


Reef
Break: Easy Riding in San Luis Obispo County, Where Great Wining & Dining
Are Easy, Too
By
Shirley Fong-Torres
Contact Shirley at
wokwiz@aol.com
Read
Shirley's site at www.wokwiz.com
(Follow
Shirley on her latest outing to San Luis Obispo County, where grapes are harvested
for some of California's finest vintages)
My traveling partner,
Wroburlto, had pestered me for a trip to San Luis Obispo County (SLO) for a long
time. He finally convinced me by talking up the area's food and wine scene and
by leaving brochures on my desk from some unique SLO spas.
As
usual, Wro had his own agenda. With two universities, including the main campus
of California State Polytechnic University, the town of San Luis Obispo, population
44,100, probably has the youngest average age in the state. So it's on the cutting
edge of youth and scientific culture.
There is also a rather distinctive
surfing scene that really appeals to Wro. SLO County's 85-mile coastline has no
point breaks. As fans of Keanu Reeves know, that keeps dare devil surfers away
and helps the coastline remain rather bucolic. (Reeves is the star of the surfing
movie, Point Break). So this Mama Bear reasoned that a long coast of gentler
reef breaks would make an easy place for a young surfer to learn the sport.
Dune
Buggies Still Legal on the Beach
SLO County is also one of the last
places on the West Coast where people can still legally drive dune buggies and
ATV's on the beach. While that appealed to my bi-polar bear, it scared me. I was
worried enough about driving from San Francisco. I prefer flying, anywhere. The
airlines have an amazing system of checks and balances for directionally-challenged
people like me.
They
have never once let me board an airplane aimed at the wrong place. Why can't highways
do that? Why can't they just politely say, "Excuse me, but that road goes
to Los Angeles, you want the road that goes to Reno. That's at Gate 27C, do you
need an escort?"

(The dramatic coastline of San Luis Obispo County near the
Dolphin Bay Hotel & Residence)
Don't
tell me about Global Positioning Systems either, they are not programmed for my
kind of driving. I had one once and it kept saying: "Error. At your earliest
convenience, turn around."
At my earliest convenience I had it removed.
To get from San Francisco to San Luis Obispo, I let my boy-crazy bear handle directions.
Wro chose "the shortest route on the map," which took us through Santa
Cruz (another beach town with a big university) where we got stuck in traffic
for three hours, just to go 15 miles.
Do not go that way, no matter what
your traveling companion tells you. You might miss the view, as it could turn
dark. You might not see the north county coast's rocky inlets, where elephant
seals and sea lions hang out in the northern part of the county.
Since
they are the favorite entrée of great white shark gourmets, surfers and
swimmers prefer south county beaches. You might even miss the Santa Lucia Mountains,
which split the county in two and preserve its wine-friendly mild climate and
summer fog.
Sycamore Inn & Mineral Springs
By the
greatness of the gods of fate, we arrived at a place that has been helping stressed
out mothers relax for over 120 years. And we arrived before their restaurant closed.
In 1886, oil drillers in Avila Valley found sulfur-based mineral water instead.
Those white-sulfur hot springs quickly became a resort and a playground for Hollywood's
elite.

(Sycamore
Mineral Springs Treatment Center offers massage therapy and much more)
The
Pacific Coast Railway stopped there on its Los Angeles to San Francisco route.
W.C. Fields visited frequently, as did many guests of the nearby Hearst Castle.
After World War II, the emergence of freeways, super jets and air conditioning
took the buzz away as Palm Springs and Hawaii became more accessible resorts for
southern California's rich and famous.
The hot springs thus remained
rather unchanged until recently. Today Sycamore Mineral Springs Treatment Center
offers massage therapy, herbal therapy, Chinese medicine, ayurvedic medicine,
aromatherapy, yoga and hydrotherapy. Hydrotherapy tubs line the hillsides, Japanese
style, but we checked into a private unit with our own tub. After an eight-hour
"three hour drive," that was just what Mama Bear needed.
South
Bay Guy Likes Peaceful Central Coast
The resort's executive chef
is David McWilliam, a self-described "South Bay guy" who fled to the
Central Coast for a more peaceful place to raise kids. David cut his culinary
teeth at A.P. Stump's Chop House, a traditional legend of San Jose. His biography
is filled with circles of irony.
"I became a vegetarian in the
Navy because the food was so bad that vegetables were the safest things to eat.
When I graduated from the CIA (Culinary Institute of America), the Navy was sending
its chefs there were in order to improve the quality of the food," he told
us laughing.

