Our own Arcadia

The charming enclaves of Los Gatos and Saratoga entice those who come down for dinner to stay the weekend.

Natasha Sarkisian

When the London Observer named Manresa one of the 50 best restaurants in the world and Michelin then bestowed upon it a laudable two stars in September, the sleepy town of Los Gatos was thrust onto the map. Some San Franciscans had wondered why David Kinch chose to locate his haute cuisine restaurant in the town of 28,592 set against the Santa Cruz Mountains. But true food lovers and Silicon Valley execs knew why—they had discovered this terrain long ago. Bookended by the quaint downtowns of Saratoga and Los Gatos along a three-mile stretch of Highway 9, these foothills are built for a weekend of vista-filled hiking, tasting wines rivaling Napa and Burgundy’s finest, exceptional dining, and concerts at two of the Bay Area’s best venues: Villa Montalvo and the Mountain Winery. The high-end boutiques littering the streets and the Rolls-Royce, Lamborghini, and Aston-Martin dealerships peppered throughout are clues that you’re not in Kansas. But the homey, tucked-away vibe reminds you that you’re not in San Jose, either.

1
When Paul Masson arrived from Burgundy, France, in 1878, he surveyed the entire Bay Area and decided that the land of ridges and hillsides from Woodside to Saratoga was the chaîne d’or for pinots and chardonnays. Since then, local wineries like Ridge and Testarossa have become legendary: Ridge beat out France in the 1976 Judgment of Paris with its Monte Bello Cabernet—and 30 years later won the competition again. The best way to see the wineries, some of which can be tricky to find, is to link up with South Bay Wine Tours. One of the tour organizers’ favorite lunch spots is the Mountain Winery, where Masson started making sparkling wines. The front of the winery is the original facade from San Jose’s St. Patrick’s Church and serves as the stage for the prestigious summer concert series. South Bay Wine Tours, 408-867-9661, www.southbaywinetours.com. Ridge Vineyards, 17100 Monte Bello Rd., Cupertino, 408-867-3233, www.ridgewine.com. Testarossa, 300-A College Ave., Los Gatos, 408-354-6150, www.testarossa.com. Mountain Winery, 14831 Pierce Rd., Saratoga, 408-741-2822, www.mountainwinery.com.

2
You might recognize the bamboo gardens, koi ponds, and authentic samurai houses in Saratoga’s Hakone Gardens from the movie Memoirs of a Geisha—parts of it were filmed here. The gardens date back to 1915 and are the oldest Japanese-style residential gardens in the Western hemisphere. The grounds were modeled after those of country villas built by warlords and the upper class in the foothills surrounding Kyoto. Like those villas, it has ponds, garden plateaus, tiered fountains, and stones placed in patterns of spiritual significance. Walk the meandering pathways lined with century-old lanterns, or meditate on the Zen garden’s raked stones and striking black pine tree while soaking up the views of the valley. 21000 Big Basin Way, Saratoga, 408-741-4994, www.hakone.com.

3
Downtown Saratoga is stacked with biking shops and running stores, reflecting the locals’ love of the surrounding hills. The favorite run (or walk) is the “Dammit

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