Episodios
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For the 20th season, I share my most memorable moments during the Consumed podcast.
Chefs and Restaurants featured:
Feben Teffera, Ebony SLO, San Luis ObispoGessica and Alberto Russo, Flour House, San Luis ObispoBrian Collins, Ember, Arroyo GrandeChef Daisy and Greg Ryan, Bell’s, Los AlamosChris Dillow and Evan Toohey, Fig at Courtney’s House, TempletonChef Julien and Courtney Asseo, Les Petites Canailles, Paso RoblesClark Staub, Full of Life Flatbread, Los AlamosJeff, Lindsay and Jade Jackson, The Range, Santa Margarita -
For the 20th season, I share my favorite, most memorable moments during the Consumed podcast.
Featured in this episode:
Zack Andrade, Spinaca Farms, GilroyCaptain Mark Tognazzini, Dockside Restaurant, Morro BayNeal Maloney, Morro Bay Oyster CompanyElizabeth Poett, “The Ranch Table,” LompocDaniel Sinton, Avenales Ranch, ShandonBarbara Bullock, home chicken expert, San Luis Obispo -
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For the 20th season, I share my favorite, most memorable moments during the Consumed podcast.
Featured in this episode:
David Walker, Firestone Walker Brewing, Paso RoblesMax Montgomery, There Does Not Exist, San Luis ObispoJack Dyer, Topa Topa Brewing Company, VenturaVinnie and Natalie Cilurzo, Russian River Brewing, Santa Rosa -
For this special season, I look back on my most memorable moments with the podcast.
Featured in this episode:
Dan Berkeland, Back Porch Bakery, SLO and AtascaderoSara and Jon Peterson, Scout Coffee and Honey Co. Coffee, SLO and Morro BayTim Veatch, Wayward Bakery, Los OsosShanté Norwood, Té’Stees Cupcakes, LompocPenni Monroe, Hush Harbor Bakery, AtascaderoMarisa Bloch Gaytan, Pasolivo, Paso RoblesStephanie Nye and Kirsten Finberg, Soup Gangsta and Little Red Hen BreadMichael Palmer, McConnell’s Ice Cream, Santa Barbara -
For this season, I look back at my most memorable moments on the Consumed podcast.
Featured in this episode:
Robin Wolf, The Hatch, Paso RoblesEric Olson, Central Coast Distillery, Atascadero -
For this season, I'm looking back at my most memorable moments on the podcast.
Featured in this episode:
Sandi Sigurdson, community leader and recovering alcoholicDr. Stephen Lloyd-Moffet, The Spirit of WineArcenio J. Lopez, MICOPDr. David Cleveland, UCSBAriana Lovato, Honeycomb Home Design, Arroyo GrandePeter Cron, SLO County Integrated Waste Management AuthoritySister Theresa Harpin, Restorative Partners and The Bridge Cafe, SLO -
For this season, I look back at my most memorable moments of the podcast.Featured in this episode: • Vailia From, Desparada Wines, Paso Robles • Jim Clendenen, Au Bon Climat, Santa Barbara County • Samra Morris, Alma Rosa Winery & Vineyards, Sta. Rita Hills • Sonja Magdevski, Casa Dumetz, Los Alamos • Stephy Terrizzi, Giornata Wines, Paso Robles • Nancy Ulloa, Ulloa Cellars, Paso Robles • Matt Dees, Jonata, Ballard Canyon • Ryan Deovlet, Deovlet Wines, Los Osos
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For this season, I'm looking back at my most memorable moments on the Consumed podcast.
Featured in this episode:
Cameron Alarcio, Cameron Alarcio Knives, Pismo BeachPaul Filice, Miner’s Ace HardwareJosh and Lindsey Haring, The Mountain Air, San Luis ObispoDenis and Kacey Kehoe, Kehoe Carbon Cookware, Los Osos -
For this season, I looked back on my most memorable moments on the Consumed podcast.
Featured in this episode:
Hayley Thomas Cain, San Luis ObispoSarah Deiter, Markers & Allies, San Luis ObispoGreg Clarke, Thousand OaksBrittany App, Where There Once Was Water, CrestonDianne Jacob, Will Write For Food, Oakland -
At Dave Congalton's invitation, I went on KVEC 920/96.5 in January to talk about why so many restaurants are closing in San Luis Obispo, the state, and the nation. Shared here with permission from KVEC.
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In this episode of Consumed with Sophia Pattison, intern Sophia flies all the way to Italy to delve into the life-changing experience of a Cal Poly student’s study abroad experience and internship at a sustainable farm-to-fork restaurant in Lastra a Signa, a municipality of Florence. Through hands-on work, Mary Carli has taken Cal Poly’s learn-by-doing philosophy international, embarking on a journey of cultural exchange and culinary exploration, participating in everything from beekeeping to marketing strategies for the company.