(The
intimate setting at the Gardens of Avila Restaurant)
David's
kitchen turns out wonderful Pacific Rim fare matching fresh and local seasonal
products with classical European and Asian inspirations. We watched him brine
his own chickens and tend his own garden. I noticed a pattern of using different
salts.
"One thing I learned working for Charlie Trotter - cook
with kosher salt and season with sea salt," he explained.
Fine
Dining at the Gardens of Avila Restaurant
His Gardens of Avila restaurant
featured a fireside lounge, an elegant, picture-window dining room and a century-old
stone hillside patio. We enjoyed a bottle of local wine, an exquisite Bordeaux-blend
called Isoceles from Justin in Paso Robles, and began with some scallops on the
shell plus an awesome ahi presentation. We tried a salad of fresh greens topped
with roasted red and golden beets, goat cheese and toasted walnuts.

(A
serving of tasty scallops at the Gardens of Avila Restaurant)
Then
we moved on to a special prime rib plus a confit of duck leg with duck breast
on a bed of micro greens. We chose them over two tempting dishes: seared quail
with polenta, pine nuts and pomegranates; and a pepper-crusted venison loin with
spaetzles and black truffles. It was all so good we ate every morsel and could
only split a dessert of pistachio crème brulee before crawling into the
hot tub.
Old Edna, An Old Stagecoach Road
The next morning
we had breakfast at the Gardens of Avila and drove inland, through annoying mountains,
to Old Edna. This was originally a stagecoach road that linked SLO and Pismo Beach.
Old Edna wasn't on my map (maps never help me), but it appeared anyhow, at the
corner of Highway 227 and Price Canyon Road. Thinking like a stage coach driver,
I parked under a giant cypress tree next to a little brook, where my horses could
drink in the shade.
A sign claimed Edna had a population of 1,600, but
most of them were good at hiding. Today, an early 20th century farmhouse is home
to Fiala's Gourmet Deli, which serves scratch-made sandwiches and home-grown salads
on its porch and in cute little outdoor playhouses.

(The
Blue Belly Barn at Old Edna)
Old
Edna is the doing of Pattea Torrence, a native of SLO who came to here in 1998.
Edna had pretty much been abandoned for two decades before she bought the town,
or the site of a former town.
"One thing led to another, I didn't
ever have a vision of this as this," she admitted laughing. "I was running
a consignment clothing and antique store in San Luis. I had traffic hassles because
of all the loading and unloading I needed to do. So I decided to sell it. Now
I had kept a horse here when I was younger, so I asked the owners to sell and
I kept asking until they finally did."
Getting
More Than You Bargained For
Having gotten what she wished, Pattea
suddenly had more than she knew what to do with - a wood-frame, tin-sided storefront
near the highway, two homes, a storage room, a shed, and a large barn.
"Everything was in serious need of repairs, too," she recalled.
The homestead had been built between 1906 and 1908 and included a family home,
a store, a saloon, a blacksmith shop, a dance hall and a butcher shop. Pattea
restored the main building for her antique store but realized that keeping an
inventory took all her time. She really missed dealing with people.
"So I decided to rent it out and restore the cottage. The second floor used
to be a dance hall and I am told less savory things are suspected of going on
there, too. It's a good space for artists. The deli worked out perfectly on the
main floor," Pattea said.
Old Edna was thus reborn one project at
a time. A 1200-square-foot cottage became a bed and breakfast, accommodating up
to three couples. Pattea's skill as an antique hunter clearly paid off in decorating.
So did her patronage of local artists, one of whom rents the upper floor of the
main building. Pattea told us she's encouraging artists to come in hopes that
tourists will follow.
Wine tasters have been flocking to nearby vineyards,
especially after the movie "Sideways." A short walk from the cottage,
Corral de Piedra River passes Blue Belly Barn and MacGregor Vineyards. There's
also a one-room schoolhouse -- and that's about it for Old Edna.
Clairborne
& Churchill: From Academe to the Vineyards
We had lunch in a delightful
little garden playhouse with Claiborne (Clay) Thompson and Fredericka Churchill.
Former language professors at the University of Michigan, the couple left the
"groves of academe" for the vineyards of California in 1981. Since its
first crush in 1983, Clairborne & Churchill has specialized in dry Gewurztraminer
and dry Riesling.

