Grand Fare Market on Hold

On Saturday morning, I was all set to file a mostly glowing review of Grand Fare Market (3265 Grand Ave.), the sparkling-new hybrid prepared foods market and restaurant in Oakland’s Grand Lake neighborhood, when my phone started buzzing. People on Twitter were asking if I knew why, after having been open just six weeks, Grand Fare had suddenly gone dark, with no explanation other than a sign in the window saying the business would be “closed until further notice.”

It was a surprise to me, too. Just a few days earlier, I’d spoken to co-owner Doug Washington and chef Ben Coe, and both men were upbeat about Grand Fare’s successes and sanguine about its challenges. But on Saturday, Washington told me via text message, “We needed to shut down to figure out what changes to make to Grand Fare before moving on.” When pressed to give a timetable for when some new incarnation of the business might reopen, he said it would be at least eight weeks. Later, in an interview with Inside Scoop, Washington was even more ambivalent. When asked if Grand Fare would even reopen at all, he said, “We plan to spend some time figuring that out.”

All in all, it was a stunningly fast rise and fall for what had been one of Oakland’s most highly anticipated, and most ambitious, new restaurants. In truth, it seems inaccurate to even label Grand Fare as a “restaurant,” strictly, because it also combined elements of a grocery store, deli coffee shop, bakery, beer garden, and ice cream truck — all of that in a lavishly-appointed 3,500-square-foot indoor and outdoor space. And much of it was wonderful in its way. The indoor portion had the look and feel of the kind of luxury grocery store I associate with the ritzy parts of cities like Paris or Tokyo. There were gleaming cases filled with wonderful cheeses, charcuterie, and to-go items such as duck confit and stuffed portabella mushrooms. A carefully curated selection of snacks made by local food artisans was arranged just so. Chipper employees offered samples of the hearty, unusual house-made grain salads that the shop sold by the pound — quaintly, in South Asian-style metal tiffin boxes, for customers who chose to eat in the garden courtyard. And what a garden it was: Tree-lined and lit up with twinkly string lights, so that even on a random weeknight, I felt like I’d walked in on a festive backyard wedding party. A vintage Airstream trailer served pastries in the morning and Humphry Slocombe ice cream in the afternoon and night.

But there were cracks in Grand Fare’s well-polished armor, if you were inclined to look for them. The garden, as beautiful as it was, didn’t have a roof, and, apart from a small raw bar inside, it comprised the entirety of the restaurant’s available seating. Business seemed destined to take a hit on cold, rainy days. And the difficulty of finding street parking on that stretch of Grand Avenue likely didn’t bode well for a takeout-oriented business.   

Still, when I spoke to Washington last week, he talked only of minor tweaks that were in the works — of his desire to simplify the ordering process and to more prominently display the whole rotisserie chickens and other hot entrées. The goal, he said, was to create a feeling of abundance. “You shouldn’t have to stand at the center island and choose like you’re at a restaurant,” he said.

In the end, it seems that basic finances were what did Grand Fare in. In a Facebook post, Washington and co-owner (and wife) Freya Prowe wrote, “The market’s current incarnation simply required too much cost to keep up basic operations, and we couldn’t keep it going.”

What was never in question were the chef’s cooking chops. Coe’s previous gigs were at Commis and the now-shuttered Box & Bells — both high-profile restaurants owned by James Syhabout — and that pedigree showed here, even in seemingly simple dishes. An array of flatbreads were topped variously with thinly sliced lamb and chimichurri — like a suped-up roast beef sandwich — or big chunks of yogurt-sauced Louisiana shrimp so plump and luxurious I nearly mistook them for lobster. Meaty, tandoori-spiced pork ribs were cooked sous-vide, in a temperature-controlled water bath, then finished on the grill. They had just the right texture and were flavorful enough that no sauce was needed. A spinach salad that featured spit-roasted Piri-Piri chicken was as good a chicken salad as I can recall eating this year.

Here’s to hoping Coe lands on his feet. But whatever the future holds for the talented chef, it seems unlikely that it will be at Grand Fare, even if Washington does resurrect the concept a few months from now. When reached by phone on Monday, Coe said he didn’t have any more information about the decision to shutter the restaurant than I did. A phone call late Friday night was the only notice he got. “For one reason or another, that’s it,” he said.


Culinary Journeymen

They call themselves “journeymen,” a term meant to evoke the old European tradition of craftsmen wandering from town to town in order to build up their skills — or, for baseball fans, the utility infielder who’s been around the block a few times.

Even though chefs Jonathan Tu and Chris Wolff are just 32 and 29 years old, respectively, they say they’ve both cooked professionally for pretty much their entire adult lives. Now, Tu and Wolff are the proprietors of “Journeymen,” a new monthly pop-up dinner at Temescal’s Blackwater Station (4901 Telegraph Ave., Oakland) that the two Oakland residents hope will eventually morph into a restaurant of their own.

The next pop-up will be a $55 four-course prix-fixe dinner on Monday, December 7, with seatings at 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. Dishes will include grilled Hokkaido squid, a nasturtium and burrata soup, dry-aged chuck steak with marrow, and salted persimmon ice cream — plus a couple of snacks to start, bread and butter, and coffee and petit fours at the end. Blackwater Station’s full selection of cocktails will also be available.

You can buy tickets via Eventbrite.com (under “Journeymen Oakland”).

The basic approach is a modern Californian tasting menu, though Tu said he and Wolff wanted to avoid doing the kind of long-format, twelve- or fifteen-course marathon dinners that you’ll find at the highest-end restaurants that serve this type of cuisine — an hour-and-a-half rather than a three-hour-long meal. And the chefs are also less shy about embracing modernist cooking techniques — emulsions and immersion circulators and such — than the more rustic Cal-cuisine that still dominates the East Bay.

“When they invented the stove a long time ago, people who were cooking over a campfire were like, ‘What is this new technique? We don’t need it,'” Tu quipped.

Still, To said the dish he cited as his favorite from the pop-up menu — the nasturtium and burrata soup — was meant to be comfort food, highlighting the creaminess of the burrata and the pepperiness of the nasturtium. Shallot-like daylily bulbs, foraged from around Lake Merritt, and pumpernickel crackers seasoned like an everything bagel complete the dish. The idea, Tu said, is for every dish to be an explosion of concentrated flavor.

If the last dinner that Tu and Wolff collaborated on — in June, at the Hopscotch Annex in Uptown Oakland — is any indication, the Journeymen pop-up might sell out quickly. At the time, Tu was the sous chef at Rich Table, and Wolff was cooking at Bar Tartine, and the pedigree of those two prominent San Francisco restaurants likely contributed to the enthusiastic turnout.

But according to Tu, what the two really want is to open a restaurant in Oakland. So, in September, they both quit their jobs and took gigs working at restaurants in the East Bay — Wolff at Blackwater Station and Tu at Berkeley’s Iyasare. They both work the day shift so that they can concentrate on their pop-up venture and prospective Oakland restaurant at night. “We both agreed this is an easy place to fall in love with,” Tu said.


Best Fiction of 2015

The Sellout By Paul Beatty $26

In the age of the internet, when a thoughtless comment can quickly set off a tirade of Twitter attacks, comedy remains a refuge for brutally frank cultural critiques. Paul Beatty’s biting satire, The Sellout, makes no efforts at political correctness, but neither does it try to offend. Rather, Beatty offers a refreshing slap in the face — which was apparently his intention. Beatty told Rolling Stone he wrote the book because “I wanted to see if I could make myself flinch.” Boy, do we ever. The narrator, whose last name is Me, though he’s called different names by different people, makes his money selling marijuana and watermelons on horseback (flinch number one). Police kill his father (flinch number two), a psychologist. And soon after, Me’s town is removed from the map (flinch number three — it’s a primarily Black and Latino community). Desperate to make the town visible, Me’s friend, Hominy Jenkins, a child actor known for taking on stereotypical roles, begs Me to take him on as a slave (slap in the face). The novel is chockfull of absurdist twists and turns, including the reinstitution of segregation and a character who wants to remove all “n-word” references from Huckleberry Finn. With The Sellout, Beatty adds his name to the pantheon of great Black satirists — including Richard Pryor, Ishmael Reed, David Chappelle, and Langston Hughes — who make us laugh but also make us cringe.

