Wednesday, December 31, 2014

KITTY KASA: A FULL SERVICE HOUSING MODULE FOR CATS



They debuted their first product, the Kitty Kasa collection, which is an adorable set of stackable modules that act as little homes for cats.
The Kitty Kasa is like full service condo housing, but for cats. There’s the Kitty Kasa Gym module that comes with a scratching post and holes to keep your cat happy and exercised.

After they’re tired of the gym, they can prowl to the Kitty Kasa Recreation center, complete with a mouse for kitty entertaining.

Finally, they can go to sleep and rest in the Kitty Kasa Bedroom, that’s sturdily built and can be used indoors or outdoors.
Now how do we go about getting one of these for our puppies?

Article and Photos Sourced From:  http://design-milk.com/kitty-kasa-full-service-housing-module-cats/

Tuesday, December 30, 2014

Mortgage Rates Near 2014 Low as Year Ends

Here’s a look at recent news of interest to homebuyers, home sellers, and the home-curious:


Mortgage signMORTGAGE RATES STILL NEAR 2014 LOWS
Mortgage rates remain close to their yearly lows as 2014 ends, news that could help spur some hesitant homebuyers to make a New Year’s resolution to get in the game – especially with increases expected in 2015.
A Freddie Mac news release says that 30-year, fixed-rate mortgages averaged 3.83 percent for the week ending Dec. 24, up slightly from the previous week, when they sank to a yearly low of 3.80 percent. One year ago, mortgage rates averaged 4.48 percent, the company says.
But the low rates might not stick around too much longer, if 2015 predictions come to pass. Both Freddie Mac and Realtor.com Chief Economist Jonathan Smoke recently projected mortgage rates to climb to 5 percent by the end of next year, with Smoke guessing that increases will begin in the spring.

DISTRESSED-SALES RATES IN SINGLE DIGITS ACROSS BAY AREA
The Bay Area continues to enjoy the lowest rate of distressed sales in the state, with almost all local counties reporting single-digit levels in November.
According to the California Association of Realtors’ latest pending and distressed home sales report, eight of nine Bay Area counties recorded fewer distressed sales than the statewide average of 10 percent last month. The report, which doesn’t contain data for San Francisco County, said that the number of distressed sales ranged from 1 percent in San Mateo County – the lowest in California – to 9 percent in Solano County.
CAR also reported that pending home sales declined on both a monthly and annual basis in November, which the organization attributed to expected seasonal factors and diminishing affordability.

HEATED ROOF DECKS A HIT WITH SAN FRANCISCO HOMEBUYERS
Heated outdoor spaces are becoming increasingly popular both nationally and locally, The Wall Street Journal reports, allowing homeowners to entertain guests or lounge outside – even when the mercury drops.
Citing a survey of professional landscape architects, the article says that 95 percent of respondents rated a fire pit as a more desirable amenity than a grill. Other homeowners in chilly locales are installing infrared heaters or custom-built systems designed to accommodate year-round outdoor living.
As a local example of this trend, the article points to the Amero, a new condominium building in San Francisco’s Cow Hollow neighborhood that provides residents access to a 4,500-square-foot roof deck equipped with a 12-foot-long fire pit. Amero resident Jaime Cruz said that the roof deck factored into her decision to purchase her $1.35 million, two-bedroom unit.
“The roof deck was the really, really nice cherry on top of the sundae,” Cruz told the Journal.
(Phot0: Flickr/401(K) 2012)

Friday, December 26, 2014

Free things to do in San FranciscoWatch some unintentional theater at a Board of Supes meeting or public hearing.

When looking for some relief from the city's high prices, check out these free events, activities, and outings to soothe your budget. List compiled by the SFGate.com staff with some help from our readers.

Head to the De Young for the view from the tower and Friday night art events.

Visit the 'fog bridge' at the Exploratorium at Pier 15.

Watch some unintentional theater at a Board of Supes meeting or public hearing.

Try to climb every S.F. staircase -- like the challenging Filbert Steps.

Center yourself at one of many free yoga classes throughout the city. One is offered by San Francisco Recreation and Parks at Golden Gate Park on Saturday mornings.

View the 54 other Free Things To Do in San Francisco

Thursday, December 25, 2014

Happy Holidays!

 
Wishing everyone the warmest and happiest of holidays!
-Mindy


Tuesday, December 23, 2014

Real Estate Roundup: Will San Francisco Rental Property Owners Soon Cash Out?

Here’s a look at recent news of interest to homebuyers, home sellers, and the home-curious:
SAN FRANCISCO INVESTORS NET BIGGEST EQUITY RETURNS IN THE U.S.
Investors who have funneled money into the San Francisco housing market are netting huge equity returns, leading to speculation that rental property owners may soon sell, a recent report says.Inventory levels have been rising in the U.S.
Over the past three years, institutional investors who purchased a single-family home in San Francisco have realized equity returns of 63 percent, according to RealtyTrac, the largest gain of any major U.S. metro area. The company defines an institutional investor as one who buys at least 10 properties in a calendar year.
Across the country, institutional investors earned equity returns averaging 26 percent, RealtyTrac says. The company notes that while institutional investors don’t appear to be selling off assets at the moment, price appreciation gives them the motivation to do so.
Then again, with the most expensive rental prices in the nation, San Francisco investors also have solid incentive to hold.

