Overhead view of communal wooden table with mismatched ceramic bowls holding ruby pickled radish, amber dashi, jade wakame, and ivory brown rice, hands reaching in with wooden chopsticks, natural window light catching steam

Where grain
becomes ceremony.

Communal dinners built from whole grains, fermented vegetables, and sea greens — prepared with intention, shared at a long wooden table.

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Close-up of a knife splitting a kabocha squash open, seeds glistening in warm autumn light, deep orange flesh exposed

The kabocha
knows autumn
before you do.

We split each squash by hand, feeling for density and resonance. Inside: dense, honeyed flesh that steams into a texture somewhere between chestnut and sweet potato. It needs nothing — only heat, time, and attention.

In macrobiotic cooking, kabocha is warming, centering, and sweet — a food that steadies the nervous system and satisfies without heaviness. We serve it simply: steamed, with a thread of sesame oil and a pinch of sea salt.

In season through March

Gomashio,
ground by hand.

Roasted sesame seeds and sea salt, ground in a suribachi until the oil releases and the kitchen fills with something warm and nutty. This is the sound of every Nourish dinner beginning.

Fermentation Shelf · Feb 2026

Ume Boshi

Jan 12

Miso

Nov 3

Kimchi

Feb 1

Amazake

Jan 28

Natto

Feb 8

Each jar is labeled by hand. Nothing is rushed.

Fermentation shelf with ceramic crocks and glass jars of miso, kimchi, and pickled vegetables, each labeled and dated, warm afternoon light raking across the surface

Alive with beneficial culture,
patient with time.

What guests carry
home with them.

I send every new patient here first. Before supplements, before protocols — I want them to taste what eating with intention actually feels like. Nourish does that without a single lecture.

Dr. Priya Mehta

Naturopathic Physician

San Francisco

We booked the post-retreat dinner for eighteen yogis and the table held us for three hours. The food was quiet and alive — exactly what the body needs after a week of practice.

Tomás Reyes

Retreat Director, Pacific Yoga Collective

Marin County

I came in skeptical — I eat everything and wasn't sure 'healing food' was for me. Left understanding what umami actually means and already thinking about the next dinner.

Juno Watanabe

Food Writer

Oakland

Choose your
evening.

March 2026

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Dinner
Workshop
Communal Dinner

Spring Awakening Dinner

March 8 · 7:00 pm

Miso soup, sprouted barley, pickled ume, kabocha

3 seats remaining
Reserve for March 8

Reserve Your Seat.

Dinners are small by design — never more than twenty guests. The table fills quickly.

2guests

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