Restaurant in Paso Robles, United States
Michelin-starred farm dining, wine pairing essential.

The Restaurant at JUSTIN holds a Michelin star and AAA Five Diamond rating, making it the most credentialed dining option in Paso Robles by a clear margin. Chef Rachel Haggstrom's menu shifts with each harvest, with nearly 70 percent of produce grown on the estate. Book the four-course dinner with wine pairings to get full value from the $$$ price point.
The menu at The Restaurant at JUSTIN changes constantly, and that is precisely the point. Chef Rachel Haggstrom works from a farm that supplies roughly 70 percent of the produce on your plate, which means what you order this week will not be what someone ordered last month. If you want a fixed, predictable tasting experience, book elsewhere. If you want a Michelin-starred dinner where the kitchen is genuinely constrained by what was harvested that morning, this is one of the most compelling arguments for the drive to Paso Robles.
At $$$ for cuisine (a typical two-course meal above $66) and $$$$ overall, this is a serious financial commitment. It earns it, but only if you lean into the wine pairing and the setting. Come for a quick weeknight dinner and you will feel the price. Come for the four-course experience with JUSTIN's own wines matched to each course, and the numbers make sense.
The dining room at JUSTIN opens into an indoor-outdoor space, so the physical experience is as much about where you are as what you eat. The vineyards and orchard sit directly in your sightline, which makes the sourcing story legible in a way most farm-to-table restaurants cannot manage: you can see the land the food came from. The scale is intimate rather than grand, which fits a property where the kitchen is working with hyper-seasonal produce rather than a fixed, engineered menu.
Seating is tied to the winery grounds on Chimney Rock Road, well outside Paso Robles' downtown. You are not walking to a bar afterward. Plan the evening as a destination in itself, ideally paired with a stay at the JUSTIN property if availability allows, or factor in the drive back to town.
The 70 percent on-property produce figure is not marketing language. It has a direct consequence for the diner: the menu shifts with harvest cycles, and Haggstrom has confirmed she picks produce at peak ripeness rather than ordering to a fixed specification. A recent dinner menu included octopus carpaccio with mojo picon aioli, artichoke tortelloni with black truffle mornay, filet mignon with blueberry bordelaise, and flourless chocolate cake with strawberry mousse. That specific menu may no longer exist by the time you visit. The sample menu on JUSTIN's website is a reference point, not a contract.
This creates real value for a certain kind of diner and genuine frustration for another. If you have dietary restrictions, contact the restaurant at the time of booking, not on arrival. Haggstrom will build a tailored menu, but she needs lead time to do it properly given the sourcing constraints.
The wine list runs to approximately 400 selections with around 1,970 bottles in inventory, priced at $$ (a range of pricing, with options across price points). Corkage is $40 if you want to bring something from elsewhere on the Paso Robles wine trail. For the four-course dinner, the paired wines are the clearest value proposition on the menu: you are drinking JUSTIN's own production, chosen specifically to work with each course, on the estate where the grapes were grown. That is a coherent experience you cannot replicate by ordering a bottle off the list independently.
The Restaurant at JUSTIN holds a Michelin One Star (2025), an AAA Five Diamond rating (2025), and appears on the La Liste Leading Restaurants ranking at 78 points in 2026 (up from 76.5 in 2025), indicating upward momentum in critical recognition. For context within California wine country dining, this puts it in the same tier of recognition as properties far better known to out-of-state visitors. The Michelin star alone distinguishes it from almost everything else in Paso Robles.
Google reviews average 4.4 across 72 ratings, a smaller sample than a city restaurant would accumulate, but consistent with a destination venue that draws a self-selecting audience rather than casual walk-in traffic.
Within Paso Robles, The Restaurant at JUSTIN is the most credentialed option by a clear margin. The Michelin star and AAA Five Diamond rating set it apart from every other dining option in the area. Six Test Kitchen and Les Petites Canailles are both $$$$ and worth considering for different reasons: Six Test Kitchen suits diners who want a contemporary format without the winery-destination commitment; Les Petites Canailles is the better call if French technique matters more to you than Californian seasonality. Neither holds Michelin recognition, which is a meaningful distinction at this price point.
For a lower-commitment dinner in Paso Robles, BL Brasserie offers French-Californian cooking in a more accessible format, and Il Cortile Ristorante covers Italian well. Fish Gaucho is the right choice when the group wants Mexican cuisine without the fine-dining price tag. None of these are direct substitutes for what JUSTIN offers: a Michelin-starred estate dinner built around on-property produce and house wines on the land where they were made.
If you are comparing JUSTIN against broader California wine country dining, the honest benchmark is Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, which runs a similar farm-driven model at a higher price and with more Michelin recognition. The French Laundry in Napa is in a different price tier entirely and nearly impossible to book. JUSTIN sits closer in format and price to Caruso's in Montecito or Citrin in Los Angeles among California fine dining, and it outperforms both on the wine-pairing integration specifically because you are dining at the source.
Book The Restaurant at JUSTIN if you are making a deliberate wine country trip to Paso Robles and want one serious dinner anchored to the region. The four-course format with wine pairings is the version worth paying for. If you are passing through and want a casual meal, the price and remoteness of the location will not serve you well. Consider our full Paso Robles restaurants guide for alternatives across price points, and pair your trip planning with our Paso Robles wineries guide to build a coherent itinerary around the region's strengths.
