OCTOBER 16
S A C R A M E N T O ' S P R E M I E R F R E E C I T Y M O N T H LY
THE GRID
By Keith Berger
THE MOST INTERESTING PEOPLE, PLACES & CULTURE IN AMERICA'S FARM-TO-FORK CAPITAL
916.849.0302 | 915 20th Street
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RICH CAZNEAUX
CHARMING EAST SAC COTTAGE! This 2 bedroom, 1 bathroom, 1106 sq/ft, sits on a deep lot.The character of this property includes hardwood Áoors, formal dining room, claw foot tub, and beautiful brick Àreplace in the living room. Original Ànishes add to the charm. The separate 1 bedroom, 1 bathroom, in-law quarter is perfect for overnight guests. Within walking distance to shopping and restaurants. $449,950
TWO STORY CRAFTSMAN!
It’s all in the details in this well appointed 4-5 bedroom, 3 bathroom, 2940 sq/ft cottage bungalow. The inviting Master Suite with sunroom/ofÀce opens to an outside patio that overlooks the backyard, while the master bath has a steam shower and his/her walk-in closets with custom built-ins. $1,185,000.
UPDATED HOME IN WEST SAC!
Newly updated 4 bedroom, 2.5 bathroom in the established Linden West neighborhood of West Sac. This home has it all with new carpet, new interior/exterior paint, new appliances and new kitchen and bathroom Áooring. The kitchen looking onto the family room is very open and spacious with a brick Àreplace and sliding doors that lead into the backyard. $389,950
CLASSIC BRICK TUDOR! Nestled in the heart of East Sacramento, this 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom home affords the appeal of an idyllic brick Tudor. This 2,571 square foot home features elegantly traditional living and dining rooms. This home hosts an impressive master suite with sitting area, gas Àreplace, multiple closets, and a remodeled bathroom. Boasting an outdoor Àreplace and mature plantings, the backyard is ideal for entertaining! $1,175,000
SOLD
SOLD
QUIET STREET IN CURTIS PARK! Open living room GREAT RIVER PARK DUPLEX! with Àreplace that looks onto the dining room with lots of lighting. Kitchen was remodeled in the last 5 years with glass tile backsplash and granite countertops. Features include hardwood Áoors, Jack and Jill bathroom and a laundry room.Within walking distance to Curtis Park and Taylor’s Market/Kitchen. $401,000
Residential income opportunity! This duplex in River Park has been immaculately maintained and is perfect for any investor. Proximity to Sac State makes these two 2 bedroom, 1 bathroom turnkey units a a great investment Light, bright Ànishes really bring this property to life. $559,950
SHORT WALK TO EAST PORTAL PARK!
Well cared for 3 bedroom, 1.5 bathroom, 1359 sq/ft home.This home hasn’t been on the market since 1968. Features include hardwood Áoors throughout and classic details of original built-ins. The living room is full of light with it’s large dual pane windows and Àreplace. Close to shopping, restaurants and coffee house. $515,000
SOLD
CHARMING BUNGALOW! Located on a beautiful tree lined street in East Sacramento, this 2 bedroom, 2 bath, plus den, is on almost 1/4 acre. Features include hardwood Áoors throughout, as well as a 2 car tandem garage with an attached shop. Great location near restaurants and shops. $850,000
BRE#01447558
Rich@EastSac.com
www.EastSac.com
454-0323 INSIDESACRAMENTO.COM
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INSIDE THE GRID OCTOBER 16
@insidesacbook
VOL. 1 • ISSUE 5
3104 O St. #120, Sac. CA 95816 (Mail Only)
info@insidepublications.com Marybeth Bizjak mbbizjak@aol.com M.J. McFarland Cindy Fuller Linda Smolek, Aniko Kiezel Michele Mazzera, Julie Foster ads@insidepublications.com Lauren Hastings lauren@insidepublications.com Jim Hastings, Daniel Nardinelli, Adrienne Kerins accounts@insidepublications.com 916-443-5087
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To view more of Keith Berger's artwork, visit keithbergerphotography.com. His work will be shown through Nov. 8 at the ARTHOUSE on R who is presenting “The City:Through Brush and Lens”, works by artist Varya McMillan and photographer Keith Berger. 1021 R St. Sacramento; visit .arthouseonr.com.
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INSIDE
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IIN NSIID DETHE GRID OCTOBER 16
S A C R A M E N T O ' S P R E M I E R F R E E C I T Y M O N T H LY
By Keith Berger
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THE MOST INTERESTING PEOPLE, PLACES & CULTURE IN AMERICA'S FARM-TO-FORK CAPITAL
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N E I G H B O R H O O D
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EARLY PRAISE “Superbly done. This book captures both our heritage and a new vibrant vision of our future. Through artistic photographs and well-crafted descriptions, you can almost sense the aromas, delicacies, fun, excitement and energy of places that bring friends, family and visitors together. Bravo!” Scot Crocker & Lucy Ediam Crocker, Crocker & Crocker Communications
1462 33rd St.
Crocker Art Museum Store 216 O St.
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101 Places to Enjoy in 8 Great City Neighborhoods
Avid Reader 1600 Broadway
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OCTOBER 16 EVERY DAY IS YOUR CHANCE TO MAKE THIS CITY A LITTLE BETTER
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AN ARTFUL LIFE
Photo by Aniko Kiezel @anikophotos
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TO DO THIS MONTH'S CULTURE & ENTERTAINMENT HIGHLIGHTS
I Am Woman, Watch Me Soar “Women Speak,” season opener of the Sacramento Ballet Oct. 7-9 Main Stage Theatre, Sacramento City College, 3835 Freeport Blvd. 552-5810, sacballet.org
See the balletic beauty wrought by four extraordinary female choreographers at the Sacramento Ballet’s first performance of the 2016-17 season. These nationally renowned artists will speak their minds through dance and expand the boundaries of the art form with movement of verve and vitality. Women speak; audiences listen!
Art from the Heart “Celebration of Arts” show and sale Saturday, Oct. 1, from 2-5 p.m. Sac Ballet will perform "Women Speak" at Sacramento City College
Sierra 2 Center for the Arts and Community, 2791 24th St.
Interested in picking up some locally made artistic gems in media such as watercolor, oil, acrylic, photography, ceramics and jewelry? Then get thee to this show and sale organized by a dedicated team of local artists to benefit the art program of Sacramento County’s Palmiter School. Admission is free and everyone is invited to join in the Celebration of Arts!
jL By Jessica Laskey
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Hearts of Glass “An Evening of Inspired Music for Chorus, Organ and Strings” Sacramento Choral Society and Orchestra Stained Glass Concert Saturday, October 22 at 8 p.m. 536-9065, sacramentochoral.com Fremont Presbyterian Church, 5770 Carlson Drive
Hear the Sacramento Choral Society and Orchestra make the rafters ring at Fremont Presbyterian Church with a program including pieces by Tomaso Albinoni, James Whitbourn, Jake Runestad and others as well as the song stylings of soprano Anne-Marie Endres, mezzo Maria Bueb, tenor Christopher Bengochea and baritone Shawn Spiess, all under the able baton of conductor Donald Kendrick. Stick around for a post-concert reception to meet the artists and enjoy free parking at the Scottish Rite Temple at 6151 H Street.
Winds Of Fortune “ForTune,” ink drawings by Camille VandenBerge Through Oct. 10 Shimo Center for the Arts, 2117 28th St. shimogallery.com
Through Jan. 15, 2017 Robert T. Matsui Gallery, 915 I St. (Sacramento City Hall) sacmetroarts.org
You’re probably familiar with Camille VandenBerge’s work as a sculptor—her whimsical ceramic and bronze figures grace the Sacramento Airport, as well as feature in numerous museum and private collections worldwide—but did you know the prolific local artist has also created an impressive collection of ink drawings over the past two decades that she’s kept private until now? Check out this stunning surprise collection of pen-on-paper drawings at both the Shimo Center for the Arts and the Robert T. Matsui Gallery this fall. “When I’m drawing with ink, there’s a feeling of both spontaneity and specificity, even fortuitousness,” VandenBerge says, who goes by the name ForTune when working with ink. “(The medium) doesn’t just speak to me, it sings to me.” Camille VandenBerge's collection of ink drawings will be exhibited at Shimo Center for the Arts and the Robert T. Matsui Gallery this fall
Reading Rainbow “Paint-A-Rock Day!” official children’s book release and fine art exhibit Saturday, Oct. 1 (art exhibit through Oct. 3) Story time and book discussion with Ayanna Simone Fabio: 2-4 p.m. Art discussion with Daphne Burgess: 5-7 p.m. Underground Books, 2814 35th St.
For the first time in Sacramento history, two African American women, one a writer and the other an artist, have teamed up to create a children’s picture book that promotes social activism. Author Ayanna Simone Fabio is a mother of five children who works as a Family Advocate for children’s mental health and school readiness. “Paint-A-Rock Day!” was a story created to give readers ideas for social activism for young children. Illustrator Daphne Burgess is a professional artist, art teacher and community organizer. She works primarily with nonprofit organizations, volunteering and art making with youths and adults. The “PaintA-Rock Day!” illustrations were inspired by people and places that Burgess and Fabio encounter every day—community members and friends from their past and present are all colorful characters introduced along this beautiful journey.
Dance of Death Calidanza Dance Company presents “Noche de Muertos” Thursday, Oct. 27, at 7 p.m. Crocker Art Museum, 216 O St. 808-1182, crockerartmuseum.org
Stop by the official release of the children's book "Paint-A-Rock Day!" at Underground Books
Bring the whole crew to Calidanza Dance Company’s family-friendly tribute to Mexico’s Dia de los Muertos. Calidanza will showcase rituals, ceremonies and high-energy dances to commemorate this sacred Day of the Dead under the stars in the Crocker’s courtyard. The evening will include 2013’s “Noche de Muertos,” which is a modernistic piece commissioned by the San Francisco Symphony, as well new choreography for the traditional dance entitled “La Viejad” and more. Live musical accompaniment will be provided by Orgullo Regional.
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Claire Falkenstein will be on exhibit at Crocker Art Museum
Renaissance Woman
Key Players
“Claire Falkenstein: Beyond Sculpture” Oct. 2 through Dec. 31
Choral Evensong and Trinity Episcopal Cathedral pipe organ consecration Sunday, Oct. 2, at 4 p.m. Gala Organ Recital by Bruce Neswick Friday, Oct. 14, at 7:30 p.m.