Instagram:
@sophia.pattison
@marycarli_
@fattoria_bucolica
More information:
tuorlomagazine.it/it/lautosufficienza-nella-ristorazione-esiste-e-a-metro-zero/
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In this second episode of Consumed with Sophia Pattison, my intern Sophia takes us behind the scenes of Sidecar Cocktail Company, the cocktail bar that offers a unique fusion experience, pairing a Chinese-style food menu with an eclectic mix of drinks. Amidst the bustling ambiance, Sidecar is host to weekly live jazz performances found in the hidden gem of the bar's basement lounge. Owner JoshChristensen and Jazz Trio Forte are giving San Luis Obispo a spot that transports locals to what feels like a larger metropolitan city.
Instagram:
@sophia.pattison@sidecarslo@jacobster125@zedpudding@jamesgallardomusic
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When I developed this season of California and Central Coast legends, I came across an article about sommelier and farmer Rajat Parr. It was written by Esther Mobley, the senior wine critic for the San Francisco Chronicle. She called him one of the wine industry’s biggest celebrities and California’s most influential sommelier—and she’s certainly not the only one. Rajat Parr is an absolute giant of the wine world, having worked as a sommelier for restaurateur Michael Mina for many years in San Francisco, and co-authoring two very important books: Secrets of the Sommeliers and The Sommelier’s Atlas of Taste. So imagine my surprise when he instantly accepted my email request for an interview. Since moving away from the sommelier and restaurant world, he has taken up as a farmer and winemaker in Cambria at Phelan Farm, Stolo Vineyard, Domaine de la Cote, and Sandhi Wines. We talked about his upbringing in Calcutta, his original goal to become a chef, the way he risked it all to move to San Francisco, and his legendary and well-documented blind-tasting abilities.
Website: phelanfarm.com / sandhiwines.com / domainedelacote.com / stolofamilyvineyards.com
Instagram: @rajatparr
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There are few businesses I’d travel multiple hours to visit, but Russian River Brewing is one of them—and I am most certainly not alone. Vinnie and Natalie Cilurzo are the minds behind Pliny the Younger, one of the culty-est brews in the world, and one that is only available for a short time each spring. The brewery only makes a certain amount of this perfectly-balanced triple IPA, and only sells it for two weeks in March. People from around the globe line up outside their two locations to wait for the doors to open, and the economic impact on Sonoma County stands at $6.1 million, just for Pliny the Younger week. We talked about Vinnie growing up in a pioneering Temecula winery, how they met when Natalie bought booze for an underaged Vinnie, and the terror they felt that first time Pliny caught the world’s attention. I drove to their second location in Windsor for the day to hang out and chat, and the nine hours I spent driving were absolutely worth it.
Website: russianriverbrewing.com
Instagram: @russianriverbrewingofficial
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The concept of fresh, local, seasonal ingredients in restaurants is one most Californians are very familiar with, but in 1985, it was pretty radical. Fortunately for those of us who dine at Robin’s in Cambria, Novo and Luna Red restaurants in San Luis Obispo, owners Robin Covey and Shanny Covey didn’t know any better: it’s just the way they liked to eat. Over time they formed a shared company called the Blue Mango Restaurant Group that operates these three beloved restaurants, keeping the mandate for fresh, local and seasonal ingredients front and center at all times, and inspiring other restaurants to do the same. They’ve managed to do this through the outrageous challenges of restaurant ownership, as well as through divorcing but remaining business partners. So many of us consider these restaurants a forever-part of the local culinary landscape, and we have their creative thinking and acumen to thank.
Websites: novorestaurant.com / lunaredslo.com / robinsrestaurant.com
Instagram: @novorestaurant / @lunaredrestaurant / @robins_restaurant
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When you think of wineries that really changed the game in California, Tablas Creek Vineyard should be one of the first to come to mind. A partnership between a wine importer, Robert Haas, and winegrowers in the south of France, Jean-Pierre Perrin and Francois Perrin, Tablas Creek has been a pioneering producer of Rhone-varietal wines in Paso Robles since it opened in 1989. I spoke with Jason Haas, the second-generation proprietor of Tablas Creek Vineyard who has continued the work set out by his father and the Perrin family: to establish Paso Robles as a premier appellation for Rhone varieties, and to do so with rigorous attention to sustainability and regenerative agriculture. In these ways, Tablas Creek has been one of the first if not the very first to approach winemaking this way in Paso Robles, and well ahead of their time. Jason and I talk about his beginnings in the tech industry, his affection for ultimate frisbee, and the accolades he’s won for his writing on the Tablas Creek blog at tablascreek.typepad.com.