Go Set a Watchman By Harper Lee $27.99 (hardcover)

There are many reasons not to read Go Set a Watchman. The most obvious of which is that it seems unlikely it should ever have been published in the first place. There are whole sentences repeated in To Kill a Mockingbird, Harper Lee’s seminal classic and technical prequel to Watchman (although it was written afterward). It’s also not very well written. Where To Kill’s story begins with the ending and then weaves its readers on a beautifully circuitous tale to tell them how they got there, Watchman meanders flatly and leaves readers unfulfilled. To read the book in isolation from To Kill would be almost pointless, since the main story arch, which centers on Jean Louise Finch’s realization that her father, Atticus, is not the relentless warrior for racial equality that To Kill makes him out to be, arrives somewhat toward the beginning of the book without enough character development to understand why it’s such a crushing blow. But, in terms of commenting on race relations in the 1950s south — and indeed, commenting on race relations today — it’s an incredibly important book. Watchman offers a far more complicated picture of what it means to live in a society defined by structural inequality than To Kill and bluntly confronts white privilege, even in the most well intentioned of social justice-crusading white folk. It offers none of the blind hope of To Kill, but is sure to start more nuanced conversations.

The Harder They Come By T.C. Boyle $15.99 (paperback); $27.99 (hardcover)

In 2011, 35-year-old Aaron Bassler, who had was reported to have been suffering from schizophrenia, led some fifty deputies on a month-long manhunt through rugged Mendocino County terrain before he was ultimately gunned down. It’s this true-life tale that T.C. Boyle uses as his platform for The Harder They Come, a tense novel that speaks to survivalist ideals inherent in the American psyche. The book follows three characters: Sten Stensen, a seventy-year-old Vietnam vet; Adam, Sten’s son; and Sara, Adam’s older lover. Sara espouses the kind of anti-government rhetoric that is not uncommon in Mendocino County, where it would not be unexpected to find people who refuse to wear a seatbelt, if only out of a visceral disdain for any state-issued mandate. Mental illness pushes Adam’s already reticent and hostile nature into paranoia and violence. Adam kills someone and a manhunt ensues. The gripping tale deftly navigates the brutish nature of America’s love affair with guns and its acceptance of violence as a cultural norm. The fictionalized tale is made all the more visceral knowing that a very similar situation transpired only a few years ago, 160-odd miles to the north.

The First Bad Man By Miranda July $16 (paperback); $25 (hardcover)

Cheryl Glickman has a system for everything. The fortysomething minimizes her use of dishes so she doesn’t have to wash them and hopes that in so doing, her life will be seamless, snag-free, and unfettered. She’s worked for three decades at a women’s self-defense nonprofit that now makes lucrative exercise videos. She has a psychosomatic lump in her throat, an imagined, soulmate infant, whose spirit appears in other people’s babies, and an obsessive crush on a man who shares with her his interest in sleeping with a sixteen-year-old. Her entire world is upended, however, when her bosses ask her to take on their unruly 21-year-old daughter, Clee, a bombshell blonde exploding with sexuality and aggression. Clee’s riotous affront to Cheryl’s otherwise ordered life ultimately leads to literal fisticuffs — sparring that eventually turns into a sort of sexual liberation. The funny and unexpected tale is refreshing and Miranda July’s writing is both engaging and often poignant — just don’t expect a happy ending.

A Brief History of Seven Killings By Marlon James $17 (paperback); $28.95 (hardcover)

Author Marlon James’ A Brief History of Seven Killings is neither brief, nor does it chronicle a mere seven killings. But James makes up for the deceptive title by offering readers an ambitious novel that oscillates perspectives, crosses continents, and spans nearly three decades. The dizzying kaleidoscope of characters each spin their own thread that is ultimately woven into an intricate web — a mesmerizing, fictionalized tableau hinging on an historic event. On December 3, 1976, just three days before the Jamaican general election and two days before Bob Marley, who is referred to, ghostly, as the Singer, was set to perform in the Smile Jamaica Concert — a performance intended to unite the country and harmonize its warring factions — assassins shoot and nearly kill the music icon. The book, which won the Man Booker Prize, takes some work to read, but is well worth it.

The Sympathizer By Viet Thanh Nguyen $26

The Sympathizer begins as the Vietnam War is ending. Saigon has spiraled into chaos but the General is drinking whiskey, while the Captain — neither of whom are identified by name — is bribing CIA agents for their safe passage to the United States. Much of the rest of the book is set in the suburban flatlands surrounding Los Angeles. From the very first sentence, readers learn the Captain is a spy for Vietnam’s Communist Party assigned to watch out for any counterrevolution attempts: “I am a spy, a sleeper, a spook, a man of two faces. Perhaps not surprisingly, I am also a man of two minds.” This duality provides a natural tension throughout the work, forcing the narrator to make morally compromising choices as his role of spy collides with the interests of his own party and with the friendships he forges while working undercover. While much of the mood is tense and dark, Viet Thanh Nguyen interrupts it with sections rich in humor, especially when Nguyen calls out American perceptions of Asians.

Purity By Jonathan Franzen $28

With its somewhat ridiculous opening line (“Oh, pussycat, I’m so glad to hear your voice.”), it would be easy to write off Purity from the start. Its central character, who had the misfortune of bearing that name and instead goes by Pip, has the trappings of being a spirited, headstrong protagonist — she lives in a collective household in modern-day Oakland, after all — but is often mired in self-doubt. It’s not until Pip disappears from the narrative and returns that the novel hits its stride. The story barrels through plot developments that take Pip to Bolivia and Denver as an online journalist and along the way, deconstructs cultural myths. Although its not the most poetic or lyrical in style, Purity is a brilliantly funny and accessible read. Plus, Franzen’s book features the Express. How could we not recommend it?

Special thanks to the folks at Mrs. Dalloway’s, Moe’s Books, and Diesel, A Bookstore for their recommendations.

Christmas Numbs But Once a Year

If you’re anything like me, the holiday season is a double-edged sword: You love your family, but the novelty of seeing them in person, all in the same place, wears off eventually. Fortunately for me, I come from a long line of social drinkers, so self-medication is de rigueur at family gatherings. To be sure, there’s a delicate line between having a good time and having a problem, but I’ve always appreciated a little anesthesia while spending time with my nearest and dearest.

For some people, when it comes to holiday booze, subtlety is key, and for others, festive cocktails are a requirement to help set the mood. With that in mind, I asked some local bartenders for seasonable drink recipes that pack a punch so you can put on a numb, happy face to hide all those emotions seething under your sweater.

Room 389 (389 Grand Ave., Oakland), a cozy Grand Lake district standby with a laidback vibe that attracts a diverse crowd of locals throughout the week, has a healthy spread of warm drinks to suit the colder temperatures. The bar serves as a popular holiday refuge, according to bar manager Nick White: “First things first, as soon as the holiday dinner is over, you have to go find a bar to go to. Room 389 is famous for the night before Thanksgiving. … We really have a good time.” Room 389’s seasonal offerings are split between alcoholic cafe drinks, available from the baristas at the front of the bar until 3:00 p.m., and bar drinks, which become available once the service changes after the cafe closes.

At East Bay Spice Company (2134 Oxford St., Berkeley), the cold-weather cocktail menu is called “Sweater Weather,” and it brings the bar’s signature Indian-inflected style to warm booze standbys like toddies and ciders. “We don’t try to reinvent the wheel,” general manager Jared Berry said. “What we try to do is take things you really, really like and present them in a new way.” This season’s list includes a Classic Spiced Toddy, whose standard-issue name belies the drink’s bright, ginger-infused zest, as well as a Garam Masala Buttered Rum that uses culinary spices to make a classic drink even more savory and soul-warming.

