40
GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM | 55+ | 5 Food &Drink GOOD TIMES MAGAZINE 2016 Santa Cruz’s Best Cocktails Fine Pub dining Why ciders and sours are cool again WHERE THE NEW MIXOLOGY TREND IS TAKING OFF LOCALLY

Food & Drink 2016

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Metro Publishing

Citation preview

Page 1: Food & Drink 2016

GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM | 55+ | 5

Food&DrinkGOOD TIMES

MAGAZINE 2016

Santa Cruz’s Best

Cocktails

FinePub dining

Why ciders

and sours

are cool

again

WHERE THE NEW MIXOLOGY TREND IS TAKING OFF LOCALLY

Page 2: Food & Drink 2016

2 FOOD & DRINK | SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | 2016

Page 3: Food & Drink 2016

2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM | FOOD & DRINK 3

The Ultimate Santa Cruz Dining Experience

Seasonal live entertainment poolside Seasonal menus Locally sourced, organic Cage free and sustainable Poolside drinks and dining Fireplace Weekday Happy Hour 4-7 pm Craft cocktails

S E N T I N E L : “One of the few places locally where you can dine poolside - the setting is gorgeous”

S . F . C H R O N I C L E : “Impeccably stylish while maintaining and urban forest aesthetic”For Reservations 831.600.4545 www.opentable.com

L O C A T E D I N

611 Ocean St. Santa Cruz, CA

Page 4: Food & Drink 2016

4 FOOD & DRINK | SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | 2016

AAMCO TransmissionsAbraham Auto DetailAdvanced Auto*Ainsworth Auto RepairApco GasolineArt of SteelAutoworld Sales & LeasingAvis Rent a CarBig O TiresChevron, Soquel AveCity of Santa Cruz

Auto Services (Fleet)County of Santa Cruz

Auto Services (Fleet)

De Laveaga Service CenterDoc AutoEnterprise Rent-a-CarFanucci Auto BodyFidelity AutomotiveFirestone Complete

Auto CareFirst TransitFlyersGoodwill Industries (Fleet)Goodyear Tire &

Auto RepairGraniterock (Fleet)Greg Solow’s Engine Room

Holiday Muffler & BrakesJiffy LubeJim Ludy’s AutomotiveKeener Auto BodyLas Animas ConcreteLegacy AutomotiveLloyd’s Tire ServiceMonterey Bay AutomotiveMonterey Bay MarineNorth Bay Ford DealershipOcean 76Perrigo’s Auto Body ShopPolar Automotive & Radiator

Service

Rene’s Auto RepairReyes Auto RepairRiley Collins Auto

Body ShopRod & Ros Gas Mart 2Rotten RobbieRPM Auto RepairRusty’s RepairRV Service Center of SCSanta Cruz Auto PartsSanta Cruz Auto TechSanta Cruz AutomotiveSanta Cruz Harbor BoatyardSanta Cruz High School

Auto ShopSanta Cruz Imported

Truck ServiceSanta Cruz Metro Transit

District (Fleet)Santa Cruz MotorsportsSanta Cruz Nissan

Dodge-VolkswagenSav-On GasolineScott’s Body ShopStanford Ave GarageStoodley’s Small Engine

ServicesTim’s Auto Electric

United Parcel Service (Fleet)Valero Gas, 335 Mission StValero Gas, 1319 Ocean StValero Gas, 1516

Soquel AveValero Gas, 2202 Mission StVan CafeWater Star MotorsWeston’s Auto Body & PaintWestside Auto RepairWhalers Car Wash

*Denotes 5 Year Qualifiers

A Slice of Kianti’sAkira SushiAldo’s Harbor RestaurantAllbright Donut ShoppeAt Thai Recipe*Aunt Nettie’s KitchenBagelry, Cedar StBagelry, Seabright AveBantamBeach Street Cafe*Beckmann’s BakeryBest Western All Suites Inn*Betty Burgers,

Seabright*Black China BakeryBoardwalkBoccis CellarBranciforte Middle SchoolBurger King*Café DelmaretteCafé El Palomar*Café Gratitude*Café LenaCafé LimelightCafé Lucio*Café Mare*Caffé BeneCaffe PergolesiCharlie Hong KongChipotle*ChocolateCivic AuditoriumCoffeetopia*Coldstone Creamery*Companion Bake ShopCostcoCounty CafeteriaCrepe PlaceCrow’s NestDays Market

*De La Hacienda Taqueria

*De Laveaga Lodge Restaurant

Del Pueblo MarketDeLaveaga Elementary

SchoolDenny’sDonnelly Fine ChocolatesDream InnEl Hermoso Mar*El PalomarElks Lodge*Elm Street MissionEmily’s Good Things to EatEngfer Pizza Works*Erik’s Deli CaféFalafel HouseFeel Good FoodsFerrell’s Donuts, Mission StFerrell’s Donuts, Ocean StFins CoffeeFirefly Coffee House*Food Bin and Herb

RoomFortune Garden*Foster’s FreezeFront Street Residential*Gabriella Café*Gilda’s Restaurant*Golden CityGolden PalaceHarbor High SchoolHarvey West ClubhouseHindquarter Bar & GrilleHoffman’s DowntownHula’s Island GrillIdeal Bar & GrillIndia Joze*Iveta Gourmet

Jack in the BoxJack’s HamburgersJamba Juice, Mission StJamba Juice, Pacific AveJava JunctionJeffery’s RestaurantJoe’s Pizza & Subs,

Branciforte Ave*Joe’s Pizza & Subs,

Pacific AveJohnny’s HarborsideKiantis Pizza & Pasta BarKitchen Santa CruzKuumbwa Jazz CenterLa Posada*La PostaLas Palmas Taco BarLillian’s Italian KitchenLinda’s Seabreeze CaféLocal Harvest Catering*Los PinosLouden Nelson CenterLupulo Craft Beer HouseMaharajaMariannes Ice CreamMarini’s DowntownMarini’s MunchiesMay’s Sushi RestaurantMcDonalds, Mission StMcDonald’s, Ocean StMei Garden*Metro CenterMidtown CaféMission Hill CreameryMission Hill Jr. High

School KitchenMission Street BarbequeMobo SushiNew Leaf Community

Market, Fair Ave

New Leaf Community Market, Pacific Ave

New Life CenterNinety Nine BottlesOcean City BuffetOlitas Cantina & Grille*OmeiOswald’sOyunaa’s Mongolian Cuisine*Pacific Blue InnPacific Cookie Company,

Pacific Ave*Pacific Cookie

Company, Potrero St*Pacific Cultural Center*Pacific ThaiParadox Hotel*Parish Publick House*Pearl of the Ocean*Peet’s Coffee & Tea*Phoenix Asian

RestaurantPlanet Fresh BurritosPlantronicsPolar Bear Ice CreamPono Hawaiian GrillPortuguese HallQuality MarketReal Thai KitchenRistorante AvantiRistorante ItalianoRiva Fish HouseRosie McCann’s Irish PubSabieng ThaiSafeway, Mission StSafeway, Morrissey BlvdSaint Francis KitchenSakeSamba Rock CaféSanta Cruz Ale Works

Santa Cruz Bible ChurchSanta Cruz Coffee

Roasting Co.Santa Cruz DinerSanta Cruz Mountain

BrewingSaturn CaféSeabright Brewery*Sentinel Café*Shogun*Shopper’s CornerShun FengSoifStaff of LifeStagnaro Brothers SeafoodStarbucks*Subway, Mission StSubway, Soquel Ave*Sunshine VillaSurf Bistro*Surf City GrillSurfrider CafeSushi NowSushi Totoro*Taco Bell, Mission StTaco Bell, Soquel AveTacos Morenos*Tam’s Chinese

RestaurantTampico Kitchen*Taqueria Agave IITaqueria ApatzinganTaqueria Jalapenos

Y PupuseriaTaqueria Santa CruzTaqueria Santa Cruz Two*Taqueria Vallarta,

Mission StTaqueria Vallarta,

Soquel Ave

*Thai OrchidThe Art Bar and CafeThe ButteryThe Picnic BasketTogos, Almar AveTogos, Ocean StTony & Alba’s Pizza*Top A Lot YogurtTramonti Pizzeria*Twisselman Enterprises

(Boardwalk)*Upper Cruz Pizza &

PastaVasili’s Greek RestaurantVerve Coffee Roasters,

Bronson StVerve Coffee Roasters,

Pacific AveViva’s Mexican FoodWalnut Avenue CaféWest End Tap & KitchenWestside Coffee Company*Whiting’s Foods

(Boardwalk)Whole Foods MarketWingstopWoodstock’s PizzaYan FlowerYogurtlandYour PlaceZachary’s RestaurantZoccoli’s Deli

* Denotes 5 Year Qualifiers

These Vehicle Service Facilities are 2016 Clean Ocean Businesses

These Restaurants are 2016 Clean Ocean Businesses

Look for the Orange 2016Clean Ocean Business emblem

in the City of Santa CruzThese local businesses have made special efforts to protect local

creeks, the San Lorenzo River, and the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary by adopting practices that keep pollutants

away from both storm drains and the sewer system.

