Napa and Sonoma Restaurants

Farm-to-table Modern American cuisine is the prevalent style in the Napa Valley and Sonoma County, but this encompasses both the delicate preparations of Yountville’s Thomas Keller, whose restaurants include The French Laundry, and the upscale comfort food served throughout the Wine Country. The quality (and hype) often means high prices, but you can find appealing, inexpensive eateries, especially in Napa, Calistoga, Sonoma, and Santa Rosa.

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  • 1. Barndiva

    $$$$

    Not one to rest on her laurels, the creative director of this urban-rustic restaurant responded to winning a prestigious fine-dining award by welcoming a new chef, mixologist, and wine lead, all with impressive credentials themselves. The worth-the-splurge cuisine, hinging on hyperfresh local ingredients from superstar purveyors, comes off even more intricate than before in dishes that might include kanpachi crudo or goat-cheese croquette apps or a smoked pork chop with Japanese sweet potato entrée.

    231 Center St., Healdsburg, California, 95448, USA
    707-431–0100

    Known For

    • Open-air front and back patios
    • Ornate, well-built cocktails
    • Friday and weekend brunch

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch weekdays
  • 2. Calistoga Depot

    $

    Calistoga's flashy 19th-century entrepreneur Sam Brannan built the depot in 1868 to receive spa patrons, but it was looking careworn until his 21st-century equivalent, Wine Country vintner-showman Jean-Charles Boisset, restored the wood-frame building and opened a combination gourmet grocery, café, wine shop, distillery, and wine and beer garden. As at Boisset's historic Oakville Grocery, salads, artisanal sandwiches, and wood-fired pizzas headline.

    1458 Lincoln Ave., Calistoga, California, 94515, USA
    707-963–6925

    Known For

    • All-day breakfast
    • Wine and craft-beer selection
    • Patio seating

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No dinner
  • 3. Farmstead at Long Meadow Ranch

    $$$

    In a high-ceilinged former barn with plenty of outside seating, Farmstead revolves around an open kitchen whose chefs prepare meals with grass-fed beef and lamb, fruits and vegetables, and eggs, olive oil, wine, honey, and other ingredients from nearby Long Meadow Ranch. Entrées might include wood-grilled trout with fennel and bacon-mustard vinaigrette; caramelized beets with goat cheese and chimichurri; or a wood-grilled heritage pork chop with jalapeño grits.

    738 Main St., St. Helena, California, 94574, USA
    707-963–4555

    Known For

    • Heritage St. Louis–style ribs
    • Sunday brunch
    • On-site general store, café, and Long Meadow Wines tasting space
  • 4. Fern Bar

    $$$

    The mixologists at this verdant "bar-focused restaurant" whip up creative "garden-to-glass" cocktails meant for pairing with neo-comfort food whose ingredients, especially the produce, are primarily cultivated in west Sonoma County. "Umami bomb" mushrooms with sticky rice and the tofu with turmeric and peanut velouté entice vegans and vegetarians at dinner, but with lamb sausage, roasted chicken, a smash burger, and pan-seared fish, there's plenty for meat eaters, too.

    6780 Depot St., Sebastopol, California, 95472, USA
    707-861–9603

    Known For

    • Inviting 21st-century tavern feel
    • Low-alcohol and spirit-free drink options
    • Sandwiches at lunch and weekday brunch

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No lunch Mon. and Tues.
  • 5. Lovina

    $$$$

    A vintage-style neon sign outside this bungalow restaurant announces "Great Food," and the chefs deliver with well-plated dishes served in two buildings, one a Craftsman gem, or on street-side patios that are especially festive during weekend brunch. The offerings at women-owned and  -run Lovina change often, but a recent menu's roasted Cornish hen, lobster and prawn risotto, and seared wild halibut with gnocchi and wild mushrooms are typical of the imaginative cuisine.

    1107 Cedar St., Calistoga, California, 94515, USA
    707-942–6500

    Known For

    • No-tipping policy
    • Varied brunch menu
    • Wine Wednesdays no corkage fee and discounts on wine list

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No lunch Mon.–Wed. and Fri.
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  • 6. Pearl Petaluma

    $$

    Regulars of this southern Petaluma "daytime café" with indoor and outdoor seating rave about its eastern Mediterranean–inflected cuisine—then immediately downplay their enthusiasm lest this unassuming gem become more popular. The menu changes often, but mainstays include shakshuka (a tomato-based stew with baked eggs) and a lamb burger dripping with fennel tzatziki.

