At Bell’s Los Alamos, fine dining veterans Daisy and Gregory Ryan shed the restrictive hallmarks of French cuisine in favor of an evolving menu rooted in local agriculture and interpreted through the French culinary canon. Daisy Ryan, Bell’s executive chef and co-founder, updates classic French dishes without losing their heart. The duo have claimed a term for their style of cooking — “Franch” — which translates to a distinctly California take on bistro-leaning cooking that has garnered a Michelin star and a 2026 James Beard nomination for Best Chef: California. Set on the main street of Los Alamos in the heart of California’s Central Coast wine country, Bell’s channels the innate comfort of a French farmhouse with a dash of vintage rug collector.
Regulars and local producers like Stephanie Mutz of Sea Stephanie Fish share the bar for lunch or dinner, while groups (and their dogs) settle into the expansive backyard. To dine at Bell’s is to fall in love with the Santa Ynez Valley, whose terroir and farmers are woven into every course.
What to order
- Unbuttoned bistro fare takes the stage for lunch: Steak tartare gets pressed into a flat puck and topped with a bright orange yolk while Hope Ranch mussels bathe in a garlic saffron broth for moules frites. Maître d’hôtel butter crowns a six-ounce coulette, paired with thin, crispy fries for steak frites. Always end lunch with a slice of gateau Breton, a dense French butter cake from Brittany (those in the know take a second slice to go).
- Dinner, offered as a $125 prix fixe, begins with a mille crêpe blanketed with Regiis Ova Hybrid Caviar and uni, followed by a salad of Finely Farms lettuces and seeded sourdough baked on-site. The rest of the menu remains a choose your own adventure: Options may include lamb agnolotti with confit orange or leeks barigoule for the next course. Mains could span chevre-stuffed cappelletti topped with herbaceous nasturtium or a 5-ounce steak au poivre with fries, a constant on the menu. Dessert comes with a triad of choices, often two sweets like a pavlova or chocolate tart, plus cheese.
- Bell’s lunch and prix fixe menu are available to anyone who is old enough to enjoy them, but the restaurant also offers a separate kids menu with dishes including a peanut butter sandwich with honey or strawberry jam, grilled cheese with a Parmesan crust, and pasta topped with tomato sauce or butter and cheese.
To drink
Turn to Emily Blackman, Bell’s oracle of wine (officially Companion Hospitality’s beverage director), who will divine the perfect glass to pair with anything from a dressed Finley Farms lettuce to a pepper-laden au poivre, or even just a side of fries. Beyond wines, the menu offers rotating beers, such as an unfiltered IPA from Sante Adairius, and non-alcoholic options from Non, an Australia-based wine alternative producer, in flavors like salted raspberry and chamomile or caramelized pear and kombu.
Take note
The menu at Bell’s changes almost daily, save for a few dishes; updated menus are often posted on the restaurant’s website day-of, but the mercurial nature makes the restaurant worth multiple return trips.
Insider tip
Bell’s doesn’t have a traditional phone setup — since you can’t call, a text line (or email) is available if any issues or questions arise. Companion Hospitality, the team behind Bell’s, also operates a handful of other venues in the region that are worth visiting, such as Bodega Los Alamos, seafood tavern Bar Le Côte in Los Olivos, and Buellton’s Na Na Thai.











