Saturday, June 8, 2013

The Whantners Do Napa

Wine Country Will Never Be The Same





As a belated yet planned Christmas gift, the parents took the Whantners to Napa. What ensued was two sleeplessly joyful days of touring, sipping, gorging and "Come on gang, stop holding your wine glass by the bowl!" We look like a bunch of tourists.


We met each other on our connecting flight to California, having left Wichita, Oklahoma City and Kansas City, initial flights wheels-up sometime around six-way-too-freaking-early in the morning. Had we an Iowan in the group, we would have been coming from the four least-Californian cities in the US.


Dad and Linda - experienced “Napkins”, as the locals refer to their selves – planned each and every second of this trip, all for a party of nine. While it sounds simple enough to plan a family vacation without kids, with as many places as we were going to visit, the pre-flight itinerary looked more like the shot list from North by Northwest. (If you don’t get this reference, do yourself a favor and rent the movie).


In an early round of email chains, dad advised that the dress would be “Cali Evening Casual”. Though unfamiliar with this term, I assumed it meant something to the effect of Costco Hawaiian attire, Tommy Bahama (anything with 2+ parrots) or bowling shirts. Definitely socks and sandals. In a word, awesome! And we nailed it. This is what we had going on Day 1. In a close race, David’s coral pants narrowly beat out Linda’s pink-on-pink combo. My mustache places third.

Airport Casual
The Dudes
The Ladies

After picking up the rental van, we hurried along to Gott’s Roadside (http://gotts.com/), eating up the lush scenery along the way. We enjoyed authentic (non-Midwest) fish tacos, amazing burgers and breath-destroying garlic fries. The smart ones also ordered a shake. The best part of this idyllic truck-stop-esque joint is that we ate picnic-style outside on a wooden table, under the shade of an umbrella, with nature’s amazing green carpet, grass, beneath our feet. Quite the difference from (much) earlier that morning, when we encountered snow flurries on the way to the airport. Keep in mind, this was APRIL.


Just minutes into our trip, it was apparent that the weather in California was way less sucky than in Kansas. Warm, but not too hot during the day. Cool at night, we were told. Perfect if you want to live a life dressed on the tracksuit-to-sport coat spectrum all the time. Great for professional athletes or entry-level gangsters.


We ate quick, though not disturbingly so, to keep on schedule, poaching a final handful of fries and gulping a final slurp of that shake as we walk-jogged back to the van. Blood sugar levels were now back in balance as this was the first real food consumed since the alarm went off just shy of four in the morning, with almost ten hours of travel and waiting in between. The two-hour time difference would prove cumbersome on day one.


On to Beringer Vineyards, the only place we toured that produced a wine that I might have, probably, almost certainly, though not necessarily, sampled before. It did sound familiar to me though. We organized with a larger group of curiosity-seekers and began the tour. Benefitting from the feedback of previous groups that were given a dry tour, we were directed into a barrel hall and promptly presented with a glass of wine. Gaining two hours, we were almost able to proclaim, “Hey, it’s five o’clock somewhere”.

Wait...shouldn't it be spelled: Bearinger?

We gathered around symmetrically organized rows of wine barrels as our tour guide told us a bunch of stuff that I instantly forgot. I did learn, after a sharp declaration, that red wine glasses should only be handled at the stem – a tidbit I made sure to obnoxiously point out the remainder of our whirlwind trip.

Dust = Age = Fine Wine

Established in 1876, Beringer has a history rivaled by few other Napa wineries. Probably. To be honest, the whole trip was such a blur of wine, culture and history that many of the details were difficult to digest, nevertheless remember. I could have taken notes, but what’s the fun in that? I could rip info from the web, but again, what’s the fun in that? That’s why much of what stuck in my mind revolves around the family: the jokes we made; the funny things we wore; my mustache; being goofy and enjoying the weather; not working.


Prime example: Zinger of the trip goes to Eric!
While providing factoids about Napa and the surrounding region during a wine/cheese/salty/sweet tasting, our Beringer host asked if any of us knew what part of the valley was responsible for the majority of the US’s lettuce production. “I believe it’s the Hidden Valley”, proclaimed Eric, causing us, and the table of strangers with us, to erupt in laughter. Riding that momentum, he went on to use the phrase “Hidden Valley” no less than 87 times during the remainder of the trip. You think it would get old, yet somehow it always garnered a laugh. Classic E!

