Rebecca Reichardt could have opened her restaurant in Sacramento,
or even San Francisco. Instead, she stayed in Woodland, where she was
raised, and where she still lives.
Though she’s a hometown girl through and through, Reichardt did
live in Sacramento for four months, taking courses at American River
College’s culinary program and working at Paragary’s, a well-known
Sacramento restaurant. She stuck with the job, not school: “I was learning
more at work, and they were paying me,” she laughs.
And, she says, “I liked the speed and the pressure and the
people.”
Apparently, it liked her too. Now, at age 27, she’s packing
in crowds at Tazzina Bistro, which opened last year
along Woodland’s quiet Main Street. The bistro, with a
changing menu of inventive New American fare like
sweetbreads, a Kobe beef burger, and fried green tomato
salad, has lured visitors from as far away as Oregon and Washington—
most of them venturing off Interstate 5—but it also has an enthusiastic
following with a broad cross section of locals.
The support from locals is only fitting, given Reichardt’s emphasis
on buying from area farmers and on helping her hometown come into
its own. “People have known that Woodland could do a lot more and
had resources that weren’t being tapped,” she says. “Woodland is proud
that someone is using their ingredients, and they show that in their
support.” —Kate Washington
INFO: Tazzina
Bistro ($$;
lunch Tue–Sat,
dinner Tue–Sun,
breakfast Sat,
brunch Sun; 614
Main St., Woodland;
530/661-
1700)