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The Universe Needs Your Music

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The Universe Needs Your Music

Travel offers unique perspectives into how people in other parts of the world live, and of great interest to us, dine. But It wasn’t until Lukka and I were wandering around Buenos Aires in December that I began to take in just how profoundly, no matter where you live, food patterns have changed. Buenos Aires is a city with an affordable and vibrant dining community but wherever we traveled, in every neighborhood and down every street, motorcycles and bicycles were flying around with their sagging food delivery bags hanging off the rear.

To be clear, on the late nights out we walked home we passed restaurants still full to bursting, inside and out. We dined with delight in historic food halls where hundreds of individual purveyors hung their entire menu -all their proteins and vegetables - over their food stations seperated by only a few feet from dining counters and huge picnic tables that ran the length of the stadium sized building. This wasn’t fast food - it was thoughtful and delicious. We dined at white table cloth restaurants that spilled out onto the streets with diners of all ages, many couples with children, many animated conversations often with diners next to them they did not know. There was an elegant insouciance to dining in BA we fell in love with, but man, all those PedidosYa, Rappi and Door Dash motorcycles- and quite a few wonky bicycles - they were ubiquitous.

I get it. No matter where you live in this age of online consumerism all it takes is one phone call and a brief interaction at the door and food is there in front of you to be consumed in the comfort of your own home, no matter how humble or grand. You don’t have to get dressed. You don’t have to deal with the cacophony of outlier conversations around you, don’t have to calculate that extra drink, or even how much to drink, or what to tip. But here’s the thing: unless you shopped and cooked for that meal or ventured out to a restaurant to share it over a table in conversation, except for spending yet more time with a technology whose only goal is to hold your attention in order to monetize your behavior, what did you really nourish in letting an app dictate your appetite?

In conversation with the NYT’s David Marchese the writer George Saunders recently spoke about ‘the rate at which we’re being encouraged to forgo human to human activity.’ With so much to try and make sense of in the world, he made the point (he happily credited to Chekov) that our most important job as humans right now is not to have the answers (or rely on AI for them) but learn how to formulate our questions, better. “It all begins with a key recognition that true attention cannot be measure by a machine. The fullness of our authentic human attention, shared with others, is the power with which we make the world. It’s worth fighting for.”

Food carries an indelible footprint of a journey that tells the story of land and nature and culture. We risk losing an essential part of our humanity when, for lack of attention, we cut the threads of knowing where our food comes from, whose hands and talents caused it to appear before us to be consumed. Of all the social interactions we are compelled to do - working, shopping, attending to our health and to the needs of our families - dining out is a choice. It is imperfect, to be sure, but as both an art form and a service industry it is a true reflection of both the strengths and frailties of human nature we all share. When groups of strangers gather to dine they transmute something indelible across a room, a connection to the larger community and we break those connections at our peril. The loneliness and isolation which is a result of our increasing dependence on algo-rhythmically driven relationships has only one antidote - human to human interaction for which, lets face it, there is no substitute.

So much is in play at this moment in history as we strive to find ways to live meaningful lives. But whether I’m looking over our dining rooms on Center Street or slipping into an anticipated meal at a restaurant somewhere in the world- fine dining, bistro or gastropub - I am hoping - as the original definition of the word restaurant was intended, to be restored. Give me an interesting room full of animated hungry strangers, throw in one or two people I like or want to get to know better, and I’m halfway there. Alongside a sustainable vision of dining, and a caring staff, in that moment life affords you an opportunity that is increasingly precious … to look around you and think yes, I’m a part of all this, I belong here.

Le Caprice was the restaurant where the Guv and I had our first date, the restaurant Nick Foulkes, my editor at the Evening Standard once took me for lunch and Princess Di, behind the pillar at table 8 gave into a laughing fit so infectious everyone around her started laughing as well. It’s enjoying its third life as The Arlington under the original owner Richard Caring, perfectly executing the original menu of classic dishes the beloved food critic AA Gill - who wrote Le Caprice’s cookbook- described as exemplifying “practiced elan and panache.” (to wit: “energy, style, enthusiasm, a confident way of doing things that inspires admiration”). The enduring success of Le Caprice all those years ago continues today judging from our experience this January in a packed room which felt uncannily similar to evenings we enjoyed three decades ago. It’s is worth considering why, given the state of a restaurant industry all indications point to being in serious decline.

