48 Best Restaurants in Napa and Sonoma, California

Altamont General Store

$$ Fodor's choice

Spouses Andzia and Jenay Hofftin opened this organic restaurant, retail and wine shop, and community gathering spot inside Occidental's oldest building (1872). The "farm-fresh comfort food" menu encompasses everything from egg sandwiches and a yogurt and grain-free-granola parfait for breakfast to vegan bowls and pork melts for lunch and (three days a week) early dinner until 7.

Barndiva

$$$$ Fodor's choice

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
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch weekdays

boon eat+drink

$$ Fodor's choice

A casual storefront restaurant on Guerneville's main drag, boon eat+drink has a menu built around salads, smallish shareable plates, and entrées that might include a vegan bowl, chili-braised pork shoulder, and local cod with shiitakes. Like many of chef-owner Crista Luedtke's dishes, the signature polenta lasagna—creamy ricotta salata cheese and polenta served on greens sautéed in garlic, all of it floating upon a spicy marinara sauce—deviates significantly from the lasagna norm but succeeds on its own merits.

16248 Main St., Guerneville, California, 95446, USA
707-869–0780
Known For
  • adventurous culinary sensibility
  • Sonoma County wine selection
  • sister restaurant Brot for German cuisine in same block
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues., Reservations not accepted

Recommended Fodor's Video

Cafe La Haye

$$ Fodor's choice

In a postage-stamp-size open kitchen (the dining room, its white walls adorned with contemporary art, is nearly as compact), chef Jeffrey Lloyd turns out understated, sophisticated fare emphasizing seasonably available local ingredients. Meats, pastas, and seafood get deluxe treatment without fuss or fanfare—and the daily risotto special is always worth trying.

140 E. Napa St., Sonoma, California, 95476, USA
707-935–5994
Known For
  • Napa-Sonoma wine list with French complements
  • signature butterscotch pudding
  • owner Saul Gropman on hand to greet diners
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch

Calistoga Depot

$ Fodor's choice

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.

Farmstead at Long Meadow Ranch

$$$ Fodor's choice

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.

Press

$$$$ Fodor's choice

For years this cavernous casual-chic restaurant with a contempo-barn interior and wraparound patio steps from neighboring vineyards was northern Napans' preferred stop for a top-shelf cocktail, dry-aged steak, and high-90s-scoring local Cabernet. You can still order a tomahawk or New York strip, but chef Philip Tessier, formerly of Yountville's The French Laundry and Bouchon Bistro and New York City's Le Bernardin, has introduced more refined cuisine, much of whose produce is grown nearby.

587 St. Helena Hwy./Hwy. 29, St. Helena, California, 95474, USA
707-967–0550
Known For
  • impressive craft cocktails for pairing with dozen-plus apps
  • Wine Spectator Grand Award for wide-ranging list
  • prix-fixe tasting menu highly recommended
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No lunch, Reservations essential

Restaurant at Auberge du Soleil

$$$$ Fodor's choice

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.

Screaming Mimi's

$ Fodor's choice

Pink on the outside, with tutti-frutti walls on the inside and colorful chairs painted by a local artist, Sebastopol’s hands-down favorite for all-natural ice cream and sorbet often appears in feature stories listing the nation's best shops. Mimi's Mud (espresso ice cream, cookies, chocolate chips, and homemade fudge) and strawberry made from local fruit are among the popular ice creams, with lemon, raspberry, and mango among the top palate-cleansing sorbets.

Solbar

$$$$ Fodor's choice

The restaurant at Solage attracts the resort's clientele, upvalley locals, and guests of nearby lodgings for sophisticated farm-to-table cuisine served in the high-ceilinged dining area or alfresco on a sprawling patio warmed by shapely heaters and a mesmerizing firepit. Dishes on the lighter side might include house-made pasta or sake-marinated fish, with duck breast, crispy pork, or a tomahawk steak among the heartier options.

The French Laundry

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Inside an ivy-laced old stone building and atop many a Napa Valley visitor's bucket list, chef Thomas Keller's destination restaurant lives up to the hype with intricate yet not overthought cuisine. Some courses on the two prix-fixe menus, one of which highlights vegetables, rely on luxe ingredients such as white quail; others take humble elements like carrots or fava beans and elevate them to art.

6640 Washington St., Yountville, California, 94599, USA
707-944–2380
Known For
  • signature starter "oysters and pearls"
  • "supplements" like white truffles, caviar, and Wagyu beef
  • superior wine list
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No lunch Mon.–Thurs., Reservations essential wks ahead, Reservations essential, Jacket required

Underwood Bar & Bistro

$$$ Fodor's choice

The same people who operate the Willow Wood Market Cafe across the street run this restaurant with a Continental atmosphere and a seasonal menu based on smaller and larger dishes. Entrées might include anything from hoisin-glazed ribs and seared scallops to "Thai Life" staples like chicken curry and crispy five-spice duck leg.