Concentrating on the options

Everything can be proved with a Venn Diagram

Thought-provoking wine

After taking some amazing group pictures near a fountain in the courtyard – it really was such a beautiful place – we headed to The Silverado Resort to drop our bags off and catch a moment of rest. Never one to listen to my body, I decided to go on a quick run - wine and weary travel legs be damned. I did this in spite of the fact that, 1) I had been drinking earlier in the day, 2) I had been up since before four, two time zones away, but most importantly, 3) My family would harass, ridicule and shame me. All done in jest, mind you, but I knew it was coming. They were merciless. Sporting my new super-short New Balance running shorts was a preventable, regrettable mistake.


Promptly at five – seven to our brain/body – we Brady-bunched it to the remote Gundlach Bundschu, the oldest family owned winery in California. The current owners mark generation number six, the most skyward branches on a family tree that rivals the enormous sequoias that grow in California’s Sierra Nevada Mountains.  

It's pronounced phonetically (I think)

We rolled in, not quite sure what to expect, unaware that dinner was going to be served in a cave. What we did know - what I had grown a mustache for and why I had worn my seersucker suit - was that it was family picture time. Capitalizing on the sheer miracle that all nine of were together, paired with the fact that we were in not-Kansas, Dad and Linda hired a photographer to document the Whantner’s collective look at this period in time. Which was smart because California collective look is much more awesome than our Kansas collective look. 


We organized the big family shoot, then divided into boys and girls, then couples.  At a loss for words to describe how amazing these pictures are, I’ll simply offer up my suggestions for where you’d see these images being used.

Reverse Romney - Women have all the power
Real Housewives of the Midwest
Bachelorette reunion show - non-winner's bracket
Political flyer announcing Linda's candidacy for Mayor of Wichita
Kansas City Star featurette on power couples
Press photo for a modern-day adaptation of Gone With the Wind. This time, in a twist, Rhett really does give a damn!

Tommy Hilfiger Fall Catalog


Cover of GQ
Also used on a pay-for-use stock photography site, under the label "Confident and successful young businessman"

Gundlach Bundschu is an ice cream cone with crushed peanuts and a hardened chocolate shell casing. Surprises were bountiful and humorous. For starters, they won’t allow you to butcher the name. Employees teach all visitors how to say Gundlach Bundschu by: 1) making a James Bond gun signal with one hand “Gun”, 2) pantomiming a locking motion “Lock”, 3) pointing at your rear “Bun” and 4) pointing at your foot “Shoe”. Simple yet quirky. 


We sampled some wines and appetizers while learning the history. Especially interesting was that they drew inspiration from various cities and regions for their bottle artwork: Chicago, New Orleans, the Pacific Northwest and Southwest Pueblo. Blown-up versions of this artwork loomed over us during the tasting, daring us to spend money on them. Which we did, ordering coasters and matted posters.

 
I dare you to look at each person in this photo and try to imagine what they're thinking

Onto the cave, where we walked double-file past hundreds of chest-high wine barrels, and a hidden kitchen from where we could hear pork chops a-sizzling. We were seated at a massive table, something out of a T. H. White novel. To say the food was incredible would be to say that the wine was good. Both understatements. Never one to stand on ceremony, I caved in (ha…cave pun!) near the end of the meal, picked up the chop and went to town on the last shreds of pig. My brain couldn’t tell my mouth to salivate quick enough.

 
Entering the cave
In the cave cave...cave...cave (echo)...

We had a few glasses of wine at dinner, but near the end of the meal the day began to catch up with us. We had been up for roughly 18 hours. And these weren’t typical mid-west hours.  We had experienced two wine tastings plus fish tacos and pork chops on not-enough water. We drove, flew, drove again, walked around, jogged (well…one of us), walked some more, all in fancy clothes. We were exhausted.
  
If Napa's the Real World, I'll take it

We headed back to the minivan as the sun set, the exterior lights casting long shadows from our arms as we waved nostalgically to our tour guide turned friend. Dad drove us back to the ranch, gently navigating along the curvy roads. Conversation was sporadic and softened as bulging waistlines and fatigued brains put us in a zombie-like state where hotel beds were the desired target; not brains.