Crocker Art Museum, 216 O St. 808-1182, crockerartmuseum.org
As one of America’s most experimental and productive 20th century artists, Claire Falkenstein is known for her relentless exploration of media, techniques and processes with uncommon daring and intellectual rigor. Renowned primarily for her exquisite sculpture, she was also an inventive painter and maker of prints, jewelry, glass, films, stage sets for dance, public murals, fountains and monumental architectural commissions. This retrospective exhibition traces the development of Falkenstein’s work both chronologically and geographically through key works from the early 1930s through the 1990s.
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Trinity Episcopal Cathedral, 2620 Capitol Ave. 446-2513, trinitycathedral.org
Come celebrate the completed restoration of the Trinity Episcopal Cathedral’s historic pipe organ, more than three decades in the making, with a service of Choral Evensong sung by the Trinity Cathedral Choir and the consecration of the iconic instrument by Bishop Barry L. Beisner. Originally built by the Reuter Organ Company of Lawrence, Kansas in 1983, the organ has long been admired for its superb, refined tone and has been played by many of the world’s great organists. Over the years, issues of wear and tear and design problems arose and in 2014, the cathedral launched a campaign to repair and complete the instrument as originally intended. With work on the Reverend Dr. Grant S. Carey antiphonal organ completed this spring, the community is ready to celebrate!
Cars For Kids “2016 Viva L’Auto Gala” benefitting the Sacramento Children’s Home’s Crisis Nurseries Saturday, Oct. 1, 6-10 p.m. North Ridge Country Club, 7600 Madison Ave. 944-1462, kidshome.org/events
Get an eyeful of elegant Niello automobiles and party to live music, nosh on fabulous food and enjoy a specialty cocktail bar to help raise funds for the Crisis Nurseries, a program of the Sacramento Children’s Home, now in its 20th year. Since 1996, the Crisis Nursery Program has been serving children from birth through age 5 whose families are experiencing a crisis situation that may put the children at increased risk of abuse or neglect. At the event, you’ll get to bid on a variety of auction items including an exciting Sacramento King’s “Back Stage” experience, a hot air balloon ride, a vacation home in France, Disney Theme Park tickets, a Spare Time oneyear membership, golf packages, private winery parties, a Discovery Bay Yacht Experience and an art-framed Disney cel. The Sacramento Kings’ dancers will be on hand to meet, greet and pose for pictures.
Tanya Tickling the Ivories
Enjoy the sounds of pianist Tanya Vegvary at American River College Performing Arts Theater.
Tanya Vegvary in Concert Friday, Oct. 28, at 7:30 p.m.; Saturday, Oct. 29, at 7:30 p.m. American River College Performing Arts Theater, 4700 College Oak Drive 484-8433, tanyavegvary.com
What do you get when you start playing piano at the age of 4? Just ask Tanya Vegvary, the globe-trotting pianist renowned for her renditions of composers such as Sergei Prokofiev and Frederic Chopin who has performed in Greece (and soon to be in London) and has taught master classes in San Marino, Italy. Hear the founder of the Sacramento Piano Conservatory School of Music’s amazing artistry for yourself when she performs Chopin’s Piano Concerto No. 2 in F Minor under the able baton of conductor Steven Thompson of the American River College Orchestra.
Native Intelligence “A Show of Force: Sculpture by Allan Houser (Haozous) Featuring Recent Gifts from Loren G. Lipson” Oct. 30 through Feb. 26, 2017 Crocker Art Museum, 216 O St. 808-1182, crockerartmuseum.org
Internationally recognized for his iconic figurative and modernist sculptures featuring American Indian people and themes, Allan Capron Haozous became known to the world as Allan Houser. He is widely considered the most influential American Indian artist of modern times, with three decades of experience as a teacher and artist articulating tradition through innovation. “A Show of Force” showcases 15 sculptures in bronze and stone created during the last two decades of the artist’s life. Highlights include rare examples of Houser’s work like a reclining nude titled “By the Water’s Edge” and the focal point of the exhibition, “Force.”
Jessica Laskey can be reached at jessrlaskey@gmail.com. Please email items for consideration by the first of the month, at least one month in advance of the event. n Organist Bruce Neswick will perform at Trinity Episcopal Cathedral
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A Bright Future CELEBRATING ALL THAT SACRAMENTO HAS TO OFFER
M
y love of our city is a driving force behind much of what I have spent my life doing. But I have never been more excited about the future of our urban core than I am now. In August and September, a trio of great events came together. During the last week of August, the newly minted Sacramento Mural Festival left our central city with 10 gorgeous new murals painted on the sides of privately owned buildings. (See our photo spreads taken by Aniko Kiezel.) The effort was more than a year in the making. Much credit goes to the volunteer efforts of David Sobon and Cheryl Holben. The Sacramento Metropolitan Arts Commission, under director Shelly Willis, lent its expertise to the process in selecting the artists—some local, others from across the nation and the world.
CH By Cecily Hastings Publisher
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Mayor-elect Steinberg suggested folks buy the new guidebook and use it as a Sacramento “bucket list” challenge.
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This project was privately funded by the building owners and other sponsors. Not a penny of public money was spent. Sacramento Mural Festival was expertly promoted by Patrick Harbison, who lent his time and PR expertise. An enormous number of people from around the region were lured downtown to see the work in progress over the course of a week. David Sobon told me that many who came had never once been downtown. Sacramento Area Bicycle Advocates organized an impromptu bike ride that week to visit all 10 mural sites, and more than 250 folks showed up. Jan Sweeney from Fleet Feet told me she was organizing fun runs to visit the murals. The festival organizers plan to make this an annual event, so if you missed it, there’s always next year. Visit sacramentomuralfestival.com for a map of mural locations and plan your own voyage of discovery. The end of August also brought the completion of the first installation of the Sacramento Walk of Stars. My friends Scot and Lucy Crocker spearheaded this great project and
put in more than a year of volunteer work to make it happen. This year’s five stars included artist Gregory Kondos, film and television star LeVar Burton, Olympic Gold medalist swimmer Debbie Meyer, musician Timothy Schmit, formerly of the Eagles, and Dr. Ernie Bodai, who founded the breast cancer research stamp. The gala dinner celebration on Aug. 31 at Memorial Auditorium was a terrific event. All five stars spoke of their love of Sacramento and the impact it had on their lives and careers. Their stories were as different as the careers they found success in. And every one of these accomplished people was humble, gracious and appreciative of the honor. Their bright blue stars are now permanently embedded in sidewalks along L Street in the city’s Handle District. The Walk of Stars gives people another reason to visit The Handle (in addition to the neighborhood’s great shopping and dining). In early September, we released our new photo-driven guidebook, “Inside Sacramento: The Most
Interesting Neighborhood Places in America’s Farm-to-Fork Capital.” We celebrated our launch with a party at the Crocker Art Museum for the owners of the book’s 101 places and our sponsors. When Mayor-elect Darrell Steinberg introduced me, he had a creative idea. He suggested folks buy the new book and use it as a Sacramento “bucket list” challenge. Plan to visit every place in the book, he said. When you’re all done, pass the book on to someone who just moved to the area. The book was a labor of love for me. I grew frustrated with our city being underrated as a destination for visitors and people who live here. The way our city has grown over many decades, we never developed defined districts with concentrations of small businesses as is common in many cities. Instead, numerous city neighborhoods developed, with places to eat and shop spread over blocks and blocks. With this dispersion, it isn’t easy to see all we have to offer as a city. Our book’s photos and stories pull together a vibrant collection of locally owned business that compare
to the best of even sophisticated cities like San Francisco or Portland. With Golden 1 Center opening this month, an adjacent new hotel and retail development opening next spring, and the gorgeous new McKinley Village housing development in East Sacramento that opened in September (see our story on the public art component), we have much to celebrate and be proud of. Councilmember Jeff Harris told me recently that there are dozens of attractive and compelling development projects in the works for the city in the next few years. We also just finished year four of our city’s month-long Farm-to-Fork Celebration. Dozens of amazing events were offered showcasing the rich agricultural bounty of our area. I believe that Sacramento, and many of the people who live here, have been hampered by a self-inflicted inferiority complex. Now is the time we shed that concept and start celebrating all the wonderful things and places our city has to offer. Cecily Hastings can be reached at publisher@insidepublications.com n
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SC By Scot Crocker
Midtown Cruiser Shop owner Jeff Yeargin
ruiser Craze THE ICONIC BEACH BIKE IS THE PERFECT RIDE FOR A GROWING CITY
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B
iking on the grid is on the rise. Cyclists are buzzing around to work, restaurants, parks— everywhere. In 2015, Sacramento was named the fifth most bike-friendly town in America by BetterDoctor.com. Two-wheelers come in all shapes and sizes, but the cruiser bicycle— also known as the beach cruiser—is especially popular these days. It has balloon tires, upright seating, straightforward construction and a nice, soft seat. The cruiser is built for comfort, not speed. Put a bell and basket on it and you’re instantly in vacation mode. Leading the cruiser craze is Midtown Cruiser Shop. Owner Jeff
Yeargin has been into cruisers for about 10 years, building and working on bikes in his garage. Getting parts was difficult; he often had to order them from Germany or Amsterdam. Three years ago, Yeargin, who has a full-time job with the city, opened his shop on I Street. He sells manufactured cruisers and builds custom cruisers for people who want a look all their own. He also details bikes and handles maintenance and repairs. “I don’t think I’ll ever make a million dollars at this, but it’s a lot of fun,” he says. “I just got the idea and ran with it. I guess it started as a hobby but it’s much more than that
now. I love to see just how happy people are when they get their new bike and start riding.” While cruisers have always been big in Europe, it’s taken a while to get going in Sacramento. For the cruiser crowd, Yeargin helps organize a monthly ride on Second Saturday from May through October. Cyclists meet at Suzy Burger on P and 29th streets and often ride to Old Sacramento. The number of riders continues to grow, with as many as 300 cyclists rolling down the road together. “It’s all about having a good time,” Yeargin says. “We make sure it’s safe for everyone. We stay in one lane and even have traffic control.