(Shirley,
Wro and Clay having lunch together)
They
produce 10,000 cases of wine a year now, purchasing grapes from vineyards in the
cool maritime valleys of the central coast. They also make Chardonnay, Pinot Noir,
Syrah, Cabernet Sauvignon, Cuvee, Pinot Gris, dry Muscat, and Edelzwicker in small
lots.
We walked to their winery after lunch, as Edna is a small place.
The winery was constructed out of bales of hay and thus is probably the best insulated
building in the area. It stays cool without air conditioning even in the hot summer
months. We met their lovely daughter Elizabeth, for whom a C&C Cuvee is named.
Wro asked her if she knew any hot surfer boys. Sigh.
Checking
into the Avila Lighthouse Suites
Back
down the big hill we checked into the Avila Lighthouse Suites located right on
the main beach in Avila Beach. Avila and Pismo Beach get subjected to snobbery
in Los Angeles, where they are labeled "the Bakersfield Hamptons" or
"Malibu for Fresno."
One
of the local surfing guides warned Southern Californians that "a lot of people
live here (in SLO County) and surf here because they can't stand Los Angeles.
So, don't remind locals that you come from Los Angeles, or you might be asked
to leave."
Wro and I are quite fond of both Fresno and Bakersfield,
so we knew we'd love it here. The suites were wide open and ocean side. Neighbors
said hello and gave us nice directions when we got lost. When he wasn't taking
surfing lessons, Wro sat on the life guard stand on the beach, which I could see
from our room. A sign on our patio thoughtfully reminded him to not walk in the
flower beds.

(Wro is respectful of the admonition to not walk through
the flower beds at the Avila Lighthouse Suites)
After
hanging out on the beach, we went for a ride on the local free shuttle bus, getting
off to shop at a farmer's market store. Then we were off to Pismo for dinner.
Lido Restaurant: Where the Dining Gets Serious
Pismo
Beach is home to one of the largest Monarch butterfly groves in the USA, and Wro
and I believe that butterflies have exquisite taste. We came for Lido Restaurant
in the Dolphin Bay Hotel & Residence. Chef Evan Treadwell, one of the best
chefs in California, moved here when the hotel opened. The hotel is a century
away from the Sycamore.
A
member of "Small Luxury Hotels of the World," it is located on Shell
Beach in Pismo Beach. And yes, it's on the beach. Seventy guest rooms ranged from
900 to 2,000 square feet with 21st-century appointments -- double-pane windows,
honed travertine floors, wool carpet, solid wood doors, granite countertops, full
kitchens and laundries.

(The swimming pool with the ocean in the background at the
Dolphin Bay Hotel & Residence)
La
Bonne Vie Spa's massages, facials, herbal and hydrotherapy treatments all utilize
top line treatments from Paris, Carita and Decléor, plus local and seasonal
ingredients. It's lavender to Sycamore Spring's sulfur. We only had time for a
sundown dinner though.
Early
birds filled Lido's window seats to watch the ocean absorb the light over a drink
and a Lido shellfish platter. Our Vegas-style presentation of crab legs, mussels,
clams, oysters, prawns and accompaniments disappeared at the pace of the setting
sun. After sunset, we noticed the lovely dining room and its spectacular Murano
glass ornaments.
With the sun out of the way, we got serious and so did
Evan. We tried some flatbreads with wild mushrooms, Fontina, caramelized onions,
duck confit, chorizo, peppers, Manchego, Serrano ham and some local chevre. And
a little bisque of squash with black truffle foam, and some house-baked oysters
with prosciutto, leeks and Bearnaise sauce.
An
Ahi Crudo Gets Rave Reviews
Then we moved into the deep water portion
of dinner. Evan served an ahi crudo that was as good as any we ever tasted - and
we have tasted many. He matched the fatty raw tuna with a Tunisian entourage of
harissa, almonds and medijool dates.
Wro
ordered a tiradito of halibut, which brought a filet of fish barely "cooked"
in a divine hibiscus pomegranate vinaigrette with avocado, ginger and jalapeno.
We split some black mission figs with Serrano, chevre and micro greens as well
as an heirloom tomato salad with pesto, homemade mozzarella, pickled onions and
caper berry vinaigrette.
I passed on the highly-recommended Maine lobster
tail pot pie (with Cajun tasso) for something more Pacific - fast seared ahi with
lentils, aioli, eggplant and roasted tomato. Wro swore his pancetta-wrapped rabbit
was the best ever. I cannot and will not eat bunnies, but I was tempted by the
wild mushroom sauce in this dish.
I suffered a power outage from the
overload of divine food accompanied by a bottle of Chardonnay from our new friends
at Clairborne & Churchill. I vaguely recall that pastry chef Benji Puga finished
us off with a mission fig creme brulee and a chocolate truffle torte. And a trio
of home made gelatos. And a cheese plate with some local honeycomb.