Caprice was built to let the diner unwind, it was all about having a good time, but its success lay in sum of its parts. Good though the menu was (and is) with satisfying classic dishes, it wasn’t just the food; sleek though the room was, and is, all white, silver and reflective, its wasn’t the design (though a clue may lie in the fact the perfectly pressed white linen tables which initially feel too close together enable conversations all around you to all flow as one. It wasn’t the extraordinary floral installations which crept from the bar to the ceiling, or the Richard Avedon B&W portraits lining the walls of the greatest - or at least the most famous actors, playwrights, artists and raconteurs of the 60’s to the 80’s ( most all of them dead now). There was a rather large grand piano just behind the host stand that for two decades was played by an enormous Islander - just loud enough so conversations could get rowdy without anyone caring. The piano is still there. The night we dined there was no one worth craning your neck around to see, yet still, the mood of the room, relaxed and engaging, at our table animated with stories and plans, was a joy, a reminder of why I loved dining here all those years ago.

Then there was this: Caprice has a long, carpeted, extremely narrow staircase leading down to double leaded glass doors that open to the loo’s. It has always been extremely precarious to navigate, especially late at night, a few drinks in, as it was on my recent visit. But then as now, concentrating on getting down safely brought a presence of mind which was briefly sobering. There was a moment over the sinks, looking at myself in the mirror, listening to the muffled laughter, the music, the hum of life from upstairs that triggered a sympathetic déja vu: We don’t always need to live alongside all the pent up feelings we have at the intersection of one’s personal life and history. We should be able to look them in the eye and sometimes let them go with an exalted sigh, because, well, that’s life.

When that release comes in the middle of a social setting with the expectation of a pleasing room filled with color and sound and food which compliments our appetite, it brings with it the experience of belonging, even if to an indiscriminate tribe, belonging no less. It’s a feeling we are in need of, especially now, with so many forces trying to tear us apart. No matter what you are willing or able to spend to dine out, what we absorb from dining out in a room ‘together’ is not something that can be delivered to your door in a plastic bag.

The other memorable meal we had in London over the holidays was lunch at The Devonshire - which we enjoyed with our all time favorite dining companions, Linni and Nick Campbell. We dined in The Grill Room, a bit more posh than the dark and clubby pub on the ground floor, which reportedly has the best Guinness in London. Upstairs is a room of understated elegance dominated by an astonishing wall to wall wood-fired furnace, (see above) the better to produce the embers, ash and smokey flavors Jamie Guy (Hix) and Ashley Palmer-Watts (Fat Duck) have made a signature.

So what makes a great meal out? A tempting menu, great drink, an engaging ambiance, an anticipation of not knowing what flavors you might discover - or re-discover - all play a role in the equation. I’ve had far more super evenings that came with a few imperfect dishes or forgivable lapses in service where the room and the menu vibrated with life; quite a few forgettable ones at temples of gastronomy where playing with your food was frowned upon. A truly great restaurant is one which lets you feel that you, the diner, are an integral part of the equation. And you are crucial. Not just because brick and mortar restaurants cannot succeed without your patronage. You are the music that fills the room with life.

I have written in the past about the food grown on site or sourced within a few miles of The Pig Hotels, and their dedication to a particularly engaging hospitality that honors farm and garden traditions. It still impresses. There are now 9 Pig properties in the UK. a collection, not a chain, as each historical grand house is unique. We love the one in Devon not least because it gives us the opportunity to check in with what Ashley Wheeler and Kate Norman are up to at Trill Farm on Puddleylake Road in nearby Musbury. There are few farmers we admire as much - in addition to supplying The Pig (they grow over a 100 different varieties of leaf and flower) they run regenerative farming courses throughout the year, save seed for their Real Seed Catalogue and Vital Seeds, and are passionate voices in support of the LandWorkers’ Alliance UK and helped set up the UK Seed Sovereignty Programme.

The Wild Rabbit in the village of Dalesford in Gloucestershire sits in the middle of hundreds of farmed and grazed acres that supplies the Village, The Michelin Star Wild Rabbit Restaurant, two taverns, the Erewhon style food hall adjacent to renovated farm house cottages, as well as four Dalesford with restaurants around London. Yes, It’s posh and a bit pricey, worth it for the quality of everything the Bamford Family enterprise does; Carol Bamford’s attention to detail (which stretches to clothing and design) is astonishing without being pretentious.

No reservations were needed for what turned out to be our best lunch in the UK, straight off the boardwalk in Lyme Regis, where we dropped into a seaside table after many hours spent exploring the tiny village and hillside hidden bench gardens of Beer, in Devon, on the Jurassic coast. Here we found exquisite local oysters and cod - you can see the fishing boats coming in if you get out there early- and enjoyed an easy camaraderie with the staff that extended to everyone soaking in the sun on the patio. It’s such a joy when find an establishment that, like Barndiva’s, depends equally upon tourism and local patronage, knows how to make everyone feel welcome. The food was fresh and delicious. An elderly woman said hello as she was wheeled to a corner table where it was clear she always dined. An Indian family with young children shared their bottle of wine with the table next to them, and then with us. The weather was sublime. There was a small but wonderful moment when I noticed everyone dining was slyly keeping an eye on the little ones running back and forth across the promenade that led to the sea. We would never see any of those people again. It didn’t matter.