  
There was no nightcap. We needed rest; resistance was futile. We had two hours to make up for, and tomorrow would be even more demanding. Must recharge. Corkscrew slowly puncturing the cork, digging deeper…deeper…locked in, twirling up..."pop"…and…sleep.

Leaving my room, The Chateau Gregoire

Friday morning we were up early (for Melody) and headed to breakfast at 7:45. The folks chose The Fremont Diner in Sonoma, the sort of rustic countryside eatery that can get away with leaving an antique rusted-out truck permanently parked in the spot closest to the entrance. If you ordered the chicken & waffles, like David did, your meal was running around the outside picnic tables, nibbling at your feet – I’m guessing it doesn’t bother them, you having to walk an extra few feet to get in.



Water was served in glass jars, coffee in clean mugs that bore the restaurant’s logo. The food was, frankly, out of this world. So fresh you expected to see lemon and lime trees on the property; guacamole trees, waffle trees, bean trees, tortilla trees, you name it – it all seemed feasible. Had I requested it, I’m sure I could have seen “papers” for my pork. Hands down winner, though, was David’s chicken & waffles, the Mike Tyson of meals: simple yet packs a punch.

Legit

Rustic Beauty

Refined Beauty
Chickens were harmed in the making of this breakfast

No words...

We waddled away from the diner and set out towards for the first wine tasting of the day, located at Whitehall Lane Winery. To our surprise, we were given a full tour of the facilities by our European oenophile - to save you the time it would take you to look it up, this is a fancy pants name for a wine expert. Let’s call our oenophile Frederick (pronounced Freederick).


Freed’s depth of knowledge on wine was intimidating, though like every other guide, he did hit us with the, “the best wine is the wine that tastes good to you”. Hard to believe that’s true when the majority of the wine I drink comes from a hexagonal cardboard box. Still, his anecdotes from across the pond were Europeany and humorous, and when he quizzed us he usually provided answers to choose from, resulting in some of the higher wine test scores of the entire trip. For a sort-of virtual tour, follow along the photos below:


Wine-bottling Robots

If sexy ever leaves, this picture can bring it back...however...

This one will obliterate it!

In the warehouse

Wine Vines

Matt paying attention as best he can

Inspecting the goods

Cool house that's probably scary as hell at night

Full view of the vineyards, winery and that night-creepy house

That was exhausting! Must be time to eat again, right?


And so we continued on to V. Sattui Winery, thrice-consecutive winner of “Best Winery in the Bay Area”, for a mid-day wine tasting and lunch combo. The lunch part would prove important to fend off impending drunkenness – no one in the family seemed particularly accustomed to drinking multiple times before noon. 


V. Sattui is ridiculously picturesque - the sort of winery that a travelling group of hobbits might risk getting wasted at. Two large buildings built out of stone and covered with festive ivy merge into one. Wine tastings take place in the barrel room down below while the other side contains an authentic Italian café. Rows of vineyards are situated on one side of the lawn, while outdoor tables are scattered over plush vegetation around the rest of the structure. Yeah, hobbits and Whantners would have fun at this place.


We headed down, down, down to the barrel rooms where we did what most half-intoxicated adults would do: took goofy pictures. Mafia poses in front of oversized barrels. Ballet leaping along across rows of stacked barrels. Other silly things.

Totally hiding a dead body in the middle barrel

Reverse-prom pic

For the record, it was not yet noon when this was taken

Exercising our libatious demons, we sidled up nine strong to the bar and met a man who would become a minor trip celebrity: our bartender, Jordan. Eyes like a foamy ocean tide lapping the shore; beard full scruffy but not dirty; hair like a Kennedy. “What’s up, Bro?” he greeted us, or rather David, who promptly put him in his place by calling him out on his bro-ness. David, unlike myself, was not impressed.


If Jordan’s name was Brett, I’d make a lame Brett Favre joke right now, paralleling his wine pouring skills to that of the famous gunslinger. Dude seriously ran us through a ridiculous amount of wine in a short time. Reds for everyone. Now whites for the ladies. He even poured Eric a special bourbon, which he pretended (only guessing) to like.