Depending on how long you have stay in the same building as your kith and kin, things may become desperate. J.J. Jenkins, owner of Merchant’s Saloon (401 2nd St., Oakland), has cultivated a stable of drinks designed for just such an occasion. Their names describe the feelings of angst that a grueling day spent with family can inspire: The Rotten Apple and Festering Scab sound like the kind of cruel nicknames only a sibling could invent, while the Black Eye offers a vision of what can happen when the holidays go on a little too long.

Room 389 Hot Apple Cider

This is the same recipe that Nick White makes for his own family gatherings, and he swears by its comforting aroma. Although Room 389 uses a custom spice blend made by Oaktown Spice Shop, White told me that Oaktown’s standard mulling spices (available in-store or online) are an excellent substitute.

• Simmer apple cider with mulling spices slow and low to make the base for this drink, being careful not to cook the mixture. Room 389’s bar staffers begin to simmer the cider before the bar opens, which infuses the drink with a deep, warming flavor.

• Add Mount Gay Black Barrel Rum to each mug as you serve the cider so the alcohol doesn’t cook off.

Hot Buttered Rum

This is a classic take on the recipe — the one twist is the addition of vanilla bean ice cream (pioneered by co-owner Jamie Bernal), which gives the butter-spice mixture a creamy consistency. Room 389 tops it all off with its house-made salted caramel whipped cream.

• To make butter-spice mixture, combine:

1 pound of unsalted butter, softened

1 pound of white sugar

1 pound of brown sugar

Cinnamon and nutmeg

Vanilla ice cream to taste

Keep refrigerated.

—To serve, combine in a mug:

2 tablespoons of butter-spice mixture

2 shots of Sailor Jerry’s Spiced Rum

Fill with hot water and stir.

Irish Cappuccino

This is one of several variants on Irish Coffee offered at Room 389, and it’s perhaps the most unique. However, it’s important to note that this drink is only available during cafe hours; after 3 p.m., you’ll have to order the (still very good) Irish Coffee, which is made with Room 389’s custom coffee blend, sourced from Bicycle Coffee.

• Steam together:

1 ounce of Jameson Irish Whiskey

1 ounce of Baileys Irish Cream

Milk

• Add espresso and top with whipped cream.


East Bay Spice Company Classic Spiced Toddy

The Hot Toddy fulfills a variety of needs, from after-dinner treat to cold remedy, but this version takes the drink to new heights with the addition of house-made ginger syrup made with equal parts by weight of fresh-pressed ginger root and white sugar.

• Combine in a mug:

1 ounce of Skipper Dark Rum

1 ounce of Evan Williams bourbon

0.5 ounces of ginger syrup

0.5 ounces of lemon juice

0.75 ounces of Demerara sugar syrup

0.75 ounces of honey syrup.

• Pre-mix, then fill the mug with hot water and serve.

Garam Masala Buttered Rum

This recipe makes use of culinary spices that Berry calls “intrinsically warming,” including Garam Masala and Cayenne pepper. These are added to the butter-spice mix along with Angostura bitters and salt.

• Combine in a mug:

2 ounces of Plantation Barbados 5 Year Rum

0.25 ounces of Yellow Chartreuse

0.75 ounces of cinnamon syrup

0.75 ounces of lemon juice

1 big scoop of Masala Butter spice mix.

• Stir and add hot water to the top.


Merchant’s Saloon Rotten Apple

This cocktail, another trademark at Merchant’s, is a tougher take on the Washington Apple. Using the same flavors as the original, the Rotten Apple’s distinction lies in its extremely high alcohol content, which can be useful for taking the edge off very, very quickly.

• Combine in a highball glass with ice:

2 counts of the highest-proof whiskey available (Jenkins used to use 103-proof Fighting Cock Bourbon)

1 count of DeKuyper Sour Apple Pucker Schnapps

1 count of cranberry juice.

• Top with a float of Bacardi 151 Rum

Festering Scab

“I know it sounds disgusting,” Jenkins said. “But it’s one of the best tasting ones.” This cocktail is made to look the way it sounds, like a week-old wound being disinfected with some of the strongest hooch around.

• Combine in a glass:

1 part Everclear

1 part egg drop soup.

• Top with bacon bits.

Black Eye

This is the perfect drink if you really want to check out (as in, fall asleep on the couch between courses of the holiday meal). Best of all, it’s very easy to make!

• Combine in a glass:

Equal parts Jägermeister and Nyquil.

Merchant’s also serves The Turkey Colada during the holiday season. Foregoing the delicate language so common in today’s cocktail scene, Jenkins describes this Merchant’s staple as a “bastardization of a piña.” While he wouldn’t divulge the exact recipe, he did tell me that the Turkey Colada includes stuffing and cranberry sauce, which has to be put in a blender unless you have boba straws handy. If you feel ambitious and end up with leftover turkey fixings, it might be fun to try and recreate this unholy union of sweet and savory, but I recommend going into Merchant’s to try the real thing. Indeed, all of these recipes are best in their natural habitat, where the barroom setting will provide a totally different experience from drinking at home, and perhaps a welcome respite from the holiday dinner table.

Family-Friendly Getaways 2015

Longtime readers of the Express’ annual Holiday Guide know that we’re big advocates for getting away from it all during the crazy busy holiday season. That’s especially true if the trip involves spending some quality time in nature. Taking long walks on a secluded beach, exploring the backwoods of snow country, or catching a glimpse of a wild animal — or two, or three — is guaranteed to help melt away stress and get you ready for the New Year. Plus, it’s just great to escape the crowds during the hectic shopping season.

With that in mind, here are five family-friendly getaways for the 2015 holidays — or next year’s.

Año Nuevo State Park

Two words: elephant seals! Although it’s only about ninety minutes from Oakland, Año Nuevo State Park, along Highway 1, between Half Moon Bay and Santa Cruz, feels as if it’s on a remote continent somewhere, populated by wild, huge, strange-looking creatures. You can actually get a close-up view of the magnificent elephant seals year-round at Año Nuevo, but the best time to go is in winter — from late December to early March. That’s when the seals come ashore to give birth and mate.

During guided tours along the coast and beaches in the park, you can see females pup from late December through January. You’ll also likely see bulls engaging in titanic battles for breeding rights before the adults head back to sea in early March. You need to make reservations in advance for the guided walks ($7 per person), which last about two and a half hours and crisscross rolling sand dunes. And you might have to brave some pretty fierce weather — if El Niño delivers this year — but believe me, it’ll be worth it. You and your family will never forget seeing hundreds of these massive animals on a single afternoon in their natural habitat — up to 10,000 elephant seals come to Año Nuevo every year. If your favored day is already booked, the park offers a limited number of tickets on a first-come, first-served basis each day. But get there early. And don’t forget your camera.

Although you can do Año Nuevo as a day trip from the East Bay, I suggest making it at overnight excursion. Just head on down the coast a bit to Santa Cruz. The city’s downtown, along Pacific Avenue, is full of holiday cheer this time of year.

Parks.ca.gov/anonuevo/

Monterey Bay Aquarium and Point Lobos State Preserve

I’m typically not a big fan of zoos and aquariums, mainly because I believe wild animals should be left in the wild — like the elephant seals at Año Nuevo. But Monterey Bay Aquarium is an exception. The institution truly cares about research, about the ocean and its wildlife, and about helping maintain sustainable fisheries and aquaculture. And its Seafood Watch program produces science-based recommendations for what seafood to eat and what fish to avoid because of over-fishing. Plus, after visiting the aquarium, your kids won’t be able to stop talking about the sea otters and penguins.

But as long as you’re in the area, why not also check out some of these same majestic animals in the wild, too? At Point Lobos State Preserve, about fifteen minutes south on Highway 1, you might get a glimpse of a sea otter floating lazily on its back in one of the small bays or inlets in the park. This summer, we spotted three in one afternoon. And don’t fret about the season: December to March is the best time to see gray whales and dolphins jumping out of the water as you traipse along the rocky coastline at Point Lobos — one of the prettiest spots in all of California.

