Bottega | Santa Rosa & Wine Country Dining and Restaurants

Bottega


shrimp.jpgIf the era of flashy chef-lebrity restaurants are over, no one told Michael Chiarello. The Food Network personality who’s made his name hawking Napa’s faux-country lifestyle on television, in books and his Napa Style stores, has just opened the sprawling Bottega in Yountville.

And though myriad failed restaurants have made it easy to dismiss concepts like Bottega as overly-ambitious, personality-driven eateries, Chiarello has created a comfortable space with a reasonable (considering the location, please) price point — capturing in real-life the Wine Country joie de vivre he portrays on television.

But what about the food?


Here’s the fork-11: Chiarello isn’t new to these parts, having cut his
teeth as the driving force behind Tra Vigne’s ascendancy to
greatness in the late 1980′s, helping to define Cal-Italian food. Since
2000 he’s focused on his television and retail career, along with
producing wines near his St. Helena home. And while Chiarello’s
presence is a bonus, don’t expect to seem him behind the burners much.

mozzarella.jpgChef de Cuisine Nick Ritchie has interpreted Chiarello classics with a
solid opening menu of “micro-regional Italian cuisine”. Stuzzichini (appetizers) include house cured
olives ($5), a pumpkin frittata ($7), house-cured salumi, and Veal
Tartare
($11). A number of these can be ordered off the bar menu. Save
yourself, however, for the traditional first course, the Antipasta.
Angry Hopper Shrimp ($13) with white bean puree, a spicy orange-chili
oil and fried basil are a firecracker of a starter. Polenta Under Glass
($12) is the most fun item on the menu: A small jar filled with buttery
polenta, caramelized mushrooms, a crispy Parmesan wafer and warm
balsamic sauce poured tableside. On opening weekend, the kitchen punted
with fresh mozzarella
after the Burratta ran out, topping sliced
artichokes, ($12).

Note: Ridiculously-rich does little justice to Bottega’s dishes, so if
you’re watching your pennies you’ll be fine sharing an appetizer or
first course. Portion sizes are fairly small all the way around, but
BiteClub ended up with several to-go boxes (a rarity) for
Monday-morning indulgences.

Hearty pasta dishes are a Chiarello signature, especially welcome as
the weather turns cool. Best bet is the Garganelli with Balsamic Rabbit
Sugo (sauce) and chanterelle mushrooms ($19).
The portion size is
small, but filling. Other pastas include veal tortelli in browned
butter, pumpkin and fontina risotto with “game bird” ragu ($18) and
ricotta gnocchi with salsa pomodoro.

Secondi are meatier entrees ranging from a two-person grilled
porterhouse steak ($36 per person), seared day-boat scallops, grilled
swordfish with ancient grain polenta
($24) and goats milk braised lamb
shank with garlic, fennel, onions and mushrooms ($24). The only
disappointment of the night was the Arrosto of Duroc Pork that was bone
dry
($23).

moltencake.jpg
Both dessert and wine are done with pomp and flourish that make them
well worth the extra investment. Best bet is the Chocolate-Almond
Molten Chocolate Cake (
$9) cooked to order and unwrapped from its
parchment table side. Though its one of the most overdone desserts in
modern history, the addition of hazelnut creme anglaise over the top
redeems.

Feeling a bit bloated after three courses of butter and
goodness? Bottega’s Whole Citrus Napoleon is a refreshing dip of lemon
and blood orange curds atop a buttery crust with a perfectly sectioned
citrus salad ($8)

The wine list is what really surprises, especially in tony Yountville
where $400+ bottles grace most lists and anything under $40 is as rare as
a natural blonde.
Bottega’s lengthy list includes a pretty beefy
selection of approachable sips, though you can be hard pressed to find
diners in Napa who don’t bring their own trophy bottles. In fact, a
chef-coat-clad Chiarello stopped to stick his nose into a
decanter of Chateauneuf du Pape opened at the table next to mine. Which
was next to a bottle of Caymus on the other side. Um, yeah.

However, the wine steward opened our $30 wine
with exactly the same respect he opened the Chateauneuf du Pape with
(though BiteClub was secretly cringing).

Here’s the long-and-short of it. While Mr. and Mrs. Cheateauneuf du
Pape were trying desperately to find a dish that would match the
majesty of their wine, McNibs and I were just enjoying the food. Every
single bite, all over the map without regard to calories, perfect pairings or even dribbling a little pomodoro on our shirts. We sopped up our sauces with bread and
shared bites with abandon. We gulped down our wine without
philosophizing about it.

michael.jpgThat’s what makes Bottega work. It’s the kind of spot where Papes and cheap pinots, celebrities and nobodies can rub elbows as equals. And where the food is the real star.