His not-so-difficult talent was swirling multiple wine glasses at once. Two, three and even four glasses aerating wine in concentrically circles, all with a single hand. Bragging about how “it’s a Napa thing”, one of the girls, I believe Jess, commented, “Well we’re from Kansas, so we’re pretty good at buttering corn”. Right up there with Hidden Valley Ranch.

David talking smack on Jordan

As Jordan and I talked about our favorite shows (I say “our” because if I still had cable, our DVR’s would have identical content) and he told us about his probably-fake fiancée who worked upstairs, our goofiness hit an all-time Whantner high. Buzzing the most we would all trip, we started talking about joining wine clubs in Napa and, not improbably, buying our own plot of land for Whantner Family Winery. Good lord, if there wasn’t a delicious Italian deli upstairs to soak up some of the wine, we may have put in an offer for the place.


For the second day in a row, we ate lunch outside, under gorgeous sun, surrounded by beautiful people. As our blood sugar levels crept back to normal, we surveyed the surroundings with a sense of foreign awe, as if we were in a place only seen in movies. If you told us about this place the week before, we’d challenge you to prove that it actually existed. For you Star Trek fans, it’s Risa with none of the weirdness.


Panini’s, salad and cheese down partially digested, we waved “adios” to V. Sattui – and Jordan, wherever he was, being awesome but probably annoying David – then drove to a third consecutive winery, the fifth in just two days (26 hours, really).


Clos Du Val (pronounced Robert Duval) looked like what would result if the Chicago Cubs’ ivy-covered outfield wall and the Boston Red Sox’s green monster mated and had a love child. Every square inch of non-window/door was covered in a vibrant green leaves. It provided great contrast for some outdoor family photos, but reflected the sun into our eyes to an almost unbearable degree. I wanted to see if I could throw something at it and make it stick (say…Matt’s hat), or at least attempt a Spiderman climb up the side. Common sense won out, so Melody and I settled for another reverse-prom pose:

Continuing the reverse-prom theme

Jess trying to coax a smile out of David

We weren’t given a tour of the facility, which was fine by us as we were relative experts in the wine producing and storage process by now. We were, however, escorted through large ominous doors into a private tasting room, where we sampled a variety of wines surrounded by 40+ foot (just an estimate, probably not accurate) storage and mixing containers. At least I think that’s what they were…we’re probably not the experts I claimed two short sentences ago.

Melody having a grape time

Conversation was slow at first, as we mentally adjusted to drinking wine again. We hit an all-time Napa high at V. Sattui, but food plus the lingering effects of travel and little sleep was leveling our moods. Still, after a few tiny sips things livened up a bit.


Make no mistake, the collective change in demeanor had nothing to do with the wine, but rather the beefy ex-UCLA football player who took over as our server. I can’t remember his name, but it’s probably Tanner. Since I’ve already described one dude in doe-eyed detail, I’m going to take a different tact and introduce Tanner Stone (yeah, his last name’s gotta be Stone) to the world as the women of the group would.


Linda, Jess, Melody and Bethany think that Tanner Stone has hair as golden as the California sunset, facial features chiseled from a rare but indestructible boulder only found in ancient Mayan cave systems, pecks that you could serve dinner for a family of five on and a smile that geometry classes use for proofing perfect angles. If he were trying to “make it” as an actor, he’d be perfect for the role of “hot guy who nods at girl in the club, while looking hot”. Even though they all were thinking it, only one of the ladies mentioned that they’d like to pinch his teeming chest muscles. For now, I will not rat her out publicly. For now.


So that was Clos Du Val. Or at least what I remember of it. I think someone ordered a $100 bottle of wine, so that also happened. But mostly the other stuff. The Tanner Stone stuff.

Saying adios to Robert Clos Du Val

With five wineries under our belt in just 27 hours, it was time to experience something new on this lightning trip: rest. Back to Silverado for a few hours of relaxation. We had to prepare for the piece de resistance of this amazing experience: Chef Michael Chiarello’s Bottega restaurant.



Arguably the best Italian restaurant that wine country has to offer, Bottega has won numerous awards for its culinary feats of Italian magic, not to mention individual acclaim for Chiarello (food Emmys) and his wildly successful cookbook, humbly titled Michael Chiarello’s Bottega.

Napa Style, indeed!