People like to be out with their bikes. While some people show their bikes in competitions, most want to ride around. That’s the whole point. ” One Second Saturday, Midtown resident Erin Stafford looked out her window and, she says, “saw a stream of people on their bikes filling the whole street as far as I could see. There were old and young, blinged-out bikes and trikes with huge speakers on the back blasting music, kids on bikes and families. I’m still amazed at how many people participate in this ride. It seems like it gets bigger every month.” Yeargin takes pride in the custom bikes he builds. Most of his custom cruisers are longer and lower than
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manufactured bikes. Customers can trick out their custom bikes with specialized handlebars, rims, seats, paint styles, colors and more. Yeargin participates in shows throughout the West, including the Outlaw Bicycle Club Bike Show in Las Vegas. While he’s built bikes that cost as much as $10,000, he won a major competition with a cruiser that cost less than $5,000 to build. Helping Yeargin at his shop is Chris Beirn, who refers to himself as a mechanic. He credits the cruiser craze to the fact that they are easy to ride and comfortable. “It’s like sitting in an easy chair,” he says. “When you
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are on a mountain bike or road bike, you’re hunched over. Not everyone likes that.” Beirn has a couple of bikes and is building another one that he hopes will be different from any other bike around. “It’s cool to see where these bikes are going,” he said. Yeargin primarily sells manufactured bikes from Huntington Beach Bicycle Company, which offers a number of models and styles. New manufactured cruisers sell for $300 to $600. A custom-built cruiser starts at about $1,500 and averages around $3,000. Some really tricked-out bikes cost more than $5,000.
In the United States, cruisers were ubiquitous from the 1930s to the 1950s. Their popularity waned in the late 1960s, when they almost disappeared from the scene. New, lighter bikes with narrow tires and multiple speeds dominated sales after the early 1970s. However, cruisers were popular with a small but growing group of cyclists who were inventing what today is mountain biking. These extremists were riding on challenging off-road terrain that was steep, rocky, muddy and difficult. Road bikes couldn’t handle the harsh treatment, so they found a strong and affordable option with older cruisers. These
bikes, which they called clunkers, were tough; used ones could be bought at a garage sale for $5 or $10. The cruiser craze has picked up steam. Some say it was helped along by Pee-wee Herman and his 1985 movie, “Pee-wee’s Big Adventure,” in which Pee-Wee crosses the country looking for his stolen bright-red cruiser. Others say it was people like Yeargin, who perpetuate the cruiser craze by proudly riding tall in the seat on big bikes with big tires sporting big smiles. Scot Crocker can be reached at scot@crockercrocker.com n
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926 J Street | Sacramento, CA 95814 | grangesacramento.com | 916 492 4450
st Concert Season Donald Kendrick, Music Director
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Stained Glass Concert
ALBINONI | Adagio for Organ and Strings JAMES WHITBOURN | Lux in Tenebris JAKE RUNEST R TAD | The Hope of Loving OLA GJEILO | Luminous Night of the Soul PERGOLESI | Magnificat Ryan Enright, Organist SCSO Chamber Orchestra
SAT, OCTOBER 22 at 8:00 PM Fremont Presbyterian Church
Tickets: 916 536-9065 or SacramentoChoral.com INSIDESACRAMENTO.COM
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Vote NO on Measure B
Ambitious politicians, greedy developers, and unaccountable bureaucrats are trying to pick our pockets again! They don’t care that increasing sales taxes unfairly hurts poor people, seniors, hard-working families trying to make ends meet and small business people struggling to keep their doors opens. The existing 1/2 percent transportation tax - Measure A - already provides a gusher of more than $110 million each year to fund Regional Transit, maintain our local streets and build new transit and road projects. Enough is enough! Please take a few minutes to read why thousands of our neighbors are joining together to defeat Measure B and its plan to double our transportation sales tax rate. Thank you,
Your Neighbors at DontDoubletheTax.Org Paid for by the “Don’t Double the Tax - No on Measure B” Campaign Committee FPPC #1387847
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BROADWAY SACRAMENTO 2016-17 SEASON GET THE BEST SEATS AT THE BEST PRICE: SEASON TICKETS AVAILABLE NOW! THE FOLLOWING FIVE SHOWS ARE ON SALE NOW!
OCT 26-NOV 6, 2016
DEC 27, 2016-JAN 1, 2017
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Maintaining a Midtown Standout The Waterboy continues to impress 20 years later
GS By Greg Sabin
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I
n 1996, a young restaurateur opened a new eatery on a sleepy corner in Midtown. The neighborhood was yet to be the pulsing engine of culinary culture it is today, and the young chef turned restaurant owner was yet to be a fixture of the local food scene. The young chef had taken a turn in San Francisco kitchens before coming to Sacramento and working with the Paragary restaurant group. Wishing to strike out on his own, Rick Mahan opened a French-inspired restaurant called The Waterboy. Twenty years later, the restaurant still puts out some of the highestquality food in the region. The Waterboy is an easy restaurant to overlook. With attention focused on the reinvigorated downtown core, and with high-profile Midtown restaurant openings of places
You start to wake to the fact that this food is on a level of excellence difficult to achieve night in and night out.
like OBO’ and Hawks Public House taking folks’ time and attention, a 20-year-old establishment that quietly and competently goes about its business isn’t always the first to leap to mind when you’re choosing a dining location. From the street, it’s all windows and a bit of trim. The predominant color of the nonglass exterior is beige. The entrance is set back from street and in
the permanent shade of a large elm. Like I said, it’s easy to overlook. The interior, lovely and comfortable though it is, also doesn’t exactly pop. Beige again dominates. Some large industrial ducts and solid building infrastructure is on display in the highceilinged room. Curtains are used to good effect to separate the large open spot into discrete spaces.
The service, much like the space, is also subtle—professional but casual. “Easygoing” might be the word you’d use. All of these elements—the plain exterior, the unembellished interior and the relaxed service—do their part to lull the diner into a sense of indifference. Just another night out at some faceless restaurant. It’s not until the first dish comes out that you realize something else entirely is going on. Like the duck that seems cool and calm, even bored, on the surface but underneath the waterline paddles furiously, this calm space is a front for a kitchen putting out exceptional fare. When you take that first bite of something as simple as bruschetta, you start to wake to the fact that this food is on a level of excellence difficult to achieve night in and night out. You taste the perfectly toasted, housemade bread; you devour the artfully placed sliced fig; you savor the delicate balance between the salty prosciutto and the sweet-tangy whipped goat cheese. Maybe it’s just a brief moment after your table finishes the gorgeous opening dish, but it’s a well-savored moment. And then, just before you ask yourself what might be next, your casual server drops by to run through a few specials with you. While he commands your attention, the plates and soiled silverware disappear from your table. A well-rehearsed magic trick has just been performed for you and you’re not even aware of it. The service is an elaborate ruse. The laid-back nature of the servers
belies a practiced professionalism. The conversational server distracts you from the team of service staff that invisibly patrols the dining room, filling water glasses, replacing utensils and shuttling plates hither and yon without your being the wiser. It’s an elegant, subtle dance. As each plate comes to the table, it strikes a familiar note. Maybe it’s the veal sweetbreads? You could swear you’ve heard someone talk about them before. Odds are you probably have, and the meaty glands soaked in demiglace are every bit as good as you’ve been told. The dish is so good, in fact, that Mahan can’t take it off the menu for fear of customer revolt. Could it be someone mentioned the corn soup recently? Probably. It’s a gorgeous bowl of pureed sweet corn with crumbled chorizo and gulf shrimp, the flavors melding with unusual beauty. You may have heard that the burger has won awards, or that the bartender finished first in a national competition, or that the desserts are out of this world. In the words of Han Solo, “It’s all true.” Twenty years after a characteristically quiet opening on a characteristically quiet corner, The Waterboy continues to deliver excellent food that stands up to the test of time. It’s simplicity on the outside, well-oiled machinery on the inside. The Waterboy is at 2000 Capitol Ave.; 498-9891; waterboyrestaurant. com. Greg Sabin can be reached at gregsabin@hotmail.com n
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Value Added
At McKinley Village, art is seen as a public good
JV By Jordan Venema
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“We wanted a real addition to the city by emphasizing the richness of the local art community and those who helped define and shape the Sacramento art scene.”
local artists and called it a day. But according to Angelides, “we wanted to create an art walk that would draw people from the surrounding neighborhoods and the rest of Alan and Helen Post Park features five of Helen's sculptures the city.” Developers he relationship between the McKinley invested about private and public sectors Village officially $500,000 to has never been characterized opened its doors— commission nine by efficient communication, but or underpass, One of the Helen Post sculptures on display original pieces by the McKinley Village housing anyway—on Sept. local artists, as development proves that, under the 10. But from the project’s inception, well as to acquire sculptures by nowright circumstances, these two sectors art has always been its driving force. deceased artist Helen Post. To help can work together to put on quite a “We wanted a real addition to oversee the project, Angelides hired the city,” explains Phil Angelides, show. the Sacramento Metropolitan Arts president of Riverview Capital Public art for the development Commission. Investments, “by emphasizing the spurred a partnership between “Phil contacted me and asked if we richness of the local art community the Sacramento Metropolitan Arts would help administer this project,” Commission, a public agency, and the and those who helped define and says Shelly Willis, executive director shape the Sacramento art scene.” private developers Riverview Capital of SMAC, “and to help with artist At little cost, developers could have selection, design review, fabrication Investments and the New Home named a few streets and parks after Company. and the installation of the art.”
