145 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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Angèle Restaurant & Bar

$$$$ Fodor's choice

A vaulted wood-beamed ceiling and paper-topped tables set the scene for romance at this softly lit French bistro inside an 1890s boathouse. Look for clever variations on classic dishes such as croque monsieur (grilled Parisian ham and Gruyère) and salade niçoise for lunch, with veal sweetbreads, cassoulet, beef bourguignon, and, in season, mussels steamed in aromatic fennel, white wine, garlic, and thyme for dinner.

Bazaar Sonoma

$$ Fodor's choice

The chef at this few-frills restaurant with seating outdoors under a massive poplar tree or inside at the bar and a handful of tables prepares pan-Chinese comfort cuisine. Dishes that might include pork wonton noodle soup, spicier Taiwan beef noodle soup, congee (rice porridge), sizzling black cod, and Szechuan mapo tofu with black bean sauce are easy to appreciate on their culinary merits, the bonus being the sense of deep cultural attachment underpinning them.

CA, USA
707-614–8056
Known For
  • Vegetarian selections
  • Seasonal dishes like Xi'an lamb stew in winter
  • Handy lunchtime stop between West County tastings
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. (but check)

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Bistro Don Giovanni

$$$ Fodor's choice

Giovanni Scala opened this boisterous roadhouse restaurant in the mid-1990s, and it's still a hangout of Napans who appreciate its Cal-Italian bistro cuisine, prepared with flair by Scott Warner, Scala's executive chef and partner. Warner augments the greatest-hits lineup—fritto misto (deep-fried calamari, onions, fennel, and shrimp), spinach ravioli with lemon cream or tomato sauce, slow-braised lamb shank, and wood-fired pizzas—with daily specials based on seasonal ingredients.

4110 Howard La., Napa, CA, 94558, USA
707-224–3300
Known For
  • Patio and garden dining
  • Specialty cocktails and aperitifs
  • Broad selection of Napa, Sonoma, and international wines

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Bistro Jeanty

$$$ Fodor's choice

Escargots, cassoulet, steak au poivre (pepper steak), and other French classics are prepared with precision inside this tan-brick country bistro whose flower-filled window boxes, extra-wide shutters, and red-and-white-striped awning hint at the old-world flair and joie de vivre that infuse the place. Regulars often start with the rich tomato soup in a flaky puff pastry before proceeding to sole meunière or coq au vin, completing the French sojourn with crème brûlée or other authentic dessert.

6510 Washington St., Yountville, CA, 94599, USA
707-944–0103
Known For
  • Traditional preparations
  • Oh-so-French atmosphere
  • Patio seating

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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.

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 vegan risotto, Moroccan chicken, and pan-seared local cod. 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, CA, 95446, USA
707-869–0780
Known For
  • Adventurous culinary sensibility
  • Sonoma County wine selection
  • Specials inspired by chef’s world travels for “Lost in Taste” ReachTV show
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues.
Reservations not accepted

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Bottega Napa Valley

$$$ Fodor's choice

At this softly lit, exposed-redbrick downtown trattoria occupying sections of the 19th-century former Groezinger Winery, the chefs transform local, seasonally changing ingredients into regional Italian cuisine. Staples like ricotta gnocchi with old-hen tomato sauce and the short rib smoked and braised in espresso agrodolce (sweet-and-sour sauce) and served with creamy ancient-grain polenta are rustic yet sophisticated.

6525 Washington St., Yountville, CA, 94599, USA
707-945–1050
Known For
  • Romantic setting
  • Soulful craft cocktails
  • Italian and California wines
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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Bouchon Bistro

$$$$ Fodor's choice

The team that created The French Laundry is also behind this place, where everything—the zinc-topped bar, antique sconces, suave waitstaff, and escargots, French onion soup, and salmon and beef tartare starters—could have come straight from a Parisian bistro. Sole Provençale, pan-seared flat iron steak with caramelized shallots, and mussels steamed with white wine, saffron, and Dijon mustard—the latter two served with crispy addictive fries—are among the perfectly executed entrées.

The Butcherman at The Sonoma Cheese Factory

$ Fodor's choice

No cheese is made at the factory, but the 2024 resurrection of this Sonoma Plaza fixture for picnic fixings surpassed previous iterations with the addition of The Butcherman, whose executive chef, Oscar Gomez, held the title of head butcher at Thomas Keller’s The French Laundry. Gomez and his team prep brisket, tri-tip, pulled-pork, turkey, and other smoked meats (there are also non-smoked options) for sandwiches or plates.

