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November 30, 2014

Helena Gustavsson-Giesea resurfaces at Santa Rosa’s Station 1870









Chef Helena Gustavsson-Giesea is back in business, running the kitchen at Station 1870 in downtown Santa Rosa. The last time we saw her, she was cooking at Whitetail Winebar in Guerneville, but she departed a while before the bar closed in May.
Now, she offering a similar experience at the wine bar and live music lounge on Fourth Street in Railroad Square. The idea is small bites like duck tacos with tropical salsa and cotija cheese (three for $15), butter baked pancetta crusted oysters (three for $9) or her signature meatball trio made with shrimp, turkey and beef ($12).
There are also weekly three-course specials ($20 / paired with wines $35). This week, for example, guests can get onion soup, pink peppercorn pork with quinoa squash, and a lemon tart (you can see the entire menu here).
Other specials play off Gustavsson-Giesea’s Swedish heritage, such as a meal of cream of winter vegetable soup, Swedish meatballs with cranberry rice, and chocolate cherry bread pudding with green tea custard sauce.
Station 1870: 123 Fourth Street, Santa Rosa; (707) 623-9619 or station1870.com.

May 12, 2014

Chef Helena Featured in Sonomacounty.com

Read original article here

"Thank you James for including me in your article" ~ Chef Helena

WINE OF THE WEEK: RED CAR PINOT NOIR

red car winery
Sweden’s leading wine club, Munskänkarna, has chosen Sonoma County, along with Napa Valley, as their wine region of the year in 2014. Throughout 2014, Munskänkarna will host tastings and seminars for its 23,500 members, as well as publish articles in its consumer magazine, focusing on wines from our region. Sonoma County follows up Porto in 2013, and Chianti Classico in 2012.
The nation that hosts the Nobel Prize for literature is surely a nation of discerning, literate citizens. But did you know many Swedes take wine as seriously literature, architecture, and design? Although Sweden produces virtually no grape wine of its own, Munskänkarna pursues the study and appreciation of wine with both passion and precision.
Munskänkarna was established in 1958 (perhaps not coincidentally three years after Sweden abandoned a rationing system for alcoholic beverages). On Feb. 10, 2014, wine club chair Ylva Sundkvist presented Honore Comfort, executive director of Sonoma County Vintners, with a commemorative plaque at an event at Kunde Family Estate.
“We are thrilled to receive this recognition and host Munskänkarna this week in Sonoma County,” said Comfort, in a press release announcing the event. “We relish the opportunity to show them our range of high-quality wines, stunning natural beauty, and connect them with our winegrowers and winemakers who are so passionate about producing wine in this special place.” (Photo Munskänkarna by George Rose).
At Kunde Estate, Sundkvist said that the occasion had particular significance for her personally, bringing her full circle on a journey of wine discovery, because the first wine she ever tasted was a Sonoma County wine.
What is a Munskänkarna? It’s literally a “cup-bearer,” but Sundkvist said that it loosely translates to mean, “A person who really enjoys wine!”
In the sumptuously wood-paneled meeting room at Kunde’s Hill House, a delegation of Munskänkarna board members sat down to take in four flights of wine and a presentation of the geological, climatic and historical foundations of Sonoma County Wine Country.
The members’ discipline — most of them! — in refraining from swirling, sniffing, or sipping any of the tantalizing wines before them, throughout a discussion of plate tectonics, was notable.
A panel of winemakers introduced Sonoma County Chardonnay, Pinot Noir, Zinfandel, and Petite Sirah. La Crema’s Elizabeth Grant-Douglas presented the Pinot Noir flight with vim and verve, inspiring me to seek out one of the wines selected for the Munskänkarna delegation’s tasting.
Scheduled for release in April, Red Car Wine’s 2012 “Heaven & Earth” Sonoma Coast Pinot Noir ($68) is grown in the coastal Bohemian Station Vineyards near Freestone. It’s got a teasing, dusty sandalwood incense aroma, with cool cherry fruit and a slice of cherry fruit leather. Flavors remain in the cool category of cranberry and cherry, while the spicy, chewy palate sensation is on the warm side. The contrast makes a pleasing wine, better with the right earthy food.
I took the food pairing question to one of Sonoma County’s most preeminent Swedes — at least, that’s what I think when I find myself at a lunch or dinner prepared by Helena Gustavsson Giesea.Chef Helena, a native of Sweden, seems to always subtly transform her Wine Country cuisine with a bit of earthy, Scandinavian magic. Chef Helena came up with an intriguing entrée.

Recipe: Biff a la Lindström and Creamy Potatoes with Feta Cheese

4 portions
Directions for Biff:
  • 1 1/2 lb. lean ground beef
  • 3 egg yolks
  • 4 tbsp. chopped red onion
  • 4 tbsp. chopped pickled beets
  • 3 tbsp. copped capers
  • 3 tbsp. juice from pickled beets
  • 1 tbsp. chopped chives
  • 1 tsp. Dijon mustard
  • 1 1/2 tsp. sea salt
  • 1 tsp. white pepper
Mix all ingredients until evenly blended, without over mixing. Make 4 large patties or 8 smaller ones. Fry in butter mixed with a little vegetable oil on medium hear 4-5 minutes per side or until nicely colored.
Directions for Creamy Potatoes with Feta Cheese:
  • 8 medium size Yukon Gold
  • 2 tbsp. butter melted
  • 1/2 C. whole milk warm
  • 1/4 C. feta cheese crumbles
  • 1/8 tsp. ground nutmeg
  • Taste off with sea salt and white pepper
Peel and quarter potatoes. Cover with cold water, add a pinch of salt and simmer until soft enough to mash. Mash with butter. Whip up with milk and nutmeg until light and fluffy, add more milk if needed. Fold in cheese and taste off with salt and pepper.