T
Founded in 1977 by a joint city and county ordinance, SMAC oversees public art and art programs throughout the county. Specifically, it manages Sacramento’s Public Art Program, which is funded by 2 percent of the total budget of eligible city and county capital improvement projects. While public projects are required by the city and county to set aside a percentage of their overall budget for the installation of public art, there is no ordinance that requires the same from private developers. “It’s pretty rare that a private developer voluntarily puts a sculpture in front of a building, and it’s super rare to have public art in a housing development,” says Willis. “To have somebody say I’m going to invest in art in a housing community that’s paid for by the private sector—that’s nearly unheard of in this country.” The developers could have hired private curators to help manage McKinley Village’s art projects. By hiring SMAC, the money it pays will go back into the public program to
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Mark Foster’s “La Feuille” sculpture greets visitors, and soon, residents as they enter McKinley Village
fund future art projects and programs in the city and county. The McKinley Village art project was managed by Willis and a committee that includes three members from the development team (Phil Angelides and Megan Norris of Riverview Capital Investments and Aaron Sussman of The New Home Company) and three members of the community (SMAC commissioner Cecily Hastings, former Sacramento mayor and arts philanthropist
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Burnett Miller and renowned artist Wayne Thiebaud). McKinley Village’s public art will include a sculpture garden and an art walk with nine installations by artists Suzanne Adan, Julia Couzens, Brenda Louie, Jeff Myers, Hearne Pardee, James Piskoti, Gina Werfel and Marc Foster. The first completed installation, located at the entrance to McKinley Village in Alan and Helen Post Park, is Foster’s “La Feuille.” The 18-foot-
tall, leaf-shaped structure made of honed stainless steel pays homage to Sacramento’s trees and will be complemented by the 1,800 trees that will be planted in the neighborhood. Named after deceased Sacramento residents and artists, Alan and Helen Post Park will also feature five of Helen’s sculptures made between 1972 and 1977. The second park, named after former Sacramento Mayor R. Burnett
Miller, and other installations should be completed by spring. Willis admits that some people might be surprised to find quality art in a housing development. She says the artists contributing to McKinley Village’s art walk will bring something unique and beautiful to the project. “It’s an incredible project,” says Willis. “The work will be imaginative, and the artists are all experienced. And that you can go for free to see this whenever you want is really incredible.” Angelides also believes the art adds value to the development—and the wider Sacramento region—that isn’t usually quantified by developers because it doesn’t necessarily translate to the bottom line: profit. “When budgets get tight, often the things that get cut are things that bring human enjoyment, like public places and artwork,” he says. Angelides says of the artworks, “They’re beautiful, they’re practical, and they lend themselves to human interaction.” He hopes McKinley Village challenges other developers to see the value of public art in private spaces. “I hope that this project inspires the private development community to invest in art, and I believe that it will,” he says. Jordan Venema can be reached at jordan.venema@gmail.com n
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CHANGES at the CO-OP LEGENDARY NATURAL FOODS STORE GETS A NEW HOME
W
hen Sacramento Natural Foods Co-op opens the doors at its new location on Sept. 28, it will offer a sleek, green design and energyefficient features, along with expanded deli, produce and meat departments, enough grab-and-go options to keep you out of the kitchen, and lots of elbow room for dining and cooking classes. And let’s not forget the solar-ready car park and bike racks. If you like numbers: The old co-op on Alhambra Boulevard, which opened in 1989, has 16,000 square feet and miniature aisles. You might snag a parking spot in the small lot next door if you’re lucky. The square footage of the new co-op on 28th and R streets, a short walk away, is 26,000 on the ground floor, and the snazzy mezzanine adds another 16,000. There is double the parking space, and that doesn’t include additional spaces available evenings and weekends in the parking garage. It’s an impressive move for the co-op, which was formed
AK Sacramento Natural Foods Co-op general manager Paul Cultrera
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By Angela Knight
more than 40 years ago as a foodbuying club. You don’t have to be an owner to shop at the co-op, but it’s an option. Shopper Vicki Contente purchased ownership in the co-op as a present to herself after she retired. She’s looking forward to the opening and says she’s “ecstatic about the new parking.” While I check out the “Local & Organic” signs in the old store’s produce department, Contente cleans up something on the floor. She takes her ownership seriously. What the new store won’t have is general manager Paul Cultrera. He’ll hang up his name tag at 5 p.m. on Oct. 31, after 18 years working at the co-op and almost four decades in the grocery business. “I’m coming dressed as a retired guy [for Halloween],” he says. The co-op recently announced his replacement: Dan Arnett, who’s worked for Seattle’s Central Co-op. But Cultrera will be a difficult act to follow. He has an encyclopedic
knowledge of the co-op, its suppliers, its history and the communities it serves. Cultrera reminds me of the rabbit in “Alice in Wonderland.” He has white hair and a moustache, and he wears a big watch. Time is on his mind. Plans for the new store were “started a long time ago on the back of an envelope,” he says. “A long time ago” translates to six years. While he admits the new store is his “baby,” he’s comfortable leaving it in someone else’s hands. “It will be done before I leave,” he says. What began as a parking lot has been transformed, under Cultrera’s leadership, into the co-op’s new digs. Revolution Wines, an urban winery, and Temple Coffee are neighbors. I’m here to tour the new building—before products are placed on the shelves— with Cultrera as my guide. There’s lots of dust on the concrete floor right now. Contente would probably start sweeping if she were here.
Although there are many changes in store at the co-op, it will continue to support farmers. Cultrera estimates the co-op buys directly from 30 to 40 farms. He rattles off a partial list: Say Hay Farms in Yolo County and Vega Farms in Davis provide bulk eggs. There’s organic meat from Prather Ranch. Riverdog Farm, an organic family farm in Capay Valley, and Green Restaurants Alliance Sacramento pick up food scraps for composting. Bring your own shopping bag and the co-op will donate to One Farm at a Time and other worthy organizations. With all the dining space and food options, you can eat a slice of pizza, a burrito, some made-to-order sushi or vegetables from the salad bar, then finish your meal with a scoop of Devine gelato while sitting at a table made from reclaimed wood by local company New Helvetia Hardwoods. “I think the community is going to be blown away,” Cultrera says. I think he’s right.
There is so much space in the new store, I lose track of where I am and rely on Cultrera to guide me. We admire the employee bike racks (there are 75, along with showers so employees can spritz before they start work), a commercial mixer (I estimate it weighs more than a baby elephant) in what Cultrera says may be the largest kitchen in Sacramento, and numerous skylights. Then there’s the decorative tile. Cultrera originally saw the distinctive tiles in a restaurant in Barcelona, and the building’s interior design firm found a supplier. Those tiles will be one of the first things shoppers see when they walk in the door. Sacramento Natural Foods Co-op will relocate to 2820 R St. in midOctober. For more information, go to sacfood.coop. Angela Knight can be reached at knight@mcn.org n
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INSIDE
OUT
Sac Mural Fest Sacramento Mural Festival was a weeklong event featuring artists from Sacramento and around the world. From Aug. 20–27, more than a dozen murals were painted in downtown and Midtown.
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Eclectic by Design
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he exterior of Nance Singleton’s South Land Park home offers tantalizing clues to its imaginative interior. Built in 1965, the 1,600-squarefoot home was originally a California Rambler, like the surrounding houses. Thanks to Singleton’s alterations, it no longer resembles its neighbors. The exterior is stucco with copper gutters and a metal roof. Jaunty orange metal plant sculptures sit tucked between living plants. An 8-foot wall with custom iron inserts surrounds the entry to the home. The garage boasts a second-story work space with azure-tinted windows and a balcony.
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jF By Julie Foster
“I don’t like to keep it all one style,” Singleton says. “I try to keep it modern and eclectic but pull in special pieces. My home is a collaboration with artists and ironworkers I have worked with over the years.” Singleton, an architect and former model, purchased the four-bedroom, two-bath house in 1977. Initially, the house had a wildly different decorating scheme. “It looked like a bordello with carpeting, linoleum, bright flowered wallpaper and a bright blue ceiling,” she says. “But I knew I could make it work.” Outdoors, Singleton replaced two koi ponds with a sumptuous custom lap pool with a rock waterfall and huge granite spill bowls. The tile surround and insets are laced with copper and were imported from Japan. Two bronze sculptures poised at one end of the pool represent her granddaughters perfecting their diving skills. A remotely controlled solar-powered patio cover provides shade for the outdoor kitchen and lounge area. A fire pit extends the outdoor season. Crossing the floating steps lands you at the front door.
After her four children were grown, Singleton set about reconfiguring her home. She began in the master bedroom. Taking out a wall provided space for a large master suite. She enlarged the bathroom, making space for both an open-concept shower and separate soaking tub. She used stone and other natural materials to bring the outside in. The walls are painted a vivid green representing energy, life and family in the Japanese tradition. When Singleton decided the kitchen needed remodeling, her thought process was a long one. The original kitchen had little storage space. She doesn’t like overhead cabinets, feeling they create a feeling of confinement. She prefers counters clear of clutter and appliances. And she wanted space for maximum entertaining. “I really thought this kitchen out,” she says. “This was the first kitchen I did, and
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“
MY HOUSE IS ALL ABOUT BEING
PEACEFUL AND BEING ABLE TO WALK
AWAY BEING RESTED. IT’S SOMETHING I’VE ALWAYS STRIVED TO DO.
”
it gave me nightmares. I kept drawing and drawing, trying to get enough cabinet and drawer space so I could keep everything organized.” Forgoing a kitchen table, Singleton installed a free-form island composed of Cambria stone and two salvaged pieces of granite. It seats eight easily. Her cabinets were imported from Italy. A pullout pantry reduces clutter. A six-burner gas induction cook top, double convection ovens and Liebherr stainless steel wine fridge set the stage for entertaining. A 6-foot-long Japanese kitchen sink contains prep areas and plenty of space left over for all the pots and pans used for a large meal. Singleton stayed put through each project. When she gutted the kitchen, she set up camp in her bedroom. “I lived through the dust and everything and moved my coffeemaker and toaster in and I was set,” she explains. A custom-made industrial steel staircase leads to the artist loft space she built above the garage. Sliding double doors open onto a balcony overlooking the pool area.