MontereyBayAquarium.org, PointLobos.org

Yosemite National Park

Yes, Yosemite is spectacular in summertime, but it’s arguably even more gorgeous in winter. In fact, you really haven’t seen the jewel of the US national park system until you’ve soaked in the beauty of Half Dome, El Capitan, and Yosemite Valley when they’re blanketed with snow and ice. If there’s a lot of snow on the ground (fingers crossed), I recommend strapping on some snowshoes and hiking around the most beautiful valley on Earth.

Badger Pass Ski Area also offers great downhill, backcountry, and cross-country skiing and snowboarding, along with a lively ski school for kids. For the young ones, try out snow tubing — it’s a blast. And if you’re a cross-country skier or a snowshoer, you also must check out the breathtaking views at Dewey Point. Do yourself a favor, too: Spend some time warming up in the Glacier Point Ski Hut. It overlooks Half Dome.

YosemitePark.com/BadgerPass

Snow Tubing in Tahoe

Speaking of snow tubing, for families with young kids who perhaps aren’t ready yet for the slopes (or aren’t interested), there are few things more fun than gliding fast down a snow-covered hill on an inner tube. Tubing, in fact, has become increasingly popular over the years — many of the top resorts in Tahoe now offer the family-friendly activity, and some of them have fairly long runs and large hills. Plus, it’s way cheaper than ski school. Tickets usually run $30–$40 for a full day, and you don’t have to rent or buy expensive equipment. Just drop off the kids, and they’ll glide to their heart’s content, while you do some downhill or cross-country skiing or snowboarding. They might just have more fun than you do.

A favorite place is Tube Town at Soda Springs Resort near Truckee. It’s got twenty tubing lanes and a 400-foot lift that ferries your tired kids back to the top for another run. Children have to be at least 42 inches tall, and must be able to ride without sitting on an adult’s lap. $34–$39 per ticket.

SodaSprings.com

Glass Beach at MacKerricher State Park

Question: What’s the prettiest former garbage dump in California? Answer: Glass Beach at MacKerricher State Park near Fort Bragg. In fact, it’s a popular spot precisely because of the garbage — the old discarded glass, that is.

Until 1967, local residents referred to the area The Dumps and used to throw trash, old appliances, and bottles and glass over the cliffs and onto the beaches below. The State Water Resources Control Board eventually realized that this was not such a good idea, and so it took over the area and embarked on a number of cleanups. What’s left today are old pieces of glass that have transformed into extraordinarily colorful stones as smooth as, um, glass — thanks to the constant pounding of ocean waves.

There are actually three glass beaches in Fort Bragg. In 2002, the state parks system purchased one of them, Site 3, and incorporated it into MacKerricher State Park. Believe me when I say that your kids will want to spend hours combing through the shiny glass on the beach. Park rangers, however, discourage souvenir collecting at Glass Beach. But don’t worry: If you really must, you and your kids can still collect some glass from the other two non-state-park beaches. After all, it’s only garbage.


Holiday Season Concert Tickets Worth the Splurge

As much as everyone loves getting presents, seeing loved ones smile when they receive thoughtful holiday gifts can be more satisfying than receiving something yourself. If that’s the case for you, then you might be tempted to go all out and splurge on something fancy for your best friend, sweetie, or family member. But sometimes, bonding over an experience can be even more meaningful than giving or receiving material items. If your loved one is a music fan, getting them covetable concert tickets that you know you’ll both enjoy is the move. We’ve rounded up a list of noteworthy show recommendations in a variety of genres that would make excellent gifts for the special people on your list.

Flying Lotus, Clams Casino, and Thundercat

With virtuosic electronic compositions that deftly blend elements of hip-hop, jazz, and noise, it should come as no surprise that Steven Ellison, aka Flying Lotus, is the grand-nephew of famed jazz pianist Alice Coltrane. Though his instruments of choice are a laptop and drum machine, his production utilizes nuanced melodies and challenging rhythm structures that evoke his family’s boundary-pushing contributions to music in the 20th century. Flying Lotus’ experimental edge makes him appeal to hip-hop heads and niche, electronic music fans alike. While his 2012 album, Cosomogramma, was glitchy and frantic with a digitized sonic palette, his latest release, You’re Dead!, has a more nostalgic, analog feel with an emphasis on jazz percussion and psychedelic electric guitar instrumentals. Kendrick Lamar and Snoop Dogg lend vocals to the album. (And Flying Lotus has production credits on Lamar’s landmark release, To Pimp a Butterfly.) He performs at 1015 Folsom on New Year’s Eve with Thundercat — a bassist, vocalist, and his frequent collaborator — and Clams Casino, another producer of ambient instrumentals with hip-hop roots.

Dec. 31, 2015. 9 p.m. 1015 Folsom (1015 Folsom St., San Francisco). $75. 1015.com


Morrissey

While Morrissey might seem like an insufferable tool — with his arbitrary cancellation of shows and irrational, racially insensitive statements to the press — there’s no denying that he has changed the lives of generations of emotional, misunderstood teenagers (and adults) with his band, The Smiths, and his later solo work. Despite his toxic public persona, tracks like “There’s a Light That Never Goes Out,” “Half a Person,” and “Heaven Knows I’m Miserable Now” speak to feelings of alienation and loneliness in romantic, poetic terms. In my life/Oh, why do I give valuable time/To people who don’t care if I live or die? — it’s a question all sensitive souls have asked themselves at some point. At the risk of failing in my duty as an intersectional feminist, I recommend that you go see this highly problematic yet undeniably brilliant artist at the Masonic in San Francisco on December 29. Go on — slow dance with your boo and shed your first-world-problem tears along to his music.

Dec. 29, 2015. 8 p.m. The Masonic (1111 California St., San Francisco). $59.50–$95. SFMasonic.com

Berner’s Cookies Christmas Party

San Francisco rapper Berner has long been a stalwart of the Bay Area’s hip-hop scene and has enjoyed some mainstream success through his deal with Wiz Khalifa’s Taylor Gang Records. Big, soaring beats — which often sample phrases of funk and soul songs — and narrative-driven bars define Berner’s nostalgic sound. His aesthetic evokes classic Bay Area mob music, the mid-tempo gangsta rap for which the region was known in the 1990s before hyphy rose to popularity. Berner has collaborated with many prominent figures of the local underground scene, such as Messy Marv, B-Legit, and the late Jacka. His work with The Jacka is a particularly standout part of his discography: the two MCs worked together on the excellent mixtape Drought Season 3 shortly before The Jacka’s untimely passing earlier this year. Released posthumously, Drought Season 3 features lush, spacious beats with melancholic undertones, with the two rappers engaging in a dualistic back-and-forth throughout. If you’re looking to surprise the diehard Bay Area rap fan in your life, tickets to Berner’s Cookies Christmas Party — which features Berner and members of Taylor Gang — is a must.

Dec. 27, 2015. 8 p.m. TheWarfield (982 Market St., San Francisco). $35–$45. TheWarfieldTheatre.com


Vân-Ánh Vanessa Võ: Notes from Vietnam

In a video of a recent NPR Tiny Desk Concert, composer and multi-instrumentalist Vân-Ánh Vanessa Võ introduced viewers to a variety of unusual musical instruments, several of which come from her native Vietnam. Võ began the show by playing a tortoise shell-shaped drum called a Hang while singing a woeful song in Vietnamese. Then, she nimbly switched to the dan bau, a one-string instrument she used to play a tense melody with psychedelic inflections that evoked the warbly guitars in Pink Floyd’s The Wall. Critics and fellow musicians have lauded Võ for the savvy interplay of Vietnamese and Western musical stylings in her work. In a concert presented by the Oakland East Bay Symphony Orchestra at the Paramount Theatre on February 12, the musician will premiere a new piece called Lullaby for a Country, which she will play on a sixteen-string, harp-like instrument called a dan tranh zither. The Oakland Symphony will also perform Dvorák’s Carnival Overture and Benjamin Britten’s Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra.

