Restaurant in Santa Rosa, United States
Rosso Pizzeria & Wine Bar
150ptsWine Country Pizza Counter

About Rosso Pizzeria & Wine Bar
Named one of Sonoma Magazine's Best New Restaurants of 2025, Rosso Pizzeria & Wine Bar has quickly registered as a serious entry in Santa Rosa's dining scene. Located on Montgomery Drive, it pairs wood-fired or artisan pizza with a wine program positioned squarely within Sonoma County's producer-rich backyard. For a city that sits at the intersection of California agriculture and wine country, the format fits with precision.
Where Sonoma County's Pantry Meets the Pizza Counter
Montgomery Drive runs through one of Santa Rosa's more established commercial corridors, and the address at number 53 places Rosso Pizzeria & Wine Bar within a neighbourhood that has gradually accumulated serious food tenants over the years. Walk up and the format announces itself clearly: this is a pizzeria-wine bar that takes both halves of that description at face value. In a region better known for producing Pinot Noir and Chardonnay than for shaping American pizza culture, Rosso has made an argument that the two can occupy the same table without either apologising for itself.
Sonoma Magazine named it one of the Leading New Restaurants of 2025, which in a county that includes destination-level dining like Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg is not a minor footnote. Recognition of that kind in this region implies a standard of ingredient sourcing and execution that goes well beyond casual neighbourhood pizza. Sonoma County readers and editors eat well, and they notice when something is done properly.
The Sourcing Logic Behind a Wine Country Pizzeria
The case for a serious pizzeria in Santa Rosa has always been stronger than it might appear. Northern California's pizza scene has long operated in the shadow of the Bay Area, where places like Lazy Bear in San Francisco remind diners how much produce-driven thinking has shaped the region's dining identity. But the distance between San Francisco and Sonoma County is not just physical. Sonoma has its own agricultural infrastructure: dairy farms, heritage grain producers, small-scale vegetable growers, and a ranching tradition that runs through the county's interior valleys. A pizza counter situated inside that network can source differently than one operating in a metropolitan supply chain.
That sourcing distinction matters in a format that, at its most rigorous, involves very few components. A pizza is flour, water, heat, and a small number of toppings. When the toppings are drawn from producers operating twenty miles away rather than a national food distributor, the difference registers in the eating. The same principle applies to the wine list. A wine bar in downtown Santa Rosa that draws on local producers is sitting on leading of one of the most consequential wine regions in the United States. Russian River Valley Pinot, Dry Creek Zinfandel, Sonoma Coast Chardonnay: these are wines that restaurants elsewhere in the country would pay a premium to pour by the glass. Here, they are the home field.
That geographic advantage separates Rosso from comparisons to urban pizza-and-wine formats. The format in principle is not far from what you find in parts of New York or Chicago, but the input materials arrive from a fundamentally different context. When you consider that the dining rooms at Blue Hill at Stone Barns in Tarrytown or The French Laundry in Napa have built significant parts of their identity around access to regional agricultural production, the logic of a wine country pizzeria committed to the same sourcing radius becomes sharper.
The Wine Bar Side of the Equation
The pairing of pizza and wine is not a new idea, but the wine bar designation matters here because it signals a list with some depth and editorial intent, rather than a short selection of broadly familiar labels bolted onto a food menu. In a county where producers operate across every major appellation within a reasonable drive, the wine program at any serious establishment carries an implicit obligation to represent that range with specificity. A well-constructed Sonoma County wine list should be able to demonstrate the difference between a Russian River Valley Pinot and one from the Sonoma Coast, and between a Dry Creek Zinfandel and a Chalk Hill Cabernet. Whether Rosso's list makes those distinctions in detail is not confirmed in available data, but the format and the recognition it has received suggest a program designed to go beyond the basics.
The pizza-and-wine combination also attracts a different dinner cadence than a prix-fixe restaurant. Guests tend to order around the wine rather than in spite of it, which means the kitchen has to produce food that functions as a serious pairing partner. The wood-fired or artisan pizza format, when taken seriously, produces a crust with the kind of char and acidity that can hold up against a structured Pinot or a mineral-driven white without disappearing. That textural and flavour range is part of why the format has gained traction in wine regions across Europe and, increasingly, in California.
Santa Rosa's Dining Position in Northern California
Santa Rosa operates in an interesting position within the Northern California dining conversation. It is the largest city in the North Bay, but it has historically been overshadowed by Healdsburg's concentration of high-profile restaurants and by the Bay Area's gravitational pull on food media attention. The wave of Sonoma Magazine recognition for newer establishments in recent years reflects a shift: the city is developing enough of its own dining identity to be assessed on its own terms rather than purely as a wine country support town.
Rosso sits in that context as a restaurant that appears to be drawing on what the county does structurally well, namely, proximity to serious agricultural and viticultural production, and building a format around it that is accessible enough to draw a local crowd without being generic. For travellers already spending time in Sonoma County for wine, or in transit between San Francisco and destinations further north, Santa Rosa's restaurant scene increasingly justifies a deliberate stop rather than an incidental one.
Those planning a broader sweep of the county will find useful orientation in our Santa Rosa hotels guide, our Santa Rosa bars guide, and our Santa Rosa experiences guide for building out a full itinerary beyond the table. The county's winery network is mapped in our Sonoma wineries guide, which provides useful context for understanding what's in the glass at a wine bar operating this deep inside Sonoma's production heartland.
Planning Your Visit
Rosso Pizzeria & Wine Bar is located at 53 Montgomery Drive, Santa Rosa, CA 95404. Given its Sonoma Magazine Leading New Restaurant recognition for 2025, weekend tables are likely to require advance planning, particularly in the spring and summer months when wine country visitor traffic peaks across the county. The pizzeria-wine bar format typically supports both dinner-focused visits and earlier evening arrivals, though specific hours are leading confirmed directly with the venue before travelling. Booking ahead for groups is advisable. Phone and online reservation details are not confirmed in current data; checking directly with the restaurant is the practical approach.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Can I bring kids to Rosso Pizzeria & Wine Bar?
- The pizzeria format in a mid-price Santa Rosa setting generally accommodates families, though the wine bar emphasis and evening dining character may mean the atmosphere skews more toward adults, particularly later in the evening. Confirm directly with the venue.
- What's the vibe at Rosso Pizzeria & Wine Bar?
- For a city that sits at the edge of serious wine country, Rosso reads as a neighbourhood-anchored but genuinely considered wine bar and pizzeria, the kind of place a local would bring out-of-town guests without having to explain it. Its 2025 Sonoma Magazine recognition positions it in the upper tier of Santa Rosa's casual-to-mid dining range.
- What's the leading thing to order at Rosso Pizzeria & Wine Bar?
- Given the wine country sourcing context and the recognition for new-restaurant quality in 2025, the pizza itself is the clearest proof of the kitchen's seriousness. Pair it with something from the local Sonoma producer list for the most coherent version of what this format is doing.
- Do they take walk-ins at Rosso Pizzeria & Wine Bar?
- If you are visiting Sonoma County during peak season and this is a priority stop, booking ahead is the sensible approach given its 2025 award recognition. Walk-in availability will depend on day and time; mid-week evenings are a more reliable option than weekend prime time in a wine country city like Santa Rosa.
- What's the standout thing about Rosso Pizzeria & Wine Bar?
- The combination of a pizza kitchen operating inside one of California's premier agricultural and wine-producing regions, with Sonoma Magazine's editorial endorsement for 2025, is what separates Rosso from a standard neighbourhood pizzeria. The format is familiar; the inputs and the location are not.
Recognized By
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