RUNNING DOWN THE BAY AREA’S MUST-SEE HOLIDAY DISPLAYS
‘Tis the season for holiday decorating, and some local homeowners are sparing no expense to spread the yuletide cheer.
SFGate.com recently took a look at the Bay Area’s best holiday displays, starting with “Deacon Dave’s,” a Livermore home that has been attracting crowds for more than 30 years and contains 372,000 lights. Other locals take less conventional approaches to decking the halls, with two San Jose neighbors synchronizing their homes’ light displays with a variety of holiday tunes, a spectacle known as Glacier Lights.
The article also highlights several streets where all or most owners decorate their homes, including enclaves in Palo Alto, San Mateo, Oakland, and Alameda.

U.S. ECONOMIC GROWTH TO STRENGTHEN IN 2015
Although 2014 has been a volatile year for the U.S. economy and will end with less growth  than measured in the previous year, Fannie Mae expects the pace to pick up in 2015.
In a news release, Fannie Mae projects that the U.S. economy will grow by 2.7 percent in 2015, compared with a forecasted 2.1 percent this year. As a result, the company said that it expects housing starts to increase by 22 percent and home sales to rise by 5 percent next year.
“We anticipate a fairly strong increase in housing starts in response to stronger employment and some improvement in related household incomes,” Fannie Mae Chief Economist Doug Duncan said in a statement.

WEALTHY AMERICANS BUYING MANSIONS AS FAMILY HEIRLOOMS
You can’t take your home with you when you die, but luxury buyers are increasingly purchasing high-end properties for the purpose of keeping them in the family for generations to come.
According to The Wall Street Journal, a survey found that 64 percent of affluent Americans said it was likely they would purchase a home in order to pass it on to family members. The article says that so-called legacy homes cost a minimum of $5 million to build, but because their buyers tend to prefer homes in traditionally affluent areas, they represent a solid long-term investment.
The Journal notes that legacy homebuyers are decking out their purchases with features that will appeal to multiple generations, including volleyball courts, equestrian facilities, home theaters, and rooms designed for playing video games.
 (Photo: Flickr/Liskbot)

Monday, December 22, 2014

Contemporary classic Arguello

One of the most ridiculous criticisms on consumer websites and social media about Arguello, the new Mexican restaurant in the converted officers’ club at the Presidio, is that owner Traci Des Jardins is an Anglo.

That argument doesn’t track on several counts. For one thing, it’s nonsense that having a certain ethnic heritage makes you inherently better at producing the cuisine. Secondly, Des Jardins’ mother and grandparents are Mexican, and she grew up with the cuisine.
It’s also odd that no one made the criticism when she was cooking California/French food at Rubicon or at her three-star Jardinière.

If the food is good, it’s not just because of ethnic background; it’s because the chef has the passion, reverence and integrity to make it, regardless of the style. And from my three visits to Arguello, we can check off those boxes.
Des Jardins is a talented chef, whether she’s creating Latino, French, Italian or American food. Arguello offers classic preparations with a modern sensibility — an uncharacteristically short menu for this style of cuisine, for example, with only eight appetizers and four main plates.

The space also supports a more contemporary approach — even more so than the Commissary, the nearby Spanish-California restaurant Des Jardins opened earlier this year.
There’s a rustic elegance in the wood-beamed ceiling, the tile floor and the circular iron chandeliers that speaks to the building’s history. The space has an open feel, thanks to the windows and the doors that open to the officers’ lounge. Outside there’s a modern 24-seat patio with a fireplace which can be used to produce tortillas and other items. The 56-seat dining room is separated from the lounge and open kitchen by a shoulder-high partition.