(Sampling
a a vintage from new friends at Clairborne & Churchill was a delight)
When
overloaded with good food, my brain attempts logical deductions. I reasoned that
if Lido was in San Francisco, one would need to make reservations more than a
month in advance. When Wro and I left Lido, there were still empty tables. Even
if a 3-hour drive takes 8 hours, I had still saved a month of time. So, one can
become younger simply by eating here often.
El Paso Robles: Singing
Marty Robbins with New Words
Somehow, I drove after dinner. We left
the beach behind to visit a rough and tumble place that is now the latest buzz
in the wine world. When I told Wro that Paso Robles used to be called El Paso
Robles, he started singing a Marty Robbins' song with some new words.
"Down in the north county town of El Paso
I fell in love with a Mexican
boy. "
His psychiatrist tells me to encourage his fantasy life,
so I let him go on. The rough side of the area's reputation comes from Jesse James'
uncle Dury James, who ranched here, and Dr. Woodson James who operated a hotel
at Sulfur Hot Springs. Jesse and brother Frank were frequent visitors and even
recovered from gunshot wounds there.
Brief History of El Paso Wine
El Paso has been a wine town since 1797, when Father Junipero Serra
planted California's first grapes at Mission San Miguel Arcangel. Commercial winemaking
began here in 1882 and really took off in the Roaring 20's after legendary pianist
Ignace Paderewski purchased 2,000 acres and planted Petite Sirah and Zinfandel
on his Rancho San Ignacio vineyard. (After Prohibition ended, Paderewski's wine
was made by York Mountain Winery.) Rancho San Ignacio wines won awards and Paso
Robles' reputation grew. Zinfandel has been a star wine here since the early days
but Cabernet Sauvignon is now the leading variety for the appellation.
Larger
vineyards and wineries were established here in the 1980's, when reasonably priced
land encouraged new growers. Smaller vineyards have been coming on line the last
two decades - "vineyards for mere millionaires instead of billionaires."
Between 1994 and 2006, at least 10 wineries focusing on Rhône varieties
were established here. Now the area has the largest acreage of Syrah, Viognier
and Roussanne grapes in California.
In 1997 Justin Vineyards & Winery's
Bordeaux-style "Isosceles," which we loved at Gardens of Avila, was
named one of the top 10 wines in the world by the Wine Spectator.
Chester's
Hotel: Meet the Belgian Draft Horse

(Hotel Cheval, an intimate inn with 16 luxury guest rooms)
We
checked into the remarkable Hotel Cheval, an intimate inn consisting of sixteen
luxury guest rooms, a gorgeous courtyard with stone fireplaces, a library and
the Pony Club bar and breakfast nook with its horsehoe-shaped zinc bar. We met
Chester, the hotel's Red Belgian draft horse, who moved here from Ohio's Amish
country to provide guests with carriage rides to the restaurants around the city
park.
Though
we could hardly eat another meal, Chester pulled us around in a vintage vis-a-vis
carriage. Chester's driver, Tommy Harris, said the horse was 18 hands tall and
over 2000 pounds. He eats 60 pounds of hay and two gallons of rolled oats per
day. About the equivalence of what we had consumed at Lido.
The next
morning we strolled around the village shops and hung around the wonderful hotel
as late as we could. Then we headed into more confusing hills in search of two
of the area's great food-and-wine creators.
Justin Estate Winery for
Bordeaux Varietals
Justin
Estate Winery was founded in 1981 when Justin and Deborah Baldwin planted 160
acres with the major Bordeaux varietals. This property looks like a great French
vineyard, from the huge cave to the tasting room, from the private club room and
the inn.

