18 Best Restaurants in Napa and Sonoma, California

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 au chocolat or another authentic dessert.

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 traditional French onion soup—could have come straight from a Parisian bistro. Pan-seared flat iron steak with caramelized shallots and mussels steamed with white wine, saffron, and Dijon mustard—both served with crispy, addictive fries—are among the perfectly executed entrées.

Coqueta Napa Valley

$$$ Fodor's choice

From pintxos and paellas to Iberian cheeses and fish à la plancha (flat-grilled), the chefs at this Wine Country offspring of Michael Chiarello's successful San Francisco restaurant Coqueta reimagine Spanish classics with a 21st-century farm-to-table sensibility. The frenetic pace in the flame-happy open kitchen, inside Yountville's redbrick former railroad depot, keeps the mood lively in the relatively small dining space, with the vibe on the patio out back even more so.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Regiis Ova Caviar & Champagne Lounge

$$$ Fodor's choice

Even restaurateurs as famous as Thomas Keller test out concepts via pop-ups, though in retrospect his pairing of mostly French sparkling wines with caviar from a company (Regiis Ova) the chef co-owns was always destined for permanent glory. Intended as a palate-cleansing pit stop between Cab tasting and dinner, the place, furnished in insouciant, faintly decadent style by Bay Area celeb designer Ken Fulk, tempts patrons to stay put, order more bubbly and roe, and call it a meal.

6480 Washington St., Yountville, California, 94599, USA
707-947–7181
Known For
  • sommelier-selected French Champagnes
  • chilled oysters, tartares, and crudités
  • live jazz most days
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Wed. No lunch (but check)

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

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

Bottega

$$$

At his softly lit, exposed-redbrick downtown trattoria, which occupies sections of the 19th-century former Groezinger Winery, chef Michael Chiarello (Food Network, etc.) and his team transform local, seasonally changing ingredients into regional Italian cuisine. Staples like ricotta gnocchi with tomato sauce and smoked/braised short rib in espresso agrodolce (sweet-and-sour sauce) served with creamy ancient-grain polenta show the chef at his most rustic yet sophisticated.

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.

Brix Napa Valley

$$$

A roadside stop for specialty cocktails, casual lunches, and evening fine dining, Brix shares ownership with Kelleher Family Vineyards, whose Cabernet Sauvignon grapevines surround the restaurant on three sides. Pan-seared fish, juicy Brix burgers, house-made pasta, and risotto appear on both the lunch and dinner menus, with prime rib the crowd-pleaser on Sunday night.

7377 St. Helena Hwy., Napa, California, 94558, USA
707-944–2749
Known For
  • verdant outdoor dining areas
  • Napa/Sonoma-centric wine list with older-vintage surprises
  • Sunday brunch
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Tues.

Ciccio

$$$

After a lengthy closure, an insider favorite for modern Italian was scheduled to reopen by summer 2023 with vintners Frank and Karen Altamura remaining as owners and Napa Valley culinary star and longtime Ciccio patron Christopher Kostow of The Restaurant at Meadowood and The Charter Oak stepping in as executive chef. The seasonal growing cycles of Meadowood's herb and produce garden dictate the menu, with fried-seafood appetizers, pasta dishes, and several wood-fired pizzas among the likely offerings.

6770 Washington St., Yountville, California, 94599, USA
707-945–1000
Known For
  • Negronis lineup
  • pizzas' flavorful cheeses
  • Napa and Italian wines
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No lunch (check website for days closed)

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

La Calenda

$$

A few steps south of his Bouchon Bistro, chef Thomas Keller opened this ivy-covered restaurant serving Oaxacan-inspired Mexican cuisine. The decor inside is airily upscale casual, though on sunny days most patrons head to the street-side patio to dine on dishes like tacos al pastor (with slow-grilled pork), chicken enchiladas with mole, and pescado zarandeado verde (grilled marinated fish with green salsa).

6518 Washington St., Yountville, California, 94599, USA
833-682–8226
Known For
  • house margarita
  • churros with dulce de leche for dessert
  • patio people-watching
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch Wed. and Thurs.

Lucy Restaurant & Bar

$$$

In a modern space radiating offhand elegance, the Bardessono's restaurant seduces with sophisticated flavors, many from fruits, vegetables, and herbs grown in the hotel's on-site culinary garden. Although the cuisine is ultimately modern American, the chef might incorporate Japanese, Mexican, or other techniques and ingredients depending on the dish.

Madeleine's Macarons at Stewart Cellars

$

With Edith Piaf as his background track, a waiter whose job at Yountville's Bistro Jeanty had become a pandemic casualty spent several months toiling to perfect the macaron, his wife's favorite cookie. Success selling his multiflavored confections at farmers' markets and placement at a few upscale grocers (Jeanty was the first restaurant customer) spurred the couple, Dennis and Aubrey McInnich, to expand into retail with this shop and café selling their brightly colored treats.

6752 Washington St., Yountville, California, 94599, USA
707-289–7499
Known For
  • savory macarons as well as sweet
  • certified organic coffee from San Francisco–based Linea roastery
  • six-packs (of macarons) to go
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Tues. and Wed. No dinner

Mustards Grill

$$$

Cindy Pawlcyn's Mustards Grill fills day and night with fans of her hearty cuisine, equal parts updated renditions of traditional American dishes—what Pawlcyn dubs "deluxe truck stop classics"—and fanciful contemporary fare. Barbecued baby back pork ribs and a lemon-lime tart piled high with brown-sugar meringue fall squarely in the first category, and sweet corn tamales with tomatillo-avocado salsa and wild mushrooms represent the latter.

North Block

$$$

Regionally farmed fish and other foraged and cultivated Northern California ingredients go into this restaurant's shareable seasonal plates, turned out in an open kitchen that faces a bar serving large-format cocktails as well as wines by up-and-coming producers and Wine Country mainstays. St. Helena–based designer Erin Martin supplied the mildly offbeat interiors, though most patrons dine on the Tuscan-theme courtyard patio in good weather.

6757 Washington St., Yountville, California, 94599, USA
707-944–8080
Known For
  • artisanal cocktails
  • oyster happy hour 4–6
  • atmospheric interior
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch

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.

RH Yountville Restaurant

$$$

Crystal chandeliers and fountains worthy of a French château supply the pizzazz at Restoration Hardware's street-side café, and the all-day menu's starters (charcuterie, shrimp cocktail, crispy artichoke), salads, and mains (from a burger modeled on one from Chicago's Au Cheval restaurant to delicate Atlantic sole in brown butter) easily live up to it. The prosciutto is flown in from Parma and the burrata from Puglia, the greens are ever-so-fresh, and the plating impresses.