Feb. 12, 2016. 8 p.m. Paramount Theatre (2025 Broadway, Oakland). $20–$75. OaklandSymphony.org

St. Louis Symphony Orchestra

The second-oldest symphony orchestra in the United States, the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra, comes to UC Berkeley’s Zellerbach Hall on January 29 with a performance of modern classical and contemporary compositions: Mahler’s Fifth Symphony and John Adams’ 2013 Saxophone Concerto. Mahler was an Austrian, pre-romantic composer whose work was banned throughout much of Europe during Nazi occupation but experienced a resurgence in popularity in the post-war period. His symphonies are known for juxtaposing contrasting moods, and his Fifth Symphony undercuts somber moments with unexpected insertions of popular melodies from his day. While Mahler’s Fifth Symphony is turbulent and emotional, Adams’ Saxophone Concerto is jubilant, with a noticeable jazz influence thanks to its lead instrument. On January 31, the orchestra will perform Olivier Messiaen’s Des Canyons aux Étoiles alongside a multimedia presentation featuring photography by Deborah O’Grady, which Cal Performances co-commissioned to celebrate the hundredth anniversary of the National Park Service.

Jan. 29, 2016. 8 p.m. Jan. 31, 2016. 3 p.m. Zellerbach Hall (101 Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley). $19–$98. CalPerformances.org

Flying Lotus performs at 1015 Folsom on New Year’s Eve.


Free Will Astrology

Aries (March 21–April 19): “We are torn between nostalgia for the familiar and an urge for the foreign and strange,” wrote novelist Carson McCullers. “As often as not, we are homesick most for the places we have never known.” I’m guessing that these days you’re feeling that kind of homesickness, Aries. The people and places that usually comfort you don’t have their customary power. The experiences you typically seek out to strengthen your stability just aren’t having that effect. The proper response, in my opinion, is to go in quest of exotic and experimental stimuli. In ways you may not yet be able to imagine, they can provide the grounding you need. They will steady your nerves and bolster your courage.

Taurus (April 20–May 20): The Pekingese is a breed of dog that has been around for over 2,000 years. In ancient China, it was beloved by Buddhist monks and emperors’ families. Here’s the legend of its origin: A tiny marmoset and huge lion fell in love with each other, but the contrast in their sizes made union impossible. Then the gods intervened, using magic to make them the same size. Out of the creatures’ consummated passion, the first Pekingese was born. I think this myth can serve as inspiration for you, Taurus. Amazingly, you may soon find a way to blend and even synergize two elements that are ostensibly quite different. Who knows? You may even get some divine help.

Gemini (May 21–June 20): Author Virginia Woolf wrote this message to a dear ally: “I sincerely hope I’ll never fathom you. You’re mystical, serene, intriguing; you enclose such charm within you. The luster of your presence bewitches me. … The whole thing is splendid and voluptuous and absurd.” I hope you will have good reason to whisper sweet things like that in the coming weeks, Gemini. You’re in the Season of Togetherness, which is a favorable time to seek and cultivate interesting kinds of intimacy. If there is no one to whom you can sincerely deliver a memo like Woolf’s, search for such a person.

Cancer (June 21–July 22): Some people are so attached to wearing a favorite ring on one of their fingers that they never take it off. They love the beauty and endearment it evokes. In rare cases, years go by and their ring finger grows thicker. Blood flow is constricted. Discomfort sets in. And they can’t remove their precious jewelry with the lubrication provided by a little olive oil or soap and water. They need the assistance of a jeweler who uses a small saw and a protective sheath to cut away the ring. I suspect this may be an apt metaphor for a certain situation in your life, Cancerian. Is it? Do you wonder if you should free yourself from a pretty or sentimental constriction that you have outgrown? If so, get help.

Leo (July 23–Aug. 22): “Most human beings have an almost infinite capacity for taking things for granted,” wrote Leo author Aldous Huxley. That’s the bad news. The good news is that in the coming weeks you are less likely to take things for granted than you have been in a long time. Happily, it’s not because your familiar pleasures and sources of stability are in jeopardy. Rather, it’s because you have become more deeply connected to the core of your life energy. You have a vivid appreciation of what sustains you. Your assignment: Be alert for the eternal as it wells up out of the mundane.

Virgo (Aug. 23–Sept. 22): In their quest to collect nectar, honeybees are attuned to the importance of proper timing. Even if flowering plants are abundant, the quality and quantity of the nectar that’s available vary with the weather, season, and hour of the day. For example, dandelions may offer their peak blessings at 9 a.m., cornflowers in late morning, and clover in mid-afternoon. I urge you to be equally sensitive to the sources where you can obtain nourishment, Virgo. Arrange your schedule so you consistently seek to gather what you need at the right time and place.

Libra (Sept. 23–Oct. 22): Are you willing to dedicate yourself fully to a game whose rules are constantly mutating? Are you resourceful enough to keep playing at a high level even if some of the other players don’t have as much integrity and commitment as you? Do you have confidence in your ability to detect and adjust to ever-shifting alliances? Will the game still engage your interest if you discover that the rewards are different from what you thought they were? If you can answer yes to these questions, by all means jump all the way into the complicated fun!

Scorpio (Oct. 23–Nov. 21): I suspect your body has been unusually healthy and vigorous lately. Is that true? If so, figure out why. Have you been taking better care of yourself? Have there been lucky accidents or serendipitous innovations on which you’ve been capitalizing? Make these new trends a permanent part of your routine. Now I’ll make a similar observation about your psychological well-being. It also seems to have been extra strong recently. Why? Has your attitude improved in such a way as to generate more positive emotions? Have there been fluky breakthroughs that unleashed unexpected surges of hope and good cheer? Make these new trends a permanent part of your routine.

Sagittarius (Nov. 22–Dec. 21): From the dawn of civilization until 1995, humans cataloged about 900 comets in our solar system. But since then, we have expanded that tally by over 3,000. Most of the recent discoveries have been made not by professional astronomers, but by laypersons, including two 13-year-olds. They have used the Internet to access images from the SOHO satellite placed in orbit by NASA and the European Space Agency. After analyzing the astrological omens, I expect you Sagittarians to enjoy a similar run of amateur success. So trust your rookie instincts. Feed your innocent curiosity. Ride your raw enthusiasm.

Capricorn (Dec. 22–Jan. 19): Whether or not you are literally a student enrolled in school, I suspect you will soon be given a final exam. It may not happen in a classroom or require you to write responses to questions. The exam will more likely be administered by life in the course of your daily challenges. The material you’ll be tested on will mostly include the lessons you have been studying since your last birthday. But there will also be at least one section that deals with a subject you’ve been wrestling with since early in your life — and maybe even a riddle from before you were born. Since you have free will, Capricorn, you can refuse to take the exam. But I hope you won’t. The more enthusiastic you are about accepting its challenge, the more likely it is that you’ll do well.

Aquarius (Jan. 20–Feb. 18): For $70,000 per night, you can rent the entire country of Liechtenstein for your big party. The price includes the right to rename the streets while you’re there. You can also create a temporary currency with a likeness of you on the bills, have a giant rendition of your favorite image carved into the snow on a mountainside, and preside over a festive medieval-style parade. Given your current astrological omens, I suggest you consider the possibility. If that’s too extravagant, I hope you will at least gather your legion of best friends for the Blowout Bash of the Decade. It’s time, in my opinion, to explore the mysteries of vivid and vigorous conviviality.

Pisces (Feb. 19–March 20): Are you available to benefit from a thunderbolt healing? Would you consider wading into a maelstrom if you knew it was a breakthrough in disguise? Do you have enough faith to harvest an epiphany that begins as an uproar? Weirdly lucky phenomena like these are on tap if you have the courage to ask for overdue transformations. Your blind spots and sore places are being targeted by life’s fierce tenderness. All you have to do is say, “Yes, I’m ready.”