The menu includes an excellent guacamole ($6.50) with warm, salty chips that shatter in layers with each bite, and spicy pumpkin seeds ($2) that go with the extensive Tequila and cocktail list. On one visit, however, it seemed the chips, which can also be ordered with two house-made salsas ($3.50), tasted as if they were fried in old oil because they left a harsh, bitter aftertaste.
The smaller plates include an excellent albondigas soup ($9) with meatballs, potato, crunchy tortilla strips and an intense chicken broth with a touch of heat, unleashed in layers. Crisp chicken taquitos ($11) look similar to those found in grocers’ freezers, but the chicken filling is fresh, as is the avocado and tomatillo salsa and the bed of shredded iceberg lettuce.
Ingredients are noticeably pristine, as shown in the salad with cold crunchy escarole ($13) with roasted squash, queso fresco and a cumin-pumpkin seed vinaigrette. There’s also a salad of Little Gems ($9) with radishes, cilantro and cotija cheese; and a stellar reinvention of a classic combination: jicama sticks with citrus and avocado in a nicely piquant dressing ($13).
The quality also shows on the mushroom quesadilla ($10.50) with a pleasing medicinal touch from epazote and a tender golden crust.
While many people shy away from tongue ($14), it’s a dish that shows the more complex, rustic side of Mexican cuisine. A stack of thick triangles of seared meat are complemented by chayote, slightly crunchy pickled vegetables and sauce estofada, a complex mole with tomato, capers, olives and a hint of sweetness.
The four larger plates include a vegetarian option with roasted squash, poblanos and patties of queso fresco boldly enhanced with epazote, cilantro and onions ($12).
Pollo chile verde ($15) is the dish I’d come back for, with a richly layered sauce and cilantro rice. Caramelized pork shoulder ($18) features big chunks of meat on a cabbage salad. I can see why it’s a favorite, but I felt the orange in the sauce needed more serrano chile balance.
Two desserts ($4) offer a soothing respite: a creamy, palate-coating caramel flan, and rice pudding with just the right amount of sweetness, pierced with rum-soaked raisins.
Service is still in the building phase and fluctuated from visit to visit. It can be slow, which may also be the result of kitchen backups.
On one visit, we arrived a few minutes before our third dining companion, and even though only a few tables were occupied, the host had a somewhat haughty attitude and refused to seat us until everyone was there.
However, the bar is welcoming and the bartenders stir up a good margarita ($10) with Pueblo Viejo Blanco Tequila, fresh lime and agave; and El Presidio ($11) with Partida Blanco Tequila, grapefruit, angostura bitters and soda water.
Getting to the restaurant can feel like a trek, but it’s a peaceful drive through eucalyptus stands and brick and wooden barracks. The former military base dates back to 1776; when it closed in 1995, it was the longest continuously operating military base in the United States.
Arguello plays into the history by celebrating the importance of the Mexican population to the area. It’s nice that Des Jardins is of Mexican descent, but being a great cook is the key.
★ ★ ½
Arguello
Food: ★ ★½
Service: ★ ★
Atmosphere: ★ ★ ★
Price: $$
Noise: Four Bells
50 Moraga Ave., in the Presidio, San Francisco; (415) 561-3650. www.arguellosf.com
Lunch 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Wednesday-Friday; brunch 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Saturday, until 4 p.m. Sunday. Diner 5-9 p.m. Wednesday-Saturday (bar menu 3-5 p.m.). Full bar. No reservations. Credit cards accepted. Paid lot (free after 6 p.m.)

Friday, December 19, 2014

Where to Sit Back and Sip Afternoon Tea, Holiday-Style

Afternoon Tea at the Ritz-Carlton San Francisco
Afternoon Tea, Photo Courtesy of Ritz-Carlton San Francisco
There are many ways to celebrate the holiday season – some of them more stressful than others. Forget that cup of coffee on the run and take a breather from shopping to sit down to holiday tea. Relaxing in a festively decorated hotel makes for a sweet date with friends, significant other, and even the kids.
Sipping with the Girls
Pair your choice of Mighty Leaf or Red Blossom tea with a glass of Gloria Ferrer sparkling wine during Holiday Tea at The Westin St. Francis. Nibble on a selection of English tea sandwiches, freshly baked scone and seasonal berries with Devonshire-blend cream, preserves and assorted petit fours. $51 per person, November 30 – December 22; available Saturdays and Sundays only, 2 pm to 4 pm Reservations are required, (415) 774-0264, Kids welcome.

Sipping with Your Significant Someone
The indulgent combination of tea, finger sandwiches, scones and macaroons at Afternoon Tea at the Ritz-Carlton San Francisco, may convince you to skip dinner. Live music provides soothing sounds to sip to. $65 per person, November 29-December 1; December 5-8, 12-24, at 3 pm. Reservations, (415) 773-6168, Kids welcome.

