10 Best Restaurants in Napa and Sonoma, California

Animo

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Even before charting on Esquire's list of 2022's best new restaurants, the intimate, bungalowlike establishment of New York City transplant Joshua Smookler (formerly chef at his own Mu Ramen and Thomas Keller's Per Se) was already drawing a crowd for its mash-up of Basque, Jewish, and Korean cuisines. Smookler, whose wife, Heidy He, runs the front of the house, consistently delights with idiosyncratic flavor combinations in dishes like feather-cut ibérico pork, lobster in XO sauce, grilled whole turbot, and dry-aged rib eye.

18976 Sonoma Hwy., Sonoma, California, 95476, USA
707-721–1160
Known For
  • open-hearth kitchen
  • cheesecake and other desserts
  • no web presence so must call for reservations
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch

Glen Ellen Star

$$$ Fodor's choice

Chef Ari Weiswasser honed his craft at The French Laundry, Daniel, and other bastions of culinary finesse, but his Sonoma Valley outpost revolves around haute-rustic cuisine, much of it emerging from a wood-fired oven. In 2022, Weiswasser turned the day-to-day reins over to a new chef de cuisine, but the mainstay crisp-crusted, richly sauced Margherita and other pizzas continue to thrive in the oven's torrid heat, as do tender whole fish entrées and vegetables roasted in small iron skillets.

13648 Arnold Dr., Glen Ellen, California, 95442, USA
707-343–1384
Known For
  • outdoor dining area
  • prix-fixe Wednesday "neighborhood night" menu with free corkage
  • Weiswasser's sauces, emulsions, and spices
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No lunch, Reservations essential

Kitchen Door

$$ Fodor's choice

Todd Humphries has overseen swank haute-cuisine kitchens in Manhattan, San Francisco, and the Napa Valley, but he focuses on multicultural comfort plates at his high-ceilinged industrial-contemporary restaurant downtown. The signature dishes include a silky cream of mushroom soup, flatbreads, pho, Thai fisherman's stew, duck banh mi sandwiches (go for the voluptuous duck jus add-on), and sweet, spicy, and succulent chicken wings among many other crowd-pleasers that keep this place hopping even in the off-season.

Recommended Fodor's Video

SingleThread Farm Restaurant

$$$$ Fodor's choice

The seasonally oriented Japanese dinners known as kaiseki inspire the 10-course prix-fixe vegetarian, meat, and seafood menu at the spare, elegant restaurant—redwood walls, walnut tables, mesquite-tile floors, muted-gray yarn-thread panels—of internationally renowned culinary artists Katina and Kyle Connaughton (she farms, he cooks). As Katina describes the endeavor, the micro-seasons of their nearby farm plus SingleThread's rooftop garden of fruit trees and greens dictate Kyle's rarefied fare, prepared in a theatrically lit open kitchen.

Willi's Wine Bar

$$$$ Fodor's choice

First in a historic roadside haunt that perished in the 2017 wildfires and now in a strip mall location more urbane than its exterior suggests, Willi's serves inventive globe-trotting small plates paired with international wines. Pork-belly pot stickers represent Asia, the Mediterranean inspires Tunisian roasted local carrots and Moroccan-style lamb chops, and curried crab tacos straddle two, maybe three, continents.

Bird and the Bottle

$$$

The owners of Willi's Seafood, Bravas Bar de Tapas, and other Sonoma County favorites operate this "modern tavern" serving global bar bites and comfort food in a multiroom, nostalgic yet contemporary space that evokes home, hearth, and good cheer. Shrimp wontons, matzo-ball soup, Cobb salad, pork belly, and skirt steak all go well with the wines, craft cocktails, and artisanal beers and ciders.

1055 4th St., Santa Rosa, California, 95404, USA
707-568–4000
Known For
  • small bites and full meals
  • classic and specialty cocktails
  • happy hour Sunday–Thursday 3–5 pm

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.

Pat's International

$$
On Main Street for several generations, Pat's got a new lease on life when a pop-up chef known for gooey-delicious, highly addictive Korean fried chicken (aka "Korean Fried Crack") bought the place and broadened its menu to include chicken pozole, huevos rancheros, and other international comfort food items. The setting—diner with counter and booths on one side, "dining room" with fake grass and picnic tables on the other, and plenty of cabinlike wood paneling all around—is peppy ersatz retro.
16236 Main St., Guerneville, California, 95446, USA
707-604–4007
Known For
  • playful ambience
  • artful spin on American classics
  • KFT (with tofu), noodle bowls, and other nonmeat options
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Wed. No dinner Thurs.

R+D Kitchen

$$

As the name suggests, the chefs at this restaurant with an expansive patio often packed on weekends are willing to experiment, starting with sushi plates that include spicy hiramasa (yellowtail kingfish) rolls with rainbow-trout caviar. Rotisserie chicken, wild-mushroom meat loaf, the buttermilk fried-chicken sandwich topped with Swiss, and a slow-roasted pork sandwich served with coleslaw are perennial favorites.

The Block Petaluma

$$

A microbrewery, a wood-fired pizza stand, and a barbecue joint anchor this downtown food park with indoor and outdoor dining areas, the latter a patio with fire pits. On weekends, food trucks motor over, adding, depending on the day, Greek, Mexican, Filipino, and other cuisines to the mix.