Monday, November 27, 2006

Thanksgiving in Excess

So this year, I was not local for Thanksgiving, no traditional eating but loads of fun, friends and wine. John and I, along with three other [married] couples ventured off to Sonoma Valley/Healdsburg, CA for the week. We left DC on Saturday the 18th and flew into Oakland, CA to begin our adventure. We were to drive up to our house [rented a nice 4 br house on the Russian River] on Sunday and hit a few wineries along the way [why not?]. So we go first to the Dry Creek General Store, very cute, quaint place with great sandwiches, a wide selection of bottled exotic sodas [Verners Gingerbeer] and other tasty tidbits.

Sunday
Our first destination is Preston of Dry Creek which is an organic family vineyard and they only sell their jug wine on Sundays [see the man on the jug] and did our first tasting...yummm. They have very good whites and reds [loved the Madame Preston, the Carignane, and the L. Preston]. Apparently I still don't like the Barbera, I think its too strong for my taste. We then moved on to a small, family owned winery David Coffaro Vineyard & Winery
and did a tasting there, that included tasting the futures, or barrel tasting. I highly recommend their wines and they're only available through the web site or at the winery. Great reds. We then moved onto the Dry Creek Vineyard and made it just in time for a tasting. They were closing for the day but we got to sample their wares and purchase a few bottles for future consumption. All in all it was just the beginning of a roaring great 4 days. Dinner, breakfast, wineries, lunch, dinner, sleep, breakfast, wineries, lunch, repeat....you get the idea.

Monday
This was Napa, Calistoga, St. Helena day. We subsequently visited
V. Sattui in Napa Valley, Heitz Cellars and Summers Winery and Vineyards where we had a rousing game of "women vs men" Bocce Ball. We also got to see the famous Old Faithful Geyser of California...one of three "old faithfuls" in the world.

Tuesday
We had to be respectable this day since we were visiting more "snooty" upscale places, like J Wineries, Merry Edwards and Alderbrook. See photo below of the group at J Winery. From Left to Right, Cory [me], Dave Shove-Brown, Dave Tracz, Kim Sullivan [married couple], John Murray [my sweetie], Sharon and Todd Friedlander, and Maureenn Shove-Brown.

Wednesday

The group spilt up in the morning, all the women but me going for spa treatments and the boys off to more wineries. This was our last day in the Russian River/Dry Creek area so we made the best of it. We went to Ferrari-Carano Winery not for a tasting but to purchase Black Muscat, then to Bella Vineyards, where the tasting room is in a manmade cave and the Estate wines are to die for. For fun we went to Francis Ford Coppola's new vineyard as yet to be named. Lunch was our next stop and then off to our final vineyard of the visit, Ledson Winery and Vineyards, where we certainly got our money's worth. Maureen challenged our host to find a wine that pleased her pallet and he went to great lengths to do so. We left with happy tastebuds. On to San Francisco, a burger and a beer...enough wine for one week.

Thursday
We thought it might be tough to find a place for breakfast on Thanksgiving morning but were pleasantly surprised to find World Famous Sears Fine Food serving yummy silver dollar pancakes,
eggs, bacon, and a broiled grapefruit. Back to the fabulous hotel [oh, yea, great Priceline score of the day, Hyatt Regency San Francisco on the Embarcadero for less than $100 per night...sweet!]. Change for the evening festivities and off to Todd and Sharon's for dinner in Oakland. Suffice it to say that food, wine and fun were had by all [some more than others] and there are videos out there somewhere of dancing...check out YouTube for a posting sometime. Menu consisted of yummy butternut squash soup [I think], stuffing, turkey done on the grill, green beans with bacon and shallots, carrots with beets, and spur of the moment gravy [my first]. I think nearly every dish had bacon of some sort in it [the gravy started with bacon grease] so you all would fully appreciate that.

Friday [our last full day]
After a trip to Haight-Ashbury to go to the Kid Robot store [indulge the kid in me, and John's gotten me hooked] we headed up the coast to Tomales Bay Oyster Company for oysters by the bay [tasty and when grilled, a spectator sport] and then went to Point Reyes to experience the harsh wind of the beach and the corresponding light house.

Here we are at the observation deck at Point Reyes, where the original lighthouse used to be:



All in all, it was a fabulous time, good food, fun things to see, more than enough memories and photos, and new friends.

1 Comments:

At Mon Nov 27, 10:22:00 PM EST, Blogger Meghan said...

I'll echo Cory's comments here as mine about the Thanksgiving weekend are similar: "All in all, it was a fabulous time, good food, fun things to see, more than enough memories and photos, and new friends." And yes, I know a lot more than I ever knew there was to know about the Christmas tree business. ;)

In tri-related news, I may make a motion soon to change the name of the blog (or at least incorporate separately out here on the west coast). I left my house today as I do many times in the winter in Seattle with only one of our criteria met: dry. And when I say dry, I mean not actively raining or snowing, not that the pavement itself was dry. I have managed to get some decent fenders for my bike so everything but my feet stays relatively dry when the pavement is wet. Today, however, it was a crazy weather day. Despite setting out under relatively sunny skies, it hailed big hunkers at least three separate times on my ride. Now this presents a particular biking challenge as it is hard to look up with the hurling frozen chunks coming at your head, but knowing where you are going more than a split second before you get there is equally helpful with the decreased steering capabilities presented by a layer of ice balls on the trail. All I can say is that I managed to get home without totally wiping out and managed to get feeling back in my toes after a warm shower- tingling doesn't mean hypothemia, right?

It is snowing now and we are supposed to get about three inches of accumulation by morning which should make for an interesting commute. Seattle deals with snow just about as well as DC so I expect we'll be "snowed in" tomorrow which will be perfect for me to work on my paper from the comfort of my own home!

 

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