Tea Service, Photo Courtesy Rosewood Sand HillSipping with Tradition
This year marks the 18th annual Teddy Bear Tea at The Gardens at Heather Farm. Enjoy teatime treats, story time, a souvenir photograph and favors for every child. $15 per child, $25 per adult, December 7th & 8th, 11:30am & 2pm, Reservations required, (925) 947-1678. Free parking.
Walnut Creek’s Shadelands Ranch Museum offers a three-course Victorian Tea along with its 31st Annual Holiday Faire. Go hungry. Service includes scones with lemon curd, beef wellington, mushroom tarts chocolate cake and cream puffs, just to name a few things. $30 per person; November 30 - December 15, seatings at 11:30 am and 1:30 pm. Reservations required, (925) 935-7871. Free parking and admission to the Holiday Faire.
Sipping ‘Out of the Box’
If one of your favorite parts of the holidays is unwrapping presents, tea at the Fairmont San Jose is a must-do. From tea sandwiches to cookies and pastries; all food is served in Christmas boxes for guests to open at their table. Save room for the dessert bar. Santa’s Chocolate Fountain will be bubbling with two types of chocolate, and they’ll be plenty of holiday treats for dipping. $44 per adult, includes sparkling wine, $33 for children; Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays, November 29th - December 22, 3pm to 6pm. Daily December 23rd -December 29th (Closed Christmas Day). Reservations, (408) 998-3960.
Teddy Bear Tea Ritz Carlton
Teddy Bear Tea, Photo Courtesy Ritz-Carlton San Francisco
Sipping with the Kids
The Ritz-Carlton also holds a Teddy Bear Tea for kids that includes a live family show starring Stretchy the Elf, the “tallest elf in the world,” his sidekick Holly Berry and the Ritz-Carlton Teddy Bear. They’ll be sing-a-longs, holiday stories and holiday sweets including hot chocolate with marshmallows, children’s tea sandwiches, cookies and pastries. Each child receives a photo with the Ritz-Carlton Teddy Bear and a small teddy bear gift. A portion of the proceeds benefit Make-A-Wish® Greater Bay Area. $110 per person, November 29-December 1; December 6-8, 14-15, 20-24, 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. Reservations required, (415) 773-6168.
Every Saturday in December until Christmas, Rosewood Sand Hill is hosting a Children’s Holiday Tea with Santa. The jolly fellow will be reading holiday stories to kids in the hotel’s Library by the Christmas tree. Tea and hot cocoa, along with tea sandwiches, cookies and sweets will be served. Kids receive a teddy bear to take home, but will also be encouraged to write Christmas cards for children of The Ronald McDonald House during the event. The cards will be attached to teddy bears that Rosewood Sand Hill is donating to the organization. $55 per child,Saturdays, December 7th, 14th and 21st, 1:30pm to 3:30pm. Reservations required, (650) 561-1540.
Dana can be found on Twitter @drebmann
Article and Photos Sourced From:  http://www.7x7.com/eat-drink/high-tea-holiday-style 

Thursday, December 18, 2014

Bay Area Sellers Still Scoring Premiums, Bucking Statewide Trend

Multiple-offer situations are fading across most of the Golden State, with sellers netting a smaller percentage of list price than they did a year ago. But here in the Bay Area, a pronounced lack of homes for sale means that overbids are still common.Gold coins
In its November home sales and price report, the California Association of Realtors estimates that the average home seller in the state currently receives 97.2 percent of list price, down from 98.4 percent one year ago. In the nine-county Bay Area, where homebuyers compete for a limited amount of properties, sellers are pulling in 100.5 percent of list price – the only region in the state where the average buyer could expect to pay a premium.
“The declining sales-to-list price ratio suggests that mismatched expectations of home prices between sellers and buyers still exist in most markets, except for the Bay Area, where there’s a dearth of homes for sale,” 2015 CAR President Chris Kutzkey said in a statement accompanying the report.
CAR’s data shows that the inventory shortages that local buyers have become all too familiar with persisted in November.
The months’ supply of inventory (MSI) in the Bay Area edged up slightly to 2.3 in November on both a monthly and annual basis, but our region has about half as many available homes compared with the entire state. San Mateo had the smallest MSI of any California county, at 1.4, followed by Alameda and Santa Clara (1.9), Contra Costa (2.0), San Francisco (2.3), and Marin (2.7) counties.
Besides fueling overbids, CAR noted that supply constraints have also caused sales volume declines, similar to conclusions reached in a newly released CoreLogic DataQuick report.
“The San Francisco Bay Area, which has an extreme housing supply shortage due to robust economic growth, is a perfect example of how these factors have slowed down home sales this year,” CAR Vice President and Chief Economist Leslie Appleton-Young said.
In November, the number of single-family homes sold in the Bay Area dropped 21.5 percent month over month and 6.3 percent year over year. All nine counties reported double-digit volume declines from October, with seven seeing drops in excess of 20 percent. Sales were down from November 2013 in six of nine local counties.
The median price for a single-family Bay Area home was $748,870 in November, a modest 1.5 percent dip from the preceding month and up 8.1 percent from a year earlier. Marin and San Mateo were the only California counties to post median sales prices higher than $1 million.
San Mateo County was also the fastest-moving market in the state in November, with the average home selling in 21.3 days, as well as the most expensive per square foot, at $654.