Images above: floral delivery to our hotel in BA at the wonderful Jardin Escondido ; Buenos Ares food images, El Preferido de Palermo ; Mercado de San Telmo; our lovely bartender @CoChinChina.Bar.

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 Studio Barndiva  2025

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Studio Barndiva 2025

This is Bea, the ‘angel’ in our holiday ‘angels and bears’ cocktail made from crabapples we harvested with Misha, our extraordinary farm manager and her daughter, Ara. Bea and Ara, ethereal creatures, are not that much smaller than our extremely old crabapple trees, the ones by the road which have somehow managed to escape the woozy ire of the ‘bears.’ My guess is our ursine neighbors are put off by the smell of tannin in the apple skins, which also happens to be why they are such a great apple to macerate, in this case, in Armagnac and aromatics.

I love end of year best lists, the books the movies, the art shows, but when it comes to dishes - especially those we served - it’s not so easy to choose. Each season has its standouts. This is our second year serving dinner in Studio Barndiva where we have room for dining couches and cocktail high tops, better sound, a big wall on which to play Isabel’s silent film compilations. The feedback from returning guests and new customers has been, thankfully, incredible. When the mood of a space is just right, the drinks and dishes arrive as a blessing, which is how all food should be received.

Long before we learned to make an art out of cooking & dining, we gathered in tribes and then communities to celebrate harvest and the seasons, and I am of the belief that the time we spend dining at brick and mortar restaurants - the experience itself whether perfect or flawed - is at the heart of the definition of what it means to share the experience of being human. Of course we can and should participate in fostering the health of our community in many ways: going to the theatre, galleries, music venues, but something quite unique happens when you lift a glass in a comfortable room or garden surrounded by other fellow humans. You replenish, physically and emotionally. If the experience is authentic, if there is care in the sourcing, labor that honors the food chain, you also pay it forward, you contribute. And you don’t have to know a soul sitting in the room around you to share a social covenant which is irreducible.

I had a friend who grew up in Oklahoma, and I have never forgotten his description of how his family knew a tornado was coming. It wasn’t the growing darkness on the horizon, which seemed to move closer by the minute, certainly not once the furniture started flying. “It was something in the air, not quite a scent, but you could definitely smell it: a chilly premonition it was time to prepare.”

It would be disingenuous to say that for those of us practicing hospitality in wine country right now - Napa, Sonoma, Mendocino- at the end of a year as precarious as this one, that while the furniture is not flying, premonitions abound. With the wine industry in transition, diners (we are told) drinking less wine and spirits, the general tightening of the family budget and - not least for a town like Healdsburg - a possible downward shift in tourism - we may be in for an interesting new year. People will always thankfully celebrate the momentous moments of their lives - a good thing as Barndiva moves into our 21st year as a bespoke wedding and special event venue - but it’s as a restaurant we find our deepest connection to the Healdsburg we’ve been a part of for two decades, and its surrounding food and wine sheds all the way up to our farm in the Anderson Valley.

Our last blog post was a photo album of Sparkle Party, which we hosted with Stay Healdsburg to launch the Holiday season in Healdsburg on November 15. Sparkle drew close to 250 people from across the town’s spectrum of locals and visitors, farmers and artists. What was extraordinary about that evening? I’d like to think the Misha Vega’s green mum floral wall, the vinyl playlist, the bites which showcased food grown a few miles away, the many glasses we raised of singular sparkling wines also grown and made only miles from where we gathered. The images tell the story that there was something else at play on the night as well. Just being in the same space together, the conversations we didn’t realize we needed to have, the unbridled laughter. The energy at Sparkle wrapped its arms around a truth we will be holding close this coming year: we are strongest and happiest when we come together. It’s not a euphemism. It is the truth.

We send this blog out with heartfelt thanks to all who patronized Studio Barndiva this past year, especially Barndiva’s local friends and neighbors who returned again and again, as well many visitors to Healdsburg who came looking to see what we’ve got up to in the intervening years. Never a dull moment, that’s for sure. Its all still so beautiful and delicious, for which we are grateful.

We hope to see you soon.

dishes we enjoyed serving the most in 2025

  1. Now on the winter menu, the layered flavors of mixed greens and chicories dressed in a fragrant orange flower dressing, Barndiva farm apples, grana padano crisps, pecans, pomegranate, delicata squash chips.

  2. The Basil Gimlet, made with Reyes Farm basil, finished with drops of nasturtium oil, resplendent with the scents of summer.

  3. Erik’s sweet corn soup made a brief appearance at the height of corn season, poured table side, the better to see the Jimmy Nardello pepper and sherry vinegar jam with a hint of Presto VOO. Finished with a flash grilled pouf of corn silk.