Page 5: Food & Drink 2016

2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM | FOOD & DRINK 5

AAMCO TransmissionsAbraham Auto DetailAdvanced Auto*Ainsworth Auto RepairApco GasolineArt of SteelAutoworld Sales & LeasingAvis Rent a CarBig O TiresChevron, Soquel AveCity of Santa Cruz

Auto Services (Fleet)County of Santa Cruz

Auto Services (Fleet)

De Laveaga Service CenterDoc AutoEnterprise Rent-a-CarFanucci Auto BodyFidelity AutomotiveFirestone Complete

Auto CareFirst TransitFlyersGoodwill Industries (Fleet)Goodyear Tire &

Auto RepairGraniterock (Fleet)Greg Solow’s Engine Room

Holiday Muffler & BrakesJiffy LubeJim Ludy’s AutomotiveKeener Auto BodyLas Animas ConcreteLegacy AutomotiveLloyd’s Tire ServiceMonterey Bay AutomotiveMonterey Bay MarineNorth Bay Ford DealershipOcean 76Perrigo’s Auto Body ShopPolar Automotive & Radiator

Service

Rene’s Auto RepairReyes Auto RepairRiley Collins Auto

Body ShopRod & Ros Gas Mart 2Rotten RobbieRPM Auto RepairRusty’s RepairRV Service Center of SCSanta Cruz Auto PartsSanta Cruz Auto TechSanta Cruz AutomotiveSanta Cruz Harbor BoatyardSanta Cruz High School

Auto ShopSanta Cruz Imported

Truck ServiceSanta Cruz Metro Transit

District (Fleet)Santa Cruz MotorsportsSanta Cruz Nissan

Dodge-VolkswagenSav-On GasolineScott’s Body ShopStanford Ave GarageStoodley’s Small Engine

ServicesTim’s Auto Electric

United Parcel Service (Fleet)Valero Gas, 335 Mission StValero Gas, 1319 Ocean StValero Gas, 1516

Soquel AveValero Gas, 2202 Mission StVan CafeWater Star MotorsWeston’s Auto Body & PaintWestside Auto RepairWhalers Car Wash

*Denotes 5 Year Qualifiers

A Slice of Kianti’sAkira SushiAldo’s Harbor RestaurantAllbright Donut ShoppeAt Thai Recipe*Aunt Nettie’s KitchenBagelry, Cedar StBagelry, Seabright AveBantamBeach Street Cafe*Beckmann’s BakeryBest Western All Suites Inn*Betty Burgers,

Seabright*Black China BakeryBoardwalkBoccis CellarBranciforte Middle SchoolBurger King*Café DelmaretteCafé El Palomar*Café Gratitude*Café LenaCafé LimelightCafé Lucio*Café Mare*Caffé BeneCaffe PergolesiCharlie Hong KongChipotle*ChocolateCivic AuditoriumCoffeetopia*Coldstone Creamery*Companion Bake ShopCostcoCounty CafeteriaCrepe PlaceCrow’s NestDays Market

*De La Hacienda Taqueria

*De Laveaga Lodge Restaurant

Del Pueblo MarketDeLaveaga Elementary

SchoolDenny’sDonnelly Fine ChocolatesDream InnEl Hermoso Mar*El PalomarElks Lodge*Elm Street MissionEmily’s Good Things to EatEngfer Pizza Works*Erik’s Deli CaféFalafel HouseFeel Good FoodsFerrell’s Donuts, Mission StFerrell’s Donuts, Ocean StFins CoffeeFirefly Coffee House*Food Bin and Herb

RoomFortune Garden*Foster’s FreezeFront Street Residential*Gabriella Café*Gilda’s Restaurant*Golden CityGolden PalaceHarbor High SchoolHarvey West ClubhouseHindquarter Bar & GrilleHoffman’s DowntownHula’s Island GrillIdeal Bar & GrillIndia Joze*Iveta Gourmet

Jack in the BoxJack’s HamburgersJamba Juice, Mission StJamba Juice, Pacific AveJava JunctionJeffery’s RestaurantJoe’s Pizza & Subs,

Branciforte Ave*Joe’s Pizza & Subs,

Pacific AveJohnny’s HarborsideKiantis Pizza & Pasta BarKitchen Santa CruzKuumbwa Jazz CenterLa Posada*La PostaLas Palmas Taco BarLillian’s Italian KitchenLinda’s Seabreeze CaféLocal Harvest Catering*Los PinosLouden Nelson CenterLupulo Craft Beer HouseMaharajaMariannes Ice CreamMarini’s DowntownMarini’s MunchiesMay’s Sushi RestaurantMcDonalds, Mission StMcDonald’s, Ocean StMei Garden*Metro CenterMidtown CaféMission Hill CreameryMission Hill Jr. High

School KitchenMission Street BarbequeMobo SushiNew Leaf Community

Market, Fair Ave

New Leaf Community Market, Pacific Ave

New Life CenterNinety Nine BottlesOcean City BuffetOlitas Cantina & Grille*OmeiOswald’sOyunaa’s Mongolian Cuisine*Pacific Blue InnPacific Cookie Company,

Pacific Ave*Pacific Cookie

Company, Potrero St*Pacific Cultural Center*Pacific ThaiParadox Hotel*Parish Publick House*Pearl of the Ocean*Peet’s Coffee & Tea*Phoenix Asian

RestaurantPlanet Fresh BurritosPlantronicsPolar Bear Ice CreamPono Hawaiian GrillPortuguese HallQuality MarketReal Thai KitchenRistorante AvantiRistorante ItalianoRiva Fish HouseRosie McCann’s Irish PubSabieng ThaiSafeway, Mission StSafeway, Morrissey BlvdSaint Francis KitchenSakeSamba Rock CaféSanta Cruz Ale Works

Santa Cruz Bible ChurchSanta Cruz Coffee

Roasting Co.Santa Cruz DinerSanta Cruz Mountain

BrewingSaturn CaféSeabright Brewery*Sentinel Café*Shogun*Shopper’s CornerShun FengSoifStaff of LifeStagnaro Brothers SeafoodStarbucks*Subway, Mission StSubway, Soquel Ave*Sunshine VillaSurf Bistro*Surf City GrillSurfrider CafeSushi NowSushi Totoro*Taco Bell, Mission StTaco Bell, Soquel AveTacos Morenos*Tam’s Chinese

RestaurantTampico Kitchen*Taqueria Agave IITaqueria ApatzinganTaqueria Jalapenos

Y PupuseriaTaqueria Santa CruzTaqueria Santa Cruz Two*Taqueria Vallarta,

Mission StTaqueria Vallarta,

Soquel Ave

*Thai OrchidThe Art Bar and CafeThe ButteryThe Picnic BasketTogos, Almar AveTogos, Ocean StTony & Alba’s Pizza*Top A Lot YogurtTramonti Pizzeria*Twisselman Enterprises

(Boardwalk)*Upper Cruz Pizza &

PastaVasili’s Greek RestaurantVerve Coffee Roasters,

Bronson StVerve Coffee Roasters,

Pacific AveViva’s Mexican FoodWalnut Avenue CaféWest End Tap & KitchenWestside Coffee Company*Whiting’s Foods

(Boardwalk)Whole Foods MarketWingstopWoodstock’s PizzaYan FlowerYogurtlandYour PlaceZachary’s RestaurantZoccoli’s Deli

* Denotes 5 Year Qualifiers

These Vehicle Service Facilities are 2016 Clean Ocean Businesses

These Restaurants are 2016 Clean Ocean Businesses

Look for the Orange 2016Clean Ocean Business emblem

in the City of Santa CruzThese local businesses have made special efforts to protect local

creeks, the San Lorenzo River, and the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary by adopting practices that keep pollutants

away from both storm drains and the sewer system.

Page 6: Food & Drink 2016

6 FOOD & DRINK | SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | 2016

A Good Times publication.

Cover design by Tabi Zarrinnaal.

