expected the entire area to be like. There was even a nerve-wracking one lane bridge to cross.
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At Michel-Schlumberger, we tasted their cabernets: 2001, 2000, and 1999. We had tasted two different years of the same wine at Arroyo, but this was much clearer for us to taste the differences. We did not distinguish many differences between the 2001 and the 2000, but the 1999 had definitely mellowed out. The first sip of the 2000 we tasted seemed to taste more fruity, but then in further analysis, we were no longer able to determine this.
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We returned to Sonoma to relax and pack. While we didn’t get much relaxing done, Emily repacked every suitcase we brought to include all of the souvenirs we had picked up along the trip, amazing Ryan with her Clark-family abilities to pack. We decided to eat at a small Italian place where we could get a big plate of carbs without anything complex going on.

Wines for 2 June 2009:
Unti Grenache Rose
Unti Barbera
Unti Grenache
Unti Zinfandel
Unti Syrah
Unti Benchwood Syrah
Unti Grenache Deux
Unti Petit Frere
Michel-Schlumberger Cabernet 2001
Michel-Schlumberger Cabernet 2000
Michel-Schlumberger Cabernet 1999
Michel-Schlumberger

Monday, June 1, 2009

day seven

We started off with breakfast at Ramekins- a bowl of grapes and yogurt and granola, alongside banana muffins and scones.
We got on the road to head into San Francisco. The weather was nothing like it had been the other day when we flew in. Instead, it was foggy beyond belief (even crossing the bridge you couldn’t see the top of it), and it was very cold and windy. Photobucket
When we got to the city, we found a parking garage a few blocks from Pier 39. After we had parked Ryan threw the card up toward the windshield and we headed on our way. Emily noticed a sign that said that the garage would validate up to 90 minutes with purchase from the stores below. So Ryan opened the car door to grab the ticket, but it was missing. It had fallen in between the dashboard and the windshield a spot we previously did not realize existed. After 10 minutes of trying to fish it out and a lost bobby pin, we gave up and went on to the pier.
We walked around Pier 39 for a while stopping in various shops and grabbed lunch at Boudin Bakery. Later on we walked past the big Boudin Bakery to see them making alligator and turtle shaped loaves of bread.
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We bought many souvenirs at Pier 39. We took a tour of the bay by boat, which sailed under the Golden Gate Bridge and all around Alcatraz Island.
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Afterwards, we were so cold from the wind that we decided to head over to Ghiradelli Square to grab some hot chocolate. Along the way we saw various street performers one of which was painting a picture of a satellite above earth with cans of spray paint, an index card, and a solo cup cut in half. We got to Ghiradelli and ordered our hot chocolate and walked through the shop. We noticed a press used for making chocolate that looked exactly the same as the olive oil press, but smaller. By this time, the whole bustling city/tourist traps were getting to Emily after the peace and calm of Napa and Sonoma, so we relaxed near a World Market. Although we had reservations for 6:15, it was nearly 5 and we decided to go ahead and eat. We went to The Stinking Rose, a restaurant completely dedicated to garlic.
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Some of it was a bit too much even for Emily. Ryan ordered the Silence of the Lamb Shank with Chianti glaze and fava beans while Emily had the forty clove roasted chicken. The best part of dinner was the real garlic mashed potatoes but the rest of dinner was alright too. Emily knew that forty clove was a typical marinade, but was surprised when she got her dinner, and had a side of forty garlic cloves!
After dinner, we walked around China Town for a while. We walked by The Wok Shop and Ryan suggested that we get one there, since Emily has such specific requirements for one. Unfortunately, we hadn’t thought of this earlier, as every shop was open except for the wok shops, which would have been if we had gone before dinner. We decided to try to stop by on our way to the airport. We still got a few souvenirs in China Town, then headed back to the quiet of Sonoma.

NO WINES!