46 Best Restaurants in Napa and Sonoma, California

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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.

Altamont General Store

$$ Fodor's choice

Spouses Andzia and Jenay Hofftin opened this organic restaurant, wineshop, retail space, and community hangout inside Occidental's oldest building (1876), originally a hotel. The "farm-fresh comfort food" menu encompasses egg burritos, avocado “smash” toast, and pork-sausage sandwiches for breakfast and vegetarian bowls, pork melts, and the popular Hawaiian-inspired beef hot dog with grilled pineapple relish for lunch and (three days a week) early dinner until 7.

3703 Main St., Occidental, CA, 95465, USA
707-874–6053
Known For
  • Ingenious ingredients and spicing
  • Children's menu
  • Groceries, handmade jewelry, bath products, books, ceramics
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. and Wed. No dinner Sun. and Mon.

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Black Oak Coffee Roasters

$ Fodor's choice

Skilled baristas churn out a dizzying array of coffee drinks—drip, cold brew, all the fave espresso options—in a clean downtown space with white walls and teal wainscoting. Pastries, avocado toast, quiche, and egg-inflected sandwiches (some vegan or gluten-free) are the breakfast hits, with banh mi and the like added for lunch.

Contimo

$ Fodor's choice

Two chefs who've starred at fine-dining restaurants shifted gears to open this informal eatery 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 sandwiches that usually include mortadella, chicken Parmesan with heirloom tomato sauce, and pimento cheese.

950 Randolph St., Napa, CA, 94559, USA
707-782–6424
Known For
  • Cold and hot coffee drinks
  • Salads and other sides
  • Ice-cream sandwich with homemade chocolate cookies
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No dinner

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Recommended Fodor's Video

Les Pascals

$ Fodor's choice

A bright-yellow slice of France in downtown Glen Ellen, this combination pâtisserie, boulangerie, and café takes its name from its husband-and-wife owners, Pascal and Pascale Merle. Pascal whips up croissants, breads, turnovers, and sweet treats like napoleons, galettes, and éclairs, along with quiches, potpies, and other savory fare; Pascale creates a cordial environment for customers to enjoy them.

The Lodge at Dawn Ranch

$$$ Fodor's choice

West County's most handsome restaurant, softly lit, with a fireplace, an open-trestle ceiling, wooden floors and tables, and long mauve-cushioned banquette benches running down the middle, hides in plain sight at the Dawn Ranch resort. The cuisine is ultimately modern American, but the lead chefs' South American influences reveal themselves in small plates that might include a fried tapioca and cheese appetizer or large ones like Wagyu striploin with house-made chimichurri.

16467 Hwy. 116, Guerneville, CA, 95446, USA
707-869–0656
Known For
  • Outdoor dining on second-floor deck in good weather
  • Vegan and dairy- and gluten-free dishes
  • Abbreviated lounge menu Tuesday–Thursday
Restaurant Details
No lunch weekdays

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Loveski Deli

$ Fodor's choice

Christopher Kostow gained fame as the award-winning chef of the Restaurant at Meadowood, the essence of Napa Valley haute fine dining, but the fare and mood are more down-to-earth at the order-at-the-counter deli he and his marketing-whiz wife, Martina Kostow, opened at the Oxbow Public Market. Bagels and bagel sandwiches anchor the breakfast menu, with pastrami and smoked-whitefish-salad sandwiches appearing for lunch and early dinner, along with matzo ball soup, latkes, and other stalwarts.

610 1st St., Napa, CA, 94559, USA
707-294–2525
Known For
  • Updated take on deli classics (kimchi with Reuben)
  • "always boiled," gluten-free bagels with trad (smoked salmon) and rad (miso vegetable) spreads
  • Happy hour 3 pm–(early) closing
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Pearl Petaluma

$$ Fodor's choice

Regulars of this southern Petaluma "daytime café" with indoor and outdoor seating rave about its eastern Mediterranean–inflected cuisine—immediately downplaying their enthusiasm lest this quiet 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, CA, 94952, USA
707-559–5187
Known For
  • Weekend brunch
  • Fun beverage lineup, alcoholic and non
  • Menu prices include gratuity
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. and Wed. No dinner

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Piknik Town Market

$ Fodor's choice

Longtime resident and community favorite Mags van der Veen runs this bakery and gourmet shop, for years called Big Bottom Market, where she serves soups, salads, and sandwiches with well-thought-out flavor combos. The sweet and savory biscuits are her variation on the recipe of a previous owner whose mix made Oprah's Favorite Things list.