Editor’s

Table of Contents

BREWING A MENUCHEF SANTOS MAJANO ON FUSING

CRAFT BEER WITH A FARM-TO-TABLE PHILOSOPHY

FIVE O’CLOCK SOMEWHERESANTA CRUZ PERFECTS THE ART OF THE INNOVATIVE COCKTAIL

FRUIT CHICHOW CIDER AND SOUR ALES ARE

MAKING A COMEBACK

POP CULTUREWHY THE POP-UPS ARE FLOURISHING IN SANTA CRUZ

PRO CHOICEPROBIOTIC DRINKS FROM SANTA

CRUZ’S FARMHOUSE CULTURE

MAKING A SPLASHTHE SECRETS OF COOKING

WITH WINE

THE ROAD LESS STUMBLEDLEAVE THE DRIVING TO OTHERS ON NEW WINE TOUR

T he big question for foodies used to be “Where do you want to eat?” These days, though, it’s just as likely to be “Where do

you want to drink?” In this issue of Food & Drink, we give Santa Cruz’s spirited spirits scene its due. First, Christina Waters looks at how the mixology movement has made its way to Santa Cruz, and where to find it. She also confirms that it’s now okay to admit you drink ciders and sours, so allow me to finally say: I don’t care who thinks I am the world’s wussiest drinker, I will take a blueberry sour at Mission Street BBQ every day of the week, and twice on Sundays. Wow, that felt good. Good talk! OK, anyway, if you worry that happy hour is bringing down the dining scene, I recommend reading Lily Stoicheff’s interview with the Kitchen at Discretion’s Santos Majano about his one-man pub food revolution. And don’t miss her article on local pop-up culture, which goes beyond the typical “hey, pop-ups exist” angle to explain why Santa Cruz is an ideal place for them to thrive. Dig in!

STEVE PALOPOLI | EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

0816

2022

28

3230

35FOODIE FINDSA CALENDAR OF SANTA CRUZ COUNTY FOOD AND DRINK EVENTS

PUBLISHER Jeanne Howard

EDITOR Steve Palopoli

MANAGING EDITORMaria Grusauskas

CONTRIBUTORSJosie Cowden

Anne-Marie HarrisonJune Smith

Lily StoicheffChristina Waters

PROOFREADERJosie Cowden

ART DIRECTORTabi Zarrinnaal

DESIGNERSDiAnna VanEyckeRosie Eckerman

PHOTOGRAPHERKeana Parker

WEBMASTERLily Stoicheff

ADVERTISING DIRECTORDebra Whizin

ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES

John Bland Lisa Buckley Nadine Kelley Sue Lamothe

Ilana Rauch Packer

ACCOUNTINGKatherine Adams

CIRCULATION MANAGERMick Freeman

OFFICE MANAGERLindsay Keebler

CEODan Pulcrano

VICE PRESIDENTLee May

NOTE

STAFF

Page 7: Food & Drink 2016

2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM | FOOD & DRINK 7

Open Tuesday – sunday Lunch 11:30 - 2:30Dinner 5 - cLose

101B cooper st, Downtown sant cruz831.423.4545 | LaiLiresTauranT/cOm

AUTHENTIC

Thai Cuisine in Midtown

(Across from the Rio Theatre)

DINE-IN | TAKE-OUT | FREE DELIVERY1632 Seabright Ave | 831-427-2559

realthaisantacruz.comAlso Available 9.95 Lunch Buffet

MON-FRI 11am-3pm

Open Everyday : Lunch & Dinner

Page 8: Food & Drink 2016

8 FOOD & DRINK | SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | 2016

In Discretion

RAW FLAVOR Tombo Poke with avocado, pickles, cilantro

and tortilla chips ($14) served at the Kitchen at Discretion Brewing.

PHOTO: KEANA PARKER

A conversation with the Kitchen at Discretion’s Santos Majano about pairing his menu with beer,

and his crusade to revolutionize pub food

Page 9: Food & Drink 2016

2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM | FOOD & DRINK 9

S antos Majano’s decision to leave Soif, where he had been the chef for five years, to partner with the barely 1-year-old Discretion

Brewing came as a surprise to many on the dining scene. But since that transition two years ago, Majano’s reasons for the move have become clear to those who have explored his innovative new offerings. Deeply inspired by the rise of craft beer in Santa Cruz, and Discretion Brewing’s philosophy in particular, Majano appears to have hit his culinary stride at the independently operated the Kitchen at Discretion, owned by Rob and Kathleen Genco, as he reinvents what one would expect to pair with a pint while staying true to his firmly held belief in the farm-to-table ethos.

Why did you choose to transition from Soif, where you’d been for five years, to a brewery?

I knew about Soif even before I moved to Santa Cruz. They have a very unique wine list, and I loved their farm-to-table philosophy. It was great. I loved it. I still have a great relationship with Patrice [Boyle, the owner]. She knows I’m someone who is ambitious. I’m

a dreamer. I never want to get comfortable. And I think it shows in my menu. We don’t want to keep doing the same thing. We

always want to be thinking a little outside the box.I knew Discretion from the time they were building it.

My wife said, “There’s a new brewery opening up, and it seems like craft brewing is starting to happen in Santa Cruz.” So we peeked through the window.

After a year or so, we heard Main Street [Garden & Cafe] had left, and I became curious about what was going to happen next. One of my prep cooks also worked at Everett Family Farms and she would drop flowers off at Discretion every week, and she told me they were looking for someone else to go in the kitchen. I could not believe the opportunity was available. I felt for sure someone would have jumped in there right away. It seemed too good to be true.

We met and we really connected. They care about their product, and are invested so much in what they put out.

10 >

BY LILY STOICHEFF

“... if Discretion spends the time and puts the energy into

sourcing the best ingredients to make the best beer, then I want to match that ... Our philosophy is

identical. It’s almost like sharing the

same brain.”

- Chef Santos Majano

Page 10: Food & Drink 2016

10 FOOD & DRINK | SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | 2016

<9

Did you feel that there was some fron-tier in pairing food and beer? Wine has been the dominant alcohol to pair with food for so long, but pairing with beer is still fairly new.

Yes, I absolutely agree. I’m always looking for something exciting, and Santa Cruz is just blooming with crafted beer. I like to move with that.

I am a chef who has worked hard to build up where I am right now, to make the kind of food I want to make. I think a lot of people thought when I left Soif that I was just going to be making bar food, and it’s not like that. People asked how my food was going to match the beer, but you know, when you think about wine, you think about the smells, the body, the acidity, the balance. Beer also has those components. It has roastiness, there’s chocolate, there’s hoppiness, bitterness. You have to think slightly differently, but it’s the same thing when you are creating. You just have to look for the balance of flavors. I think it’s kind of crazy to say, “oh, you can’t pair your food with beer.” That’s not true. You can actually make some amazing dishes.

Did you make adjustments to your culi-nary style when you transitioned from Soif to Discretion?

I wouldn’t say “adjust,” but we did think slightly differently. The adjust-ments came when we were thinking about how to incorporate beer into the food. We thought about things like “how can we incorporate a black lager into our barbecue sauce?” But ultimately we knew we wanted to do something exciting that showcased the farm-to-table philosophy.

How much do you consider the beer when you’re creating a menu item?

A good 60-70-percent. I know someone is going to come here, have a beer and look for something to go with it. Whether the beer complements the food or the food complements the beer, there has to be one or the other.

12 >

CRAFTED PALATE Chef Santos Majano puts a lot of thought into pairing his dishes

with the beer selection, and often incorporates it as an ingredient. PHOTO: KEANA PARKER

Page 11: Food & Drink 2016

2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM | FOOD & DRINK 11

493 Lake Ave, Santa Cruz Harbor 831.479.3430 | johnnysharborside.com

New Management TeamVoted Best Seafood in the County

Featuring Nightly Specials Fresh & Sustainable Seafood

Handmade Signature Cocktails Local Spirits and Over 25

Wines by the Glass

Join Us For Taco Tuesdays!

5pm-Close

Where FRESH CATCH is MADE YOUR WAY.

the restaurants

DowntownHOFFMAN’S

�NDMARK THEATRESTHE NICK & DEL MAR THEATRE

$50DATE NIGHT

TICKET

MOVIE TICKETS FOR TWO & UP TO $50 CREDIT TOWARDS

DINNER FOR TWO! DATE NIGHT TICKETS AVAI�BLE AT THE THEATRE BOX OFFICE

WWW.�NDMARKTHEATRES.COM/SANTA-CRUZ

Page 12: Food & Drink 2016

12 FOOD & DRINK | SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | 2016

What inspires you right now? What’s influencing your menu?

Always the season. The farmers market is a big thing for us. We work with a few farms that will call us when they get really exceptional produce in. But we have some menu items that will never go away. We tried to change them once, and people didn’t like that.

I remember when you tried to take the chicken and waffles away. And people were like, ‘Whoa! You can’t just put something like this on the menu and then take it off!’

Of course, chicken and waffles is nothing new. But I wanted to make it different, because someone else is always going to do it. When people think of that dish, they think fried chicken. Well, I don’t have a fryer. And when people think of a brewery, they automatically think of chicken wings, so we decided to go with that instead. I also wanted to do some-thing unique with the syrup. I love the flavors when you combine Asian cooking with French or the South. We infused our syrup with ginger, lemongrass and a dash of soy sauce. And we sell so many of those things.

This is what we’re looking for all the time. We didn’t want to do something too strange. We want it to be familiar to people, but when they pick it up at the window, they’re wowed.

Have new customers been receptive to the style of food you’re doing here?

