Friday August 4, 2006
Time to Celebrate
Once you have the evening gown, hors d’oeuvres and white tablecloths, what’s left? For the missing element — the perfect venue — readers chose the Jewish Community Center of San Francisco for the city, the Claremont Resort & Spa for the East Bay and the Marin Art & Garden Center for Marin/Sonoma as the best places to rent for a large elegant party.
Open to “anyone and everyone who wants to rent,” the JCC has rooms of all sizes for virtually all types of parties. Communications manager Aaron Rosenthal believes that clients appreciate the quality perhaps even more than the location: “People who have emotional attachment to the JCC will ultimately only choose to do it if we have a room that is tasteful and classy.”
It’s hard to find a location where someone will paint your toenails one day and serve your wedding dinner the next. But readers need look no further than the “big white castle,” the Claremont Resort & Spa located next to U.C. Berkeley. The facilities include 20 different-sized meeting and banquet rooms. “All of the out-of-town guests’ needs will be taken care of,” says director of catering Kathy Marty.
At the Marin Art & Garden Center in Ross, visitors can find a diverse repertoire of events. From private parties to Shakespeare camps, the center seems to do it all. “We love having Jewish weddings here,” event manager Elizabeth Ayers says. “We have enough room for the ketubah signing and everything else.”
Second-place winners were the Ritz-Carlton San Francisco, the Sequoyah Country Club for the East Bay, and the Fairmont Sonoma Mission Inn & Spa for Marin/Sonoma.
San Francisco
Jewish Community Center of San Francisco (415) 292-1269 www.jccsf.org
East Bay
Claremont Resort & Spa Berkeley (510) 549-8521 www.claremontresort.com
Marin/Sonoma
Marin Art & Garden Center Ross (415) 454-1301 www.maagc.org
San Francisco
The Ritz-Carlton San Francisco (415) 296-7465 www.ritzcarlton.com/hotels/san_francisco
East Bay
Sequoyah Country Club Oakland (510) 632-2900 www.sequoyahcc.com
Marin/Sonoma
The Fairmont Sonoma Mission Inn & Spa Sonoma (707) 938-4250 www.fairmont.com/sonoma
Readers expressed diverse tastes in choosing the best place to rent for a large casual party by picking locales in an urban center and a secluded oasis. The Jewish Community Center of San Francisco won in the city, while the Brazilian Room won in the East Bay.
Protected from the bustle of San Francisco, the Brazilian Room in Berkeley’s 2,000-acre Tilden Regional Park has been a favorite location to host a party since 1941. “In this area, it really is a gem of a place,” supervisor Gerrie Honder says.
Information on the JCCSF can be found under the award for best place for a large elegant party.
In second place were the Cellar for San Francisco, and Beth Jacob Congregation in the East Bay.
San Francisco
Jewish Community Center of San Francisco (415) 292-1269 www.jccsf.org
East Bay
Brazilian Room Berkeley (510) 540-0220 www.brazilianroom.org
San Francisco
The Cellar (415) 441-5678 www.cellarsf.com
East Bay
Beth Jacob Congregation Oakland (510) 482-1147 www.bethjacoboakland.org
Where can you find a place to host a lot of guests without worrying about complaints from the neighbors? For large outdoor parties, readers chose the Brazilian Room at Tilden Regional Parks for the East Bay, and Marin Art & Garden Center for Marin/Sonoma.
Information on the Brazilian Room can be found under the award for best place for a large casual party.
Information on the Marin Art & Garden Center can be found under the award for best place for a large elegant party.
East Bay
Brazilian Room at Tilden Regional Park Berkeley (510) 540-0220 www.brazilianroom.org
Marin/Sonoma
Marin Art & Garden Center Ross (415) 454-1301 www.maagc.org
When hosting a small elegant party, diversity is the theme for our Readers’ Choice winners — ranging from the Victorian grace of the Haas-Lilienthal House, chosen as the best in San Francisco, to the bustling Berkeley eatery Bar Ristorante Raphael, best in the East Bay.
The Haas-Lilienthal House, built in 1886, combines a luscious setting with a rich history. Clients can also ask for a docent to be available during their event to provide historical details. “With three main rooms on the first floor, there is a natural flow of events,” explains operations manager Barbara Roldan. “Gathering in one room, drinks in the next and dinner in the last — the house works perfectly.”
Bar Ristorante Raphael’s part-owner and chef Domenico Testa believes his venue’s easygoing environment and succulent food are its main draws. With Italian plaster everywhere, and many fresh, organic ingredients, Testa seems to have found a recipe for success. “It’s like going to someone’s house for a party,” he says. “[We] make up everything!”
The Montclair Women’s Cultural Arts Club won second place for the East Bay.
San Francisco
Haas-Lilienthal House (415) 441-3011 www.sfheritage.org/house.html
East Bay
Bar Ristorante Raphael Berkeley (510) 644-9500 www.ristoranteraphael.com
East Bay
Montclair Women’s Cultural Arts Club Oakland (510) 339-1832
Readers gravitated toward cross-category favorites when choosing the best place for a small casual party. In the city, the winner was the Jewish Community Center of San Francisco, and in the East Bay, voters selected Bar Ristorante Raphael.