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“Combining my love of art, architecture and design, I created a special loft space to not only work but display my works and special pieces I have collected through the years,” she explains. “My house is all about being peaceful and being able to walk away being rested. It’s something I’ve always strived to do.” If you know of a home that you think should be featured in Inside Publications, contact Julie Foster at foster.julie91@yahoo. com n
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Lucy Eidam Crocker SHE WEAVES DREAMS FOR SACRAMENTO
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hen it comes to connecting with the public, no one does it better than Lucy Eidam Crocker. The co-owner with her husband, Scot, of public relations firm Crocker & Crocker has, in her own words, “always been a PR person.” Whether she’s using her connections and PR prowess for paying clients or for nonprofits to whom she donates her services—like WEAVE, the Sacramento Walk of Stars and various water groups—you know Eidam Crocker will get the word out. “I wasn’t originally looking to start my own business,” says Eidam Crocker. “I was working in water at another PR firm and was looking for a new challenge. When Scot (only a friend at the time, when he was running the Crocker/Flanagan ad
JL By Jessica Laskey Giving Back
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agency) recommended I start a consulting firm and offered to rent me an office at the agency, I took him up on it and voila! Here we are, 22 years later.” In those ensuing two decades, Eidam Crocker not only founded her own PR firm, LucyCo Communications, she also married Scot in 2010 and joined business forces with him the next year under the name Crocker & Crocker. “We complement each other,” Eidam Crocker says. “He does branding, marketing and ads and I do public relations and outreach. Our skills work together perfectly.” Eidam Crocker’s expertise has benefited a slew of organizations over the years, including countless water agencies for which she’s created statewide messaging and developed logos—often pro bono. “Water is really my passion area,” she says. “It’s essential to our daily lives, and it’s never-ending what
Lucy Eidam Crocker. Photo courtesy of Tia Gemmell.
you can learn and apply in the line of work that I do. I started working in water five months before former Gov. Pete Wilson declared the last drought over. Since then, it’s been a fascinating ride. There’s nothing like a drought to make the general public pay attention to water.” Considering Sacramento has been struggling with drought in recent years, Eidam Crocker’s skills have come in quite handy. “I help customers understand the importance of water,” she says. “I’m
not always carrying the most popular message forward for my clients, but I think it’s so important.” An equally important endeavor that Eidam Crocker has been focusing on lately has been helping WEAVE, Inc.—the primary provider of crisis intervention services for survivors of domestic violence and sexual assault in Sacramento County—expand its retail operation. “I started working with WEAVE about two and a half years ago,” says Eidam Crocker, who helped the
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organization develop a retail advisory committee to identify the best way to expand its stores. WEAVEWorks Recycled Fashion on Arden Way and the WEAVE to Work program, which provides free professional clothing to people seeking to regain their independence through employment, were already popular. But Eidam Crocker thought that Sacramento was ripe for even more purchasing potential. “WEAVE has a very strong brand, and I really believe in their mission,” Eidam Crocker says. “They also have a very strong staff and retail operations manager, so we knew that another retail store could be very successful. We tested different concepts for the name, location, decor and signage with our target demographic as well as with the people who would be donating to the store and it was very well received.” The result of that research is TRUE (Totally Recycled Urban Exchange), a Midtown boutique that opened last year. There, you can buy,
sell and trade fashion to help fund programs and services for survivors. “We’ve seen benefits not only to the bottom line but also for serving victims,” Eidam Crocker explains. “Victims can go anonymously into the store and find clothing to wear day to day—sometimes they leave their homes with nothing—or clothes to wear to work or a job interview.” Or perhaps an outfit to wear to visit the Sacramento Walk of Stars, another Eidam Crocker project that’s taken shape this year. After visiting the iconic Hollywood Walk of Fame for the first time, she and her friends got to brainstorming over dinner what well-known Sacramentans they could picture honoring with a star just like those along Hollywood Boulevard. “The people we came up with are not all actors and directors. We have our own types of important people,” Eidam Crocker says. “We have scientists, doctors, news people, artists, entertainers and sports figures. Apparently, a lot of people have thought about doing something like this over the years. The city said
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rellesflorist.com 2400 J Street 441-1478 it had been approached five or six times. But it’s never gotten off the ground.” Leave it to Crocker & Crocker (with the help of the Sacramento Convention and Visitors Bureau and “a wonderful committee”) to bring the idea to fruition. The inaugural Sacramento Walk of Stars launched on Aug. 31 and included local luminaries Debbie Meyer, Gregory Kondos, LeVar Burton, Dr. Ernie Bodai and Timothy B. Schmit. The plan is to place stars in a new location each year—switching back and forth between Midtown and downtown—until finally connecting into one impressive firmament. With the power of lifelong PR powerhouse Eidam Crocker behind it, we say the sky’s the limit. For more information about WEAVE, visit weaveinc.org. For more information on the Walk of Stars, visit sacramentowalkofstars.com. To nominate an outstanding volunteer for a profile please contact Jessica Laskey at jessrlaskey@gmail. com n
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Walk, Talk, Eat, Drink A LOCAL PAIR TAKES OVER EDIBLE TOUR BUSINESS
Dawnie Andrak is co-owner of Local Roots Food Tours
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I
’ve been eating for 50 years. I’m good at it and I like it!” says Dawnie Andrak, co-owner of Local Roots Food Tours. She and her partner, Tim Bailey, live in East Sacramento and bought the business last December. Together, they have tried their hand at a few local food ventures over the years, including an edible biking tour, and they’ve finally honed in on a brand they hope will stick. “We had three tours the next day [after we bought the business], and the day after we had another three, and we haven’t stopped since,” Andrak says. Her passion for food runs deep. She and Bailey completed the inaugural California Farm Academy in 2012, an intensive farm training program conducted by the nonprofit Center for Land-Based Learning. They dabbled in running a farm but found they were happier managing their six chickens, an alley garden and a hive of bees in their backyard. The day I spoke to Andrak, she had just finished pulling 5 gallons of honey from the hive. In 2013, Andrak completed the inaugural Food Literacy Academy through Food Literacy Center, a training program for community members to become food literacy instructors, making her a certified Food Genius. Andrak later joined the center’s board of directors and regularly volunteers in the classroom.
S A By Amber Stott Food for All
She does the work, she says, because kids make her smile. Andrak is on track to complete a master’s degree in food studies from University of the Pacific by June, and Bailey is doing coursework at Sacramento City College. The two take joy in learning and being active in their community. When they aren’t learning and volunteering, they’re often riding bikes (sometimes alone, sometimes on a tandem) in their favorite city: Sacramento. When the opportunity came to purchase Local Roots Food Tours, they didn’t hesitate. For fun, they take annual trips to cities like New Orleans, where they participate in arranged group bike tours. Last year, they traveled to Iowa for the great RAGBRAI, a seven-day bicycle trip across the state filled with sightseeing and local food. Andrak and Bailey wanted to bring this model to Sacramento, a city they consider world class when it comes to food and beverage. Last year, they developed Stick a Fork in It, a daytrip bike tour that culminated with a pig roast by Patrick Mulvaney. With the purchase of Local Roots Food Tours, they have the opportunity to showcase America’s Farm-to-Fork Capital to a range of people—both locals and visitors from out of town— on bikes or on foot. Each tour includes a professional guide who provides a slice of history with stops along the way to eat in some of Sacramento’s favorite restaurants. On the K Street tour, for example, visitors enjoy bites from Mayahuel, Ambrosia Cafe, Mother, Pizza Rock, Andy’s Apothecary and Cornflower Creamery. The company’s offerings include the Urban Art, Food & Libations Tour, Origins of
Sacramento Food & Cultural Tour and Murphys Food & Wine Tour. Andrak and Bailey aren’t planning immediate major shifts in the tours, though they have ideas, such as adding cruiser-style bike tours of the city. They’re hoping to make improvements to the marketing and branding of the company first. They’ll be rolling out a new logo at the Sacramento Taco Party on Oct. 11, an event they’re sponsoring because it embodies the spirit of their business: celebrating the best of Sacramento’s food scene. They also plan to bring back their daylong bike trip through Stick a Fork in It in 2017. “I hope to see the rest of the world really understanding and appreciating Sacramento for its food scene,” says Andrak. “We have an excellent start, but in 10 years I’d like the world to know about it, too, not just us. I’ll do my part in telling the world.” Andrak and Bailey feel inspired by their new business. “We’re in the walking, talking, eating, drinking business,” Andrak laughs. “We like those things and are pretty good at those things.”
“I hope to see the rest of the world really understanding and appreciating Sacramento for its food scene.”
For more information about Local Roots Food Tours, go to local-foodtours.com. Amber K. Stott is founder and chief food genius of the nonprofit Food Literacy Center, inspiring kids to eat their veggies. She’s a freelance food writer and has been named a Food Revolution Hero by Jamie Oliver Food Foundation, Food Tank’s 20 Innovators Protecting the Planet and a TEDx Sacramento Changemaker Fellow. She can be reached at amber. stott@gmail.com n
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HAVE “INSIDE,” WILL TRAVEL 1. Buz and Debi Miller reading Inside with their camel, Tiger, in the Australian outback 2. Beech family visiting Petra, Jordan 3. Francisco and Gina Castillon visited the Vatican to see and hear Pope Francis in Saint Peter's Basilica 4. Covert family at the Smithsonian Natural History Museum in Washington, DC 5. Deborah Chan, Bob Leonard, and Linda Jayne in Munich, Germany 6. Jan Geiger and Cathy Markle in Arles, France 7. Chris Dawson & Gwynnae Byrd family in front of the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain
Take a picture with Inside Publications and e-mail a high-resolution copy to travel@insidepublications.com. Due to volume of submissions, we cannot guarantee all photos will be printed or posted. Can’t get enough of Have Inside, Will Travel? Find more photos on Instagram: InsidePublications
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39
Bigger
But Not Better THE CASE FOR SEPARATING THE CONVENTION CENTER AND THEATER
RG By R.E. Graswich
S
acramento city council members have endless opportunities to disappoint people. Constituents appear daily with complaints about traffic on their streets. Entrepreneurs call to pitch ideas that require the city’s help through subsidies or entitlements. Labor unions lobby for higher pay and benefits. Nonprofits come looking for financial handouts. The successful council member develops a capacity—ideally it becomes an ideology—to pass along bureaucratic problems to the proper agencies and say no to most solicitations. The successful council member saves the big, affirmative answers for projects that move far beyond special interests and truly make the city better. People get upset
40
THE GRID OCT n 16
John Colville is the interim city treasurer
“W have multiple needs throughout “We oour city. The bigger issue is what we hhave with our assets.”
when they hear this, but everything else is a distraction. In October, the city council will face a monumental decision to expand the convention center and rebuild the adjacent community center theater. The council is certain to move ahead with the proposal. A unanimous council vote in May to fund architectural studies for the project signaled the council’s intentions. There will be no turning back now. But the convention center and theater project presents a classic study on why Sacramento is regarded as a second-tier town despite its significant assets. The city’s habitual underachiever status will be reinforced and memorialized by the council’s vote to stumble forward at 13th and K streets. As every city council member knows, the current convention center is too small and inadequately designed to accommodate large, modern-day conventions. As for the theater, its many problems are underscored by its noncompliance under the Americans With Disabilities Act. So the council has two big challenges here: an underperforming convention center and an antiquated,
noncompliant theater. To solve those distinct and separate problems, the council is prepared to make a monumental error of convenience—a trick shot that seeks to kill two birds with one rock but winds up creating two redundantly mediocre assets. The problem is money. The council has only about $170 million in bonding capacity to cover the cost of expanding the convention center and rehabilitating the theater. That amount won’t be enough to do a first-class job on either project. For proof, walk six blocks west from the convention center and behold the new arena, Golden 1 Center. The arena’s price tag has recently expanded by about $110 million thanks to enhancements ordered by the Kings’ owners. It’s worth noting the Kings are paying for the upgrades, not the city. Two points: The Kings’ owners don’t think like council members, and $170 million only goes so far these days. The Kings’ owners are not paying for the convention center and theater. The city will pick up the entire bill. On the bright side, the city’s interim treasurer, John Colville, believes tourist taxes can service the debt load.