    500 1st St., Petaluma, California, 94952, USA
    707-559–5187

    Known For

    • Weekend brunch
    • Fun beverage lineup, alcoholic and non
    • Menu prices include gratuity

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Tues. and Wed. No dinner
  • 7. Restaurant at Auberge du Soleil

    $$$$

    Possibly the most romantic roost for brunch, lunch, or dinner in all the Wine Country is a terrace seat at the Auberge du Soleil resort's illustrious restaurant, and the Mediterranean-inflected cuisine more than matches the dramatic vineyard views. The prix-fixe dinner menu (three or four courses), relying mainly on local produce, might include caviar or diver scallop starters, delicately prepared fish or vegetable middle-course options, and mains like prime beef pavé with béarnaise, spiced lamb loin, or Japanese Wagyu A5.

    180 Rutherford Hill Rd., Rutherford, California, 94573, USA
    707-963–1211

    Known For

    • Six-course chef's tasting menu
    • Comprehensive wine list
    • Special-occasion feel

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Reservations essential, Closed Mon. and Tues.
  • 8. Table Culture Provisions

    $$$$

    The chef-owners of this neighborly restaurant say their fare "walks the line between comfort and haute cuisine"—mostly California-inspired and "hyperseasonal" items that range from vegetarian butter-bean cassoulet (there's also a pork-belly version) to a 30-ounce tomahawk steak. The same could be said for the casual but knowing hospitality and the decor (bare wooden tables yet linen napkins), but it all works: dining here engenders quiet excitement.

    312 Petaluma Blvd. S, Petaluma, California, 94952, USA
    707-559–5739

    Known For

    • Raw bar and appetizers
    • Weekend brunch (clever updates of the classics)
    • Dinner tasting menu

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch weekdays
  • 9. Valley Bar + Bottle

    $$$

    The team behind this wine shop, bar, and restaurant across from Sonoma Plaza revamped a 19th-century adobe (though inside you'd never know it's this old) and expanded its outdoor patio, where most dining takes place. Sustainably produced seafood and meats find their way into "California home cooking"—summer dishes that might include halibut with corn and cherry tomatoes and winter ones like pork adobo or a half chicken with broccoli.

    487 1st St. W, Sonoma, California, 95476, USA
    707-934–8403

    Known For

    • XO deviled eggs, shrimp rolls, and other small plates
    • Organically and biodynamically farmed wines by iconoclastic producers
    • Weekend brunch with traditional fare plus less common alternatives

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Tues. and Wed.
  • 10. Ad Hoc

    $$$$

    At this low-key dining room with zinc-top tables, superstar chef Thomas Keller offers a changing daily fixed-price menu that might include smoked beef short ribs with creamy herb rice and charred broccolini or sesame chicken with radish kimchi and fried rice (check the website for that day's offerings). Ad Hoc also serves a small but decadent Sunday brunch, and Keller's Addendum annex, in a separate small building behind the restaurant, sells boxed lunches to go (including moist buttermilk fried chicken) from Thursday to Saturday except in winter.

    6476 Washington St., Yountville, California, 94599, USA
    707-944–2487

    Known For

    • Casual cuisine
    • Don't-miss buttermilk-fried-chicken night
    • Good prices for a Thomas Keller restaurant

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Tues. and Wed. No lunch weekdays and Sat., Reservations essential
  • 11. Bear

    $$$$

    The culinary garden guests pass on their way to the Stanly Ranch resort's main restaurant supplies fruit, produce, and herbs for the artisanal cocktails and well-conceived dishes served inside the stone-and-glass structure. A salmon crudo appetizer exemplifies the approach: each of the pristinely fresh ingredients (yogurt, young dill, raw salmon, trout roe, green apple, Japanese spice) registers well enough separately but soars as an ensemble.

    200 Stanly Crossroad, California, 94559, USA
    707-699–6250

    Known For

    • California-centric wine list with a global reach
    • Grand yet comfortable interior
    • Patio dining with pool and villa views
  • 12. Brix Napa Valley

    $$$

    A roadside stop for specialty cocktails, casual lunches, and evening fine dining, Brix shares ownership with Kelleher Family Vineyards, whose Cabernet Sauvignon grapevines surround the restaurant on three sides. Pan-seared fish, juicy Brix burgers, house-made pasta, and risotto appear on both the lunch and dinner menus, with prime rib the crowd-pleaser on Sunday night.

    7377 St. Helena Hwy., Napa, California, 94558, USA
    707-944–2749

    Known For

    • Verdant outdoor dining areas
    • Napa/Sonoma-centric wine list with older-vintage surprises
    • Sunday brunch

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Tues.
  • 13. Corner Project Ales & Eats

    $$

    Two microbrewing brothers' longtime dream, this storefront gastropub along Geyserville's slim commercial row serves their ales and other area craft brews, plus a rotating lineup of kombuchas, ciders, stouts, seltzers, and sours. The beverages beguile, as do the flavors in animal- and plant-based dishes that might include farro salad, cheddar cauliflower muffulettas, lamb burgers, roasted-mushroom melts, pickled vegetables, and pork belly sliders (good with the potent house IPA).