(The
caves at Justin Estate Winery)
It
also looks like it belongs in Architectural Digest as much as Wine Spectator.
We had come to the patio of Deborah's Room, where we met Justin Baldwin for lunch.
Restaurants like this are rare finds on wine estates in California.
Justin
explained: "When we started there were less than 10 wineries in this area
and 200 in California. Now there are nearly 200 here and 2400 in California. Only
ten have restaurants. We made it just before the legislature made it illegal to
attach a new one to a winery," he said.
Deborah's Room serves dinner
and weekend lunches inside or outside. There is no nicer setting for lunch. Justin
confessed that he grew up in San Francisco and "fell in love with good food
before falling in love with good wine." He also fell in love with Deborah
there, where both of them were investment bankers.

(Guests
enjoy lunch at Deborah's Room)
"She
turned me down for a loan," he joked.
We asked him to differentiate
Paso Robles from Napa.
"Paso Robles is different. Napa is about
18 feet above sea level and we're at 1400 feet for starters. Our appellation has
the most Syrahs in North America," he said.
"Our winery is
the furthest west and the highest in this appellation. Three miles beyond here
is a dead end road and limestone quarry, where all the cement in the Central Valley
originates. You can set your clocks by the limestone trucks, but guests at the
inn don't seem to mind. The limestone's ph count binds the soil nutrients and
slows down both the growth of the vine and the yield. We get low yields here,
but concentrated flavors."
Comparing
Wine-Making to Cooking
Justin
compared wine-making to cooking. "My favorite part of winemaking is putting
the blend together," he said.
"
My objective was originally to make one wine and one wine only. The ISOCELES was
a "left bank" Bordeaux-style blend of Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot and
Cabernet Franc, which, like the triangle it's named after, was to have three equal
parts.
"That was rigid," Baldwin said. "The formula needs
to be changed every year and, besides, we got bored just making one wine. It's
been 20 years of trial and error, but we use much less Merlot now. And we also
make JUSTIFICATION, it's a "right bank" Merlot and Cabernet Franc cousin.
And we do varietal bottlings of Cabernet Sauvignon and Syrah. We also produce
limited amounts of Tempranillo, Zinfandel, Malbec, Petit Verdot, Sangiovese, OBTUSE
(Port wine), Sauvignon Blanc and Chardonnay.
Wro was pleased to see that
Justin and Deborah were flying the Mexican flag.
"We have been
flying a Mexican flag here for 20 years, in honor of our main group of workers.
Those guys do the real work, we have two French experts in our harvest crew too,
but we are most grateful to our Mexican workers," he said.
After
splitting a relatively light lunch of pan roasted foie gras with pickled huckleberries
and arugula, followed by seared sea bass, a New York cut steak and a Meyer lemon
pudding cake, we visited the Just Inn. Four luxury suites (Tuscany, Provence,
Sussex, and Bordeaux) had a definitive European look with tapestry-covered furnishings,
big feather beds and frescoed ceilings. English gardens and a heated spa and pool
sat in the middle of the wine making operations.
Next door to the inn
we toured the ISOCELES Center, where wine barrels aged in caves and club members
tasted the latest vintages. What a great place for fantasizing.
Pasolivo:
The Central Coast's Old Hollywood Playground
We had another appointment
to keep. Down more strange roads with strange names we found Pasolivo, a 140-acre
ranch. Owner Karen Guth bought the place 20 years ago. It had been King Vidor's
(War and Peace, Stella Dallas) estate back in the days when Central
Coast was a Hollywood playground.
"We have over 45 acres of olive
trees under cultivation," said Guth, "in varieties chosen specifically
for their excellent oil. I wanted something different. We decided to make an olive
oil more like Tuscan oils," she said, going on to explain that most oils
in the American market are filtered to make them clear. Plus they are usually
made from olives that have been stored awhile between harvesting and pressing
and then rushed to market after pressing and bottling.