Murder and Activism in Palestine: On Kate Jessica Raphael’s New Mystery

One night in 2004, Kate Jessica Raphael and a group of fellow American activists with whom she was living in Palestine were called to a nearby village that had been invaded by Israeli soldiers. Just their presence could deter violence — like a safety charm laced with the threats of governmental retribution from abroad. The village they were headed to wasn’t far, but it could be dangerous to get there because it was across a checkpoint. To travel, they took Palestinian roads that wound underneath Israeli-only speedways.

As the group approached an underpass, Raphael spotted a car on the side of the highway above, surrounded by cops. It was a relatively unremarkably sight, but her imagination whirred — where they were, in the northern West Bank, there were soldiers, farmers, migrant workers, border police, and international activists all near one another, yet separated by social politics. An abandoned car could be the beginning of an unfolding mystery — the site at which all those people converge.

Aside from being an activist, Oakland-based Raphael is also a journalist (she produces KPFA’s feminist radio show, Women’s Magazine), and as of recently, a novelist. Her new book, Murder Under the Bridge: A Palestine Mystery begins with an abandoned car on a bridge in the northern West Bank — near a wall that was being built between Israeli and Palestinian territories partly to keep Palestinians from entering Israel illegally for work. What follows is a complex mystery that teases out the social dynamics between the area’s various players — probing into the ubiquitously politicized experience of everyday life in Palestine.

Raphael came a long way before arriving in Palestine. She was raised as a devout Zionist in Richmond, Virginia — a place where a Jewish community was difficult to find. And it wasn’t until she went to college that she even realized the word “Palestinians” referred to a people. Gradually, though, she became increasingly educated on the conflict. In April 2002, she signed up for the International Solidarity Movement, which asked for people from around the world to come participate in nonviolent actions with Palestinians. But her visit coincided with the siege of Bethlehem by the Israeli Defense Forces, and she ended up spending her time in a refugee camp with no ability to communicate linguistically with her hosts.

Raphael went back six months later with the International Women’s Peace Service, this time arriving with Arabic skills and staying for three months. The next year, she returned for a six-month stay and was imprisoned for nine days due to her activism. When she returned for a fourth time the following year, she stayed for nine months, and was imprisoned for nearly six weeks — primarily alongside trafficked migrant workers — then deported. During that second imprisonment, Raphael outlined her novel.

Murder Under the Bridge follows two female protagonists: Rania, a hard-headed Palestinian cop and mother, and Chloe, an idealistic American peace activist whose backstory is nearly identical to that of Raphael. The two women embark on an investigation to find out how an Asian woman in a lavender blouse ended up dead underneath the bridge where the story begins. Among other places, their search leads them into refugee camps and the inner workings of Israel’s human trafficking industry — exposing how the latter is crucial for the construction of Israeli apartheid.

Amid an enthralling investigation, the story illuminates the ways in which boundaries — physical, mental, social — contribute to a fraught societal framework in a contested landscape like the West Bank. “Mysteries — ironically to some extent — actually lend themselves pretty well to social critique,” said Raphael, “because of the way they bring people into conflict with social norms.”

The dialogue is rife with Arabic and Hebrew phrases, which are each followed by their English translation. Because so many of the interactions require strategic decision making about what language to speak, the question of communication is always in the air, and conversation offers a rich context for exploring how cultural differences play out in tense situations — and how language is linked to power.

For Americans with little knowledge of Palestinian culture, Murder Under the Bridge will be an educational mystery as well. Raphael’s detailed descriptions give readers a sense of the place that’s far more intimately mundane than what can be culled from news representations — such as what a Palestinian breakfast tastes like and what the customs are for cooking one. But for Raphael, those details hold a little self-indulgence as well. “I was deported, so I can’t go back,” said Raphael. “So for me, writing these books is actually a little way to live in that world again.”


Correction: The original version of this article stated that Raphael encountered the abandoned car that inspired her book in 2003. In fact, she saw it in 2004. It also erroneously stated that Raphael is Berkeley-based. She is based in Oakland. 

Oakland Eyes Affordable Housing Plan in Secret

Since the early 2000s, affordable housing activists have been trying to get the City of Oakland to incentivize and fund affordable housing. But each campaign ended without major policy changes. As a result, the city has forgone collecting tens of millions of dollars in funds that could have financed more affordable housing in Oakland. Now, several years into yet another regional economic boom, it appears that the city council may be finally ready to adopt a housing impact fee — one of the most common mechanisms used by cities throughout California to finance affordable housing programs.

But as the affordability crisis deepens in Oakland, affordable housing advocates are worried that city officials, under the influence of developers, are dragging their feet, and that the current boom might fizzle before the city actually enacts a housing impact fee. They’re also concerned about the city’s secretive process for crafting the proposed fee. Oakland’s planning department has held several private meetings with developers and affordable housing advocates to discuss impact fees, but the city has declined so far to release its economic research on the feasibility of the fees to the public. In fact, the city has not even released this information to attendees of its private “stakeholder” meetings.

In September, city planning staffers invited twenty experts to meet behind closed doors to shape the city’s proposed impact fees. The first meeting was held earlier this month in City Hall. The stakeholders group included well-known local real estate investors such as John Protopappas and Wayne Jordan; developer lobbyists, including Greg McConnell of the Jobs and Housing Coalition; as well as several affordable housing advocates and developers. A team of consultants led by Linda Hausrath of the Hausrath Economics Group handed out a seven-page memo and gave a slide presentation to the stakeholder group during its first meeting, but attendees have not been given copies of the city’s draft nexus study or the draft economic feasibility analysis for the impact fees — two studies that cities use to calculate the amount of a housing impact fee.

Millions of dollars a year for the city are at stake. If fees are set too high, some projects might not pencil out, thereby inhibiting the construction of both market-rate and affordable housing. If fees are too low, or if there is further delay in implementing them, the city will lose millions that could be used to build low-income housing.

Jeffrey Levin, policy director of the affordable housing nonprofit East Bay Housing Organizations (EBHO), attended several of the stakeholder meetings. In an email to city staff, obtained by the Express through a public records request, Levin called the lack of information given to participants “disappointing.”

“Without the full [nexus] study there is no way for any of us to evaluate the assumptions and calculations,” wrote Levin. “The policy discussion is now going to be framed by conclusions about a study that no one can see. I’m not aware of any [other] city that has taken this approach.”

According to city records, an “administrative draft” of the nexus study was completed in June. A draft of the economic feasibility analysis was completed earlier this month. The city council’s community and economic development committee is scheduled to consider impact fees at its December 12 meeting, but the nexus study and feasibility report won’t be released publicly until next year.

“I think it’s unusual for a group that’s supposed to be made up of technical experts not to get information, and to only get it at the meeting, so they can’t absorb it beforehand,” said Gloria Bruce, executive director of EBHO, in an interview.

In an email, city spokesperson Karen Boyd wrote that the stakeholder meetings have been limited to a small, invitation-only group “to encourage open and honest discussion among the meeting attendees.” Boyd also stated that the public can view some results of the nexus study in slide presentations that have been posted on the city’s website, but that the full nexus study will not be complete and available for review until February.

EBHO and other affordable housing activists held a rally last week outside Oakland City Hall calling on the city to make the reports public and to expeditiously pass a fee at a level similar to surrounding cities.

A housing impact fee for Oakland could raise millions a year during boom times. Since 2005, San Francisco has raised $89 million to support low-income housing through its affordable housing impact fee, according to the San Francisco Controller’s Office.

According to the slide presentation prepared by city staff and shown at Oakland’s first stakeholder meeting, the maximum legal affordable housing impact fees Oakland can charge are between $34,833 and $81,729, depending on the type of housing unit. Slides from two other presentations shown to the stakeholder group reveal that the city is contemplating a $20,000 impact fee, and that it might be phased in over several years. With more than ten thousand units of housing in Oakland’s development pipeline, a $20,000 fee could raise tens of millions over multiple years.

