Hello Friends,
A family member and I were having a discussion the other day — what is a MAHA Mom? I said to them that I thought of myself as one, as I am nutrition-forward. I feed my family mostly organic foods, purchased at farmers’ markets and the local co-op where I live. I believe in a balanced diet of raised-right or caught-right proteins, vegetables and grains. I cook regularly, have a garden, believe in fact-based, scientific research, wish to ban social media from the face of the earth (it is ruining human consciousness, not to mention generations of minds), and more.
And yet, when I said I felt MAHA, she asked me “is that a good thing? Or are MAHAs nuts?” Hmmm…as an East Coast-raised Californian, my European-raised father always used to joke that Californians are “fruits and nuts.” Also true, if you don’t mind the double-entendre. And again, I find myself wanting to take back the term “fruits and nuts.” What is nutty about eating right? I’m raising my kids in a place where salad is a course and grown in the earth all around us and as far as the eye can see. (We eat LOTS of salads.)
I like to say that my body requires me to eat like a 17th century peasant or it gets very (very) cranky. That is, lots of foods I grow or catch myself (or know the provenance of), foods aged a bit to break down the proteins or add beneficial probiotics, foods that do not interrupt my circadian rhythm. I still can’t eat gluten or drink cow’s milk – I can’t handle the proteins of either. I believe in a style of eating that Michael Pollan once called: “Not too much, mostly plants.”
Has health – the “H” in MAHA – been hijacked by influencers with opinions, not facts? Not if I have anything to say about it. So, I hereby take ownership of the term. Or at least the “healthy” part of MAHA.
Here’s where I’ve landed: I believe in science-backed nutrition and functional health. I also believe that you are what you eat, including fruits and nuts. And no child should die of measles. EVER. I am proud my children eat real food, cooked by real people. I am glad they can distinguish a porcini from an enoki. I wouldn’t have it any other way. Does that make me a MAHA Mom? I’m going with “yes.”
What’s Hot:
These are just a few of the food and food-adjacent events that have caught my attention in March.

Chef Azalina Eusope (Azalina’s) and Chef Mat Schuster (Canela)
International Women’s Month at Nightbird (ASAP)
- Beignet and caviar with quail egg
- Daikon radish with buttermilk taiyaki (for the moms)
- Young bamboo with mole and chard broth (for the mentors)
- Morel and potato pavé (for Julia)
- “Cheesecake” with buckwheat crumble and lime gel (for the ceramicists)
- $175 per person
Make a Reservation for March at Nightbird
Sunday Supper at Bistro Lagniappe (March 8, 15, 22)
- 4:30 – 8 p.m., Sundays
- $55 per person
Make a Reservation for Sunday Supper at Bistro Lagniappe
Chef Diego Kahlo at Compline (March 18 – April 26)
Chef Diego Isunza Kahlo — former Culinary Director of Mexico City’s Michelin 2-Star restaurant, Pujol and great-great nephew of artist Frida Kahlo – returns to Napa after a successful 2024 residency, to cook at Compline. Menu details are deep on the down-low but expect this spring’s edition to showcase Kahlo’s contemporary perspective on Mexican cuisine with California touches and plentiful pours from this restaurant-slash-wine shop.
Reserve a Table for Kahlo at Compline
Lechon at Merkado for SF Giants Opening Week (March 25, 27 & 28)
- Taco: Lechon with salsa verde, habanero pickled red onion (2 tacos, $15)
- Plate: Lechon with Mexican oregano, red onion, salsa verde and salsa de chile puya, pickled veggies + tortillas ($32 share plates)
Make a Lechon Reservation at Merkado
Azalina’s – Canela Collab (March 26 – 29)
The fifth-generation Malaysian street food vendor turned Michelin Guide–recognized chef and San Francisco restaurateur, Azalina Eusope, heads across town to the Castro for a four-day collab at Canela with Chef Mat Schuster. Shareable, tapas-style dishes will blend Spanish and Malaysian influences. Dishes will include:
- Spring White Sesame Gazpacho with Pa amb Tomato
- Coconut Milk Béchamel Croquetas with Anchovy Crumb
- Salt Cod with Malaysian-Style Samfaina and Malaysian-Style Risotto
- Malaysian-Style BBQ Pollastre amb Gambes
- Olive Oil Churros with Sparkling Wine Granita
Yum!
Make a Reservation for Azalina at Canela

Where to Read My Work
This month, I focused plentiful energy on my new website and newsletter – have you taken a look yet? Please do. I’d love to hear your thoughts.
I wrote about a few of the new places that have dropped into Marin for The Marin Dish.
I’ve also shifted my cookbook coverage. Instead of writing a review every month, I’m cooking – and writing about – one cookbook each quarter. This gives me the space to dive deeper into each cookbook I write about, cooking more than a few of the book’s recipes.
For Q1 2026, I chose, Nagi Maehashi’s Delicious Tonight. I had not heard of Maehashi until a visit from a grad school friend who lives in Hong Kong. She so loved Maehashi’s first cookbook, Dinner, that she encouraged me to review Delicious Tonight. I found the recipes well-planned and straight-forward with an undeniable global tilt. Maehashi’s cooking is approachable and saucy. She’s not afraid of a good carbohydrate as a vehicle to transport flavor. Her food is family-friendly, fun, and often delicious. Here’s my review.
FYI that I’m planning to bring back my holiday season Cookbook Gift Guide for 2026. (Here’s 2025’s Gift Guide as a reference).
Aaaaand, more next month!

Where to Eat: 5 Places to Eat Now

Kampachi Crudo with blood orange and sweet potato at Songbird Parlour
Now that new website is launched, albeit softly, I’m putting my restaurant coverage – Where to Eat and Best Bites – there.
For March, I consider San Francisco’s Xica, PLS on Post, Equal Parts, and True Laurel, as well as Songbird Parlour in the Sonoma County town of Glen Ellen.
Read my March column on my website.
About That Image
Chef Kim Alter at Nightbird is an inspiration – her women-forward March menu includes this stunning presentation: Lime “cheesecake” with sesame cake, sakura ice cream, buckwheat crumble, and lime gel. The plate is done in the style of kintsugi – the Japanese art of repairing broken pottery by mending the areas of breakage with urushi lacquer mixed with powdered gold, silver, or platinum.
How cool is that? The dish honors all the women ceramicists Nightbird works with. And maybe all of our broken hearts?
Thanks for reading and be in touch.
Christina