32 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

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

Cyrus

$$$$ Fodor's choice

A decade after his beloved, same-named Healdsburg restaurant closed, celebrity chef Douglas Keane of Top Chef Masters and other fame reopened a "2.0" version inside an 8,000-square-foot steel, glass, and concrete structure set in an Alexander Valley vineyard. Keane bills his prix-fixe culinary experience as a "dining journey," with guests (couples'-rate only; single diners charged double) changing rooms a few times for multiple internationally inspired courses based on hyper-seasonal mostly Northern California ingredients.

275 Hwy. 128, Geyserville, California, 95441, USA
707-318–0379
Known For
  • architectural stunner in a rural setting
  • reservations (essential) released in monthly blocks two months in advance
  • Bubbles Lounge for cocktails and small bites à la carte (no reservations)
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon.–Wed. No lunch

Recommended Fodor's Video

Edge

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Inside a former residence that received a high-design makeover down to its open-air patio, this restaurant began as an exclusive perk for Stone Edge Farm Estate's wine-club members; though now open to all, it still flies under the radar. Prix-fixe meals built around organically grown ingredients from the winery's nearby farm might include an appetizer like tuna adorned with crispy shallots, kumquats, and cashews followed by a salad of picked-the-same-day greens and a sensitively spiced fish, meat, or vegetarian entrée.

139 E. Napa St., Sonoma, California, 95476, USA
707-935–6520
Known For
  • regenerative farming techniques employed in the vineyard and culinary garden
  • prix-fixe rate that includes wine pairings
  • wine tasting Thursday–Sunday noon–5
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun.–Tues. No lunch

Gatehouse Restaurant

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Gung-ho Culinary Institute of America students in their final semester run this excellent if unheralded restaurant in a historic stone structure. A solid value, the three- or four-course prix-fixe meals—oft-changing, nicely plated dishes—emphasize local ingredients, some so local they're grown on-site or nearby.

Kenzo

$$$$ Fodor's choice

From the limestone floor to the cedar walls and cypress tabletops, most of the materials used to build this downtown Napa restaurant specializing in seasonally changing multicourse kaiseki meals were imported from Japan, as was the ceramic dinnerware. Delicate preparations of eel, abalone, bluefin tuna, and slow-roasted Wagyu tenderloin are typical of the offerings on the prix-fixe menu, which also includes impeccably fresh, artistically presented sashimi and sushi courses.

1339 Pearl St., Napa, California, 94559, USA
707-294–2049
Known For
  • spare aesthetic
  • delicate preparations
  • wine and sake selection
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch

La Toque

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Chef Ken Frank's La Toque is the complete package: his French-inspired cuisine, served in a formal dining space, is complemented by a wine lineup that consistently earns the restaurant a coveted Wine Spectator Grand Award. Ingredients appearing on the à la carte and prix-fixe tasting menus often include caviar, Alaskan halibut, Wagyu beef, and rich cheeses in dishes prepared and seasoned to pair with wines jointly chosen by the chefs and master sommelier.

Lovina

$$$$ Fodor's choice

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.

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.

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.

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.

Table Culture Provisions

$$$$ Fodor's choice

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.

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

The Matheson

$$$$ Fodor's choice

The location of Dustin Valette's farm-to-table restaurant holds a special place in his heart: the bar and its Wine Wall taps dispensing mostly Sonoma County wines occupy the space where the Geyserville native's great-grandfather ran a bakery a century ago. Valette describes the menu—aged meats creatively adorned, local fish with recently plucked vegetables—as a "love letter" to local agriculture, a point driven home by the large, bright paintings of farm and culinary activity hanging above the dining-room floor.

106 Matheson St., Healdsburg, California, 94558, USA
707-723–1106
Known For
  • ingredients harvested for peak ripeness
  • see-and-be-seen dining
  • rooftop bar for craft cocktails and bar bites
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No lunch

Torc

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Torc means "wild boar" in an early Celtic dialect, and owner-chef Sean O'Toole, who formerly helmed kitchens at top Manhattan, San Francisco, and Yountville establishments, occasionally incorporates the restaurant's namesake beast into his eclectic offerings. A recent menu featured tuna tartare, squash risotto, three hand-cut pasta dishes, a side of mushrooms foraged by a local pro, and Maine diver scallops in a lobster emulsion, all prepared by O'Toole and his team with style and precision.

1140 Main St., Napa, California, 94559, USA
707-252–3292
Known For
  • jolly only-at-the-bar happy hour (4–6 pm, nine seats total)
  • specialty cocktails
  • Bengali sweet-potato pakora and deviled-egg appetizers
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch

Troubadour Bread & Bistro

$$$$ Fodor's choice

The founders of Quail & Condor, both formerly of SingleThread Farms, followed up the success of their small bakery in town with this shop and restaurant that by day showcases their naturally fermented sourdough breads in sandwiches ($–$$) distinguished by their expressive flavors. Come evening, the kitchen shifts into fine-dining mode, producing multicourse prix-fixe French-inspired "Le Dîner" meals, served at counters and a communal table, that quickly evolved into a local hot ticket.