We were seated outside in an open yet covered area, which allowed the cool breeze to energize our weary bodies. For the first time on the trip some of us eschewed wine in favor of a cocktail – in my case a Moscow Mule. This kick-started us a bit, as we eased into banter, summarizing the trip, joking and casually laughing at the highlights.


Then something changed.


I’m not exactly sure when it happened, or how, but at some point during that dinner it became apparent that, against all odds, it was the women, not the men, who were social liabilities. You see, Bethany sometimes gets what we refer to as “the giggles”, or better explained, she laughs so hard she cries, can't speak and becomes non-responsive to outside help. Problem is, Jess also gets the giggles. Put the two of them together, and it’s a fire-juggler in room full of TNT. Dangerous.


And contagious as well, as at one point all four women – Bethany, Jess, Melody and Linda – were laugh/crying so hard that none of them could speak. Us guys didn’t even know what was so funny…we just kept looking around, apologetically nodding at those who stared at our table in wonder. There was nothing we could do or say to make the situation better, so we did just that – nothing.


Then, a miracle happened. In a plotline not even believable in a sappy-yet-kinda-but-not-really-funny romantic comedies, Bethany was served her dinner, a large bowl of pasta. The server cradled a smaller bowl of some flaky substance and rather aggressively, unexpectedly leaned over her plate and dumped its contents out in their entirety. She left but as we began to dig in, something odd began occurring on Bethany’s plate. First there was sound, then movement. Let me be clear, HER FOOD WAS ALIVE!

Pasta with a mind of its own

The flaky substance took on a life of its own as it snap, crackle and popped (yes, just like the cereal, but way grosser), twisted and contorted on top of her pasta. Bethany’s look of disbelief – utter horror, to some – caused a chain reaction within the group. Nobody was eating, as it’s impossible to eat while you’re pointing, laughing and making mad-scientist proclamations about food coming back from the dead.


We were done for. We were officially that group of Midwesterners, dressed nicely, but having an ebullient and rollicking good time in a fancy place, fish out of water (misplaced wheat?). I can’t remember the last time I’ve had as much fun at a dinner.


To end the evening, like a man struck twice by lightning, our piece de resistance had its own piece de resistance when we were visited by the man himself, celebrity chef Michael Chiarello. He greeted our table and we all told him how great the food was. He had a personable yet dominating presence that told us it was okay dish out compliments, but out of bounds to ask why in the hell Bethany’s food was trying to escape her plate.

Eric preparing to ask Michael Chiarello for a side of Hidden Valley Ranch

We didn’t want to leave, but practically everyone else in the restaurant had. This may have been why Mi-Chi (I think it might stick) came out to greet us, sounding the awards-show symphony to usher us on our way. What better way to cap off such a wonderful trip, right?


We visited the same area the following morning for breakfast before heading to the airport. Day three of wearing the seersucker suit still felt right, as we sat outside sipping coffee and downing quiches. Time slowed down a bit that morning, as we knew that ahead of us was a day that would be mostly spent waiting in airports, with but a few hours of flying in between.


This trip was the culmination of a movement that has been progressing the past seven or eight years. First step was all of the Whantners turning 21 (for obvious reasons...booze). Then long courtships and marriages began to occur, followed by the introduction of three lovely granddaughters.


Somewhere in all this, it just clicked: our family became super-fun. Not that we didn’t enjoy ourselves previously, but this is different. Whether we’re fully booked (as in Napa) or spending a lazy weekend in Wichita, we all genuinely look forward to spending time together. We know that a typical Whantner weekend will include laughing, crying (the good kind, cry-laughing), recreational activities, some drinking, goofing around outdoors, a big-screen movie, kids terrorizing my dog, stories and the making of new, next-generation memories. Just ask Bethany’s pasta and Hidden Valley Ranch.


This unity and closeness excites me and gives me hope for the future – a future that already sees the younger Whantners adding to this enjoyment, and will almost certainly culminate in one of them running the White House (though Dave and Jess might feel this is already occuring).



So if you’re looking to “do” Napa, I hope this step-by-step guide proved helpful. If you have additional questions feel free to ask myself or any Whantner, for that matter. Or just invite us along as a tour guide. I'll be ready once I pick up the seersucker from the dry cleaners. 




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