    21079 Geyserville Ave., Geyserville, California, 95441, USA
    707-814–0110

    Known For

    • Family-run business
    • Weekend brunch with egg dishes and waffles
    • Live music some evenings

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues.
  • 14. Costeaux French Bakery

    $

    Breakfast, served all day at this bright-yellow French-style bakery and café, includes the signature omelet (sun-dried tomatoes, bacon, spinach, and Brie) and French toast made from thick slabs of cinnamon-walnut bread. French onion soup and cranberry-turkey, chicken with Jarlsberg, and (on the cinnamon-walnut bread) Monte Cristo sandwiches are among the lunch favorites.

    417 Healdsburg Ave., Healdsburg, California, 95448, USA
    707-433–1913

    Known For

    • Breads, croissants, and fancy pastries
    • Quiche and omelets
    • Front patio

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues. No dinner, Reservations not accepted
  • 15. El Dorado Kitchen

    $$

    This restaurant owes its visual appeal to its clean lines and svelte decor, but the eye inevitably drifts westward to the open kitchen, where longtime executive chef Armando Navarro's team crafts dishes full of subtle surprises. The menu might include ceviche or roasted maitake mushrooms as starters and pan-roasted salmon, fettuccine carbonara, or paella awash with seafood among the entrées.

    405 1st St. W, Sonoma, California, 95476, USA
    707-996–3030

    Known For

    • Subtle tastes and textures
    • Truffle-oil fries with Parmesan
    • Takeout window for Mexican (plus the spicy burger)
  • 16. Evangeline

    $$$

    The gas-lamp-style lighting fixtures, charcoal-black hues, and bistro cuisine at Evangeline evoke old New Orleans with a California twist. The chefs put a jaunty spin on dishes that might include shrimp étouffée, duck confit, or steak frites; the elaborate weekend brunch, with pamplemousse (grapefruit) mimosas an acerbic intro to everything from raw oysters, avocado toast, and smoked salmon to shrimp and grits and prosciutto Benedict, is an upvalley favorite.

    1226 Washington St., Calistoga, California, 94515, USA
    707-341–3131

    Known For

    • Outdoor courtyard
    • Palate-cleansing Sazeracs
    • Gumbo ya-ya and addictive fried pickles

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No lunch weekdays
  • 17. Fleetwood Calistoga

    $$$

    Built-in wood-fired ovens anchor the open kitchen at this fun-casual spot with tile floors and bare light bulbs strung over the tables. Pizzas and pasta dishes made from farm-fresh ingredients dominate the menu, but straightforward fish, chicken, and steak entrées appear as well.

    1880 Lincoln Ave., Calistoga, California, 94515, USA
    707-709–4410

    Known For

    • Wood-fired pizzas
    • Full bar's happy hour
    • Fleetwood burger with Gruyère

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No lunch weekdays
  • 18. Grace's Table

    $$

    A dependable, varied menu makes this modest corner restaurant occupying a brick-and-glass storefront many Napans' go-to choice for a simple meal. Empanadas and iron-skillet cornbread with lavender honey and butter show up at all hours, with buttermilk pancakes and chilaquiles scrambled eggs among the brunch staples and cassoulet and roasted heirloom chicken popular for dinner.

    1400 2nd St., Napa, California, 94559, USA
    707-226–6200

    Known For

    • Congenial staffers
    • Good beers on tap
    • Eclectic menu focusing on France, Italy, and the Americas
  • 19. Gravenstein Grill

    $$$

    Tablecloths, cut flowers, and the soft glow of liquid paraffin candles and strings of lights overhead draw most diners to this casual-elegant restaurant's expansive outdoor patio. Chef Bob Simontacchi relies on local sources for the organic, sustainable ingredients in vegan, vegetarian, and omnivore bistro-style dishes like beet salad, braised red cabbage with bacon and Sebastopol apples, vegetable stew, foraged-mushroom risotto, and duck confit.

    8050 Bodega Ave., Sebastopol, California, 95472, USA
    707-634–6142

    Known For

    • Patio atmosphere
    • Artisanal wines, beers, and ciders
    • Barbecued chicken from massive smoker

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues.
  • 20. Hazel Hill

    $$$$

    Even before diners settle in their seats, the Montage resort's glass-walled destination restaurant captures the imagination with exterior views of vineyards, oaks, and far-off Mt. St. Helena and interior haute-luxury touches like chandeliers of locally handblown Czech glass. The Cali-Continental connection comes full circle in dishes—Pacific oysters with a spicy mignonette, perhaps, or halibut with shrimp, corn, and chanterelles—whose French flourishes elevate the seasonal ingredients.

    100 Montage Way, Healdsburg, California, 95448, USA
    707-354–6900

    Known For

    • Chef's tasting menu
    • Wagyu with foraged mushrooms and sauce au poivre (or go full-tilt with a Wagyu tomahawk)
    • Embrace of area wines on food-friendly international list

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