(Pasolivo Olive Oil)
Karen
does things backwards. Her oils are pressed within hours of harvesting and then
aged for up to 18 months in casks. The common commercial method, which is what
most American consumers expect, produces a mellow flavor. Karen says that she
wanted something that didn't "take the spine out of the oil."
"I wanted the natural flavor, bite and all," she said.
Even
more exciting was her California Mission olive oil. She partnered with Mission
San Miguel and UC Davis to revive the original olive tree that Father Serra planted.
They have tested the DNA of Karen's trees and they now match the original, so
this is pure heirloom oil like no other in America.
Karen said that
customers are learning to accept cloudiness and bitterness in her oils. We were
able to see her state of the art Pieralisi press and barrels that her oil is aged
in, all just steps away from the olive orchards. After tasting her oils, we understood
why everything Pasolivo produced the last five years sold out quickly. We bought
some of each kind and got our names on her internet alert list for future pressings.
Wishing we had more time, I started the drive back home. Using directions
from the concierge at Hotel Cheval, we made it in three hours. That made me think
that everything about SLO is as easy as riding a reef break wave.
You
can choose to relax in sulfur springs that have been curing ailments for most
of a century, or in state-of-the-art new spas on the beach. You can play Sideways
without the traffic hassles or crowds that Napa wineries make you endure. And
in many cases you can simply walk in and dine at places that would require you
to make reservations months in advance in San Francisco. As long as you don't
let maps or Global Positioning Services trick you.
Recipes
Pasolivo's Oven-dried Tomatoes
24 Roma tomatoes, halved lengthwise
Sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
2 tablespoons dried herbs, such
as Herbes de Provence
1 clove garlic, minced
Preheat oven to 250.
Arrange the tomato halves cut side up and close together on a baking sheet. Season
with salt and pepper. In a small bowl, combine the 6 tablespoons olive oil, herbs,
and garlic. Spoon a little of the mixture over each tomato half, stirring as you
go.
Bake until the tomatoes are soft and shriveled but still retaining
some moisture, about 5 to 8 hours. Timing will depend on how large, meaty and
juicy the tomatoes are. Let them cool completely, then arrange in a plastic container,
making no more than 2 layers. Add olive oil to cover completely, then cover and
refrigerate.
Use these stuffed with goat cheese and sprinkled with basil
for an appetizer.
Pasolivo's Oranges
This is an easy,
elegant way to highlight the taste of extra virgin olive oil. It was prepared
for us by a friend in a tiny restaurant in Rome and we've never seen it anywhere
else.
With so few ingredients, it's perfect to bring to a party, and
it looks lovely on the table. We serve it all the time at the ranch - enjoy!
Ingredients:
4 - 5 of oranges
pinch of sugar
freshly ground
black pepper
Pasolivo Extra Virgin Olive Oil
loaf of fresh bread
Instructions:
1. Cut the oranges into slices about 1/2 inch thick.
Arrange on a large plate or platter.
2. With a fork, press the orange slices
to release some of the juice.
3.Sprinkle just a pinch of sugar over the oranges.
4.Generously drizzle with Pasolivo so that the oranges are covered in olive
oil.
5.Pepper the oranges.
6.Cut the bread, and dip it onto the orange
slices. You'll taste the oil, with a hint of fresh citrus.
You can also
try this with lemons or grapefruit. For more color, tuck basil leaves under the
orange.
When
You Go
San Luis Obispo County Visitors & Conference Bureau
at 800-634-1414 , www.SanLuisObispoCounty.com
Justin's Vineyard and Winery
Restaurant: Justin/Deborah's Room
11680
Chimney Rock Road
Paso Robles, CA 93446
805-238-6932, www.justinwine.com
Dolphin Bay
Lido Restaurant
2727 Shell Beach Road, Pismo Beach,
CA 93449
805 -773-8900, www.thedolphinbay.com
Hotel Cheval
1021 Pine Street o Paso Robles, CA 93446
866-522-6999,
www.hotelcheval.com
Avila Lighthouse
Suites
550 Front Street, Avila Beach, CA 93424
800-372-8452 or 805-627-1900
www.avilalighthousesuites.com
Sycamore
Mineral Springs Resort/ Gardens of Avila
1215 Avila Beach Drive, San Luis Obispo,
California, 93405
800-234-5831, 805 -595-7302
www.sycamoresprings.com