Website: tablascreekvineyard.com
Instagram: @tablascreek
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If you don’t recognize the name Susie Righetti, you might recognize her two iconic businesses: she is the founder of Susie Q Brand, a purveyor of Santa Maria Style barbecue seasonings, pinquito beans, salsas and jerky; and along with her family members, she is co-owner of the Far Western Tavern in Santa Maria. I chose Susie as one of this season’s legends because she grew up hanging out in the Far Western’s dining room and kitchens, and she knows both Santa Maria and barbecue. Also, family lore says that her family line dates back to the De Anza Expedition along the California coastline and predates the Declaration of Independence—if that doesn’t make her a legend, I don’t know what does. We talked about what makes Santa Maria Style Barbecue different, important, and delicious, and we discussed the evolution of the Far Western Tavern, too, which moved from its original building in Guadalupe to its new location in Orcutt just a few years ago.
Websites: farwesterntavern.com / susieqbrand.com
Instagram: @susieqbrand / @farwesterntavern
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The Madonna Inn is a California icon for many reasons, most famous of which might be its embrace of the color pink: pink walls, pink goblets, pink carpet—even pink tennis courts and pink lamp posts. Who made the decision to go pink? That would be Mrs. Phyllis Madonna, who co-founded the hotel and restaurant with her late husband Alex Madonna, a successful businessman, developer and contractor. Their over-the-top aesthetic and unique interpretation of luxury turned the inn into a destination for travelers driving Highway 101 through San Luis Obispo—and over the years, a whole new generation has adopted the Madonna Inn as its own. (Just search up “Madonna Inn” on Instagram and brace for impact.) But it isn’t just tourists who love the inn: we locals love it too, and have been known to argue about which is better: the Pink Champagne Cake or the Black Forest Cake. Interestingly, when I sat down with Marketing Director and longtime assistant to Mrs. Madonna, Amanda Rich, she spoke mostly about Mrs. Madonna’s Cheese Pie (whose recipe I share below) and her own favorite dessert, which I guarantee isn’t one you would guess.
Website: madonnainn.com
Instagram: @madonnainn1958
Madonna Inn Cheese Pie(courtesy of Madonna Inn)
12-14 graham crackers
1/4 cup melted butter
4 3-ounce packages cream cheese (whipped)
2 eggs (whites beaten stiff)
3/4 cup sugar
2 teaspoons vanilla
1/2 teaspoon lemon juice
1 cup sour cream
3 1/2 tablspoons sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
Crust: Crush graham crackers until fine, then mix with melted butter. Press and shape into a pie plate. Bake in 350-degree F oven for 5-7 minutes. Remove and cool.
Filling: Combine cream cheese, 1/2 cup sugar, egg yolks, 2 teaspoons vanilla and lemon juice. Beat until light. Fold in beaten egg whites. Pour mixture into graham cracker crust. Bake in 350-degree F oven 15-20 minutes. Remove and cool for five minutes.
Topping: Blend 1 cup sour cream, 3 1/2 tablespoons sugar and 1 teaspoon vanilla. Pour over pie filling. Bake 10 minutes more. Refrigerate for 5 hours.
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Some products are so tightly woven into the culinary consciousness of a place that it’s hard to believe they ever didn’t exist. Such is the case with the Brown Butter Cookie Company, makers of a ridiculously addictive shortbread cookie that California and the Central Coast just can’t get enough of. I spoke with co-founder Traci Hozie Alderson about her beginnings in marketing for Calvin Klein fragrance, the origins of this special cookie in the back of a deli in Cayucos in 2008, how locals and out-of-towners alike have embraced it as “our cookie,” and the ways the company is currently giving back—and bursting at the seams.
Photo credit: Ruby Wallau for Edible SLO Magazine
Website: brownbuttercookies.com
Instagram: @brownbuttercookiecompany
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If you’ve lived on California’s Central Coast for any amount of time, you’re aware of the name Cattaneo Brothers. Since 1947, this family-owned brand has produced artisan jerky, as well as other snacks and sausages, and their handiwork can be found nearly everywhere you look in San Luis Obispo County. CEO Katelyn Kaney joined me on the podcast to talk about the history of Cattaneo Brothers, its humble beginnings in the basement below present-day restaurant Luna Red, how her parents took the company nationwide, and, well...how the jerky’s made.
Website: cattaneobros.com
Instagram: @cattaneobros
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