Wednesday, December 17, 2014

Sausalito dog thought drowned in storm reunited with owner

In a near-miraculous recovery, a dog that was on a boat that sank in Richardson Bay during Thursday's storm swam a mile to shore, walked to a church she had visited with her animal guardian and was reunited with him in an emotional meeting two days later.
Daisy, a brown and white pit bull belonging to Sausalito resident Stephen Alioto, was reunited with Alioto Saturday morning at the Marin Humane Society after a chain of events that ranks as, at the very least, improbable, not to mention heartwarming.
"My neighbor told me there was a soaking wet, shivering dog crouched in the church doorway around 7:30 a.m. Thursday," said the Rev. Paul Mowry of the Sausalito Presbyterian Church. "Initially, I thought she was just a lost dog."
Steve Alioto, left, is reunited with his dog Daisy with the help of Pastor Paul Moury of Sausalito Presbyterian Church, who is also the police chaplain.
Steve Alioto, left, is reunited with his dog Daisy with the help of Pastor Paul Moury of Sausalito Presbyterian Church, who is also the police chaplain. Alioto thought Daisy drowned when their boat sank last week in Richardson Bay. (Courtesy Marin Humane Society)
The pastor notified Sausalito police and the Marin Humane Society, who sent an officer to scan Daisy's microchip. The chip yielded two phone numbers.
"I tried the secondary number a couple of times and got somebody who said the dog, Daisy, had been given away to a good friend, Steve. And we (the church) have a Steve who comes to our free lunches on Wednesday," Mowry said. "He lived on the boat with Daisy."
The next day, on Friday, a distraught Steve reported his lost dog to Sausalito police. Police Sgt. Thomas Georges' investigative skills came into play, as he made the connection between the pastor's Thursday report of finding a brown and white pit bull.
"He (Georges) called me and said they took a report – this guy Steve reported his lost dog, a pit bull," Mowry said.

"The Open Door Ministries does a Friday dinner. So I went there and was talking to a man whose boat had sunk. I asked, 'Is Steve here?' and the man said, 'He's here. His boat sunk and his dog drowned.'
But how to reach Alioto, who was now homeless? "My partner Joey (Joe Silverman) said, 'Where is the next (free) meal in Sausalito where he might be?'" Mowry said.
"I walked over and said to Steve, 'We have your dog.' He said, 'Are you kidding me?' I told him the dog showed up at the church. He started sobbing and threw his arms around me," Mowry said.
The next day, the pastor drove Steve to the Humane Society and the two were reunited.
"Steve said to me, 'The things I lost are just things. They can be replaced. But you can't be replaced, and I can't be replaced, and Daisy can't be replaced,'" Mowry said. "That dog is his companion. She's his everything." Steve and Daisy are now staying on a friend's boat, Mowry said.
Reflecting on the dog's saga, Mowry said, "She got herself up through the hatch and out of the boat while it was going down and made it to shore in the dark. I don't know how she did it." The pastor pointed out that the dog had to find a shore that was accessible on foot, since the dog could not climb up a dock.
"It's a remarkable achievement. And then to find her way to the church!" Mowry said.
Alioto told Mowry that he had given Daisy swimming lessons, Mowry said.
"He got a doggie life preserver for her and jumped in the water with her and she made her way to the dock and back to the boat. He taught her how to survive in the water," Mowry said.
Lisa Bloch of the Humane Society said, "One thing that to me is particularly poignant is here is a man who has lost everything, but he at least has his companion.
"When Steve came to pick the dog up we provided him with a new leash and dog food," Bloch said. "A woman just happened to come by to drop off a donation of a 50-pound bag of dog food and she turned around and gave it to Steve."
The Humane Society is accepting donations of food and pet toys, needs that are especially apparent this time of year, Bloch said.
"As they were leaving, a Good Samaritan heard the story and handed some money toward Daisy's care," Bloch added.
"This is a beautiful story and I think it says a lot about our community here in Marin and how much we care about animals and people," Bloch said.

Tuesday, December 16, 2014

Most Renters Unable to Afford a Home Purchase

Financial hardships are preventing most renters from entering the real estate market, a recent Freddie Mac survey found, but new low-down-payment programs could help some of them unlock purchasing power and become first-time homebuyers.empty wallet
According to poll results, 45 percent of U.S. renters said they live from paycheck to paycheck, while another 17 percent reported an inability to pay for basic necessities. And although 91 percent of renters believe that homeownership is a source of pride, just 39 percent said that they expect to purchase a home over the next three years.
Renters who plan to get in the game tend to be younger, with 47 percent of those in the 25-to-34 age bracket foreseeing a purchase by 2017. Generation Xers seemed even more certain that homeownership is in their future, with 58 percent of those aged 35 to 44 responding that they expect to buy a property within the next three years. Renters who haven’t bought a home by the age of 45 were unlikely to do so, Freddie Mac noted.
In a statement accompanying the survey results, Freddie Mac Multifamily Executive Vice President David Brickman said that an inability to afford a down payment is preventing some renters from buying, but the California Association of Realtors believes that new lending programs could help turn the tide.
Last week, both Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae unveiled programs that would allow qualified first-time buyers to obtain a loan with as little as a 3 percent down payment.
“Our goal is to help additional qualified borrowers gain access to mortgages,” Andrew Bon Salle, Fannie Mae Executive Vice President for Single Family Underwriting, Pricing and Capital Markets, said in a statement.
CAR commended the programs, saying that increased access to credit would greatly benefit the state’s first-time buyers.
“Saving enough money for a down payment is the biggest hurdle for most first-time home buyers, but this program will help remove that barrier, and at the same time, lenders can be assured they are providing a safe, affordable loan to creditworthy borrowers,”CAR President Chris Kutzkey said in a press release.
Still, not all renters want the responsibilities and commitments that come with homeownership, according to Freddie Mac. Freedom from home-maintenance chores and expenses is the main advantage of renting, 78 percent of respondents answered, while 68 percent said that renting allows for greater flexibility in terms of location.
And the country’s recent recession and housing collapse is still very much top of mind, with 66 percent of those polled responding that continuing to rent would protect them against future home price declines.