I have my mindset with what I want to do and what I believe, but I also know that when you walk into a brewery, most of the time there’s going to be a burger. But the truth is, that’s not our philosophy. There are already a ton of breweries out there where you can go and have that. I’m not against it, but if Discretion spends the time and puts the energy into sourcing the best ingredients to make the best beer, then I want to match that. They make beer right here, sourcing the best ingredients, and we do exactly the same thing. Our philosophy is identical. It’s almost like sharing the same brain.

You’ve always been a huge supporter of the farm-to-table movement. Why is it so important to you?

I grew up in El Salvador, and I came to Monterey in 1997. It’s funny, I distinctly remember my mother telling me that dinner was ready, all I needed to do was grab it from the kitchen. And I didn’t want to. I was, like, I don’t want to go to the kitchen! But the connection to the farm was important to me. I worked with my dad and my brothers on our farm, where we were growing our own

squash, watermelons, green beans, corn, tomatoes … We would sell half of what we produced, and the other half we’d keep for the family. Now, looking back on what I had makes me appreciate so much. That’s why now when I go to the farmers market, I look at produce that was picked that morning or the day before and I can definitely appreciate that. I know it hasn’t traveled 300 miles to get there, it traveled 20 minutes for us to grab it and bring it to our kitchen. That connection to the farm has always been there, from when I was little.

<10

FARM FANATIC Meyer lemon risotto with

asparagus, parsnips, spring garlic, and

Reggiano ($17) made by Chef Santos Majano of

the Kitchen at Discretion. PHOTO: KEANA PARKER

Page 13: Food & Drink 2016

2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM | FOOD & DRINK 13

We use only fresh local organic ingredients. It is our pleasure to share the simple goodness that is Italian cooking, with recipes straight from the homeland.Full Bar • Extensive Wine List • Open for Lunch & Dinner DailyJoin us for Happy Hour Sun - Thurs 5pm-7pm

831.458.1212 | 740 Front St. Suite 100, Santa Cruz www.CafeMare.com

Local eateries featuring hand-crafted food, beer & wine

OPEN 7 DAYS • LUNCH & DINNER334D INGALLS STREET • SANTA CRUZ

831.471.8115 • WESTENDTAP.COM

OPEN TUES–SUN • LUNCH & DINNER1501 41ST AVENUE • CAPITOLA

831.475.8010 • EASTENDPUB.COM

Page 14: Food & Drink 2016

14 FOOD & DRINK | SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | 2016

Sunday -Thursday 11:30 - 10 Friday, Saturday 11:30 - 11:30

233 Cathcart St • Downtown Santa Cruz

Spanish and Latin-American tapas Constantly rotating draft beers

Over 100 hard-to-find bottles for in-house or takeawayLarge selection of wine, cider, and non-alcoholic drinks

Game room with shuffleboard and TVs in back Happy Hour M-F 3-6pm

831.454.8306lupulosc.com

.......................

.......................

Classic and gluten-free pastas.Reservations recommended 831.464.2608

316 Capitola Ave, Capitola Village 95010 Dinner Only | Closed Mondays

Step out of the ordinary and enjoy an authentic Italian experience,

right here in Capitola.

Internationally trained

Chef Gaetano

THERE’S A NEW WEBSITE IN TOWN.

GoodTimes.SC

Page 15: Food & Drink 2016

2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM | FOOD & DRINK 15

SANTA CRUZ845 ALMAR AVENUE / (831) 454-9464 / CORNER OF MISSION AND ALMAR, IN THE SAFEWAY SHOPPING CENTER

SKIP THE WAIT. ORDER @ wingstop.com

Page 16: Food & Drink 2016

16 FOOD & DRINK | SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | 2016

Page 17: Food & Drink 2016

2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM | FOOD & DRINK 17

A fter several decades of silent running given over to exten-sive wine tasting and craft beer brewing, the cocktail boom is on

in Santa Cruz.The origins of the term “cocktail” are lost

in a vague haze of media hype and archival misprints, but it seems to have been used well before the characters created by Charles Dickens got thoroughly blitzed on rum punch and gin rickeys. So let’s just say that for a good 200 years thirsty patrons in search of high-proof excitement turned to “mixed drinks” involving more than two ingredients to amuse their tastebuds and release their inhibitions.

The growing appeal of liquor-infused drinks—with even the area’s top wine bar poised to unveil its new liquor license—points to a spiritual revival, with a 21st century emphasis on the botanical and artisanal.

At Oswald, responsive mixologists are always happy to give house cocktails a customized spin. A bit less simple syrup, a hint more bitters, or perhaps the substitu-tion of basil for mint—the patron can help dial in their desires. I often ask for the Amorous to be made with Fernet Branca for a slightly bitter sparkle. The point is to create a complex artwork in a glass that can move through various flavor notes while the patron lingers, sips, and lingers some more.

The Cosmopolitan broke open the martini mold about 20 years ago to court female

consumers, who, (it was believed) preferred the bitter edge taken off their cocktails. It’s hard to argue with the visual and sensual appeal of vodka, Triple Sec, cranberry juice, and sweetened lime juice. Pretty and pink. As sophistication levels grew, patron desires for the new drove the Cosmo to morph into a wide range of postmodern libations involving cranberry and lime. Mint, for example,

added an herbal thrill. Gin replaced vodka for a deeper perfume of juniper. And cucumber reigns as

the go-to vegetal collaborator.Fashionable new cocktails borrow their

appealing complexity from the addition of unexpected change-ups of ingredients. Blood orange, chilis, cucumber, saffron, fruit purees. Others amp up their impact by adding more than one extra shade of liqueur. Amaro plus vodka. Fernet plus hard cider plus gin. See what I mean?

So convinced was Santa Cruz entrepreneur Sean Venus of the rising tide of high-proof cocktails that he recently opened the area’s first distillery, making artisanal gins as well as tequila and bourbon. “I think the cocktail and spirits craze is a natural evolution of what we have seen in other culinary trends,” he says. New flavors and the handmade touch are noted by Venus as fueling this renaissance.

“I think this has been building for quite some time, but recent changes in legislation around the country has made it easier for a 18 >

Where to seek out Santa Cruz’s new mixology chic

BY CHRISTINA WATERS

Cocktail Hour

Page 18: Food & Drink 2016

18 FOOD & DRINK | SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | 2016

<17

small distiller to exist,” says Venus. “This has reinforced and accelerated the move-ment, as there are many more distillers today out there telling their story and sharing their spirits.”

At 515 Kitchen & Cocktails, the upstairs bar works up uncanny cocktails with alchemical precision. The inventive cock-tail menu suggests a science experiment in an heirloom garden. For example, the Garden Still is a blend of two gins, absinthe, Cynar, basil, and lemon. And my favorite, the Cantina Band, is stocked with St. George Terroir Gin, Fernet Branca, ginger beer, and lime juice. Disarming combinations, ecstasy for the mouth.

Red, upstairs in the historic Santa Cruz Hotel, is on everyone’s shortlist of places to hang and sip a slow handcrafted cocktail. Serious martinis and cucumber Cosmos with basil are just the tip of the iceberg at this throbbing outpost of adult beverages.

“We pride ourselves on creating original cocktails with fresh produce and house -infused spirits,” says general manager Taylor Fontana. “A few of our most popular cocktails would be our Cucumber Mojito

MIXOLOGY PRIMER: THE PEGU CLUBEveryone has a favorite cocktail. Here’s the Pegu Club, a favorite of organic gin-smith Sean Venus.

1 1/2 ounces Venus Gin Blend No. 01

3/4 ounce fresh lime juice

1/2 ounce orange simple syrup*

2 dashes Angostura bitters

Combine all ingredients in a cocktail shaker with ice. Shake and serve up with an orange twist.

*Orange simple syrup: Combine sugar and water in a saucepan over medium high heat, 1-to-1 ratio. Add zest from one orange and stir until sugar is dissolved. Immediately remove from heat and strain. Store refrigerated.

and the Naked and Famous.”Fontana notes the presence of organic

mint in the mojito, and offers the recipe for the N&F: mezcal, peach liqueur, housemade honey syrup, habanero bitters, lime juice, and ginger beer. Blazing idea.

At Aptos’ busy Kauboi Japanese Grill & Sushi Bar, another outpost of mixology, a signature hit is the Hinky Dink, involving no fewer than four liquors—vodka, pomegranate liqueur, limoncello, and Cointreau—as well as lemon juice and mint. The cocktail menu is astonishing. My mouth waters for the Mexican Elvis, a mix of Reposado tequila, Minero mezcal, Fernet Branca rinse, pineapple syrup, and lime. Ay caramba!

At the surf saloon with a view—Aquarius, tucked inside the Dream Inn—theme cocktails rule. The Legend offers purists a classic martini starring Ketel One. But for a walk on the wild side many swear by the Aeronaut loaded with designer tequila, hibiscus, Cointreau, agave and cranberry. Seriously, how could you have any more fun for only $12?