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Restaurant at JUSTIN | When it comes to California’s wine country, most people automatically think of Napa or Sonoma. However, Paso Robles, a destination south of the Central Coast and north of Los Angeles, rivals its Northern counterparts with exceptional experiences and wonderful wines.; La Liste Top Restaurants (2026): 78pts; La Liste Top Restaurants (2025): 76.5pts; WINE: Wine Strengths: California, Bordeaux, France Pricing: $$ i Wine pricing: Based on the list\'s general markup and high and low price points:$ has many bottles < $50;$$ has a range of pricing;$$$ has many $100+ bottles Corkage Fee: $40 Selections: 400 Inventory: 1,970 CUISINE: Cuisine Types: Californian Pricing: $$$ i Cuisine pricing: The cost of a typical two-course meal, not including tip or beverages.$ is < $40;$$ is $40–$65;$$$ is $66+. Meals: Dinner STAFF: People Wine Director: Nazare Azevedo Sommelier: Jason Santos, Jim Gerakaris Chef: Rachel Haggstrom General Manager: Nazare Azevedo Owner: The Wonderful Company; AAA 5 Diamond (2025); When it comes to California’s wine country, most people automatically think of Napa or Sonoma. However, Paso Robles, a destination south of the Central Coast and north of Los Angeles, rivals its Northern counterparts with ... **Our Inspector's Highlights This is a destination for wine lovers: The farm-to-table restaurant is at the winery, where JUSTIN grows its grapes and produces the wine, in the hills of Paso Robles.The dining room opens to become an indoor-outdoor space, allowing guests to enjoy the natural beauty of the vineyards. A picture-perfect view of grapevines and a green orchard creates a stunning and serene backdrop to a memorable meal.Nearly 70 percent of the produce featured on the menu is grown on the property. The extensive gardens sit near the eatery, and you are invited to explore the fresh fruit and vegetable farm before or after the meal.Dinner is where Haggstrom reveals her culinary prowess. Each course is precisely presented, making it feel like edible artwork. The menu is constantly changing because she works with a parade of super-seasonal ingredients. Peas, asparagus, edible flowers, strawberries — she grows it all and then picks each item when perfectly ripe. The resulting meal is flavor-packed and unlike anything you’ve ever tasted before.All of JUSTIN’s wines are available by glass or bottle. However, if you opt for the four-course dinner menu, wine pairings are a must. You’ll get to sip the wine specifically chosen to complement each dish — an experience that is unique to the Paso Robles restaurant.** **Things to Know:** The Food Since the menu is so dependent on the garden’s bounty, it’s subject to change — what you get will be different from the sample menu online.A recent dinner menu featured octopus carpaccio with mojo picon aioli, artichoke tortelloni with black truffle mornay, filet mignon with blueberry bordelaise, potato fondant with apple mostarda, and flourless chocolate cake with strawberry mousse.Have special dietary needs? Let the chef know as soon as you book your reservation, and she will tailor a menu to suit your tastebuds. **Treatments:** Amenities Dinner Outdoor seating Vegetarian options **Amenities:** 11680 Chimney Rock Road, Paso Robles, California 93446; Michelin 1 Star (2025); Michelin 1 Star (2024) | $$$$ | — |
| Six Test Kitchen | Michelin 1 Star | $$$$ | — |
| Les Petites Canailles | $$$$ | — | |
| BL Brasserie | — | ||
| Fish Gaucho | — | ||
| Il Cortile Ristorante | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
The venue data does not confirm a bar dining option. The Restaurant at JUSTIN is structured around a sit-down dinner format in its indoor-outdoor dining room. check the venue's official channels when booking to ask about seating flexibility, particularly if you are a solo diner.
At $$$$ pricing for dinner and $66+ for a typical two-course meal before beverages, this is one of the pricier dinners on the Central Coast — but the credentials back it up. A Michelin One Star (2025), AAA Five Diamond rating (2025), and a sourcing model where roughly 70 percent of produce comes from the property give you a clear reason for the price tag. The four-course menu with wine pairings is the format to book: JUSTIN's full wine list at $$ pricing makes the pairing add-on a strong value relative to ordering by the bottle.
The menu changes frequently based on what the on-property farm is producing, so the sample menu online may not reflect what you will actually eat — treat that as a feature, not a drawback. Chef Rachel Haggstrom tailors menus for dietary restrictions if you flag them at the time of booking, so do that upfront. The dining room opens to an indoor-outdoor space overlooking the vineyards, so this is a destination dinner, not a quick weeknight meal.
Specific booking windows are not publicly documented, but a Michelin-starred, AAA Five Diamond estate restaurant with dinner-only service in a destination wine region fills up. Booking two to four weeks out is a reasonable baseline; for weekend visits or peak summer and harvest season travel, push that to six weeks or more. Special dietary needs should be communicated at the time of reservation, which is another reason to book early.
Within Paso Robles, The Restaurant at JUSTIN holds a clear credential advantage — no other local option carries both a Michelin star and an AAA Five Diamond rating. Fish Gaucho is a solid step down in formality and price if you want a more casual Paso Robles dinner. For a different style at a lower price point, BL Brasserie and Il Cortile Ristorante are worth considering if you are staying in town and not making the drive out to Chimney Rock Road.
The venue data does not specify a dress code, but a Michelin-starred, AAA Five Diamond estate restaurant warrants dressing up relative to casual wine country standards. Think polished casual at a minimum: no beachwear or athletic wear. Given the outdoor vineyard setting, layers are practical for evening dining, especially in cooler months.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.