Zaytoon is a lebanese restaurant in Downtown Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara.
Lebanese garden restaurant since 2005 in the lower State Street garden district. Mezze, grilled meats, outdoor patio under olive trees. No cocktail-bar noise.
Hidden gem in Santa Barbara· Downtown Santa Barbara· Lebanese· $$$Verified June 26, 2026
Editorially verified June 26, 2026 by
Lewis Vaughan,
TableJourney editor.
Source.
CuisineLebanese
Price$$$
NeighborhoodDowntown Santa Barbara
HoursTue-Thu 17:00-21:00; Fri-Sat 17:00-22:00; Sun 17:00-21:00
Why locals love it: A Lebanese garden restaurant tucked behind El Presidio Historic Park that most visitors walk straight past on their way to State Street. The fully outdoor patio with fire pits and string lights is one of the most atmospheric dining settings in Santa Barbara.
Tip: Reserve the outdoor patio in advance and arrive at dusk. The free-range chicken and halal lamb kebabs cooked over wood are the reliable order.
Location
Address: 209 E. Canon Perdido Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93101
Downtown bakery on a residential side street serving European sourdough and pastries. Pre-Instagram pricing, locals-only crowd, cash-friendly counter.
Why locals love it: The tourist coffee queues form around the corner on State Street while this longtime neighbourhood bakery on Gutierrez stays relatively quiet. Bread quality and breakfast prices reflect a pre-Instagram era of Santa Barbara eating.
Tip: Arrive before 09:00 for the best bread selection. The outdoor seating fills with local regulars and the espresso is strong.
Funk Zone tasting room with a chalk mural mapping all six Santa Barbara County AVAs. One room where viticultural geography anchors every pour.
Why locals love it: Most Funk Zone visitors pour through the bigger branded tasting rooms and walk past this chalk-mural wine education room on Yanonali Street. The county-wide AVA focus makes it the best single-stop introduction to why Santa Barbara wine country is worth the drive north.
Tip: Ask for a flight spanning all six AVAs to understand the difference between Sta. Rita Hills Pinot Noir and Happy Canyon Cabernet in one sitting.
Downtown bakery on a residential side street serving European sourdough and pastries. Pre-Instagram pricing, locals-only crowd, cash-friendly counter.
Why locals love it: The tourist coffee queues form around the corner on State Street while this longtime neighbourhood bakery on Gutierrez stays relatively quiet. Bread quality and breakfast prices reflect a pre-Instagram era of Santa Barbara eating.
Tip: Arrive before 09:00 for the best bread selection. The outdoor seating fills with local regulars and the espresso is strong.
Funk Zone roastery sourcing organic fair-trade beans from small-lot indigenous farmers. A share of every sale supports the Yanonali Street Artist Fund.
Why locals love it: Tucked on Yanonali Street between wine tasting rooms in the Funk Zone, Dart operates more like a community science project than a coffee shop: every sourcing decision is documented and the proceeds support local artists.
Tip: Order whatever the roaster opened that morning. The single-origin pour-overs change with each roast batch and the staff can explain the farmer behind it.