He says, “The way we have it modeled now, there will be no effect on the general fund.” Even then, some city council members are concerned that $170 million is too much to spend on the convention center and theater— especially since that price tag leaves the city with no borrowing capacity. “I have some concern about using 100 percent of that (bonding capacity) on this project,” council member Jay Schenirer says. He would like to see $20 million pulled aside for affordable housing. Another council member, Eric Guerra, says, “We have multiple needs throughout our city. The bigger issue is what we have with our assets.” One obvious solution would be to remove the theater and create a convention center that can compete on a national stage. This was city manager John Shirey’s idea several years ago. He believed the theater’s proximity to the convention center precluded an ambitious expansion. He wanted to knock down the theater and rebuild it elsewhere, possibly near Crocker Art Museum.
The problem with Shirey’s idea was it upset the arts community, especially Richard Lewis, who rents the theater for his Broadway Sacramento musicals. The city loves Lewis and has a hard time saying no to him, even when his shows struggle to sell tickets. Other people in the arts community, led by magazine publisher Rob Turner, believe the theater should be separated from the convention center. The city council is sympathetic to Turner and his friends but wants to know if Turner or anyone can identify a financial partner to help pay for a new, relocated theater. So far, the answer is no. “The convention center actually is the driver,” says city council member Larry Carr, meaning conventions generate tax windfalls while the theater does not. That reality should be enough to separate these babies at rebirth and build a new theater elsewhere when the city can afford to pay for it. R.E. Graswich can be reached at reg@graswich.com n
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41
Yes, He Can Can LOCAL BARTENDER PUTS CRAFT COCKTAILS IN A CAN
A
long with Sacramento’s
he says. “I really like bartending.
new arena, a local canned
It keeps me connected with a lot of
cocktail company is planning
people.”
to make its debut on Oct. 4.
Seng, who is wearing a Farm-
To meet that date, Can Can
to-Fork Capital T-shirt, looks like
Cocktails’ founder, bartender and
an artist with a splash of dreamer,
artist Ryan Seng, and his business
while McNeill has the demeanor
partner, Patrick O’Neill, are sprinting
of a briefcase-carrying accountant.
for the finish line—complying with
He’s comfortable using words like
government rules and regulations,
budgeting, scheduling, costing and
perfecting formulas and preparing
procurement and seems tall enough
for initial production runs—so they
to play center for the Kings. His
can introduce fans to their canned
background and education are in
cocktails at the arena’s inaugural
construction management. When
event, a Paul McCartney concert.
he’s not working with Seng, McNeill is a project manager for Armstrong
If all goes according to plan (and
Development Properties.
assuming you’ve purchased tickets
They met after Seng was featured
beforehand), you can rock out with Sir Paul in Sacramento’s freshly
on a local morning television program.
built arena while sipping a can of
According to McNeill, he was at the
Boar’s Bourbon Root Beer, made with
gym, watching the show, when Seng
Kentucky bourbon, root beer and
introduced Can Can Cocktails. When
Angostura bitters. Another cocktail,
Seng said on the air, “I still don’t
called 120, tops out at 120 calories
know how much this is going to cost,”
and is made with vodka, raspberry,
McNeill knew he had to be part of
mint and lemon.
Can Can, even though he didn’t know a thing about cans or cocktails.
Because of “tied-house laws,”
“I really do believe in the product,”
federal and state regulations governing alcohol suppliers like Can
McNeill says. They haven’t slowed
Can, Seng had to give up his longtime
down enough to have dinner together
bartending career in order to put
and introduce their families to one
signature cocktails in cans. He can’t
another. Seng has lived in Davis since his
do both.
first child was born; McNeill and
For the past eight years, Seng has painted by day and worked behind
his wife are fairly recent Bay Area
the bar at Grange at night—a job that
transplants who live in Curtis Park. While Can Can’s partners don’t
AK By Angela Knight
42
THE GRID OCT n 16
Ryan Seng mixes a cocktail
has provided financial security for his
I worked my way through art school,”
family, including his wife and their
he says. His family and the folks at
three teenagers. The oldest is set to
the Grange have been supportive,
start college in the fall. “I’ve been
but he’s not thrilled about giving up
working in restaurants since I was 14.
bartending. “They’re happy for me,”
look or sound the same, they both have blue-collar roots. Seng’s family founded a transportation company in Chicago, and McNeill’s dad is a woodframing contractor. Seng’s colorful artwork appears on Can Can’s aluminum cans in censored
“
SOMETIMES
YOU SEE AN
OPPORTUNITY AND YOU HAVE TO GO FOR IT.
” The men behind Can Can Cocktails, Patrick O'Neill and Ryan Seng
form. He had to “drop all the nudity”
a teenager, and he’s been painting
that graces his large canvases, but he
nudes ever since. His approach is
kept all the edginess.
simple: “I ask myself, ‘If I were on a
His artwork has a dreamlike
desert island, what would I paint?’”
quality. There are enough seminude
Seng says he had no plans after
people to delight a Freudian analyst.
he got his art degree in New York,
He had to get written permission to
moved to Davis, started working in
attend his first nude modeling class
restaurants and
when he was
raising a family, but things have worked out. “Sometimes you see an opportunity and you have to go for it,” he says—a good motto for any new venture. For more information about Can Can Cocktails, go to cancancocktails. com Angela Knight can be reached at knight@mcn. org n
INSIDESACRAMENTO.COM
43
INSIDE
OUT McKinley Village art
Local artist Marc Foster created a sculpture entitled “La Feuille” (the leaf) to greet residents and visitiors as they enter McKinley Village in East Sacramento. The sculpture is two leaf-shaped structures made of honed stainless steel standing approximately 18 and 15 feet tall, with corten steel branches extending above and beneath the ground in either direction. According to Foster, the artwork pays “homage to trees and, more specifically, leaves.” McKinley Village is shaped like a giant leaf and current plans call for the planting of more than 1,800 trees in the neighborhood.
44
THE GRID OCT n 16
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45
An Artful Life A student of Thiebaud and Kondos forged his own path
46
THE GRID OCT n 16
F
or artist Mickey Kane, it’s all about participation—both in art and in life. Whether he’s creating multipanel totems that hang from the ceiling, corralling complex circuitry for motherboards or designing swimming pools, Kane has made it his mission to live his life creatively participating in the world. And at 80 years old, he doesn’t show any signs of stopping. “I have enthusiasm for exploration,” says Kane. “I’m continually investigating who I am.” Kane is many things, but one thing he’s not is predictable. The Detroit native moved to Sacramento as a toddler and doodled cartoons of characters like Donald Duck all through middle school until he entered McClatchy High School, where his natural artistic inclinations were “subordinated,” as he puts it, so he could play sports. After graduating in 1953, Kane spent a year and a half at a junior college, where he earned A’s in art class, before entering the military in 1955. “That’s where I learned selfdiscipline,” says Kane, who served in the 82nd Airborne Division until 1957. “But I knew, after hearing that whistle blow at 4 a.m. every day, that I didn’t want that kind of rigid structure in my life. If I was going to get up that early, it was going to be because I wanted to.” Kane decided to focus on art. He studied with Wayne Thiebaud and Gregory Kondos at junior college before graduating from Sacramento State University with a bachelor’s degree in 1961 and a master’s the following year. “Kondos was the biggest influence on me,” Kane recalls. “He showed me the clichés to avoid in my work and encouraged me to keep moving forward. That amplified my perspective.”
jL
Kane was already exploring his unique artistic perspective during this time with other like-minded artists. At Artists’ Cooperative Gallery, a collective co-founded by Thiebaud and dedicated to exhibiting local work, Kane’s work was spotted by the director of San Francisco’s Palace of the Legion of Honor, who invited Kane to show three times at the museum. The art world took notice, but although Kane enjoyed the attention from art critics on both coasts, it was only a matter of time before he felt the urge to go his own way.
His self-possessed style is on stunning display through his totem series, a work in progress since 1985 that's been displayed in 11 cities around the world.
dson
ne with his gran
Artist Mickey Ka
“I’m a renegade,” he says. “I follow the rules for a while, but then I’m outta there. The tastemakers at the time were saying they wanted me to do a show in New York, but I put up resistance. I saw others artists being groomed. I could have been a second- or third-generation Abstract Expressionist, but I was still experimenting like crazy with my style.” Kane also turned down an offer of tenure at Sac State, where he’d been teaching for two years. “It wasn’t right for me,” he explains. Instead, he dedicated his time to bringing
rock bands like the Grateful Dead and Quicksilver Messenger Service to Sacramento for the first time. The late ’60s and early ’70s were a heady time for Kane, and not just because of his involvement with rock ’n’ roll. He moved to Los Gatos and started doing work in Silicon Valley, developing prototypes for the circuit boards used in digital watches. Kane got fired from that job, but because he had kids to take care of, he answered an ad for a pool salesman and designer. After landing the job, he was asked to join the owner in a business partnership.
Kane’s ability to stay true to himself over the course of his multifaceted career is impressive. His self-possessed style is on stunning display through his totem series, a work in progress since 1985 that’s been displayed in 11 cities around the world. “I’m revising sacred geometry for the 21st century,” Kane explains. “I call it ‘quantum artwork.’ Each panel is an individual expression in itself, but it’s also a member of a multiunit creation. The panels are working together to extend the range and dimension of the common denominator while the content remains the same. That’s the paradox of this quantum world.” Mickey Kane’s work can be viewed at users.cwnet.com/rabbitt9/ profilecontent.html and on YouTube. Jessica Laskey can be reached at jessrlaskey@gmail.com n
By Jessica Laskey
INSIDESACRAMENTO.COM
47
INSIDE
OUT
Sac Mural Fest
CONTRIBUTED BY ANIKO KIEZEL
48
THE GRID OCT n 16
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Art Preview GALLERY ART SHOWS IN OCTOBER
Sparrow Gallery presents the work by Davis artist Leslie DuPratt through October 28. Her work provides a glimpse into the “film” that is a woman’s life. Shown above: A painting by DuPratt. 2418 K St., sparrowgllerysacramento.com
The exhibition “Reboot” denotes the reset of JAYJAY on their 15th anniversary. This show celebrates their expanding stable of modern and contemporary artists and runs through Oct. 29. Shown above: Untitled watercolor on paper by Stacey Vetter. 5520 Elvas Avenue; jayjayart.com Patris Studio and Art Gallery will feature a group show through end of October. Shown below: “Sunflowers” by Patris. 3460 2nd Ave. patris-studio.com
Artspace 1616 will exhibiting work by John Fortes, Julian Faulkner and Anne Veraldi in 3 solo shows through Oct. 29. Shown above: “Hell 2 Pay” by John Fortes. 1616 Del Paso Blvd.
