June 2022: Issue 18

Celebrate, Wine Spectator They May Be Puppets Where There’s a Will The Sorcery’s Apprentice Foggy Bottoms Boys Taste The Rainbow

by Joey Wolosz | Published June 22, 2022

A Note from Joey Wolosz

It’s June, the month of celebrations: graduation, Father’s Day, birthdays (mine), Juneteenth, and Pride. There is plenty to celebrate.

We are throwing a little celebration for an article that just came out in Wine Spectator by MaryAnn Worobiec.

Instead of doing the interviewing, this time it was Jeff and me who were interviewed. We met with MaryAnn months ago and our time together was a real wine barrel of laughs, chatting about the Castro, getting certified, a welcoming culture, and of course, vino. Give it a read. 

June is the month we donate 10% of our online sales to the It Gets Better Project and its mission to uplift, empower, and connect LGBTQ+ around the world. There is still time to stock some summer wines while joining me in support of the youth.

Jiminy Cricket! I had to pull a few strings to finally get my puppet, mainly in persuading Jeff. I ordered this little guy months ago, custom made in Prague, hand-carved from linden wood.

With most of my more serious studies out of the way I find myself with a little time to pursue my latest indulgence and an almost forgotten family tradition – puppeteering. Not necessarily a new hobby, even if I haven’t visited it for 50 years, puppets were common company in my childhood.

My mother was a puppeteer-of-sorts, having learned to make lead-weighted puppets in Germany in the 1950s. She created the entire cast of Snow White, my dad built the stage with props, and the debut performance was at Peter Pan Nursery School on Halloween in 1971. My four-year-old self was sat in the front row in a handsewn Tigger costume my mother somehow had the spare time to create.

I’m continuing the lineage. My new friend only has strings to move his arms and legs and with a little maneuver of the control, I can get his head to turn. I need to add some strings to get more complex movements and am looking into puppet stringing, a rabbit hole of a Google search, trust me.

You can bet he will make appearances at The Bungalow when we open. On stage, you can call me Gepetto.

Ahh, the Bungalow, that long-term project that has been making an appearance in Field Notes for 18 months now. In May we started some light demolition on The Bungalow in anticipation of our permit to begin construction from the City of Napa. There is now some delay in issuing permits of which I am still a little unclear. Progress has turned frustratingly slow. I hope to turn a corner any day now and get to building out our social space, where there’s a will, there’s a way.

Our time in Los Angeles was filled with puppets, poolsides, and the possibilities of real magic. Possibly the influence of poltergeists or the spirits of magicians past; nonetheless, inspiration struck when we completed our tour of The Magic Castle with Alfonso.

I have officially taken up the mantel and engaged a proper instructor. Alfonso is a magic consultant for movie sets, a Magician Member of the Magic Castle, and my personal professor of prestidigitation. With an hour-long Zoom meeting every two weeks, he is taking me through the effects and showmanship of up-close magic. We are working on a ten-minute performance piece. Soon, the razzle dazzle will be real, at least from the perspective of the audience. Prepare to be amazed!

These are two young men, doing good things, that I think you should know. I was first introduced to these fine gentlemen farmers through our boutique motel in Humboldt County, The Redwood Riverwalk. They joined us for a 420 event this past April (on the 20th) where we showcased local LGBTQ+ businesses in the area.

Thomas and Cody Nicholson Stratton, known as the Foggy Bottoms Boys, tend to their sixth-generation family farm in the Foggy Bottoms of the Eel River Valley of the North Coast of California with the help of their young son, Tiny Farmer.

In 2014 the boys returned to Cody’s family’s organic Jersey dairy farm in Ferndale. The dairy farm is certified humane, non-GMO, organic, and has been in operation since 1860. The cows enjoy 365 days a year on lush, green fields under the fog cover of the wet Humboldt weather.

Looking to diversify and promote sustainability for future generations, they expanded the farm to include rabbits, chickens, sheep, goats, and grass-fed beef. They sell milk to Rumiano Cheese Company, the oldest family-owned creamery in California. Their egg cartons are hard to miss in the local grocery with their signature Pride flag sticker front and center.

Not only are they producing satisfying food, but they are also turning out wool products from the sheep including yarns, dryer balls, and throws.

If you find yourself in the area, they host barnyard tours of the seasonal operations where you can get up close and personal with the livestock and the lifestyle.

Follow their antics on Instagram @foggybottomsboys

During our visit to Paris in April, I took some time to get a little instruction on macarons at Le Cordon Bleu. They are the fancy French cousin to the American sandwich cookie. The cookie part is just almond flour, powdered sugar, Italian meringue, egg whites, and a little food coloring that gives a fun indication of the filling. It is the filling that hosts the variety of flavors and not the shells.

They can be found filled with ganache, buttercream, jams, or jellies. The sky is your limit. I give you the basic recipe for the macaron “shell”, or “cookie” as well as a base ganache recipe that you can add any flavor. For example, with a green-shaded macaron, I use pistachio butter, for a red shade I’ll use lingonberry jam.

For Pride, I made a full rainbow of macarons, 180 in all! Here is what I came up with:

  • Red: Lingonberry

  • Orange: Grand Marnier

  • Yellow: Lemon Curd

  • Green: Pistachio

  • Blue: Blueberry

  • Purple: Chambord

Because this is baking so you’re going to want a scale. I am giving measurements in some new-fangled units of mass and volume found in the ye olde metric system.

Note that a milliliter of water (volume) is equal to a gram of water (weight) so if you don’t have a graduated measuring cup with ml (Pyrex) just weigh it out.

You can use either liquid food coloring or gel. The liquid will give you a pastel hue. The gel, in a hefty amount, can get you the vibrant colors of the rainbow. Your call.

About wine, sweets are difficult to pair with wines; however, this is a month to celebrate, I’m enjoying mine with a glass of roséRead through the recipes, the first is for the macaron shells, the second for the ganache filling.

Pairing Recommendations

2022 Sonoma Coast Rosé
Rainbow Macarons

Celebrate Valentine’s Day with Gentleman Farmer Wines

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