16228 Main St., Guerneville, CA, 95446, USA
707-604–7295
Known For
  • Breakfast burritos with chipotle crema
  • BLT on a biscuit and Coastal Sage sandwich (turkey, melted Gouda, and garlic aioli on Dutch crunch roll)
  • Picnic lunches
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. No dinner
Reservations not accepted

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Quail & Condor

$ Fodor's choice

A wife and husband with upper-echelon fine-dining credits run this bakery (set to relocate during 2025 from its original site at 149 Healdsburg Avenue) that the New York Times lauded as one of America's best. The recognition confirmed what locals have known since the shop opened about the ingredients, craft, and imagination that go into creating the bread, cakes, cookies, and pastries sold here.

44 Mill St., Healdsburg, CA, 94558, USA
707-473–8254
Known For
  • Croissants, kouign amanns, salted-egg morning buns, canelés, and cinnamon rolls
  • Turkish-influenced breakfast items
  • Baguettes, Danish rye, and pane Siciliano sourdough bread
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Ray Ray’s Tacos

$ Fodor's choice

Chef-owner Rachel "Ray Ray" Williams's Southern background, education at the Culinary Institute of America, stint at Meadowood resort, and experience as a graphic designer all inform the Austin-style gourmet tacos she serves in a stone-walled old building. Williams first gained notice at the St. Helena's Farmers Market for breakfast tacos whose novel combinations, high-quality ingredients, and balanced flavors and colors inspire pilgrimages from fans throughout the Bay Area.

1304 Main St., St. Helena, CA, 94574, USA
707-512–3129
Known For
  • Good stop between wine tastings
  • "everyone's favorite" Eleanor breakfast taco (smoked bacon, scrambled eggs, and Monterey Jack)
  • Ready-to-heat taco kits to go
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon.

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Retrograde Coffee Roasters

$ Fodor's choice

Pick up town gossip along with your beverage—regular, espresso, and cold-brew coffees; various teas, enlivened kefir, and wellness beet, matcha, and turmeric lattes—at this combination shop and café committed to green and sustainable practices. Gluten-free bread and bagels (regular, too) are available for all sandwiches.

130 S. Main St., Sebastopol, CA, 95472, USA
707-827–8065
Known For
  • Breakfast sandwiches, granola parfait, oatmeal
  • Vegan and nonvegan sandwiches for lunch
  • “build your own toast” with sweet and savory options
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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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 festive patio warmed by shapely heaters and a mesmerizing firepit. Dishes on the lighter side might include house-made pasta or sake-marinated fish, with crispy pork or a slow-braised short rib among the heartier options.

Sonoma Eats

$ Fodor's choice

Chef Efrain Balmes attracted such throngs for his "real Mexican food" truck specializing in his native Oaxacan cuisine that he finally went full brick-and-mortar, creating a colorfully casual order-at-the-counter space with wooden-top tables and pastel blue metal chairs (there’s also a covered outdoor patio). The tacos—fish, shrimp, potato, mushroom, pork, and an outstanding lamb one—and the signature mole Oaxaqueño sauce are the must-tries here, the latter with either an enchilada or a burrito.

18133 Sonoma Hwy., Sonoma, CA, 95476, USA
707-343–1141
Known For
  • Daily and Taco Tuesday specials
  • Breakfast burritos, egg dishes, and locally roasted coffee
  • Mexican beers, sodas, and agua frescas
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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Valley Bar + Bottle

$$$ Fodor's choice

The team behind this wineshop, 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.

487 1st St. W, Sonoma, CA, 95476, USA
707-934–8403
Known For
  • XO deviled eggs and other starters
  • Wines chosen for producers' earth-sensitive farming practices
  • Weekend brunch with traditional fare plus less-common alternatives
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. and Wed.

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Violetto

$$$$ Fodor's choice

A chef with a national reputation applies classic Italian and French techniques to predominantly California ingredients inside the 1907 Georgian-style mansion housing the Alila Napa Valley resort's destination restaurant. Lunch items like a griddled mortadella sandwich or smash burger give way at dinner to more intricate à la carte fare like squash blossom bucatini and Santa Barbara sea urchin or truffled Petaluma hen, but the prix-fixe and tasting menus demonstrate the culinary team's prowess the best.

Acorn Cafe

$

Lemon-ricotta pancakes, tiramisu French toast, an acai berry bowl, and avocado toast with feta and pickled shallots score high with patrons of this light-filled, order-at-the-counter brunch-all-day café that debuted in late 2024. Seasonal salads, chipotle steak, and teriyaki fried chicken sandwiches are good lunchtime choices, enjoyed indoors on the large front patio with plaza views.