2 W. Spain St., Sonoma, CA, 95476, USA
707-996–1931
Known For
  • Avocado toast, scrambled-egg burrito for late breakfasts
  • Cheeses, charcuterie, baguettes, chips, sodas, and craft beers
  • Smart wine selection by Sonoma’s Best Mercantile
Restaurant Details
No dinner
Reservations not accepted

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Campanella Kitchen & Garden Patio

$$$ Fodor's choice

A portrait of restaurant consultant and Campanella co-owner Tom Rutledge's grandmother large in the covered patio seating area of his stylish yet snug restaurant inspired by East Coast Italian-American "red sauce" cuisine. The chef's 21st-century remixes of classics like the ones Nonna prepared in Brooklyn include marinara meatballs, butter beans, eggplant Parmesan, steamed clams with linguine, chicken cacciatore, and gnocchi with Bolognese ragout.

7365 Healdsburg Ave., Sebastopol, CA, 95472, USA
707-910–3030
Known For
  • Chicken parm pizza with vodka sauce
  • Specialty and classic cocktails
  • Weekend brunch
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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Catelli's

$$ Fodor's choice

Cookbook author and Iron Chef judge Domenica Catelli returned home to revive her family's American-Italian restaurant, a Geyserville fixture. Contemporary abstract paintings, reclaimed-wood furnishings, and muted gray and chocolate-brown walls signal the changing times, but you'll find good-lovin' echoes of traditional cuisine in the sturdy meat sauce that accompanies the signature lasagna, made with paper-thin noodles and a ricotta-and-herb-cheese filling.

21047 Geyserville Ave., Geyserville, CA, 95441, USA
707-857–3471
Known For
  • Three-meat ravioli and other pasta dishes
  • Festive back patio
  • Organic gardens
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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Charlie's

$$$ Fodor's choice

Elliot Bell, a French Laundry alum, St. Helena resident, and volunteer firefighter, took over a light-filled space formerly occupied by Cindy Pawlcyn of Mustards fame, enchanting patrons with elevated comfort cuisine and variations on fine-dining classics. Ingredients from local farms and protein purveyors go into apps, sides, and mains that might include abalone Rockefeller, shrimp and grits, slow-cooked trout, vegetarian potato Milanese, and brown-butter-aged Wagyu brisket.

1327 Railroad Ave., St. Helena, CA, 94574, USA
707-804–3099
Known For
  • Fried chicken (gluten-free option)
  • Bar and outdoor patio seating
  • Artisanal wines and beers (wine lounge upstairs)
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. and Wed.

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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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Cook St. Helena

$$$ Fodor's choice

A curved marble bar spotlit by contemporary art-glass pendants adds a touch of style to this downtown restaurant whose northern Italian cuisine pleases with understated sophistication. Mussels with house-made sausage in a spicy tomato broth, chopped salad with pancetta and pecorino, and the daily changing risotto are among the dishes regulars revere.

1310 Main St., St. Helena, CA, 94574, USA
707-963–7088
Known For
  • Intimate dining
  • Reasonably priced local and international wines
  • “mundae” gelato dessert with olive oil, reduced balsamic, and whipped cream
Restaurant Details
Closed weekends

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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.

Fern Bar

$$ Fodor's choice

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 five-spice pistachio entice vegans and vegetarians at dinner, but with pork belly skewers, chicken wings to share, a smash burger, and pan-seared fish, there's plenty for carnivores and pescatarians.

6780 Depot St., Sebastopol, CA, 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
No lunch Mon.–Thurs.

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The Girl & the Fig

$$$ Fodor's choice

At this hot spot for inventive French cooking inside the historic Sonoma Hotel bar, you can always find a dish with the signature figs on the menu, whether it's a fig-and-arugula salad or an aperitif blending sparkling wine with fig liqueur. Also look for duck confit, steak au poivre, mussels and frites, and wild flounder meunière.

Goldfinch

$$$ Fodor's choice

Northern California's diverse farm-fresh and ocean-fresh ingredients and global culinary influences converge exuberantly at this brick-walled bistro with brass-colored wire chandeliers, teal walls, and plush mahogany-brown booths. The food, much of it prepared by wood fire, matches the polished yet informal atmosphere, with pickled vegetables, oysters, and caviar whetting the appetite for shareable starters like ceviche, fried calamari, and roasted beets, followed by entrées that might include grilled fish or hanger steak, a pasta plate, or a heritage pork chop.

