Terre Rouge / Easton would be my first choice too, and Vino Noceto would be a good option. Sobon often has some good wines though they can be hit or miss. You can check out a report I did recently for Grape-Nutz.com that includes a visit with Bill Easton: Visits to Sierra Foothills Wineries - November 2012 You can search the Grape-Nutz site for other Amador visits I’ve done in recent years. Depending on how long you’re in the area, it’s a pretty short drive north to wineries in the Fair Play area in southern El Dorado County too. For dinner, Taste in Plymouth would be my pick. Kind of pricey for the area but very good food.
We enjoyed many of the places mentioned above, as well as Dillian and Dobra Zemlja.
As mentioned, the museum at Sobon is worth the visit, especially if you go when the huge fig tree is tossing fruit. YUM!!
From Bryan A. Garner, Modern American Usage (Oxford University Press, 2003):
The spurious rule about not ending sentences with prepositions is a remnant of Latin grammar, in which a preposition was the one word that a writer could not end a sentence with. But Latin grammar should never straitjacket English grammar. If the superstition is a “rule” at all, it is a rule of rhetoric and not of grammar, the idea being to end sentences with strong words that drive a point home. That principle is sound, of course, but not to the extent of meriting lockstep adherence or flouting established idiom.
Or as Winston Churchill is reputed to have said in response to your criticism: “This is the type of arrant pedantry up with which I will not put.”
[quote="
Bryan A. Garner, Modern American Usage (Oxford University Press, 2003):"]
…in which a preposition was the one word that a writer could not end a sentence with.
[/quote]
Yeah, but you have to admit, “Where are you at?” grates the nerves not only for the prepositional ending, but the redundancy. The “at” serves as much purpose as the human appendix.