Page 19: Food & Drink 2016

2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM | FOOD & DRINK 19

3326 portola Dr, Santa Cruz | 831.476.2733 www.thepointchophouse.com

A Pleasure Point Tradition

Enjoy our delicious take on California comfort food, prime cuts,

chops and cocktails

Breakfast Sat.-Sun 8:30am-2pm | Lunch Sat.-Sun. 11am-4pm

Dinner Nightly from 5pm | Happy Hour Mon-Fri. 4-6pm

COMFORT | CHOPS | COCKTAILS

Park Downtown &Trolley

to the Beach

$5 all Day Parking | 25¢ Per trolley ride

Soquel Front Parking (next to the Del Mar)

Locust Street Garage & trolley Stop

Parking Services

Mention this ad for 10% Off

TrueOliveConnection.com

Downtown Santa Cruz 106 Lincoln St. 831.458.6457

Aptos Village Square 7960 Soquel Dr., Ste. C 831.612.6932

Tasting Room & Gourmet Retail Shop

Extra Virgin Olive Oils Aged Balsamic Vinegars

Gourmet Gifts

Zinnia’sScotts Valley

Gifts for Dads and GradsPlus we Have a Large Assortment of

Ladies’ Apparel and Accessories Including Brighton Jewelry, Vera Bradley and Much More

219C Mount Hermon Rd. (next to Starbucks) 831-430-9466www.zinniasgiftboutique.com

(831) 430-9466219C Mount Hermon Road • Scotts Valley

zinniasgiftboutique.com Always complimentary gift wrap

Annieglass • Brighton • Hobo • Rosy Rings • Umi Rolf Glass • Vera Bradley • Baggallini … and many more

Page 20: Food & Drink 2016

20 FOOD & DRINK | SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | 2016

Whose Cider You On?

We’ve been noticing sour ales and hard ciders making their way back onto enlightened wine and

beer lists in California, thanks in part to the artisanal tinkering of handcrafters looking for something new and different. What goes around comes around, and in the case of hard cider, the new trend is indeed an ancient one. The French and English were cider aficionados since before the Norman Conquest, preferring the reliable flavor and cleanliness of fermented apple and pear juice to the

questionable pedigree of drinking water.In the late 18th century New World, a

restless grower euphemistically dubbed “Johnny Appleseed” broadcast apple seeds as he worked his way west. But it wasn’t so that we could have big, fat, delicious apples to go with our lunches. It was for harvesting and fermenting into something with a few decibels of alcohol. So prevalent was hard cider as a mildly alcoholic beverage in the U.S. that during Prohibition the G-men actually ripped up apple orchards in an effort to prevent

zealous lawbreakers from making up a bit of hard cider.

Paul Cocking of Gabriella Cafe serves Square Mile cider from Oregon. The flavor is crisp, dry and delicious. “It comes in 12-ounce bottles, which no one around here seems to be making,” Cocking notes. “People asking for it seem to just have developed a taste for it. It’s drier than beer and has less alcohol than wine.”

Sour ales are another handcrafted item adding sex appeal to libation menus. I first tasted one of these distinctive creations at Assembly a few months ago, thanks to Zane Griffin, Assembly’s beverage manager.

“Sour ales have been very popular in the recent craft beer movement,” says Griffin. “Using wild fermentation methods and pitching interesting yeast and bacterial strains coupled with breweries’ house ‘bugs,’ brewers are able to yield dynamic and interesting flavor profiles.” Griffin describes the sour results as offering notes of “barnyard funk, apricots, minerality, lemon, and slatey earthiness.”

Michael Enos and Julie Rienhardt at Watsonville’s Elkhorn Slough Brewing Co. specialize in handmade wild and sour ales. They write: “We think the reason why these ales are becoming more popular is a byproduct of the general food and beverage revolution. People are recognizing more that fermented foods are good for you, so more people are experimenting with fermentation in general.”

The duo made their first batch of spon-taneously fermented hard cider by acci-dent. “The resulting cider was so good, we decided to try using the wild yeast to make beer. We began experimenting and ended up making some very good award-win-ning barrel-aged beer,” write Enos and Rienhardt. The brewery’s award-winning June Bug is an example. “We produce this annually, after first making our base beer with our harvested wild yeast from the apples in the late fall, and then adding olal-lieberries from our garden in the summer to re-ferment the beer in the barrel.”

Wild beer is different from sour beer. If the yeast is harvested from the natural environment, the beer can be called wild. “It produces some tartness and funkiness, but those characteristics are created naturally,” the Elkhorn brewers explain. Sour beer can use laboratory-produced yeast and bacteria. Griffin believes much of the allure of these new ales results from how beautifully “they complement the renaissance of artisan from-scratch food.”

Why hard ciders and sour ales are cool again BY CHRISTINA WATERS

Page 21: Food & Drink 2016

2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM | FOOD & DRINK 21

EXPERIENCE THE REDWOODS FROM A UNIQUEP E R S P E C T I V E

mounthermonadventures.com $10 OFF! use code LOCALGet

537 seabright ave • santa cruz • www.engferpizzaworks.com

call 831.429.1856 hoursTuesday–Sunday 4:00 to 9:30pm-ish

WOOD-FIRED PIZZA • ORIGINAL RECIPE SAUCES • HANDMADE DOUGH

GlutenFree

featuring WOOD-FIRED pizza build-to-suit or combinations vegan and gluten free options • organic salads homemade soups and desserts beer and wine to dine-in or TAKE OUT

ping-pong • checkers • smiling faces!

eat and be happy

537 seabright ave • santa cruz • www.engferpizzaworks.com

call 831.429.1856 hoursTuesday–Sunday 4:00 to 9:30pm-ish

WOOD-FIRED PIZZA • ORIGINAL RECIPE SAUCES • HANDMADE DOUGH

GlutenFree

featuring WOOD-FIRED pizza build-to-suit or combinations vegan and gluten free options • organic salads homemade soups and desserts beer and wine to dine-in or TAKE OUT

ping-pong • checkers • smiling faces!

eat and be happy

Our customers are GOLDEN!

537 seabright ave • santa cruz • www.engferpizzaworks.com

call 831.429.1856 hoursTuesday–Sunday 4:00 to 9:30pm-ish

WOOD-FIRED PIZZA • ORIGINAL RECIPE SAUCES • HANDMADE DOUGH

GlutenFree

featuring WOOD-FIRED pizza build-to-suit or combinations vegan and gluten free options • organic salads homemade soups and desserts beer and wine to dine-in or TAKE OUT

ping-pong • checkers • smiling faces!

eat and be happy

˝ It s only beer that makes thirst so wonderful˝

831-459-9999 • 110 Walnut Avenuewww.99bottles.com

Featuring 45 taps & over 200 bottled beers½ lb Burgers • Grilled Chicken, Salmon & Ahi

Fresh Pasta & Salads • Vegetarian Dishes • Kids Meals Family Friendly Pub • Pet Friendly Patio

Mt Hermon 1.2h

Page 22: Food & Drink 2016

22 FOOD & DRINK | SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | 2016

24 >

Pop Life

Instead of burning out, the pop-up trend has caught fire. Why does it work so well in Santa Cruz? BY LILY STOICHEFF

When Tighe Melville and chef Zachary Mazi met in 2014, they set out to make the kind of food they felt was missing in Santa Cruz. LionFish SupperClub

held regular pop-ups at the Food Lounge throughout 2015 and into 2016, featuring menus inspired by Asia, India, the Middle East and beyond, exploring these flavorful cuisines while making good use of “some of the best local ingredients in the world.”

“There’s a hunger here for more diverse foods, and it’s just not available,” says Mazi.

“What diners desire is shifting,” agrees Melville. “There are a lot of young foodies in Santa Cruz who grew up here and want more. I think pop-ups are addressing that demand. What’s cool, too, is a lot of busi-nesses are embracing it. Midtown Cafe, the Food Lounge, MJA Winery, the breweries … They’re seeing there’s value in it.”

LionFish SupperClub recently added a “permanent pop-up” called Ulterior, a brick-and-mortar kitchen above Motiv, on Pacific Avenue, earlier this year. Mazi and Melville’s goal is to maintain the inherent playfulness of their food that is so well received by their fans in their new space.

“We feel like we have this blank canvas to paint a more conceptual restaurant,” says Mazi. “California cuisine is kind of played out and there’s a lot of restaurants doing the same thing, but slightly different. Variance draws people to pop-ups—‘What are they doing this week? Let’s check it out!’”

POP-UP LUCK The Blue Lotus dish at Ulterior includes locally

caught smoked sustainable sable fish on a bed of kimchi fried

rice with blistered snap peas, a rice crisp, Miner’s lettuce, and

borage flowers. PHOTO BY KEANA PARKER

Page 23: Food & Drink 2016

2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM | FOOD & DRINK 23

Back Nine Grill & Bar555 Highway 17

(Pasatiempo Drive Exit)Santa Cruz

www.backninegrill.com

Follow Us

HOST A MEMORABLE PARTY OR EVENT

Fair Prices Extensive Menu & Bar ServiceGreat Atmosphere Right Off the Highway

Back Nine is the perfect venue for your next celebration. Banquet service up to 200 guests.