9113 Graton Rd., Graton, California, 95444, USA
707-823–7023
Known For
  • oyster of the day, French onion soup, and flatbread starters
  • old-style cocktails, ports, and cognacs
  • outdoor patio with heaters
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. No lunch Sun.–Thurs.

A La Heart Kitchen

$

A longtime Bay Area caterer opened this retail shop serving soups, salads, sandwiches, and a few entrées to go or eat indoors or on the front patio. Supplementing staples like turkey, tri-tip, and roasted portobello sandwiches—the Caesar salad is a town favorite—are surprise items, says the owner, "we just feel like cooking, like pot roast when it rains or Thai wraps on sunny days."

6490 Mirabel Rd., Forestville, California, 95436, USA
707-527–7555
Known For
  • good stop for picnic fixings or dining back at lodging
  • house-made blueberry-bacon maple scones
  • espresso drinks, chai tea, kombucha, Italian sodas
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues. No dinner

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
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Tues. and Wed. No lunch weekdays and Sat., Reservations essential

Avow Napa

$$$

The rooftop's the draw at this three-level brick-walled bar and restaurant opened by vintner Joseph Wagner, who grew up working at his family's Caymus Vineyards before starting Belle Glos Pinot Noir and other brands on his own. Small plates for pairing with updated classic cocktails might include caviar, oysters on the half shell, ceviche, and roasted bone marrow, but it's worth sticking around for dinner items like steelhead trout, pan-seared scallops, and cola-braised short rib.

813 Main St., Napa, California, 94559, USA
707-203–8900
Known For
  • international wines and beers
  • carved-wood first-floor bar
  • affiliated Quilt & Co. tasting room next door for Wagner's small-lot wines
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Tues. and Wed. No lunch

Bounty Hunter Wine Bar & Smokin' BBQ

$$

Every dish on the small menu at this wine store, wine bar, and restaurant is a standout, including the pulled-pork and smoked beef-brisket sandwiches served with three types of barbecue sauce, the meltingly tender St. Louis–style ribs, and the signature beer-can chicken (only Tecate will do). The space is whimsically rustic, with stuffed-game trophies mounted on the wall and leather saddles used as seats at a couple of tables.

Brewsters Beer Garden

$$

Succulent fried chicken and St. Louis ribs whose meat glides off the bone are among the hits at this open-air, partially covered restaurant where diners sit at sturdy oak picnic or high-top tables. Many of the ingredients come from top artisanal protein and produce purveyors; most of the two dozen beers on tap are by craft breweries.

Cafe Sarafornia

$

Longtime upvalley restaurateurs run this down-home diner whose efficient chefs churn out comfort food with a touch more flair than the zingy Cal-hippie decor might lead you to expect. Huevos rancheros and other egg dishes top the breakfast (until 2:30 closing) menu along with pancakes, waffles, French toast, and vegetarian and corned-beef hash; burgers (beef, fish, or black bean), tuna melts, sandwiches, wraps, and several salads headline at lunch, with sides that include crispy-golden onion rings.

1413 Lincoln Ave., Calistoga, California, 94515, USA
707-942–0555
Known For
  • huge portions
  • create-your-own omelets and egg scrambles
  • cakes and deep-dish pies
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No dinner

Calistoga Inn Restaurant & Brewery

$$$

When the weather's nice, the inn's outdoor patio and beer garden edging the Napa River are swell places to hang out and sip some microbrews. Among the beer-friendly dishes, the garlic-crusted calamari appetizer and the country paella entrée stand out, along with several pizzas, the burger topped with Tillamook cheddar, and (for lunch) the Reuben with ale-braised corned beef.

Contimo Provisions

$

Two chefs who've starred at fine-dining restaurants shifted gears to open this humble shop, expanded with seating in 2023, where everything's made from scratch, either by them or their vendors. The ingredients are all of the highest quality, which explains the long lines at breakfast for the Ham & Jam (buttermilk biscuits with molasses-brined ham and seasonal jam) and at lunchtime for the Cuban, mortadella, and a few others.

950 Randolph St., California, 94559, USA
707-782–6424
Known For
  • cold and hot coffee drinks
  • salads and other sides
  • ice-cream sandwich with homemade chocolate cookies
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon. No dinner

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
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues.