Monday, December 15, 2014

Rx bar in S.F.: Well-crafted cocktails for the bar-stool set

The back of the cocktail menu at Rx bar in S.F. playfully references the Prohibition era Dennis Leary’s new Rx is a drinker’s bar, with a long lineage as such. In the short term, it’s risen from the ashes of hisTrocadero Club, which Leary concedes landed with a thud. (“We could’ve offered free alcohol and nobody would have showed up.”)

Before that, it was RJ’s Sports Bar, back when dive bars could survive and before anyone took on Tendernob airs. But that was only the latest iteration. A bar has been at the corner of Geary and Leavenworth pretty much since Repeal.





Since having shuttered Canteen last year — his original Tenderloin beachhead — Leary has become an unlikely bar impresario, taking over House of Shields and opening Cafe Terminus and Natoma Cabana with Eric Passetti, who’s also a partner in Rx. It’s worth noting that each of these projects willfully resists the tendency of late for restaurants to slip on their bar drag. As our bar culture approaches peak nosh, these are places where you come to drink, dammit.

Rx has one big thing going for it: a stellar cocktail menu from Passetti and barman Erick Ochoa, a veteran of the Mina Groupand Natoma Cantina. As the bar’s name indicates, they wanted to pay homage to liquor’s medicinal era during the Prohibition years, when a doctor’s note was the only legal path to hard liquor.




I’m not sure the ghost of Eliot Ness is a great enticement to drink, but the Rx crew found great inspiration in that era of furtive tippling, as the stylized faux-scrip on the menu’s back reveals, filling cocktails with all manner of amari and bitters. It is a very specific and very grown-up concept.

But it is hardly harsh medicine. These flavors have become part of the essential repertoire of today’s informed drinker, and Ochoa’s ability to balance their seemingly dissonant ways is worth a visit alone.

Among the 14 cocktails, or “elixirs,” you’ll find names like Rexall and Bartell — further homages to the druggist theme. The Rexall piles together mezcal, chile tincture and Becherovka liqueur for fiery effect, while the Dietz is all low tones: Averna’s dark bite mixes with espresso-infused rum and curacao.


The Dante’s pulls off a similar balance, in a brighter hue: Gin, genepy and orange bitters tame Fernet’s growl. Ditto the Wolzen, which puts mezcal and the bitter-orange bite of Aperol up against the suave, foresty flavors of Amaro Nonino. (Note the deft hand with mezcal here.)

These are not drinks to woo a Cosmo set. But Leary’s bars are very good at pushing away cocktail foppery. Swigging beer from the bottle is encouraged. You’re still in the Tenderloin, after all.

Rx has one other big thing in its favor: It still feels, if not like a dive, like a Stygian spot for drinking in peace — no rules or ropes, which has arguably held back nearby spots like Tradition. The hues are darker than Trocadero, and new touches telegraph Ochoa’s concept: the stylized caduceus wall stencil, a Rexall-ish neon sign.

But the ancient black slatted bar remains largely unchanged, as do rough glass tiles on the back bar and a handsome lighting dome under which Nucky Thompson would proudly have sat. It’s a somber, welcome spot to come and soothe what ails you.

Friday, December 12, 2014

State Bird Provisions partnership serves up the newest course

As customers line up on a neon stretch of Fillmore Street, what is widely regarded as one of the most innovative restaurants in the country readies for the nightly crush. Inside, State Bird Provisions looks like an industrial art gallery, its pegboard and concrete walls hung with vivid canvases. The simple tables aren’t set with much — no tablecloths, scant place settings beyond stacks of ceramic plates — but waiters polish the silver and glassware like it’s a Relais & Châteaux hotel.

Chefs Stuart Brioza and Nicole Krasinski pictured in the construction zone
of their upcoming restaurant The Progress Nov. 15, 2014 in
San Francisco, Calif. Chefs Stuart Brioza and Nicole Krasinski currently
own the wildly popular restaurant, State Bird Provisions, and
will be opening up their second place, The Progess, in December right next door.


In one booth, husband-and-wife chefs and owners Stuart Brioza and Nicole Krasinski scrutinize a pancake. It’s a contender for the menu, a riff on one of Brioza’s creations by their chef de cuisine, Glenn Kang.

The eager clientele waits to get into the adjacent State Bird Provisions.


Earthy with buckwheat, rich with melted bone marrow, topped with corned cow’s tongue, it’s one of dozens of small plates their cooks and waiters might roll out nightly on the restaurant’s signature dim-sum-style carts, many for around $5 apiece.