Call or Email to Book Your Event Now (831) 423-5000 x310 [email protected]

231 Esplanade | 831.476.2263

7 Days 11a-close Weekend Brunch 9a – 1p

Happy Hour Mon - Fri 3p – 6p

Dog Friendly & Heated Patio

Lively -and- Local

2621 41ST AVE SOQUEL • 831-476-3801 • CAFECRUZ.COM •

Page 24: Food & Drink 2016

24 FOOD & DRINK | SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | 2016

<22

26 >

UP SWINGPop-ups work much differently than a typical restaurant. The service is almost always to-go, lines tend to be long and menus brief. Arrive late and you run the risk of seeing a heavy chalk mark across your favorite item after they’ve run out. But customers keep coming back for more of these adventurous eats, and more entrepreneurs are using this low-investment format to test the market waters.

It was just a couple of years ago that local culinary entrepreneurs really began embracing the format. And rather than burning bright and then fading away, pop-ups have become a new norm. Locals seem eager to come out in droves for these gone-in-a-flash restaurants, whose service occurs over the course of a few intense hours on a single day, perhaps once a week or even more infrequently. Lines down the block have been typical in many spots, and yet no one really seems to mind.

Assembly restaurant partners Zachary Davis and Kendra Baker were inspired by the underground food movement in San Francisco when they decided to turn an adjacent street-facing storefront into POPUP, a reconfigurable space that hosts a variety of food events. They knew pop-ups were taking off in the Santa Cruz food scene, and wanted to create an opportunity for them to do something more public in a certified kitchen, while still maintaining a spontaneous vibe.

“Santa Cruz has a very creative entre-preneurial spirit, and it exists in the food world as well,” says Davis. “The issues we have around food trucks have pushed some of the people that might have gone in that direction into other lower-overhead ways of trying out their business. With a pop-up, they can experiment, learn, and test their product without the larger commitments of opening a restaurant.”

Throughout 2015, Manresa Bread, the bakery offshoot of the Michelin-starred Manresa restaurant in Los Gatos, supple-mented their farmers market appear-ances over the hill with weekly pop-ups at POPUP. Co-owner and head baker Avery Ruzicka says that that develop-

ment phase was crucial for her business.“It ended up being a testing ground for

products that would end up in our own retail space. We could showcase them in the pop-up and get customer feedback, and our own feedback,” says Ruzicka.

They chose to vend on Wednesdays in order to be a part of the downtown farmers market experience, albeit one street over. Says Ruzicka, “At a farmers market and at a pop-up, the line between producer and consumer is very thin. There is no line, you’re right

there with that person. That’s really attractive.” Overall, she found the Santa Cruz community extremely receptive to this kind of research and development, frequently selling out of their artisan breads and inventive pastries.

“Santa Cruz has a very well-educated and adventurous, open community. People have the idea of life balance down, and it allows for moments of, ‘Hey, let’s try something new,’” she says. “Living in Santa Cruz turns something that could be mundane into a beautiful, wonderful

STRIKING GOLD Chef Zachary Mazi of LionFIsh SupperClub graduated from pop-ups to a kitchen of his own, Ulterior at Motiv, where he’s pictured here with a handful of locally harvested Miner’s lettuce. PHOTO BYKEANA PARKER

Page 25: Food & Drink 2016

2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM | FOOD & DRINK 25

A gathering place for great Cask Alesin the public house tradition, uniqueto Santa Cruz. Served in our taproomwith local passion.

British Style Ales now in Santa Cruz

21517 East Cliff Drive in East Cliff Village near 17th Ave.

Santa Cruz (831) 713-5540

eastcliffbrewing.comHours

Mon - Thurs 4-9 pmFriday 4-9:30 pm

Saturday 12-9:30 pmSunday 11 am-8 pm

17th

Ave

East Cliff

East Cliff Shopping Center

San

ta C

ruz

Har

bor

Tremont

Early Bird Special $3 Off any Entrée

7-9am,Tues thru Fri onlyOne per coupon | exp. 10/28/16

Open Tues–Sun, 7-2:30pm819 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz 427.0646

zacharyssantacruz.comOver 30 years of serving breakfast and lunch in Santa Cruz

BEST MEDITERRANEAN FOOD BEST MIDDLE EASTERN FOOD

BEST NEW RESTAURANT

110 Church Street, Downtown Santa Cruz | 831.454.8663

mozaicsantacruz.com

Full Bar | Happy Hour 3-6 DailyLunch 11:30am-4:00pm

Dinner 4:00-9:30pm, Fri & Sat ‘til 10

Belly Dancer Every

Fri Night

Perfect for Your Lunch Hour

New ExpressLunch Menu

Same Fresh IngredientsLunch Pricing $5-$16

Page 26: Food & Drink 2016

26 FOOD & DRINK | SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | 2016

<24

moment. One way to enjoy the moment is to go out to dinner, try something new, take a little bit of a risk.”

MAKING IT POPCustomer outreach is crucial for any fledgling business, and the transient nature of pop-ups means chefs can bring their food to the customer. That’s a perfect system for Kickin Chicken friends Justin Williams and Danny Mendoza, who started frying chicken in their condo as a way to bring in some extra cash in 2014. Now, they use their popular feasts to introduce their product to potential new fans, who will hope-fully get hooked and order their late-night delivery service, now prepared in a professional kitchen at the Food Lounge. So far, their methodology has worked. They’ve gone from being the self-described “drug lords of late-night chicken” to weekly pop-ups and catering to looking for a permanent location.

Mendoza and Williams feel that while the brevity of pop-ups is innate to the form, the characteristic spontaneity is largely an illusion. They definitely want people to

show up. “Marketing is 90 percent of the work,” says Mendoza. “The instantaneous marketing where you send out a tweet or an Instagram post and say, ‘I’ll be here in an hour’ only works for food trucks. It doesn’t work for us,” adds Williams.

Consistency is also key. Pop-ups allow for more creativity than a chef might normally have in a brick-and-mortar restaurant, but if a customer falls in love with a dish, they’ll keep coming back for more.

“Getting a consistent menu has helped us out so much, because people know what to expect and what to order from you. We have people who have ordered every week for a year, more than a year, and some-times they’ll order a new thing, but they’ll always get the chicken,” says Mendoza.

“Doing something unique is important, too,” says Williams. “I think it would be really hard to do, like, a barbecue pop-up or a burger pop-up, because that’s already readily available here. You have to do something different, and you have to do it really, really well.”

Zane Griffin, who manages POPUP, is always looking for movers in the back-yard food scene to bring into the light.

“There’s this underground food culture wherever you go. We see and read about brick-and-mortar places, but there’s a lot of other stuff going on off the books that’s really cool too, and I’ve been talking to those people. I can’t really say who, because they don’t have their permitting together, but that’s who we’re trying to work with and help out.”

He believes that part of the appeal of this kind of dining harkens back to street food culture, which he doesn’t see in Santa Cruz, where you walk down the street and stop just because something smells good. He believes that as people continue to become more familiar with the format, more delicious things will come.

“The pop-up scene is in its infancy. It’s learning to walk. People are still getting used to the concept, both cooks and consumers, but there’s a lot of excitement and interest from the community, which is awesome,” says Griffin. “I think it’s important to have something fresh and surprising. It’s only going to get more exciting and busier as the food artisans of the community start to crawl out of the woodwork and make an impression.”

CHICKEN SLINGIN’ Justin Williams and Danny Mendoza of Kickin Chicken use their weekly pop-ups at POPUP on Pacific Avenue to introduce new customers to their late-night delivery service. PHOTOS BY ZACHARY DAVIS

Page 27: Food & Drink 2016

2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM | FOOD & DRINK 27

1141 Soquel Ave, Santa Cruz • 831.426.5664Open Daily 11am - 11pm | charliehongkong.com

Organic Noodles and Rice Bowls

Real FoodHealthy & Affordable

Dog Friendly

Patio

Eat Organic

Love Your Body Love The Earth

Page 28: Food & Drink 2016

28 FOOD & DRINK | SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | 2016

Santa Cruz’s Farmhouse Culture expands its fermented empire with Gut Shot probiotic drinks BY JOSIE COWDEN

W hen Santa Cruz’s Kathryn Lukas started her sauerkraut company Farmhouse Culture, it

was an instant success. Naturally probiotic and delicious, sauerkraut adds raw organic goodness and a burst of tangy flavor to all kinds of dishes, and Lukas found fermented favor with flavors like Classic Caraway and Horseradish Leek.

Now, Farmhouse Culture has come out with a line of probiotic drinks called Gut Shot—all made with cabbage. Organic, vegan and gluten-free, with no added sugar, Gut Shots come in flavors such as Kimchi, Garlic Dill Pickle, Smoked Jalapeño, and, my favorite, Ginger Beet.

While most people know about the health benefits of eating cabbage in the form of sauerkraut, drinking

flavored cabbage water might sound a bit out there. But its salty goodness is surprisingly tasty, proponents say it aids digestion and boosts the immune system.