Information on the JCC can be found under the award for best place for a large elegant party.
Information on Bar Ristorante Raphael can be found under the award for best place for a small elegant party.
Scott’s Seafood Restaurant in Walnut Creek won second place for the East Bay.
San Francisco
Jewish Community Center of San Francisco (415) 292-1269 www.jccsf.org
East Bay
Bar Ristorante Raphael Berkeley (510) 644-9500 www.ristoranteraphael.com
East Bay
Scott’s Seafood Restaurant Walnut Creek (925) 934-1300 www.scottsrestaurants.com/wc_intro.cfm
Are the buds more beautiful in the Bay Area? Floral-loving readers say yes, and chose four different shops as best florist: Bloomers for San Francisco, Glenview Florist for the East Bay, J. Floral Art for the South Bay/Peninsula and Main Street Floragardens for Marin/Sonoma.
Patrick Powell has been selling flowers for 29 years with Bloomers on Washington Street. He credits his “lovely customers with good taste” for creating his high level of repeat business.
Glenview Florist’s owner Vicky Rice, in contrast, took over the Oakland store only recently, following previous owner Doug Brown’s departure after 22 years. Besides moving the shop to a smaller building down the street, she doesn’t plan to make many changes to Brown’s business model. His vision kept the shop busy with many events, including “many Jewish weddings!”
Co-manager Jeffrey Adair of J. Floral Art in Menlo Park prefers to blaze his own path — giving customers the “big city European aesthetic, big on design and color. Our style is a little different than a typical ‘mom and pop’ shop. No carnations and daisies here.”
Without a retail location, Main Street Floragardens in San Anselmo is available by private appointment only. “With the shop, we were requiring more and more employees, so I was spending my days managing instead of designing,” co-owner Marcia Maffei says. “I wanted to be more hands-on.”
Ashby Flowers won second place in the East Bay.
San Francisco
Bloomers (415) 563-3266
East Bay
Glenview Florist Oakland (510) 530-1945
South Bay/Peninsula
J. Floral Art Menlo Park (650) 363-0313
Marin/Sonoma
Main Street Floragardens San Anselmo (415) 485-2996
East Bay
Ashby Flowers Berkeley (800) 644-7662 www.ashbyflowers.com
From the Ascher Cut to the U-Bar Setting, jewelers in the Bay Area have many areas of expertise — and experience. Keeping clients satisfied isn’t a problem for this category’s winners: Simayof for San Francisco, Heller Jewelers for the East Bay and Diamonds of Palo Alto for the South Bay/Peninsula.
Manager Dan Wiskine believes in the Simayof motto: “Keep it simple and sophisticated.” He has been in business since 1989, and says that longevity — and his two locations in San Francisco — keeps customers returning.
Scott Heller, owner of Heller Jewelers in San Ramon, believes in the value of customer service — he even discourages using his Web site over going to the store. “It’s the personal experience, not the point-and-click experience,” he says.
Israel Zehavi, who has spent 18 years in the jewelry business at Diamonds of Palo Alto, has a different philosophy — after receiving orders from overseas through his Web site, he’s excited to see how his business can expand via the Internet. But he still believes in the personal relationship: “The clients and I have become like a family,” he says.
Fisher’s Custom Design Jewelry won second place in the East Bay.
San Francisco
Simayof (415) 391-0152 www.simayof.com
East Bay
Heller Jewelers San Ramon (925) 904-0200 www.hellerjewelers.com
South Bay/Peninsula
Diamonds of Palo Alto (650) 322-1200 www.diamondsofpaloalto.com
East Bay
Fisher’s Custom Design Jewelry Albany (510) 524-0400
Not too many band managers can report that their congregation helped them come up with their name. But with a group like the Red Hot Chachkas, picked as the best klezmer band in the Bay Area, it’s no surprise that manager Julie Egger concocted the title on a synagogue camping trip.
“We had ‘red hot,’ and we were sitting around thinking of all these other words when we landed on ‘chachkas,’” Egger says. “I came up with a different angle to spell it – most Americans probably can’t pronounce ‘tchotchkes’!”
Klezmania! won for second place in the Bay Area.
Bay Area
Red Hot Chachkas (415) 488-9125 www.redhotchachkas.com
Bay Area
Klezmania! (415) 239-4670 www.bennybemusic.com/klez.htm
Able to segue within seconds from a pop song such as “Hit Me Baby One More Time” to hand-clapping “Mayim,” the Joel Abramson Simcha Orchestra is anything but stuck in one style. It seems readers like that, as a majority chose the group as the best dance band in the Bay Area.
Abramson noted that “sometimes people are afraid that we are going to be too Jewish, but we are also a great pop band.”
The Shtetlblasters won second place.
Bay Area
Joel Abramson Simcha Orchestra (408) 265-7279 www.joelabramson.com
Bay Area
The Shtetlblasters (510) 287-2540 www.maxjas.com/shtetl.htm
When remembering the b’nai mitzvah they’ve attended recently, most people recognize a familiar litany of events in the party: games, candlelighting, the obligatory hora. DJK Productions, picked as best DJs in the Bay Area (with many readers singling out disc jockey Darryl Grace), can change that pattern.