“I feel like the thicker cut on the tongue is juicier,” Brioza says to Kang, as he pulls the pancake apart to examine the crumb. “I love the color, man.”

Kang nods, trying to read his boss between the compliments. Brioza and Krasinski look at each other, chewing, searching.

Brioza hands back the dish. “Let’s keep playing with it this weekend,” he says amiably.
Kang leaves, the faintest note of frustration in his wake.

“There’s a point when you’re tasting something and you say, 'This is good, but it’s missing something,’” Krasinski later explains about the way they dissect every dish.
“Something that takes it from being pedestrian to floating on air,” Brioza adds.

Since opening on Dec. 31, 2011, State Bird Provisions has proved so popular that Silicon Valley techies have built bots to grab reservations. The accolades don’t stop: two Best New Restaurant nods from the James Beard Foundation and Bon Appetit, one star from Michelin.

Yet Brioza and Krasinski never stop climbing for rarer air. This week they will open a second restaurant next door called the Progress, more hotly awaited than State Bird.

State Bird and the Progress represent the culmination of the unusually long, collaborative and cutting-edge careers of its husband-and-wife owners. Having cooked at establishments from Chicago to Michigan since the late 1990s, the pair combine three rare skills: a willfully idiosyncratic vision. An exceptionally open-minded curiosity. And a freakish ability as a married couple to work well together. Often years ahead of everyone else, they have shifted from formal French toques to locavores to, most recently, cart drivers. It’s no accident that State Bird has changed fine dining in America.

“It seems that just about everyone in the food world is showing up at the door of this quirky, imaginative spot,” Michael Bauer wrote in his Chronicle review. “It's the type of place that makes chefs stand up and take notice: The food, and the entire concept, are original.”

State Bird gave diners new experiences that, on paper, read like a series of contradictions: fast food slowly prepared, served informally (from carts) yet intimately (often by the cooks who prepared it). Almost immediately, chefs around the country began copying the ideas.

The founders could now take it easy, or open up more State Birds. Last year the legendary restaurateur Drew Nieporent invited them to open a New York branch. But they turned him down to embrace what may be their toughest challenge yet.

Chef Stuart Brioza (right) consults with line cook Conor McKee as Max
Sheffler works at left. Right: Brioza (center) and Nicole Krasinski
plan the new spot with staff.


A partnership
Brioza and Krasinski seem low-key for culinary greats, but all their lives they’ve possessed a preternatural work ethic. They grew up less than 10 miles from each other in the South Bay suburbs (Brioza in Cupertino, Krasinski, Los Gatos) but didn’t meet until 1995, as art students at De Anza College: Krasinski, 18, her hair dyed goth-black; Brioza, 20, his head shaved.

Since their college days, they have shared art, food — and a tendency to make major life decisions on airplanes. Brioza’s mother was a flight attendant, which got her family free standby flights. In 1995, the year before they became a couple, Brioza invited Krasinski and some friends to fly to New York to see the museums. He had cooked at South Bay restaurants throughout high school; for dinner he dragged them to Gotham Bar and Grill, Krasinski’s first fine-dining meal.

“It was an eye-opening experience for all of us, that architectural food,” Krasinski says.
In 1996, Brioza enrolled at the Culinary Institute of America in Hyde Park, N.Y. That summer they backpacked across Europe. On their standby flight across the Atlantic, they changed planes in Chicago. As they descended over Lake Michigan and downtown, from their seats they fell in love with the city. They decided to settle there the next year, when Brioza would start his culinary externship.

In the late 1990s, fine dining in America still meant big-city, white-tablecloth, French-inflected restaurants. In Chicago, Brioza came under the wing of Chef John Hogan, “a Southside Irish guy who cooked better French food than any French chef in the city,” Brioza recalls.

Hogan said, “I don’t throw this around often, but when Stuart staged at my restaurant, I told my sous chef, 'One day we’re going to be reading about this kid.’” A picture from the time shows Brioza as a postcard image of a French chef, wearing a white coat and toque, spooning a classic French sauce over roast duck from a copper pan.

Krasinksi was accepted at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago but never enrolled after taking a job at a bakery called the Red Hen. Starting as a bencher, making baguettes and croissants by hand, she rose to kitchen manager, fueled by a grit and desire similar to Brioza’s — and without the culinary degree. Within three years she helped the bakery grow into a $4 million business, supplying the city’s best restaurants, like Savarin.

“When she first arrived, we called her Skinny — she was like 100 pounds soaking wet,” said founder Nancy Carey. “But she worked harder than anybody. Without her, we could never have done what we did.”

By 2000, Brioza and Krasinski felt ready for a slower pace. They left for the Northern Michigan resort restaurant Tapawingo, where they became chef and pastry chef. Five years before “locavore” entered the national lexicon, the restaurant’s approach was to cook with whatever nearby farmers would bring them. They embraced the task, cultivating duck farmers and foragers years before the rise of artisan butchers and gleaned food.