124 Matheson St., Healdsburg, CA, 95448, USA
707-955–7001
Known For
  • Breakfast burger with artisanal bacon, crispy hash browns, and fried egg
  • Limited 3–5 pm Snack Time Happy Hour menu
  • Grab-and-go selections
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Bear

$$$$

The culinary garden guests pass on their way to the Stanly Ranch resort's main restaurant supplies pristine fruit, produce, and herbs for the artisanal cocktails and well-conceived dishes served inside this stone-and-glass structure. Start with vegetables and dip, raw oysters, or the more unusual bison tartare for lunch or dinner, before moving on to a Wagyu burger or hot chicken sandwich for lunch or scallops, lamb ribs, or quail for dinner.

Boon Fly Café

$$

This small spot that melds rural charm with industrial chic serves updated American classics such as fried chicken (free-range in this case), burgers (with Kobe beef), steak, fish, and a pasta dish or two. The flatbreads—including smoked salmon with fromage blanc, Parmesan, lemon crème fraîche, and capers—are worth a try.

Bouchon Bakery

$

There's almost always a line outside the bakery next door to Thomas Keller's Bouchon Bistro. The textbook golden-brown croissants star, and the brownies, macarons, kouign-amanns, artisanal breads, and savory sandwiches are equally alluring.

Cafe Sarafornia

$

The efficient chefs at this down-home diner 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 closing) menu, along with pancakes, waffles, French toast, and vegetarian and corned-beef hash; burgers (beef, fish, black bean), tuna melts, sandwiches, wraps, and several salads headline at lunch.

1413 Lincoln Ave., Calistoga, CA, 94515, USA
707-942–0555
Known For
  • Huge portions
  • Create-your-own omelets and egg scrambles
  • Cakes and deep-dish pies
Restaurant Details
No dinner (closes at 12:30 pm weekdays)

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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.

1250 Lincoln Ave., Calistoga, CA, 94515, USA
707-942–4101
Known For
  • Comfort food
  • Kid-friendly patio
  • Egg dishes, French Toast, and overnight oats for breakfast

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Costeaux French Bakery

$

Breakfast, served through lunchtime 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, CA, 95448, USA
707-433–1913
Known For
  • Breads, croissants, and fancy pastries
  • Quiche and omelets
  • "La Terrasse" seasonal midweek bistro-style pop-up dinners ($$) a tasty value
Restaurant Details
No dinner Sat.–Tues. year-round and Wed.--Fri. late fall–early spring (but check)
Reservations not accepted

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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, CA, 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)
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. No dinner

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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, CA, 95476, USA
707-996–3030
Known For
  • Caviar and raw oysters starters
  • Truffle-oil fries with Parmesan
  • Cantina take-out window for Mexican (plus the spicy burger)

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El Molino Central

$

The goodness at Karen Waikiki's roadside restaurant, which has more tables outside than in, starts with high-quality ingredients and authentic techniques. The stars include tamales (chicken mole, Niman Ranch pork, and seasonal vegetables), tacos filled with beer-battered fish or crispy beef, ahi tostadas poke style, and enchiladas and burritos.

11 Central Ave., Sonoma, CA, 95476, USA
707-939–1010
Known For
  • Crispy three-cheese potato tacos
  • Handmade tortillas and tamales from organic stone-ground heritage corn
  • Breakfast chilaquiles Merida (Friday--Sunday morning)
Restaurant Details
Reservations not accepted

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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, CA, 94559, USA
707-226–6200
Known For
  • Congenial staffers
  • Beers, wines, and Sabé cocktails
  • Varied menu focusing on France, Italy, and the Americas

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Grossman’s Noshery and Bar

$

An homage to Jewish delis, Grossman's plays the greatest hits—blintzes, latkes, lox, chopped liver, and knishes, plus pastrami, corned beef, and Reuben sandwiches all on house-made breads—but mashes things up with quinoa tabbouleh, chicken shawarma kebabs, fish-and-chips, and other atypical deli dishes. The retro-eclectic decor (black-and-white ceramic tile floors, colorful tropical-bird-print wallpaper, chunky stone fireplace) feels nostalgic yet of the moment.

308½ Wilson St., Santa Rosa, CA, 95401, USA
707-595–7707
Known For
  • Full bar
  • Meats and fish cured and smoked in-house
  • Picnic-table seating beside the building

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Hazel Hill

$$$$

Even before diners settle in their seats, the Montage resort's glass-walled special-occasion 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—rabbit cassoulet or caviar with house-made potato chips to start, perhaps, or striped bass with prawn, uni, saffron, and fennel—whose French flourishes elevate the seasonal ingredients.

Honor Market

$

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 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.

House of Better

$$

A family-friendly, mostly open-air spa restaurant, HoB promotes wellness via Southwest-inspired "booster food" like a quinoa-and-kale salad and bowls containing sautéed kale, red quinoa, green chilies, and avocado. To reel in the wary, House of Better hedges its bet with nicely spiced fish tacos, going full carnivore with a green-chili cheeseburger and pepper steak add-ons to nachos, enchiladas, burritos, and tacos.