119 S. Main St., Sebastopol, CA, 95472, USA
707-827–9882
Known For
  • Happy hour (3–5) cocktails and bites
  • Perceptive wine selection
  • Desserts and after-dinner drinks
Restaurant Details
No lunch Mon. and Tues.

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Guiso Latin Fusion

$$$ Fodor's choice

Shortly after graduating from a local college's culinary program, chef Carlos Mojica opened this Latin American–Caribbean restaurant with a handful of tables inside and out front. Loyalists pine for chicken or pork sliders, halibut crudo, and pupusas (corn tortillas stuffed with cheese and pork or vegetables), a prelude to entrées like fish tacos with chili-yogurt sauce and Caribbean-style paella suffused with smoky-garlicky tomato broth.

117 North St., Healdsburg, CA, 95448, USA
707-431–1302
Known For
  • Attentive service
  • Distinctive flavors
  • Neighborhood feel
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch Tues.–Thurs.

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Himalayan Restaurant of Windsor

$$ Fodor's choice

Asian tapestries, Nepalese tunes, images of precipitous peaks, and the fragrant scent of curries transport patrons of this storefront restaurant to the Himalayas, at least for an hour. Locals enamored of the flavorful cuisine and solicitous service often pack the place for dinner, served indoors and on the adjoining patio.

Journeyman Meat Co.

$$ Fodor's choice

Sonoma County food lovers and national food writers are among the fans of Healdsburg’s premier butcher shop, whose products include hand-crafted salumi and jerky and other snacks. You can order a charcuterie board or sandwiches, pizzas, steak, and a lone salad to go or enjoy at tables inside or out.

404 Center St., Healdsburg, CA, 95448, USA
707-395–6328
Known For
  • BLT with Journeyman bacon on sourdough
  • Pizza verde with soppressata salumi, mozzarella, and arugula
  • San Lorenzo wines from founder’s small-batch winery
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. No dinner
Reservations not accepted

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Khom Loi

$$$ Fodor's choice

The chefs behind this open-kitchen storefront eatery have mastered the art of fusing northern Thai and Northern California techniques without sacrificing authenticity. Hits such as whole fried chili-pepper fish, green papaya salad, and curry-marinated duck breast captivate even before the first bite with their fragrant aromas, colorful presentation, and obviously fresh locally cultivated ingredients.

7385 Healdsburg Ave., Sebastopol, CA, 95472, USA
707-329–6917
Known For
  • Casual vibe
  • Patio seating area
  • Vegan, vegetarian, and gluten-free dishes
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch Wed. and Thurs.

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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, Vietnamese noodle salad, 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.

LaSalette Restaurant

$$$ Fodor's choice

Born in the Azores and raised in Sonoma, chef-owner Manuel Azevedo serves cuisine inspired by his native Portugal in this warmly decorated spot with a heated patio out front. The wood-oven roasted fish is always worth trying, and there are usually boldly flavored pork dishes, along with a casserole, pot roast, stew, salted cod, and other hearty fare.

452 1st St. E, Sonoma, CA, 95476, USA
707-938–1927
Known For
  • Authentic Portuguese cuisine
  • Sophisticated spicing
  • Rice pudding with Madeira-braised fig for dessert
Restaurant Details
Closed Wed.

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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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Maison Porcella

$$ Fodor's choice

The strip-mall location a mile southeast of Windsor's town green only adds to the cachet of this what-a-find combination charcuterie shop and bistro whose croque monsieur a local magazine anointed Sonoma County's best (madame's mighty fine, too). Chef-owner Marc-Henri Jean-Baptiste's Haitian-French roots, training under culinary icons Daniel Boulud and Alain Ducasse, and affinity for his local purveyors' "European mentality of respect for the environment and traditional agriculture practices" all inform Maison Porcella's dreamy cuisine.

8499 Old Redwood Hwy., Windsor, CA, 95492, USA
707-955–5611
Known For
  • Charcuterie plates, Parisian-style ham, chicken-liver mousse
  • French-dominant wine list
  • Last dinner seating at 7 pm
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon.

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The Mill at Glen Ellen

$$$ Fodor's choice

The redwood-timbered main dining space of this comfort-food haven recalls the 19th-century heyday of the former sawmill (later a grist mill) it occupies, though when the weather's nice most patrons take their meals on a plant-filled outdoor deck with timeless Sonoma Creek views. Culinary influences from Latin America to Southeast Asia underlie dishes that might include butternut squash risotto, poached salmon, and a porterhouse pork chop with a chipotle glaze.