They also learned to cook together. Since art school they’d been adept at speaking bluntly when a creation fell short.

“It was kind of effortless,” Brioza says of their earliest culinary collaborations. “With us there were never worries about feelings or sensitivities.”

“It just had to be delicious,” Krasinski adds.

With each other and their staff, they so enjoy collaboration that they often prefer the process to the finished product.

“It sounds like a Nike commercial, but with us it’s all about the path,” Brioza says. “The progress of cooking is more interesting to us than the final dish.”

In 2003, Brioza was named one of Food & Wine magazine’s 10 best new chefs.

Heading west
That year, nearing 30, Brioza and Krasinski decided to return home. In San Francisco, they looked for posts where they could keep working together.

“She consulted for another chef once, and I was like a jealous boyfriend,” Brioza says. “We’re so awesome together, I didn’t want her to be someone else’s pastry chef.”
“It didn’t feel right,” Krasinski agrees.

Then they heard Drew Nieporent needed fresh talent at Rubicon. He had opened the wine lovers’ mecca in 1994, launching San Francisco chefs Traci Des Jardins and Dennis Leary, among many others.

The restaurant inspired Brioza and Krasinski to simplify. The kitchen was broken up over the building’s four stories, which made it physically hard for Brioza to serve rabbit six ways, or Krasinski to offer apricot parfait with three other stone-fruit iterations. But simpler didn’t mean easier. On the contrary, Larry Stone, partner and sommelier at Rubicon, who married the couple in 2008, admired how they kept pushing. “They never said, 'This is my repertoire,’” Stone says. “They’d go out to a restaurant, or to Asia, and kept incorporating new elements.”

Then, in 2008, Rubicon closed. Nieporent invited the couple to take over his New York restaurant Montrachet, which later became Corton. But they wanted to stay west, to work for themselves. They took a six-week trip around Latin America — Chile, Peru, Argentina — where practically every meal came on a communal platter, with condiments on the side.

“We thought, 'God, this is how we love to eat,’” Brioza says.
They drew up a business plan for a restaurant serving a refined, family-style menu — the initial idea for what would become the Progress.

The next two years, they searched for the perfect space, consulted and cooked private dinners. Then, in 2010, their son, Jasper, was born. Brioza felt pressed to act. “You’re looking at this baby; you feel the need to provide,” he says.

A real estate agent showed him a funky former movie theater on Fillmore with room for two restaurants. The bigger space seemed ideal for their original plan, but it would take years to build and rezone. The second, smaller space would be ready much sooner. The landlord had never built a restaurant before, the couple didn’t have much money, and the sketchy location only added to the risk. But they signed a lease for both spaces, cobbling together funding through their network of private dinner clients. The family-style restaurant would go into the bigger space, whenever it was ready. For the smaller space they had an idea they’d dreamed up years earlier — once more, on an airplane.

“We were flying somewhere, and Stuart said, 'How cool would it be to serve food on a dim sum cart, with no pretense?’” Krasinski says. “We wanted to break down that barrier between chef and diner.” Only later did Brioza realize that the cart cruising down the aisle been such a theme in his life.
The bare-bones approach also meshed with the new economy. After the 2008 crash, chefs everywhere searched for less capital-intense ways to serve customers, including Mission Street Food, serving high-end cooking out of a Guatemalan taco truck.

But when the couple floated the idea with friends and potential backers, many hated the idea.
“When he told me about the cart service and what they were calling the place,” Nieporent says, “I told him, 'Stuart, do yourself a favor, put your food on plates and change the name.’”
Today, State Bird feels like an airplane — in a good way, from back when flight was fun. Diners sit in rows along a central aisle. Cooks and servers bring carts and trays of small dishes.

In the same casually but carefully choreographed way, Brioza and Krasinski juggle their home lives. Their Hayes Valley apartment — industrial-style, art-lined — looks a lot like State Bird. They rely on their wide network of friends and family for help, and split duties like line-cook stations.
“Every relationship takes work,” Krasinski says. “When you meet at 19, you don’t always have the same interests at 38. But we’ve somehow been able to grow personally and professionally along the same trajectory.”

This month, the trajectory continues as the Progress opens. Brioza and Krasinski have spent much of the last five years (if not 15) thinking about it. But as with State Bird, two weeks before opening, they have not finalized the menu.

“The theme of the Progress will come from Italian cooking and Chinese cooking, with Middle Eastern meze and a Japanese minimalist sensibility,” Brioza says. He laughs at the absurdity of that statement, but he means it. “A lot of American chefs are perplexed by the question, 'What’s your style of cooking? What are you, a northern Piemontese chef by way of California? A Japanese sushi chef?’” he says. “We are all of the above.”

So they’ll wing it. And may once again, in the process, reinvent what a restaurant can be.

Article and Photo Sourced From:  http://www.sfgate.com/restaurants/article/State-Bird-Provisions-partnership-serves-up-the-5940431.php#photo-7229176