Valette

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Northern Sonoma native Dustin Valette opened this homage to the area's artisanal agricultural bounty with his brother, who runs the high-ceilinged dining room, where the playful contemporary lighting tempers the austerity of the exposed concrete walls and butcher-block-thick wooden tables. Charcuterie is an emphasis, but also consider the signature day-boat scallops en croûte (in a pastry crust) or dishes that might include coriander-crusted duck breast, Duroc pork tenderloin, or pan-roasted trout.

344 Center St., Healdsburg, California, 95448, USA
707-473–0946
Known For
  • "Trust me" (the chef) tasting menu
  • mostly Northern California and French wines
  • pot de crème and other desserts worth saving room for
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No lunch

Walter Hansel Wine & Bistro

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Tabletop linens and lights softly twinkling from this ruby-red roadhouse restaurant's low wooden ceiling raise expectations the Parisian-style bistro cuisine consistently exceeds. A starter of cheeses or French onion soup awakens the palate for entrées like chicken cordon bleu, steak au poivre, or seafood dishes that might include scallops in a rich yet somehow delicate gastrique or subtly sauced wild Alaskan halibut.

3535 Guerneville Rd., Santa Rosa, California, 95401, USA
707-546–6462
Known For
  • romantic setting for classic cuisine
  • prix-fixe option
  • vegan and vegetarian dishes
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch

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.

Acacia House

$$$$

Inside the bright-white 1907 Georgian-style structure anchoring the otherwise contemporary Alila Napa Valley resort, Acacia House serves ambitious cuisine—sea urchin cacio e pepe (cheese and pepper pasta), perhaps, or jamón ibérico schnitzel—that generally lives up to the elegant setting. At lunch, the chefs, who source ingredients from top purveyors (the quality duly reflected in the prices), also turn out comfort fare like avocado toast with trout and a burger with slow-cooked tomato and caramelized onion.

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

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.

Cole's Chop House

$$$$

When only a thick, flawlessly cooked New York or porterhouse (dry-aged by the eminent Allen Brothers of Chicago) will do, this steak house inside an 1886 stone building is just the ticket. New Zealand lamb chops are the nonbeef favorite, with oysters Rockefeller, beef carpaccio, and creamed spinach among the options for starters and sides.

1122 Main St., Napa, California, 94559, USA
707-224–6328
Known For
  • large outdoor patio
  • borderline-epic wine list
  • whiskey flights, cocktail classics done right
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No lunch, Reservations essential

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

Hal Yamashita Napa

$$$$

The owner of casual and fine-dining restaurants in Japan and elsewhere, Kobe-born chef Haruyuki Yamashita gained fame within his native land for techniques that modernized Japanese cuisine. At his sparsely decorated Napa location—black, gray, and brown tones, polished concrete floor, gleaming open kitchen—his team prepares prix-fixe multicourse meals, but you can also order sushi, tempura, and other items à la carte.

1300 Main St., Napa, California, 94559, USA
707-699–1864
Known For
  • superlative sushi
  • artisanal sake selection
  • happy hour (5–6 weekdays, 4–5 weekends)
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Tues. No lunch

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.

John Ash & Co.

$$$$

A dress-up multiroom special-occasion establishment that debuted in 1980, John Ash bills itself as Sonoma County's first farm-to-table restaurant, but its legacy extends even further: the namesake founder, no longer involved, was among several pioneering Wine Country chefs who tailored their cuisine to the region's wines. Though eclipsed as a destination restaurant by rivals in Healdsburg and elsewhere, this remains a worthy stop for well-crafted dishes like rack of lamb, pan-seared dayboat scallops, and brick chicken.

4350 Barnes Rd., Santa Rosa, California, 95403, USA
707-527–7687
Known For
  • raw and cooked oysters and other apps
  • happy hour (3–5 pm) beverages and small bites
  • Sonoma-centric wine list with international selections
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch

Morimoto Napa

$$$$

Iron Chef star Masaharu Morimoto is the big name behind this downtown Napa restaurant where everything is delightfully over the top, including the desserts. Organic materials such as twisting grapevines above the bar and rough-hewn wooden tables seem simultaneously earthy and modern, creating a fitting setting for the gorgeously plated Japanese fare, from straightforward sashimi to more elaborate seafood, chicken, pork, and beef entrées.

Oyster

$$$$

Building on the success of Sushi Koshō across the street, chef Jake Rand opened this "Champagne and bivalves" sidewalk café specializing in raw and cooked seafood accompanied by sides like marvelously crispy duck-fat fries and an iceberg salad Louie with rock shrimp, avocado, smoked bacon, and confit tomato. Straddling two garagelike industrial spaces with indoor and outdoor seating, Oyster opens at 2 pm, making it a good stop for a late lunch or early dinner.