“We try to avoid doing the same party every Saturday night,” says owner Ken Maas. “We cater to [a client’s] individual tastes.”
Denon & Doyle Entertainment won for second place.
Bay Area
DJK Productions (877) DJK-4FUN www.djkproductions.com
Bay Area
Denon & Doyle Entertainment (800) 944-9585 www.djay.com
Barbara Heimowitz knows when to say “Thank you … thank you very much.” She’s had 19 years of experience melding Elvis impersonators, Hawaiian dancers, clowns and more into Celebrity Gems, which was picked by readers as the best party planner in the Bay Area for the second year.
With her husband and business partner, Stan, she combines the entertainment of live bands and performers with catering, decorations and party favors to make planning an occasion a one-stop shop.
Barbara Kweller won for second place.
Bay Area
Celebrity Gems (510) 581-5964 www.celebritygems.com
Bay Area
Barbara Kweller (510) 410-4413 rkweller@comcast.net
A wedding holds many extraordinary moments for a budding photographer to catch. David Lee, whose Allegro Photography (formerly David Lee Arts Photography) was voted best photographer in the Bay Area, is an ace at finding those precise moments. David and his wife, Joanna Kaplan Lee, prefer to capture the candid side of events — what they call a “photo-journalistic approach.”
“I always think of it as an honor,” Lee says of being hired to shoot a special event. “They decided we would be the ones who chronicle their moments.”
Joyce Goldschmid won second place.
Bay Area
Allegro Photography (415) 254-3465 www.allegrophotography.com
Bay Area
Joyce Goldschmid (650) 364-4400
The job of a videographer is to give people an exact replica of the special day, right? Wrong, says Andy Hirsch of Blue Moon Productions, picked for best videographer in the Bay Area.
South Bay resident Hirsch believes editing the events of the day into a “cinematic documentary” really makes the memories special. “I’m not just filming it and burning it [to] a DVD and giving it to them,” he says.
Stuart Sweetow of Audio Visual Consultants won for second place.
Bay Area
Andy Hirsch Blue Moon Productions (408) 206-6505 www.blue-moon-productions.com
Bay Area
Stuart Sweetow Audio Visual Consultants (510) 839-2020 www.avconsultants.com
When ruminating over the concept of kosher food, what dishes come to mind? Common choices may include matzah ball soup, lox and bagels. Wendy Kleckner of Too Caterers, winner as best kosher caterer in the Bay Area, has been working since 1978 to change that image.
“There’s a certain mystique about kosher food: old, boiled green beans,” she says with a laugh. “There’s no reason not to have delicious, health-conscious food that just happens to be kosher. That’s what drives me!”
Bar Ristorante Raphael took second place.
Bay Area
Wendy Kleckner Too Caterers (650) 322-4189
Bay Area
Bar Ristorante Raphael (510) 644-9500 www.ristoranteraphael.com
With specialties such as Sungold and Early Girl Heirloom Tomato Gazpacho to Crispy Kung Pao Chicken Skewers, the Delicious! Inc. catering company seems to have chosen an apt name. And readers selected it as the best non-kosher caterer in the Bay Area.
Jan Goldberg started Delicious! back in 1975. Today, she works with her partners to maintain a high quality. And she makes memorial services a priority, even though they are last-minute. “We do everything we can to make those orders happen,” she says.
Robert Meyer’s Mangia/Nosh Catering Company won for second place.
Bay Area
Delicious! Inc. (415) 453-3710 www.deliciouscatering.com
Bay Area
Robert Meyer’s Mangia/Nosh Catering Company (415) 472-7375 www.mangianosh.com
Not many people can boast that in their spare time they show students how to do yoga moves in the shape of Hebrew letters. But that is one of the talents of Robin Hall, who was chosen by readers as the best ketubah artist in the Bay Area.
She’s come a long way since her first calligraphy classes at age 16. Her ketubahs have been featured in New York exhibitions, and her company, ABC Calligraphy, had its 20th anniversary not long ago. Hall creates ketubahs regardless of her clients’ denomination — and even creates contracts for interfaith and same-sex ceremonies. “I work with people as far as their heart goes,” she says.
Bay Area
Robin Hall ABC Calligraphy (415) 771-1719 www.robinketubah.com
When planning a wedding, you probably won’t find a Yellow Pages entry for chuppah-maker. But readers agreed that one need look no further than Elizheva Hurvich.
From silk-printing to finger-painting, Hurvich uses her artistic talents and Judaica studies to create chuppahs. “I came to realize that the chuppah is the physical place where the community sanctions the transformation of people’s relationships,” she says.
Bay Area
Elizheva Hurvich (510) 575-5175 www.elizheva.com
Did you find this article interesting? Subscribe to our FREE newsletter and you'll be notified each week when "J." goes online. We'll tell you about the most important stories of the week and give you a link to each one.
This page contains a BETA version of Amazon contextual links. They are marked by the dashed underline. Your purchases support our site. At times they point to items which are not related to the actual link. Please alert us by email if you discover objectionable links.
|