Sun - Year in Review

Page 1

PHOTO BY K. REKA BADGER

The whole pie: March rolled around to find Pi-Whole Pizza—complete with lava lamps and a volcano-themed menu—in a spacious new location in Nipomo’s Adobe Plaza. Serving White Hot Pastrami Bombs, salads, and fresh, homemade pizzas, owner Phil Silver (pictured with his daughter-in-law Jacque) happily promised, “More pi, more whole!”

2009 Year in

Review

PHOTO BY K. REKA BADGER

FILE PHOTO BY K. REKA BADGER

PHOTO COURTESY CHRIS JONES

To the Core: To showcase their four labels, Dave and Becky Corey (Becky is pictured) opened the CORE Wine Company tasting room over Labor Day weekend, adding another bright spot to Orcutt’s wine scene. With a history in the area that dates to 1873, the Coreys welcome tasters to stop in, check out the family museum display, and linger a while over a sip—or a bottle—of wine.

Savor 2009

BY K. REKA BADGER

New digs: Foxen Winery unveiled a grand complex, featuring a 12,000square-foot, solar-powered winery and a visitor center with two tasting bars. Located just down the road from the winery’s beloved “shack” (which remains open to pour Cal-Ital and Bordeaux offerings), Foxen’s new digs brought the winemaking under one roof and the Foxen Boys on the path to a bright future. Pictured are co-owner Dick Dore and architect Vladimir Milosevic.

During the fleeting reign of 2009, “Eats” has taken armchair spins to the World of Pinot Noir, a chili cook-off in Nipomo, and a rousing performance of PCPA’s Les Misérables. We’ve explored flavorful scoops at McConnell’s Ice Cream Café, welcomed new owners at Coffee & Company, and gotten to know a singing chef. And after contemplating the brews at Lompoc’s Flower Festival beer garden, we discovered that real men do cook. Here’s a look at a few other stand-out moments, offered with high hopes that 2010 delivers an equally generous measure of fine wine, fabulous food, and old-fashioned community spirit. ❍ Wish K. Reka Badger a happy new year at rekabadger@hotmail.com.

It was a tasteful year

PHOTO COURTESY ATARI-YA

She’s No. 1: In January, Chris Jones celebrated the publication of One Vintage: A Year in the Vineyard, a meditation on the parallels between daily affairs and the rhythms of a Santa Ynez Valley vineyard. Peppered with color photographs, the book provides an authentic look at wine-grape growing and the challenging, yet often exhilarating, life of a local farmer.

Quarter century: Atari-Ya, Santa Maria’s popular Japanese restaurant, marked 25 years in business and became the longest-surviving Japanese restaurant under the same ownership in both San Luis Obispo and Santa Barbara counties. In celebration, owner Keiko Yoshino Hongo and her chef and business partner, Yukio Yoshida (pictured), initiated evening happy hours featuring her famous nigiri and maki rolls.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.