Crisp Kitchen & Juice

$$

"Elevate Your Everyday" glows a neon side at Crisp, whose spanking-clean interior mirrors the pristine food—avocado toast, beet-cured salmon tartine, breakfast and lunch bowls, and inventive juices, soups, broths, and smoothies—this health-oriented café serves. The location next to Sunshine Market (easy parking out front) may lack glamour, but the place exudes wellness, and the menu acknowledges the requirements of vegans, vegetarians, and carnivores alike.

1111 Main St., St. Helena, California, 94574, USA
707-657–4444
Known For
  • build-your-own granola bowls, breakfast sandwiches, and morning porridge
  • grab-and-go bowls and salads
  • wellness and superfood lattes (regular coffee drinks, too)
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. No dinner

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
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No lunch weekdays

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
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No lunch weekdays

Goose & Gander

$$$$

A Craftsman bungalow whose 1920s owner reportedly used the cellar for bootlegging during Prohibition houses this restaurant where the pairing of food and drink is as likely to involve a craft cocktail as a sommelier-selected wine. Main courses such as wood-grilled chicken or salmon, wet-aged black Angus rib eye, and the grass-fed G&G burger with Gruyère follow starters that might include corn croquettes, sticky pig ears, and harissa sausage with fry bread and baba ghanoush.

1245 Spring St., St. Helena, California, 94574, USA
707-967–8779
Known For
  • intimate main dining room with fireplace
  • alfresco patio dining
  • basement bar among Napa's best watering holes
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No lunch

Gott's Roadside

$

A 1950s-style outdoor hamburger stand goes upscale at this spot whose customers brave long lines to order breakfast sandwiches, juicy burgers, root-beer floats, and garlic fries. Choices not available a half century ago include ahi-tuna and Impossible burgers and kale and Vietnamese chicken salads.

933 Main St./Hwy. 29, St. Helena, California, 94574, USA
707-963–3486
Known For
  • tasty 21st-century diner cuisine
  • shaded picnic tables (arrive early or late for lunch to get one)
  • second branch at Napa's Oxbow Public Market
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Reservations not accepted

Howard Station Cafe

$

The mile-long list of morning fare at Occidental's neo-hippie go-to breakfast and weekend brunch spot includes order-at-the-counter huevos rancheros, omelets, eggs Benedict, waffles, pancakes, French toast, and "healthy alternatives" such as oatmeal, house-made granola, and quinoa and brown rice bowls with kale and eggs. Soups, salads, burgers, and monstrous sandwiches are on the menu for lunch at this laid-back space with seating inside a 19th-century gingerbread Victorian and outside on its wooden front porch and covered back patio.

3611 Main St./Bohemian Hwy., Occidental, California, 95465, USA
707-874–2838
Known For
  • mostly organic ingredients
  • juice bar
  • vegetarian and gluten-free items
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No dinner, Reservations not accepted

Kelly's Filling Station and Wine Shop

$

The fuel is more than petrol at this gas station–convenience store whose redbrick exterior recalls the heyday of Route 66 travel. The shop inside sells superb hot dogs, fresh scones from nearby R+D Kitchen, gourmet chocolates, and (in summer) ice cream—gas up, grab some picnic items, and be ever-so-merrily on your way.

6795 Washington St., Yountville, California, 94599, USA
707-944–8165
Known For
  • top-rated wines
  • picnic items
  • coffee, espresso, and cool drinks to go

Kivelstadt Cellars & WineGarten

$$

"The beer garden concept but with wine" is how winemaker Jordan Kivelstadt describes his roadhouse operation in southern Sonoma. Conventional wine tastings of Kivelstadt's sometimes unconventional wines take place here, with the outdoor space a lively combination restaurant and wine bar where local families and tourists mix it up while enjoying comfort fare that might include sweet-potato tacos, veggie potpie, smoked-chicken tostadas, and a mushroom Cubano on focaccia.

22900 Broadway, Sonoma, California, 95476, USA
707-938–7001
Known For
  • one-stop wine tasting and dining
  • vegan/vegetarian options
  • outdoor area good for travelers with pets and children
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Tues. and Wed. No dinner (but check website)

Lunch Box at Copia

$

Relieve restaurant sticker shock (somewhat) and long waits by ordering bowls, salads, sandwiches, and desserts online for pickup at CIA at Copia's main-entrance takeout window. Some items' herbs, fruits, and vegetables are grown steps away at the culinary institute's garden.

500 1st St., Napa, California, 94559, USA
707-967–2500
Known For
  • crab roll with crème fraîche dressing
  • soft-serve ice cream
  • open until 4 pm
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed weekends. No dinner