Farmhouse Culture’s sauerkraut and Gut Shot drinks can be found at most local farmers markets and food stores such as Staff of Life and New Leaf. Visit farmhouseculture.com for more info.

GUT FEELING

Page 29: Food & Drink 2016

2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM | FOOD & DRINK 29

60 Craft Beers & Ciders on Self-Pour Technology International Comfort Cuisine | Craft Soda | Local Wines

11A - 11P | MON-SAT

ENTER @ PACIFIC & CHURCH | 110 COOPER ST. STE. 100B, SANTA CRUZ POURTAPROOM.COM | 831-535-7007

Coming Downtown

Book a table at opentable.com or 831.460.5012175 WEST CLIFF DRIVE, SANTA CRUZ

Offering spectacular oceanfront dining just off the beach in Santa Cruz. The restaurant and Jack O’Neill Lounge

is truly a “window box on the sea”. Come enjoy local wine, craft beer

and our seasonal menu.

Specializing in Natural and Organic Foods

Supplements & Bodycare Local Wines & Beer Great Gift Options

831.685.3334 7506 Soquel Drive Aptos, CA Open Everyday 8am to 8pm

Page 30: Food & Drink 2016

30 FOOD & DRINK | SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | 2016

Drinks All Around

What better way for visitors and locals to experience our superb wineries than with a guided wine tour? Started by Seth Kinman in January, Mountains to the Bay Wine Tours takes

guests on informative and upbeat trips in the Santa Cruz Mountains, exploring some of California’s breathtaking scenery along the way. Couples, groups and private parties can enjoy a relaxing time together without having to worry about driving after enjoying several flights of wine.

“I grew up here and started the company to bring real quality to the wine tours,” Kinman says. “I love taking people

around and showing them the beauty of the area—just enjoying the day and the weather and having a good time.”

Kinman gained a wealth of experience doing wine tours for almost 10 years with another company before launching out on his own. “It’s been encouraging because I’m doing really well,” he says, adding that he expects the peak season, May through November, to be especially fruitful.

“Harvest is my favorite time to be out there,” Kinman says. “It’s a favorite time for everybody.”

For more information, visit mountainstothebay.com, or call 275-4445.

Mountains to the Bay Wine

Tours offers a new way to experience

local vineyards BY JOSIE COWDEN

Page 31: Food & Drink 2016

2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM | FOOD & DRINK 31

Welcome to Sawasdee

By the Sea or By the Mountains,

We Have Two Locations to Serve You

Happy Hour Mon-Fri 3-6 pm

with $1 off all drinksSawasdee by the Sea

101 Main St, Santa Cruz | 831.466.9009 Sun-Thurs 11a-9:30p | Fri-Sat 11a-10p

Sawasdee Soquel 5050 Soquel Dr, Soquel | 831.462.5051 Sun-Thurs 11a-9:30p | Fri-Sat 11a-10p

Best Thai Restaurant

Heated Dog-friendly patio Sunset Views of Monterey Bay

131 Esplanade, Rio del Mar, Aptos (831) 688-8917 caferioaptos.com

Hours: Dinner 5-9pm Patio 3pm-Close

Happy Hour 3-6pm

Come to the beach & take it to go...

PIZZA BY THE SLICE OR WHOLECOFFEE, ESPRESSO,

PASTRIES & DESSERTS,SANDWICHES/SALADS,

BEST ACAI BOWLOpen 6:30am-8:30pm

VOTED BEST SEAFOOD 2016

831.477.9384 655 Capitola Rd, Santa Cruz

Dog Friendly PatioFull Bar/LoungeEndless Mimosa

Weekend Brunch

Brunchweekends only

Lunch

Dinner

Don't pass us by!!

Page 32: Food & Drink 2016

32 FOOD & DRINK | SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | 2016

If used to marinate or tenderize, add wine in the beginning. Mild acids have a tenderizing effect on meat through lengthy marinating or long, slow simmering. If the end result is to retain the fresh flavor in the food, add wine to the dish just before serving.

Michael Clark, owner-chef of Michael’s on Main in Soquel, cooks with wine on a regular basis and would like to see the myth that alcohol remains in the finished dish dispelled once and for all. In fact, the

34 >

GRAPE DINEHow to take the intimidation factor out of cooking with wine

BY JUNE SMITH

There is nothing mysterious about cooking with wine; it is as basic as salt or lemon juice. Along with flavor and aroma, wine also

contributes vitamins and minerals. The wine you plan to drink with dinner can be a good one to use in preparing food. Don’t be afraid to use your best wine; the end result in the sauce or stew will be all the better for it. And the contrary is also true: if you wouldn’t drink it, then don’t add it to your food.

When cooking with wine, remember that the sugars, acids and tannins will show up on the plate, while the sublter characteristics will fade. Scan your recipe for acidic ingredients like vinegar or citrus, and cut back a tad to allow room for the acid in the wine—especially if cooking with white wine. A dry, non-oaked wine works best for fish or vegetables, and a full-bodied, less dry red or white works well with dishes that already contain lots of sugars.

Page 33: Food & Drink 2016

2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM | FOOD & DRINK 33

NEXT TO PATAGONIA415 RIVER ST. SANTA CRUZ

831.420.1280

. LOCAL . . FARM FRESH .

. ORGANIC .

BREAKFAST,

CATERING,

LUNCH

AT THE

NEW ORGANIC

JUICE BAR!

KAITO"Ocean Lover"

Open for Lunch and Dinner

Tues - Sun, closed Mon830 41st Avenue

in Pleasure Point • Santa Cruz (831) 464-2586

www.smilekaito.com

RAMen & SuShi TApAS

Pearl of the Ocean

Organic RestaurantFresh Local Organic Food“It’s not just food, it’s a passion”

Award-winning Chef Ayoma Wilen (Best Chef America 2013)

We lovingly cook organic, healthy, delicious Sri Lankan vegetarian, vegan, meat, locally caught seafood, grass-fed beef and gluten free meals. Take your taste buds on a vacation to an enchanted island where the herbs and spices will have you dancing with delight. Try our own Ayoma Wilen’s White Pearl and Red Pearl wines perfectly paired with our cuisine.

736 Water Street, Santa Cruz Tel: 831-457-2350

mainstreethub.com/pearloftheocean

Capitola's Best Kept Secret!Upper Deck Open

Saturdays & Sundays12:30pm - 5:30pm

Fabulous Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner • Full BarOpen 8am til Close

831.476.3534 • wharfhouse.com Located at the end of the Capitola Wharf

Wharf House RestauRant

Fun • Food • Live musiC • PanoramiC vieWs

Pearl of the Ocean

1.8v

Wharf House

1.8v

100 PERCENT LOCALLY-SOURCED

S U S TA I N A B L EFOOD & DRINK NEWS

D I N I N G F O O D IC U L T U R E W I N E C R A F T B E E R M I XO L O GY

REPORTING FROM THE

FIELD

Y O U R G O - T O

Page 34: Food & Drink 2016

34 FOOD & DRINK | SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | 2016

<32

alcohol evaporates, leaving behind only the delightful wine flavor and aroma. An exception to this rule is desserts, where wine can provide the extra kick needed to balance the richness in the dish.

Winemaker Richard Alfaro loves to cook, and when grocery shopping, hits several independently owned stores. His wife Mary Kay says she hasn’t had to make a meal in 30 years.

“My favorite way to cook with wine is braising,” he says. “Slow cooking in a nice Pinot Noir makes for a rich and satisfying meal.”

Alfaro believes the quickest way to a woman’s heart is through her stomach. “I have been known to try to cook my way out of trouble while in the dog house,”

he says. “Once I spent the whole day cooking, hoping to mend things with a gourmet meal, and felt sure I was out of the dog house. Then Mary Kay said, ‘Enjoy sleeping on the couch tonight!’”

Tim Slater, proprietor of Sarah’s Vineyard, studied at Le Cordon Bleu, Paris, and is an intermediate level credentialed chef. While in classes, he observed that French chefs give scientific reasons for why things should be done in a specific way—and that the art of cooking is not all that different from the art of winemaking.

“There is a strong overlap between winemaking and cooking, as technique is critical in both,” says Slater. “Top chefs use the best ingredients, sometimes

sourcing them from specific places, and winemakers spend hours in the vineyard so as to make the best possible harvest decisions. The choice of barrels is important, as different woods provide different nuances of flavor, and are the spice rack of the finished product.” At winery functions, Slater demands that his preferred caterers prepare food that is “a step above.”

So it’s no wonder, at a philosophical level, that wine should be a natural part of cooking—after all, winemakers are constantly thinking about food.

“When I make the wines,” says Jim Cargill, winemaker at House Family Vineyards, “I envision what I will want to eat with them in five years and beyond.”

PRAISE FOR BRAISE Winemaker Richard Alfaro says that slow-cooking meat in a nice Pinot Noir makes for a rich and satisfying beef Bourguignon.

