There’s a kind of hunger that hits Sonoma County in late February—and it isn’t for another glass of pinot noir (although that helps). It’s the hunger to taste this place.
To sit at a table where every bite tells a story about soil and season, that quietly sings of vineyards and orchards sprawling in foggy morning light. That’s what Sonoma County Restaurant Week feels like: an invitation not just to dine, but to come home to food that tastes like it belongs here.
From Feb. 23 through March 1, restaurants across the county are rolling out prix-fixe menus designed to spotlight local producers, growers, ranchers and winemakers—and in 2026, the spotlight has never been brighter on the farm-to-table ethos that defines Sonoma’s culinary identity. The official Restaurant Week site now prominently calls out a Sonoma County Grown list—eateries offering entrées made with 100% Sonoma County-sourced ingredients and/or pouring Sonoma County wines—making it easier than ever to plan a week of meals that are as ethical as they are delicious.
No tickets or passes? No problem. There’s no festival wristband one has to flash, no password or secret handshake required. Restaurant Week (now more than a decade old) simply asks one to show up, sit down and engage with the best of what this place grows and makes. Make a reservation. Order the prix-fixe. And eat like this is home—or one wishes it were.
Winter-ish Feast
January and February are historically slow months for restaurants up and down the West Coast, and Sonoma is no exception. As hospitality consultant Clark Wolf has observed, February sits in that culinary in-between moment—after the indulgence of December and the dining momentum of January, but before spring ingredients begin to roll in. That said, “It’s always an opportunity for people to try a new restaurant they’ve been wanting to try,” he says. The timing is strategic: Diners are still socializing, but restaurants are looking for ways to spark traffic during a quieter stretch.
Sonoma County Restaurant Week keeps things refreshingly straightforward when it comes to pricing. Participating restaurants offer structured prix-fixe options designed to make planning easy and dining accessible. Sweet Perks—typically desserts or small indulgences—are priced at $6. Breakfast features one-course options at $15 or $25. Lunch also offers one-course menus at $15 or $25, with a shared two-course lunch for four available at $50.
Dinner includes three-course menus priced at $30, $40 or $60 per person, while a shared three-course dinner for four is offered at $70. The tiered format allows diners to budget comfortably while sampling Sonoma County’s culinary range—whether stopping in for a casual bite or settling in for a full evening out.
“You can make a plan; you can budget; you can go and have fun and … be alive, be in the community,” Wolf says.
His take—that the week is designed to be affordable, adventurous and communal—is the spirit at the heart of the promotion.
River to Ridge
What sets this iteration of Restaurant Week apart isn’t just price or convenience—it’s the focus on the county’s farm-to-table network. The Sonoma County Grown designation highlights restaurants that are sourcing every ingredient from inside the county borders or pairing plates with Sonoma wines, making the week not just a celebration of chefs, but also of stewards—farmers and vintners who make food that tastes like place. This isn’t culinary tourism—it’s culinary homecoming.
Take, for example, restaurants like Bloom Carneros in Sonoma, a wine garden and restaurant focused on seasonal dishes and locally inspired ingredients. Or Petaluma’s Stockhome, where Swedish classics meet hearty local vegetables and seafood, turning cold-weather comfort food into something that feels intrinsic to the West Coast terroir. Both are part of the county’s yearly Restaurant Week roster, offering prix-fixe menus that reflect their deep sourcing commitments.
And then there are places like Cibo Rustico Pizzeria and Wine Bar in Santa Rosa—featuring unpretentious, sumptuous fare like the spicy Luciano pizza, made with a parmesan cheese sauce, prosciutto, calabrian chilis, fresh onions, garlic, basil and cracked pepper—or The Lodge at Dawn Ranch in Guerneville, which balances elevated cuisine with unstudied excellence. Their meals aren’t just dishes. They’re narratives: orchard to plate, pasture to fork, and vine to glass.
Why This Matters
One can feel the impact on the ground. Sonoma County’s restaurant scene isn’t just surviving in these winter months; it’s being energized by community participation. Restaurant Week gives diners reasons to say “Yes” to a place they’ve been meaning to try—and gives restaurants a chance to show off their roots, literally and figuratively.
This is economic support in its most delicious form. One isn’t just eating a meal; they’re sustaining jobs, backing small farms and strengthening an entire local ecosystem that thrives on quality, not volume. They’re making Sonoma more resilient by spending their dollars where they live—and this week in particular, they get more in return: meals that speak of forest floors and river valleys, of heirloom carrots still dusty with morning soil and olive oils pressed just up the road.
What Sonoma County Restaurant Week offers isn’t just deals—it’s an ecosystem of connection. From tiny cafes to celebrated kitchens, from $6 dessert deals to three-course dinners paired with local pinots, each restaurant tells part of the story of this place we call home. And the farm-to-table focus this year makes that story explicit: This is food by the hands of this land, for the people of this land.
Pro-Tip: Make a reservation (seriously—places fill up). And sit down for a meal that tastes like the Russian River at dawn or the sunlit slopes of the Dry Creek Valley. Because that’s what Restaurant Week has become: not just a winter promotion, but a celebration of Sonoma County itself.
More at socorestaurantweek.org.