Developer Mike Ghielmetti recently told an audience at an event on housing hosted by the pro-urban development group SPUR that if the fee is set too high, and not phased in, it will stifle real estate investment in Oakland, leading to lower overall revenues for the city and less housing. Ghielmetti said he believes Emeryville’s recent decision to increase its fee to $28,000 is already slowing down development there. Berkeley also has a $28,000 fee — although the council temporarily reduced it to $20,000.

Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf told the San Francisco Business Times last week that she supports phasing in impact fees so as not to “kill projects that are already entitled, but haven’t pulled their building permits yet.”

Bruce of EBHO said her organization is willing to discuss some kind of phase-in so that developers can incorporate the new fees into their project financing, but she disagrees that a high fee and relatively quick phase-in would kill projects.

“This has been a long time coming,” said Bruce. “In every conversation we’ve had with the city about specific plans or development policies, they keep saying there’s going to be a nexus study and impact fee, so don’t worry about getting anything into these specific plans, or don’t worry about community benefits agreement for Coliseum City because there will be an impact fee.

“Frankly, the city’s leaders have been talking about this for so long, I don’t think anyone can say the solution is to just wait for the market to get better and see what we can do,” Bruce added.

In fact, Oakland has been kicking around the idea of some kind of fee on market-rate housing for more than fifteen years. In 2000, the city council and then-Mayor Jerry Brown rejected an inclusionary zoning policy that would have required a small percentage of apartments and homes in any development to be priced for lower-income renters and buyers, or the payment of an in-lieu fee from developers who didn’t want to incorporate affordable housing in their projects. Then, again in 2007, the city formed a blue ribbon commission to make recommendations on an inclusionary housing ordinance. Outgoing Mayor Brown appointed Joseph Perkins, president of the Home Builders Association of Northern California to the commission, a group that has sued cities to undo affordable housing laws. After a long delay, the commission finally met, but the city council rejected inclusionary zoning and several other housing policies that would have supported affordable housing production.

Ex-Councilmember Jane Brunner, who advocated for inclusionary zoning during the last decade, said, “[D]evelopers have been opposed to having inclusionary zoning from day one. That included impact fees. In 2008, their argument was that the economy was so bad, it’s not the right time to do it. Now, the economy is good, but Oakland is still one of the few cities that doesn’t have inclusionary zoning.”

According to Brunner, Oakland officials have repeatedly rejected affordable housing policies for two reasons. She said Oakland leadership has always possessed an “underdog attitude,” believing that the city can’t attract enough developers. “They were almost desperate to have development,” said Brunner, and so they rejected any policies that developers opposed. “The second reason is financial,” said Brunner. “It’s campaign finance. Developers contribute a lot to elections.”

John Protopappas, a member of the impact fee stakeholder group, was Mayor Libby Schaaf’s campaign treasurer last year. He made the maximum allowable contribution of $700 to Schaaf in 2013 and 2014. Protopappas also runs a private nonprofit that raised $88,000 for Schaaf’s inauguration festivities. Gregory McConnell, whose Jobs and Housing Coalition is funded by real estate developers, made maximum $700 contributions to councilmembers Lynette Gibson McElhaney, Annie Campbell Washington, Rebecca Kaplan, and Abel Guillen in 2014, followed by another $700 contribution to Gibson McElhaney’s reelection committee earlier this year.

By contrast, Joseph McCarthy, an affordable housing developer with Bridge Housing who also attended the stakeholder meetings, made only $400 in contributions since 2013, all to councilmember Dan Kalb. Gloria Bruce of EBHO made a single $100 contribution to Kalb’s officeholder committee earlier this year, and Jeff Levin has not made a single political contribution, according to city records.

The East Bay’s Best Holiday Events

Holiday vacations often feel way too short — before you know it, it’s the new year and back to the grind. One way to prolong the holiday cheer is to celebrate the season throughout December by attending the many holiday-themed events put on by theater troupes, dance companies, and other arts organizations. The East Bay has no shortage of high-quality holiday productions and outings that you can share with your friends, family members, and out-of-town relatives. From LED light shows to kid-friendly theater productions, here are some of the best local tickets you can purchase for you and your loved ones this winter.

Oakland Ballet Company $25–$87

If you’re looking for a classic holiday experience, you can’t go wrong with the Oakland Ballet Company’s production of Graham Lustig’s The Nutcracker at the Paramount Theatre (2025 Broadway, Oakland) on December 19–20 ($25–87). Buying tickets to the ballet is also a great way to support a number of East Bay arts organizations. In this production, the Oakland Symphony performs Tchaikovsky’s score, and the Mt. Eden High School Women’s Choir from Hayward sings from the wings of the theater. The ballet company’s professional dancers perform alongside more than forty student dancers, ages seven to seventeen, who inhabit the roles of snowballs, mice, soldiers, and candies.

If you want to make the experience extra special for children, the company also hosts “Sweet Dreams” parties after the matinee performances ($15), which give audience members an opportunity to meet characters from the ballet while enjoying refreshments. And an “Encore” reception ($25) following the December 19 performance offers adults a chance to mingle with dancers and staff in an event that features champagne and hors d’oeuvres and desserts from local restaurants.

OaklandBallet.org

California Revels $20–$60

In its thirtieth anniversary of Oakland productions, performing arts group California Revels offers another great family-friendly holiday show this winter. This year’s Christmas Revels musical production (Dec. 11–20) at the Scottish Rite Theater (1547 Lakeside Dr., Oakland) takes place in Renaissance Venice, with a story centered on a troupe of Commedia dell’arte players hoping to find work at an annual solstice festival and masked ball. Christmas Revels blends traditional music, dance, rituals, and folk plays from a wide variety of cultures — and typically involves audience participation. This year’s production will feature a chorus of more than sixty adult and youth singers. If you’re searching for a festive, energetic show that can engage kids and parents alike, Christmas Revels won’t disappoint.

CaliforniaRevels.org

Oakland Interfaith Gospel Choir $13–$43

Also celebrating a thirtieth anniversary this year, the Oakland Interfaith Gospel Choir’s annual holiday concert is sure to attract large crowds to the Paramount Theatre on December 5. That’s partly due to the fact that this year, the choir is bringing actor and Bay Area native Danny Glover on board as a guest host. This past year has been a monumental one for the Oakland Interfaith Gospel Choir, which expanded its profile overseas with a tour across Europe. Building on the momentum of its sold-out shows abroad, this year’s holiday concert is likely to be one of the choir’s biggest. The performance features the organization’s alumni choir, community choir, and youth choir. It also features performances by two acclaimed American Sign Language interpreters. Even if you don’t consider yourself religious, it would be difficult not to find this diverse choir’s gospel music uplifting and joyful.

OIGC.org


The Oakland Zoo
$7–$8

The Oakland Zoo (9777 Golf Links Road) has some of the best East Bay holiday events for kids and families who don’t want to sit through performances. For the annual ZooLights event (Dec. 4–Jan. 3, $7–8), the zoo places hundreds of thousands of sparkling LED lights throughout the facilities with dozens of animal-themed light structures. The zoo’s African Veldt will also feature a music-themed light show this year, and the zoo will host its annual meadow show featuring animal characters and holiday tunes. Even on a cold winter night, it’s difficult for kids to resist exploring the starlit pathways that lead them to the Adventure Landing and the Outback Express Adventure train ride. And if you get too cold, you can always warm up inside with a cup of hot cocoa.

OaklandZoo.org

Piedmont Piano Company $20–$25

For lovers of jazz and blues, the holiday concert at Piedmont Piano Company (1728 San Pablo Avenue, Oakland) is a great option for a date night or outing with the whole family. On December 12, Oakland jazz singer Nicolas Bearde will serenade crowds as part of a holiday-themed jazz show. The baritone singer performs staples, originals, and improvisations. Audiences will also get an opportunity to enjoy refreshments and talk with performers after the show. Bearde is currently preparing to release his fifth studio album, Invitation, in March 2016.