  4. Whipped mozzarella with Barndiva fig vinaigrette beneath Barndiva farm figs, peak tomatoes, peeled and marinated toy box tomatoes sheltering beneath fresh basil. A moment in time - figs at their ripest, tomatoes at their juiciest.

  5. The dish people come back for again and again - our Tikka Masala. Yes, our menu in the Studio is eclectic - these are dishes we most want to eat which we are honored to share with you.

  6. Three dynamic FOH Diva’s in action : Liz, Lisette, Lynn.

  7. Trout tartare in a pool of green tomato aguachile, with avocado, radish, garden florals. The perfect, and sexiest start to a meal here. (There, I've said it)

  8. Erik’s Fava bean and fresh mint pea soup with Boonville’s piment d’ville pepper flakes as photographed by Liza Gershman for her upcoming Healdsburg Farmers Market cookbook - for publication early 2026. It will no doubt be for sale at the Farmers Market in the spanking new Foley Family Community Pavilion on North Street.

  9. Simon’s Barndiva Farm Apple galette was the hit dessert this year. Initially made with our heirloom Gravensteins, it went through the apple harvest with different varietals, served with his Tahitian vanilla ice cream. Now offered with Persimmons, in the run up to Christmas it will return with apples we harvested just last week.

  10. Lift, Flirt & Slide lower alcohol apéritifs will make a return in 2025, as will Isabel Hales to lead our cocktail program with Danny Martin. We can’t wait!

  11. The Studio Barndiva Ice Cream Social changed weekly showcasing Simon’s insane IC and sorbet flavors. Mango, Strawberry and Orange pictured.

  12. We were honored to once again receive recognition for Studio Barndiva from Michelin in 2025 - a show of their continued support as we have navigated the food, wine, and cocktail world, ‘eating and drinking the view.’ Michelin’s understanding that passion and care in the kitchen and on the floor extends to sourcing and sustainability - the foundation of truly ‘fine’ dining - is a lodestar.

Photos Chad Surmick; Jil Hales

Barndiva Farm’s floral program is overseen by Misha Vega, @philo.flora, weekly arrangements by Jil Hales. It is guided, from the Costwolds, by Daniel Carlson, @Daniel.james.co.

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Celebrating our 2023 Michelin Star

We have been passionate diners and drinkers pretty much all our lives, but until we opened Barndiva nineteen years ago we never had reason to peek behind the doors of a professional kitchen except to say hello and thank you from time to time. There was never an imperative to see the whole organism of a restaurant, from chef to dishwasher, as a living breathing entity, much less learn of the many farmers and purveyors who had provided the raw materials for a meal we had just enjoyed.

If you haven’t worked in this environment you can’t fully understand how many pieces need to fall into place - the skill sets needed, the timing you have to get just right, the talent at the top that must filter down to the patience on the floor, in order to survive the long days and longer nights this profession demands. From early in the morning, when a dizzying array of product begins to arrive, to late into the night when the last ones out have cleaned every conceivable surface and locked up, this life is relentless. As the seasonal menus flash by, there is daily education of the entire staff on new dishes, cocktails and wine, service to be corrected and perfected, rooms set and polished so every piece falls into place. Then showing up the next day and no matter how tired, hung over, or personally challenged, doing it all again to the same level.

What goes on behind the scenes of a restaurant should never be obvious, or stand in the way of a wonderful fine dining experience. The promised land is that moment of sensory magic for the diner: that is the ultimate goal. But as we hurtle into a more reductive, impersonal, technologically obsessed future, knowing what we know now we’ve come to see that celebrating the human touch present at every stage of this beautiful, exacting, transitory, thoroughly human profession is an indispensable way to continue to celebrate the best in ourselves. As a family we have always been clear that knowing where our food comes from is the defining question for all human beings on the planet - exponentially a greater issue when you own a restaurant. You are what you eat, to be sure. But how you come to appreciate and respect the human endeavor that brings that food to the plate may very well hold the key to what you become, as well.

We now have, under the direction of Chef Erik Anderson, Beverage Director Scott Beattie, Wine Director Emily Carlson, Events Manager Natalie Nelson, and Restaurant Manager Cathryn Hulsman, the strongest team we have ever had the fortune to work alongside. Being awarded a Michelin Star in 2021 after 17 years in service, again in 2022, and now in 2023 is a validation of the highly coordinated talents of our entire kitchen brigade and front of house teams. We hope these remarkable photographs by Chad Surmick, a humble homage to the great Irving Penn’s ‘The Small Trades’, conveys our appreciation for their efforts this past year, and serves as an affirmation of the respect we hold for them, and the dedication, skill, and true grit they bring to Barndiva every day.

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