Tim Collom Gallery will exhibit new works by landscape painter John Tessler through end of October. Shown above: “American River Sunset”, acrylic on canvas, 72” x 32” by Tessler. 915 20th St.; timcollomgallery.com
50
THE GRID OCT n 16
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3213 SMATHERS WAY 5119 WALNUT POINTE LN. 4812 DONNIE LYN WAY 2506 LOS FELIZ WAY 3926 OAK VILLA CIR 5316 LANA ST 5025 SCHUYLER DR 4806 CAMERON RANCH DR 3538 MARSHALL AVE 5508 SUSAN WAY 6443 MADISON AVE 4537 BELA WAY 6345 ASLIN WAY 2561 WINSFORD LN 4830 LOCH LOMOND DR 5110 GLANCY DR 4754 ESPANA CT 5948 VIA CASITAS 2729 GUNN RD 3116 GARFIELD AVE 4740 MINARET WAY 2053 CASTELLEJA CT 5248 NORTH AVE 4840 KIPLING DR 5543 WILSEY WAY 1191 JACOB LN 4852 HAZELWOOD AVE 5049 RALEIGH WAY 5149 CYPRESS AVE 5620 BEAUCHAMP CT 5304 VALHALLA DRIVE 3020 PANAMA AVE 2818 CLARK AVE 4701 CAMERON RANCH DR 1209 GENESEE CT 6376 PERRIN WAY 3916 LINUS WAY 4700 NORTH AVE 5000 ENGLE RD 5300 ROXBURY CT 6110 WINDING WAY 4005 PAMLEE CT 4747 MINARET WAY 2829 SCANDIA WAY 1844 CARMELO DR 4728 DONNIE LYN WAY 4828 KEANE 5418 ENGLE RD 2747 COMPTON PARC LN 6045 DENVER DR 5618 FRONTIER WAY 1837 DREW CT 3002 GARFIELD AVE 6747 STEELE OAK LN 7121 STELLA LN #26 5517 WHITNEY 1470 GARY WAY 1301 GARY WAY 5972 VIA CASITAS 2530 LILLIAN LN 5928 RANGER WAY 5246 WYNDHAM OAK LN 4224 YOUNGER 2516 GREENFIELD WAY 3404 WALNUT AVE 4934 KURZ CIR 5635 KENNETH AVE 6201 SILVERTON ST 3031 VALASSTRADA CT 4925 SAN MARQUE CIR 2417 KONVALIN OAKS LN 2144 MARCHITA WAY 4760 LIESEL CT 6501 TEMPLETON DR
95811
415 WASHINGTON SQ #24 1914 7TH ST 1631 18TH ST 2005 D ST
$290,000 $321,500 $385,000 $410,000 $191,500 $240,000 $400,000 $450,000 $682,000 $1,695,000 $255,000 $375,000 $300,000 $323,000 $390,000 $430,000 $455,000 $195,000 $317,000 $325,000 $329,000 $419,900 $612,500 $820,000 $256,000 $759,000 $245,000 $280,000 $323,000 $275,000 $345,000 $375,000 $440,000 $345,000 $685,000 $340,000 $365,000 $397,100 $358,000 $834,000 $310,000 $360,000 $390,000 $535,000 $570,500 $345,000 $685,000 $215,000 $335,000 $345,000 $465,000 $396,000 $414,000 $817,000 $138,000 $389,000 $507,500 $635,000 $145,500 $283,000 $367,000 $400,000 $255,000 $265,000 $300,000 $336,500 $232,455 $320,000 $457,500 $270,000 $329,000 $399,900 $470,000 $254,000 $390,000 $399,000 $440,000 $398,000
95816
2607 N ST 624 38TH ST 855 35TH ST 845 35TH ST 1525 34TH ST 3400 L ST 3500 D ST 521 38TH ST 2405 I ST 220 27TH ST 3566 D ST 301 SANTA YNEZ WAY 2505 C ST 1210 38TH STREET 2704 S ST 724 35TH ST 2211 G ST
95817
2980 61ST ST 3125 U ST 5008 Y ST 2761 37TH ST 2132 36TH ST 3928 1ST AVE 2123 36TH ST 2724 42ND ST 3348 42ND ST 6182 4TH AVE 2742 59TH ST 3301 W ST 6183 3RD AVE 2032 35TH ST 3291 8TH AVE 3509 1ST AVE 3765 7TH AVE 3977 2ND AVE 3867 8TH AVE 2410 41ST ST 2743 42ND ST 3052 9TH AVE
95818
2221 PORTOLA WAY 3680 CUTTER WAY 1711 9TH AVE 2916 FRANKLIN BLVD 2694 14TH ST 3075 FRANKLIN BLVD 2608 3RD AVE 940 4TH AVE 2755 14TH ST 2766 MUIR WAY 2220 MARKHAM WAY 2749 COLEMAN WAY 2740 COLEMAN WAY 3539 LAND PARK DR 1648 7TH AVE 1080 SWANSTON DR 2758 13TH ST 1741 MARKHAM WAY 1800 8TH AVE 2500 10TH AVE 2774 19TH ST 3501 13TH ST 2024 24TH ST 1932 MARKHAM WAY 1965 9TH AVE
95819
916 46TH ST 6010 M ST 62 51ST ST 4820 I ST 932 50TH ST 4100 FOLSOM BLVD #1B 1357 54TH ST 857 55TH ST 70 43RD ST 5215 HUSTON CT 1343 LOUIS WAY 724 40TH ST
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859 MISSION WAY 78 PRIMROSE WAY 4460 C ST 5161 SANDBURG DR 4117 T ST 74 SANDBURG DR 5201 C ST 1152 49TH ST 912 47TH ST 5258 MINERVA AVE 916 50TH ST 521 SANDBURG DR 1205 58TH ST 1115 58TH ST 1556 48TH ST 481 MESSINA DR 511 41ST ST 4617 P ST 1353 LOUIS WAY 5101 C ST 4920 H ST 59 45TH ST
95820
5030 63RD ST 5024 12TH AVE 7240 20TH AVE 4209 56TH ST 4321 CABRILLO WAY 3726 62ND ST 4548 12TH AVE 7524 FRUITRIDGE RD 5101 58TH ST 3959 57TH ST 3420 52ND ST 4941 11TH AVE 4971 64TH ST 6772 9TH 2841 24TH AVE 5400 20TH AVE 4847 11TH AVE 3725 E PACIFIC AVE 5724 7TH AVE 5312 61ST 5908 FRUITRIDGE RD 7404 MARIN AVE 5330 7TH AVE 5200 SAN FRANCISCO BLVD 3421 SOPHIA WAY 3846 38TH ST 5840 15TH AVE 4525 36TH ST 5121 SAN FRANCISCO BLVD 2750 24TH AVE 3118 SAN DIEGO WAY 6382 9TH AVE 3749 E PACIFIC AVE 5305 60TH ST 6523 9TH AVE 3939 E PACIFIC AVE 3340 62ND 3501 52ND ST 5101 SAN FRANCISCO BLVD 5955 RAYMOND WAY 5317 6TH AVE 5420 78TH ST
95821
4341 ZEPHYR WAY 2836 ALAMITOS WAY 4459 MARLEY DR 3911 KNOLLWOOD CT 2581 ROSLYN WAY 3770 N EDGE DR 2620 EDISON 2620 WATSON ST 4231 SILVER CREST AVE 3670 MONTCLAIRE 3008 SAND DOLLAR WAY 4309 ELIZABETH AVE 3009 LERWICK RD 3554 LARCHMONT SQUARE LN 3805 BECERRA WAY
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3116 MONTCLAIRE ST 3205 MONTCLAIRE ST 3200 SAINT MATHEWS DR 4413 ROBERTSON AVE 2108 EDISON AVE 2916 LETA LN 3728 CANNA CT 3205 NORTHWOOD RD 2551 IONE ST 2512 CASTLEWOOD DR 2383 RAINBOW AVE 2843 BARBARELL WAY 3810 REGENT RD 2441 VALLEY RD 2548 CASTLEWOOD DR 3582 LARCHMONT SQUARE LN 3621 FRENCH AVE 2501 DUARTE CT 2730 IDLEWOOD LN 2826 ALAMITOS WAY 3300 NORTHWOOD RD 2521 ANNA WAY 3310 EDISON AVE 3440 SIERRA VIEW LN 2828 LIENO LN
95822
1144 CHARGENE WAY 1761 68TH AVE 1180 13TH AVE 39 QUASAR CIR 5625 EL GRANERO 6767 GOLF VIEW DR 4618 STAGGS WAY 7508 HANDLY WAY 2650 65TH AVE 7019 AMHERST ST 1631 OREGON DR 1249 CAVANAUGH WAY 7487 RED WILLOW ST 2306 50TH AVE 7289 CROMWELL WAY 2261 67TH AVE 5915 KAHARA CT 2115 15TH AVE 4905 CRESTWOOD WAY 1420 STODDARD ST 7479 RED WILLOW ST 2721 WAH AVE 2620 EDINGER AVE 29 MIRANDA CT 2130 60TH AVE 2430 26TH AVE 1295 NOONAN DR 2480 45TH AVE 4408 23RD ST 1925 MEER WAY 2313 MANGRUM WAY 5512 DANJAC CIR 4021 WARREN AVE 7545 COLLINGWOOD ST 1820 60TH AVE 1901 WAKEFIELD 2343 MANGRUM AVE 5961 13TH ST
95825
$454,000 $299,000 $255,000 $286,000 $186,800 $355,000 $365,000 $267,000 $280,000 $330,000 $369,900 $235,500 $343,000 $282,500 $289,000 $150,000 $275,000 $252,000 $566,500 $240,000 $302,000 $198,000 $245,000 $351,825 $635,000 $415,000 $205,000 $825,000 $138,000 $223,000 $256,000 $416,000 $162,000 $299,088 $300,000 $319,000 $709,950 $215,500 $220,500 $285,000 $215,000 $301,000 $240,000 $563,500 $148,000 $183,500 $225,000 $239,000 $290,000 $183,000 $251,000 $620,000 $250,000 $302,000 $550,000 $213,000 $671,000 $430,000 $239,000 $245,000 $194,000 $171,000 $449,000
1019 DORNAJO WAY #266 2430 PAVILIONS PLACE LN #507 786 WOODSIDE LANE EAST #12 2280 HURLEY WAY #76 1542 GANNON DR 1390 COMMONS DR 1226 COMMONS DR 502 DUNBARTON CIR 1900 TERRACE DR 1912 WOODSTOCK WAY 2044 DELMA WAY 845 COMMONS DR 1505 HOOD RD #F 1113 BELL ST #13 3410 ARDEN CREEK RD 3000 LA VIA WAY 2430 PAVILIONS PLACE LN #609 931 FULTON AVE #431 2229 WOODSIDE LN #2 2205 TEVIS RD 733 WOODSIDE LN #8 2424 LARKSPUR LN #218 317 HARTNELL PL 2238 WOODSIDE LN #13 1037 FULTON AVE #376 1801 MORSE AVE 2340 BARCELONA WAY 2274-H SIERRA BLVD
