Gourmet Getaway to the Mendocino Region, Part IV: The Boonville Hotel and Offspring Restaurant

Sun Gold tomato Margherita pizza at Offspring.
Sun Gold tomato Margherita pizza at Offspring.

Offspring is a fitting name for Chef Perry Hoffman’s second restaurant, an inviting pizza and pasta joint in teeny Boonville in the Anderson Valley.

After all, it was the success of the Boonville Hotel and Restaurant across the street, where he’s also chef, that gave birth to it.

Yet it’s also a name that applies profoundly to him, too, as this descendant of veritable culinary royalty knows a thing or two about the creating a lasting legacy.

Chef Perry Hoffman.
Chef Perry Hoffman.

His grandparents were famously, Don and Sally Schmitt, who bought an old stone building in sleepy Yountville in 1978, the French Laundry. They worked hard to turn it into a true destination, a process Hoffman witnessed from the time he was 5 years old when he’d roast peppers and cut baguettes to help out at the restaurant. It was the tender start to his own storied career that culminated in becoming the youngest chef in the United States to receive a Michelin star when he was 25 at the helm of Domaine Chandon’s Etoile restaurant in Yountville in 2009.

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Gourmet Getaway to the Mendocino Region, Part III: Jumbo’s Win Win

It only opened last year, but this burger shack already got a nod from the New York Times.
It only opened last year, but this burger shack already got a nod from the New York Times.

You simply cannot drive on highway 128 through Philo in the Anderson Valley and miss this place — in more ways than one.

First, with its huge block letter sign painted atop its building, Jumbo’s Win Win definitely sticks out.

Second, this retro, playful, family-run burger stand serves up classic burgers, sandwiches, fries, and soft serve with premium ingredients and top-notch techniques at shockingly affordable prices.

The New York Times even named it one of the best new restaurants of 2025. If you’re in the area, it’s an absolute must-stop.

The fried fish sandwich is sublime.
The fried fish sandwich is sublime.

It was opened last year by Scott Baird, the lauded James Beard-nominated cocktail and beverage consultant who co-founded the innovative Trick Dog bar in San Francisco.

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Gourmet Getaway to the Mendocino Region, Part II: The Historic MacCallum House

Pan-seared duck breast with sweet potato chips at the MacCallum House Restaurant.
Pan-seared duck breast with sweet potato chips at the MacCallum House Restaurant.

At 144 years young, the MacCallum House in the heart of downtown Mendocino still exudes charm and quaintness.

It’s been many years since I’ve dined at this restaurant-inn that was originally the family home of Daisy MacCallum, gifted to her by her father William Kelley when she married his bookkeeper. So, when I was invited recently to stay and dine by the owners, I jumped at the chance to revisit this lovely historic Victorian.

Daisy MacCallum was a student of horticulture, who planted thousands of roses on the property. With a expansive green lawn surrounded by trees and flowers, it remains a lush, verdant property, the kind that beckons you to take a load off at one of the Adirondack chairs to relax for a long spell.

The MacCallum House is a historic Victorian.
The MacCallum House is a historic Victorian.
The historic barn, which now has guest rooms.
The historic barn, which now has guest rooms.

Nineteen rooms are available in the main house, separate cottages, or in the historic barn, which is where I stayed.

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Gourmet Getaway to the Mendocino Region, Part I: Michelin Two-Starred Harbor House Inn

The signature abalone course at Harbor House Inn, which will set the bar for any other abalone dish you enjoy in the future.
The signature abalone course at Harbor House Inn, which will set the bar for any other abalone dish you enjoy in the future.

From the first time I dined at Harbor House Inn in 2018 before it officially opened to the public to my most recent visit this month, it remains to me the restaurant that most thoroughly embodies a true sense of place.

Maybe it’s partly the secluded setting in tiny Elk, a three hours’ drive north out of congested San Francisco through peaceful winding roads of bucolic vineyards and towering redwoods, that somehow vanquishes any of life’s troubles, worries or stresses. Maybe it’s the view from the property of the rugged coastline overlooking Wharf Rock East Arch, the dramatic rock formation bored through by centuries of powerful, unrelenting Pacific waves. And maybe it’s the vision and execution by Executive Chef Matthew Kammerer and his team, who have gone to great lengths to spotlight ingredients, plateware, and decor that are distinctly of the land and sea there.

It all adds up to terroir personified, creating a truly immersive and transportive experience.

The Harbor House Inn.
The Harbor House Inn.

Of course, few Michelin two-starred experiences come at a modest price. Harbor House Inn’s tasting menu is $325 per person. If you elect to stay overnight in one of its 11 rooms or cottages, a wise choice given that there are few other accommodations close by, it will run you a minimum of $500 per night. Make the splurge, though, and you’re in for a most memorable occasion.

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Get to Know Egg Tofu

Crispy and custardy egg tofu with chili and honey.
Crispy and custardy egg tofu with chili and honey.

Kristina Cho says that she loves introducing people to egg tofu. Count me in as a new convert who is ever grateful to her now that I’ve made the acquaintance.

While tofu is made by coagulating soy milk, egg tofu is made with a blend of soy milk and eggs that gets steamed. Because of the eggs, it has a more yellow color. What I really fell for is the texture. It is slightly firmer than silken tofu and possesses a wonderful custardy quality. In fact, it reminds me very much of Japanese chawanmushi.

Find it in tube shape like slice-and-bake cookie dough in the refrigerator case of Chinese or Asian markets, beside the usual blocks of tofu.

Cho’s “Seared Egg Tofu with Honey and Soy” is an ideal way to try it, too.

The recipe is from her cookbook, “Chinese Enough” (Artisan, 2024), of which I received a review copy.

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