PiedmontPiano.com

Berkeley Rep $29–$89

Even if you’ve seen the Pirates of Penzance before, you don’t want to miss this inventive adaption of W.S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan’s comic opera now showing at the Berkeley Repertory Theatre’s Osher Studio (2055 Center Street, Berkeley). Closing December 20, the production comes from The Hypocrites, a Chicago theater company known for its modern, eccentric adaptions of classic works. The company presents the show “promenade-style,” which means there’s no formal stage, and the audience members and actors move around the room together for an immersive experience. The production features banjos, beach balls, guitars, and many other surprises that are sure to engage even the most musical theater-averse audience members.

BerkeleyRep.org

Children’s Fairyland $10

Visits to Children’s Fairyland (699 Bellevue Ave., Oakland) are always a hit with kids, but if you want to provide a unique holiday experience, the park’s “Winterland” transformation (Dec. 4–23) offers a great option with many holiday events. Throughout the month, Children’s Fairyland hosts live holiday performances celebrating many cultures, visits by Santa Claus, puppet shows, arts and crafts events, and other activities. There are a wide variety of event options, including the Nutcracker Prince puppet show, the Children’s Theater Holiday Program, storytelling from performer John Weaver, and the Festival of Lights Parade. There are so many holiday attractions to choose from, you may find yourself returning more than once this winter.

Fairyland.org.


Preparing for Godzilla

Bay Area skiers and riders are loading up on online ticket deals and waxing their gear right now after a series of cold, snowy storms turned Lake Tahoe white before Thanksgiving and laid the base for an epic and much-needed 2015­–2016 snow season.

As this issue went to press “a powerful and extremely slow-moving” storm was expected to creep over the Bay Area, bringing an estimated twelve inches or more of new powder to Sierra ridges.

Resorts opened one week early this year, after a series of Arctic systems moved through Northern California and got people excited for a big El Niño year. Storm totals for mid November were: 56 inches at Kirkwood; 41 inches at Sierra-at-Tahoe; 36 inches at Sugar Bowl; and 11 inches at Northstar.

Bryan Allegretto, forecaster for OpenSnow.com, said ski resorts are running about 4 to 5 percent ahead of their normal pace for snow accumulation this year — after several years of drought. “The snow pack isn’t as great. It’s below-average for snow pack, but snowfall at the top is ahead [of average],” he said.

California is in for what meteorologists have dubbed a “Godzilla” El Niño. “It’s not a scientific term,” said Allegretto, but he added that ocean temperatures are a record 3 degrees Celsius higher in the parts of the Pacific Ocean that are responsible for El Niño’s potentially torrential rains. “That makes it the strongest ever recorded in [the] region used to track El Niño strength,” he said.

Lake Tahoe resort operators aren’t dancing in the streets — yet. “They’re very, very leery. They know all El Niños don’t [always] mean snow. They’ve heard it one hundred times,” he said. “They need to realize how strong this one is — [it] greatly, greatly increases the precipitation, and this is the strongest ever.

“The last four years have been so bad, they’re so weary, they’re cautiously optimistic,” he continued. “They’re hoping.”

Indeed, the April 1, 2015 snowpack — a standard benchmark for annual snowfall in the Sierra Nevada — was at only 5 percent of average, making it the lowest reading on record for the date — disastrously far below the prior record.

A September paper published in the journal Nature Climate Change used tree ring data to conclude that Sierra snow levels in 2015 were the lowest they’ve been in five hundred years.

So November’s strong opening is a much-needed shot in the arm, and it’s resulted in most resorts opening way ahead of Thanksgiving. Lake Tahoe resorts have $100 million in capital improvements just waiting for throngs of skiers, riders, kids, and less adventurous family and friends.

Tahoe has fully diversified itself for every demographic — from the Star Wars-themed kids area at Sierra-at-Tahoe, to the backwoods avalanche survival courses of Kirkwood. Resorts are creating ever more expensive VIP mountain guide packages for the high rollers, while ski-and-stay deals in Reno are as low as $84 per night with lift ticket.

“The magical word is more. More chairlifts, terrain, more resorts open, and more snow on the way,” said Daniel Pistoresi, for Ski Lake Tahoe. Here’s a little bit of what’s out there.


Sugar Bowl Ski Resort

Super close to the Bay Area, Sugar Bowl is touting a new partnership with nearby Woodward Tahoe for a combo season pass that adds world-class indoor training facilities, including skateboard ramps, foam pits, and trampolines. Sugar Bowl has $20 million in upgrades that it’s dying to show off, including its new Crow’s Nest chairlift, Sporthaus aquatic center, and the new Sugar Bowl Academy campus. A new terrain park is open for the experts, while a new Village Station caters to more staid skiers wanting the 200 kilometers of groomed cross-country trails at Royal Gorge (now with snow biking and snow kiting).

SugarBowl.com

Mt. Rose Ski Tahoe

We had our best bluebird day of last year for just $35 using a Two for Tuesday ticket at Mt. Rose after a huge storm. Mt. Rose is the highest-situated and folksiest resort, and it opened on November 4 this year with a new chairlift. When warm, wet, slushy El Niño hits in December, Mt. Rose will be a keg of dry powder. Boom-shakalaka! Mt. Rose Ski Tahoe spent almost $1.2 million in on-mountain improvements — like more snowmaking and a new Enchanted Forest Family Zone. The newly christened Wizard Chairlift takes beginners to four new trails.

SkiRose.com

Homewood Mountain Resort

Homewood has opened 750 acres of glade powder reserves and close to 2,000 vertical feet of runs, along with lake views for VIP snowcat groups of ten. Powder fiends can also buy the First Tracks Breakfast program, which combines food and early access to the uncut powder. This year, Homewood also offers drone filming packages which is “literally like having your own R2-D2 flying around behind you filming your day on the slops,” said Pistoresi.

SkiHomewood.com

Squaw Valley and Alpine Meadows

One ticket gets you access to both resorts, which opened on November 12 and 14 — among the earliest openings in resort history. If the duo’s combined 6,000 skiing acres seems overwhelming, just hire a new, VIP mountain guide to take you to all the powder stashes. The upgraded Siberia Express chairlift is a high-speed six-seater that rockets powder-hunters to the open bowls of the upper mountain. Want to just chill? The Burton Relax and Ride is a two-hour group lesson on Burton demo equipment, plus lunch and an afternoon spa treatment.

SquawAlpine.com


Northstar California Resort

Real estate windfall? Stay at the mid-mountain Ritz-Carlton, Lake Tahoe, and take some Primo Private Lessons with carte blanche access to the mountain, including expedited lift access, “guided tours, private lessons, lunch/dinner reservations, spa treatments, childcare and beyond.” The Mountain Table culinary experience in the breathtaking Zephyr Lodge is all locally sourced, farm-to-mountaintop — naturally.

NorthstarCalifornia.com

Heavenly Mountain Resort

For the place to ski and gamble, Heavenly bottoms out at the new Hard Rock Casino, which is open for its first full ski-year this year. The opening has prompted all the other nearby casinos to refresh their look. Tens of thousands of new square-feet of retail and breweries along the South Shore make it a happening spot. Basecamp is the new hipster motel with Xboxes in every room, indoor glamping, and a beer garden with an airstream trailer.

SkiHeavenly.com

Kirkwood Mountain Resort

When the storm is measured in feet, not inches, Kirkwood will be ready to turn on the chairlifts at dawn. This year, the program Expedition: Kirkwood has a new intermediate “Discovery Series,” and for solo explorers, the EpicMix Guide app will draw you 350 unique itineraries to optimize your time on the mountain.

Kirkwood.com

Sierra-at-Tahoe Resort

Shred the award-winning terrain parks and half-pipes with Olympic pros. For the kids, the Burton Star Wars Echo Base and Yoda’s Riglet Park is bound to have a banner year of film tie-ins. The resort and Burton have also enhanced their Learn to Ride program with vintage Eighties snowboards that teach balance, movement, and control on both dry land and in beginner settings. Free yoga sessions each day as well.

SierraatTahoe.com


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