Bottega, 6525 Washington St., Yountville, 707.945.1050. Reservations strongly recommended. Dress is upscale casual.

Final bill: $145 (before tip) including a bottle of wine, a glass of Prosecco, three appetizers, two entrees and two desserts.

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13 Responses

  1. coffeetables 18. Jan, 2010 at 10:31 am #

    coffeetables are good for entertainment or card games. I presonally prefer leather coffetables but just plain wood will do just fine. I cant understand people who do not have coffeetable in the livingroom.

  2. Judy 18. Mar, 2009 at 6:43 pm #

    We were thinking about eating here for my 40th birthday. We have 14 people and they do not have a private room to accomodate our size. We saw that Bardessono has a table for 14. Anyone know anything about this restaurant or could recommend another in Younteville for our size (already going to Ad Hoc the night before). Thanks!

  3. jackson renfro 15. Feb, 2009 at 9:27 pm #

    stopped by for dinner. watched the young chef richie running the kitchen and putting out some great food. gnocchi and canneloni were great. know anything about this chef?

  4. Mick 09. Jan, 2009 at 9:10 am #

    I went to Bottega for lunch last week and was astounded! Chefs Chiarello and Ritchie have put together a well balanced menu that beautifully celebrates Napa and Italy in each bite.
    We had polenta under glass and the Burrata with artichokes two ways for apps. My wife had pesto risotto with a generous helping of Dungeness crab on top while I had spinach and chicken cannelloni. Both were fantastic. We have a 3 year old daughter and the wait staff and Chef Chiarello bent over backwards to make sure she was happy and well fed. They offered, without asking, off the menu items like pizza dough fritters with marinara that were an amazing finger food for her (and us). The service was wonderful; the staff is extremely friendly, helpful, and professional.
    Recommended, without hesitation. Well worth the very reasonable price!

  5. gratcon 27. Dec, 2008 at 3:54 pm #

    That is exactly why you shouldn’t repeat something you “heard”. Time has a way of making people confused. And, at times, people that couldn’t hack it at a job tend to try to shift the blame onto their bosses. I think you should apologize.

  6. johng 16. Dec, 2008 at 10:14 am #

    OK. I talked to my friends and they said they were making it up.

  7. jf 15. Dec, 2008 at 9:10 pm #

    i find it more than interesting that johng doesn’t want a full byline. Such an expose surely deserves the proper recognition

  8. Joe Scarpone 14. Dec, 2008 at 3:21 pm #

    Having spent 4 years in the kitchen I have to pipe in and disagree. Passionate…absoulutly. Excitable…very much. Caring…fair…hard working…talented…mentor…all the above. I didnt see any sex on the prep tables….or banned substances. I have been in restaurants like that and you are just off the mark.
    BTW..I hear 4 of his old servers are back and more on the way. You make the call. I say try Bottega and leave the waiter gossip alone.
    JS

  9. johng 14. Dec, 2008 at 1:59 pm #

    Dang, I wish some of the old-timers I used to work with during my Napa Valley server days commented here. I knew half a dozen people who worked at Tra Vigne with Chef Chiarello. Boy, they despised that guy, but, wow – the stories they used to tell! Flying sautee pans! Sex on the prep kitchen counter during service! Massive consumption of banned substances! Too bad none of those guys wrote a book about it.

  10. BiteClub 10. Dec, 2008 at 12:45 pm #

    Hey Woj. Yeah, McNibs said it was the best meal I’ve dragged him to in a long time. Ad Hoc rocks. Corkage is $20, but they’ll wave it if you buy a bottle.
    Funny story about corkage with a twist-off. I actually had that happen. I brought a “nice” bottle with a twist off cap and the sommelier didn’t realize it was twist off at first and started to use his bottle opener. He quickly realized the mistake and twisted it off with a flourish, making a “pop” sound with his mouth. I’ve found staff generally find the whole thing rather amusing. And yes, we still had to pay corkage.

  11. Wojamo 10. Dec, 2008 at 11:40 am #

    Wow! Sounds like a great find and very reasonable pricing. Next time I haul my butt over to Yountville for dinner, Ad Hoc is first on my list- but this will be second. Any idea what the corkage is? I plan on bringing my trophy bottle of Carlo Rossi. Does “corkage” apply if it’s a twist-off?

  12. WC Local 09. Dec, 2008 at 7:44 pm #

    Wow $145 including a bottle of wine? That’s a nice change!

  13. Steve 09. Dec, 2008 at 6:19 pm #

    Hows the Bar ?
    Are there cocktails ?

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