Page 35: Food & Drink 2016

2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM | FOOD & DRINK 35

WESTSIDE MARKET POP-UP BREAKFASTPan-griddled walnut-vanilla bean French toast. Grilled wild salmon filet brioche with farm egg and greens. Drooling yet? Grab your own plate and silverware, that’s only the first few items off this year’s Pop-Up Breakfast menu on May 28. Four monthly breakfast events at the Westside and Scotts Valley markets where local chefs fuse sensational medleys of simple cuisine with seasonal ingredients from farms represented at the market. Each breakfast connects locals to farmers, chefs to landscapes, and healthy stom-achs to happy hearts.

Info: 9:30 a.m., Saturday, May 28. Westside Farmers Market, Western Drive and Mission Street, Santa Cruz. santacruzfarmersmarket.org. 831-325-4294. $37.

Dining DaysA CALENDAR OF THE MOST ENTICING LOCAL FOOD EVENTS AND FESTIVALS

ARTISAN FOOD MARKET AT FOOD LOUNGEThe Santa Cruz Food Lounge has been a major hub for Santa Cruz’s emerging pop-up food culture. Every second Friday of the month, the Food Lounge comes alive with the Artisan Food Market. Pop in for a signature cocktail, wine, beer or cider after work, buy some artisan gifts for the foodies in your life, and have some dinner or take it to go. The Artisan Food Market also includes live music and locally made jewelry and crafts.

Info: 4-8 p.m. Second Friday of the month. Santa Cruz Food Lounge, 1001 Center St., Suite One, Santa Cruz.

Page 36: Food & Drink 2016

36 FOOD & DRINK | SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | 2016

festival goers can choose from 60 local and regional breweries and 10 cider companies in an unlimited tasting from noon-4:30 p.m. Sunday, June 25 presents the Beer Masters Cup, in which amateur and professional home brewers compete for the Best in Show Beer. The festival also runneth over with live music on two stages, food, beer games, and a dog-friendly atmosphere.

Info: 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday, June 25 and 12 p.m.-5 p.m. on Sunday, June 26. Skypark, 361 Kings Village Road, Scotts Valley. $5 for Non-tasters, otherwise $40/Saturday, $20/Sunday, $55/Two-Day. Children under 10 free. hopnbarley.org.

WINE PASSPORT DAYSHere in Santa Cruz, we kind of have the best of everything. Not only has the local craft beer scene exploded, but our wines are nothing to whine about—taste for yourselves with the Wine Passport from the Santa Cruz Mountains Winegrowers Association. On the third Saturdays of July, November, January, and April, tasters with a passport can steep in the local history of vintners and dive into more than 50 wineries throughout the Santa Cruz Mountains.

Info: Noon-5 p.m., Saturday, July 16. scmwa.com. $55.

FOODSHED PROJECT FARMERS MARKETS POP-UPSIf all schools combined learning with food incentives, we might have a whole new generation of engaged students, albeit well-rounded ones (healthy incentives only, of course!). The FoodShed Project is doing it all with its community education and outreach programs at Santa Cruz farmers markets. Free and family friendly, they host events at the downtown farmers markets on the second Wednesday of each month between June and September. This year’s menu kicks off with “Pie in the Sky” on June 8 with a focus on local strawberry history and “Cowabunga!” on July 13, with a “you make-it and taste-it” meat demo.

Info: 3 p.m., Wednesday, June 8, Downtown Farmers Market, Center and Lincoln streets, Santa Cruz. santacruzfarmersmarket.org/campaigns/the-food-shed-project. Free.

7TH ANNUAL HOP N’ BARLEY FESTIVALLocal craft beer and cider production is booming, and the 7th annual Hop N’ Barley Festival is a joyous two-day celebration of the delicious homegrown libation. On Saturday, June 25,

Dining Days

Page 37: Food & Drink 2016

2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM | FOOD & DRINK 37

SANTA CRUZ GREEK FESTIVALDidn’t get enough Greek goodness in May? Fear not, the Santa Cruz Greek Festival has got even more to dish out with music by the Spartan Band, authentic food, folk dancing and more. Eat, drink, shop, and dance till you drop with Santa Cruz’s best street festival that will get you saying opa!

Info: Friday-Sunday, Sept. 9-11, Prophet Elias Greek Orthodox Church, Santa Cruz. livelikeagreek.com. Free.

34TH ANNUAL CAPITOLA ART & WINE FESTIVALBask in the Capitola sunshine with eats, arts, and more than 20 wineries from the Santa Cruz mountains. For the little ones there’ll be juice tasting, craft projects and music with MusicalMe and Music Together. Full schedule available online.

Info: Saturday - Sunday, Sept. 10-11, Capitola Village, Capitola. capitolaartandwine.com. Free.

SANTA CRUZ COUNTY FAIRDeep-fried everything. Need we say more?

Info: Sept. 14-18, Santa Cruz County Fairgrounds, 2601 E Lake Ave., Watsonville. santacruzcountyfair.com. $5-$10.

MOLE & MARIACHI FESTIVALJust because it’s tucked up in the Santa Cruz Mission Adobe State Historic Park’s grounds, out of sight, don’t let the Mole & Mariachi Festival remain out of mind! In its swift ascent to a Santa Cruz summer staple, the festival is a battle among the best in local mole—and it’s stiff competition. Last year’s festival drew nearly 4,000 people and winners included My Mom’s Mole and Mama Marquita’s. A full-on party, the festival boasts a colorful celebration with dancing, music, and mojigangas (giant puppets) and is a benefit for the nonprofit Friends of Santa Cruz State Parks.

Info: 11 a.m. - 5 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 10, Santa Cruz Mission Adobe State Historic Park, 144 School St., Santa Cruz. Tasting kits $10.

Page 38: Food & Drink 2016

38 FOOD & DRINK | SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | 2016

<10

12TH ANNUAL GOURMET GRAZING ON THE GREENCalifornia cows are known to be happy—so why not join them on the green with some perfect midsummer grazing? Do so in style with a day of fine wine, gourmet grub from local restau-rants and live music. Organized by the Santa Cruz Cancer Benefit Group, proceeds benefit local organizations that help individuals with cancer, including Jacob’s Heart Children’s Cancer Support Services and Hospice of Santa Cruz County.

Info: Saturday, Sept. 24, Aptos Village Park, 100 Aptos Creek Road, Aptos. sccbg.org/events.

33RD ANNUAL HOSPICE OKTOBERFESTDust off the dirndls and lederhosen, Bavaria’s best export is back. The Friends of Hospice present their 33rd annual Oktoberfest with plates and plates of German-inspired grub, music, cash prizes, silent and live auctions and more. Check website for event details and upcoming date.

Info: Date TBA. Scotts Valley Community Center, 360 Kings Village Road, Scotts Valley. Hospicesantacruz.org. Free.

7TH ANNUAL SANTA CRUZ BOARDWALK CHILI COOK-OFFRevel in the tastiest of comfort foods with one of the most locally beloved Boardwalk events, the annual Chili Cook-Off. Who will win this year’s competition? You decide. Professional and amateur chefs provide the finest in Amateur Red, Amateur Vegetarian Red, Professional Red, and Professional Vegetarian Red. A portion of the proceeds go to the Walnut Avenue Women’s Center.

Info: Saturday, Oct. 22. Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk, 400 Beach St., Santa Cruz. beachboardwalk.com/chili. Tasting kit $9.

12TH ANNUAL ‘A TASTE OF SANTA CRUZ’Ever wish you could just sample all of Santa Cruz’s best food options in one place instead of having to trek all over the county to figure it out? You can: what began as a fundraiser to raise funds for low-income first-time home buyers through the Housing Foundation’s Closing Cost Assistance Grant Program, the annual Taste of Santa Cruz event puts it all on the table.

Info: 5:30-9 p.m., Thursday, Nov. 10, Cocoanut Grove, Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk, 400 Beach St., Santa Cruz. $40.

Dining Days

Page 39: Food & Drink 2016

2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM | FOOD & DRINK 39

Pupus • Tiki Drinks • Wine by the Glass

MON 4:30-6pm TUES 2-close WED-SUN 2-6pm$6H a p py H o u r a t H u l a’s

83 1 . 4 26 . H U L A221 Cathcart Street • Downtown Santa Cruz

w w w . h u l a s t i k i . co m

E X P E R I E N C E A L O H A I N

S A N T A C R U Z !island grill

Happy Hour

Outdoor Dining

Hawaiian Cuisine&

&

Page 40: Food & Drink 2016

40 FOOD & DRINK | SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | 2016

HERE!LOCAL BERRIES

ARE

It’s local strawberry season and we think that’s cause for celebration. These sweet treats are picked at their peak and delivered daily.

Try our grab n’ go Strawberry Shortcake Cup today!

www.newleaf.comWestside Santa Cruz • Downtown Santa Cruz • Capitola

Pleasanton • Half Moon Bay • Felton • Boulder Creek