$144,900 $545,000 $105,000 $163,000 $270,000 $394,950 $579,000 $375,000 $176,000 $197,000 $250,000 $385,000 $135,000 $150,000 $565,000 $372,000 $575,000 $64,000 $135,000 $230,000 $95,000 $99,250 $374,000 $112,000 $106,000 $355,000 $254,000 $280,000
2920 ANDERSON WAY 1606 GANNON DR 1434 HESKET WAY 1557 UNIVERSITY AVE
95831
6 NEIL CT 418 DEER RIVER WAY 1364 TUGGLE WAY 6150 WYCLIFFE WAY 7 TRIUMPH CT 400 BLUE DOLPHIN WAY 7670 GREENHAVEN DR 7489 DELTAWIND DR 6328 LEAF AVE 7592 DELTAWIND 241 RIVERBROOK WAY 6241 RIVERSIDE BLVD #202 679 CAPELA WAY 7466 SALTON SEA WAY 1127 ALDER TREE WAY 6850 WILLOWWOOD WAY 7718 RIVER VILLAGE DR 2 PARKLITE CIR 7337 CAMINO DEL REY ST 400 SAILWIND WAY 7279 LONG RIVER DR 929 S BEACH DR 900 COBBLE SHORES 7325 L ARBRE WAY 7640 ROMAN OAK WAY 613 CUTTING WAY 7806 RIVER VILLAGE DR 7660 AMBROSE WAY 6 RED RIVER CT 10 ROCKY RIVER CT 7317 GLORIA DR 316 BAY RIVER WAY 809 CRESTWATER LN 943 PARK RANCH WAY 11 MARJORAM CT 14 VISTAWOOD CT
95864
1509 `WATT AVE 1160 GREENHILLS RD 2663 LARKSPUR LN 1736 ORION WAY 1505 EASTERN AVE 3413 WELLINGTON 2052 VESTA WAY 1005 SINGINGWOOD RD 1240 LANTERN CT 830 CASMALIA WAY 1417 GLENWOOD RD 2330 CATALINA DR 1400 KEENEY WAY 2020 VESTA WAY 4540 OXBOW DR 820 LARCH LN 3205 SOMERSET RD 3913 LA VERNE 2317 BRIDLE PATH LN 3565 LAS PASAS WAY 3509 MAPLEWOOD LN 844 PICCADILLY CIR 3217 CHELSEA RD 2821 SEVILLA LN 399 WILHAGGIN DR 3420 BARRINGTON RD 917 TUSCAN LN 2024 VENUS DR 3513 EL RICON 4396 DORKING CT 2133 IONE ST 2420 BRIDLE PATH LN 2715 BRAYNARD WAY 4428 ARDEN WAY 3917 LAS PASAS WAY 3244 MAYFAIR DR 1720 MERCURY WAY 3360 NORTHROP AVE 3620 MEADOW LN 1309 SEBASTIAN WAY 1133 HAMPTON RD 4560 OXBOW DR 1411 EL NIDO WAY 2013 VENUS DR 1121 MARIEMONT AVE 3626 CODY WAY 4231 DEVON LN 1050 WELLWORTH LN 4616 LAURELWOOD
INSIDESACRAMENTO.COM
$325,000 $295,000 $300,000 $436,000 $344,000 $480,000 $560,000 $580,000 $625,000 $325,000 $325,000 $345,000 $410,000 $352,500 $369,000 $123,000 $290,000 $292,000 $280,000 $459,000 $430,000 $435,000 $295,000 $359,000 $365,000 $545,000 $400,000 $437,000 $321,000 $341,000 $521,250 $340,000 $430,000 $305,900 $295,000 $480,000 $182,000 $390,000 $340,000 $410,000
$165,000 $230,000 $170,000 $345,000 $475,000 $143,500 $236,000 $266,000 $520,000 $950,000 $240,000 $285,000 $310,000 $305,000 $259,000 $1,352,000 $185,000 $314,900 $360,000 $380,000 $449,000 $680,000 $260,000 $858,276 $890,000 $245,000 $1,395,000 $315,000 $579,000 $1,410,000 $319,000 $325,000 $629,000 $409,900 $540,000 $249,000 $323,000 $400,000 $960,000 $256,000 $264,000 $299,900 $910,000 $370,000 $1,887,500 $315,000 $467,746 $665,000 $455,500
53
This Month @ the Market
A LOOK AT WHAT’S IN SEASON AT LOCAL FARMERS MARKETS IN OCTOBER
BUTTERNUT SQUASH
QUINCE
This long squash is one of the tastiest winter squashes, with a subtle flavor similar to pumpkin. Eat it: Roast the flesh and use in a simple risotto.
This knobby golden fruit looks like a pear and is generally too hard and sour to eat raw. Eat it: Stew in water or wine, then bake in a tart.
SUNCHOKE
HEIRLOOM TOMATO
BLOOMSDALE SPINACH
Also known as a Jerusalem artichoke, this tuber has a fresh, nutty taste. Eat it: Roast in the oven with other vegetables, or puree for a soup.
Summer may be over, but you can still find heirloom tomatoes at the farmers market. They come in a variety of shapes, sizes and colors. Eat it: Slice and drizzle with olive oil, salt and pepper.
This old spinach variety (from the 19th century) has a crinkled leaf and a deep, interesting flavor. Eat it: Sautee in olive oil with garlic and hot red pepper flakes.
ARUGULA
This leafy green can be used as an herb, a salad or a vegetable. It has a peppery, spicy flavor. Eat it: Dress lightly with fresh lemon juice and serve on top of grilled steak or chicken Milanese.
54
THE GRID OCT n 16
Couch potato no more.
Distinctively Sacramento
giving Menu Special Thanks -7pm & Hours 12pm
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55
Coldwell Banker L STREET LOFTS #810 West Penthouse: City skyline view, 18’ ceilings, Gourmet kitchen, fireplace, loft bdrm, 2BA, soaking tub & deck. $1,019,000 MICHAEL ONSTEAD 601-5699 CaBRE#: 01222608
#1 IN CALIFORNIA
CORNER PENTHOUSE, most prestigious in city, 3200sf, 3+bds/3ba, sauna, deck. Doorman. 4 car prking. $3,000,000 MICHAEL ONSTEAD 916-601-5699 CABRE#: 01222608
LOVELY LAND PARK! Charming 2BD w/ bonus room. Orig. kitchen, CH&A, dual pane windows, wood flrs, frplc in living rm. $429,000 SUE OLSON 601-8834 CaBRE#: 00784986
PENDING
BROOKFIELD MODEL @ TAPESTRI SQ! This end unit on Vizcaya Walk is a wonderful hm w/1300 sqft, 2bd/2.5ba, deck, hdwd flrs, Romeo balcony off master. $499,000 MICHAEL ONSTEAD 601-5699 CaBRE#: 01222608
QUINTESSENTIAL BOULEVARD PARK DUPLEX! MidTown Duplex with 2BD/1BA units, remodeled kitchen, baths, electrical, HVAC & Roof. $575,000 STEPH BAKER 775-3447 CaBRE#: 01402254
MAGICAL MIDTOWN BUNGALOW! Beautifully preserved in Midtown's New Era neighborhood. 3bd/2.5ba hm w/lrg sep office & butler's pantry rms. STEPH BAKER 775-3447 CaBRE#: 01402254
SPACIOUS MCKINLEY PARK! Charming 2 bed, 1 bath, hardwood floors, corner lot & One block from McKinley Park. $439,950 MIKE OWNBEY 616-1607 CaBRE#: 01146313
CHARMING WOODLAKE COTTAGE! 2bd/1ba, hrdwd flrs, living rm frplce, CH&A. Lrg yard w/small, cute building perfect for a hm office or get-away. PALOMA BEGIN 628-8561 CaBRE#: 01254423
OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS! 2bd/1ba cottage w/hrdwd, updtd kitch & bath, 2 car garage PLUS second enormous garage off alley w/full bath. $350,000 PALOMA BEGIN 628-8561 CaBRE#: 01254423
ELEGANT MID-CENTURY RIVER PARK! 4bd/3ba, single story home on a large lot. Modern flr plan, covered patio & lrg bkyd w/open fam rm. $649,000 POLLY SANDERS & ELISE BROWN 715-0213 CaBRE#: 01158787, 01781942
SQUEAKY WILLIAMS BEAUTY Unit#2001 is lrg w/2043sf, 2bds/2.5ba. Unit#2005 is 808sf, 1bd/1ba, LR w/frplc. $769,000 JEANINE ROZA & SINDY KIRSCH 548-5799 or 730-7705 CaBRE#: 01365413; 01483907
CUSTOM BUILT SLP ESTATES! Close to William Land Park. 3 lrg bd, 2 bath, perfect Layout views to pool-sized bckyrd. Detached hm office. $625,000 TOM LEONARD 834-1681 CaBRE#: 01714895
SACRAMENTO METRO OFFICE 730 Alhambra Boulevard #150 • 916.447.5900
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