Lido Bottle Works

Michelin-Recognized | Newport Beach, CA

Lido Bottle Works sits right on the water in Lido Marina Village, blending the natural beauty of the California coast with the casual sophistication of Newport Beach. Founded by a group of longtime friends and family who share a love of travel, great food, and thoughtful drink pairings, the restaurant has sustainability built into its ownership from the start — partner Eric Paine is a board member of The Ecology Center in San Juan Capistrano, the nonprofit whose values directly shaped LBW’s founding ethos. Today, under Executive Chef Joel Gutierrez, the kitchen continues to push toward zero-waste cooking, pairing a locally driven New American menu with an exceptional craft-beer and natural-wine program.

The Sustainability Print:

Sustainability at Lido Bottle Works runs from the kitchen to the bar to the interior itself. Chef Gutierrez has made waste reduction a defining principle: asparagus bottoms are steeped with leek tops to make a creamy aioli, Meyer lemons from a local farm are preserved in-house-made vinegars, and meat trim is incorporated into in-house charcuterie. The restaurant’s edge is planted with herb pots — rosemary, sweet marjoram, curry, thyme, and dill — picked fresh for daily service. Even the interior reflects the ethos: table tops were crafted from a naturally downed redwood tree, tiles were handmade in Long Beach, and the cocktail glassware is exclusively vintage 1930s and 1940s coupes and Collins glasses sourced specifically for the restaurant.

A Study in Sourcing: The Hyper-Local Loop

The sourcing program is built on direct, personal relationships with producers in Orange County and Southern California.

The Dory Fleet Connection:

Every morning, the culinary team visits the historic Dory Fishing Fleet Market on the Newport pier to hand-select the catch of the day. Founded in 1891, the Dory Fleet is the last beachside cooperative fish market of its kind in the United States and a registered historical landmark.

The Local Farm Network:

The kitchen works with a curated group of nearby farms. Sunny Cal Farms supplies stone fruit and winter citrus. Weiser Farms provides Nantes carrots and Bloomsdale spinach. Tutti Frutti Farms supplies seasonal peas. Malaia’s Microgreens in Irvine contributes hyper-local greens. Additional produce comes from the restaurant’s Costa Mesa garden and the Santa Monica Farmers Market.

California Proteins:

Beef is sourced from Flannery Beef, a California ranch that dry-ages Holstein cattle in-house. The kitchen also features game meats and in-house charcuterie as part of its whole-ingredient philosophy.

The Bottle Shop Ethos:

The wine program focuses on California-grown grapes and winemakers who use organic or biodynamic farming methods, favoring small producers with values that align with LBW’s. The beer program sources limited releases from small craft breweries that don’t distribute at scale, including local kombucha from Blessed Booch of Laguna Beach.

Insights

Lido Bottle Works is a model for waterfront dining that takes environmental responsibility seriously at every level — from ownership to kitchen to bar. Chef Gutierrez has built a kitchen culture where waste becomes creativity, while the ownership group’s deep ties to The Ecology Center keep sustainability central to the restaurant’s identity. Paired with a network of small local farms, the Dory Fleet, and a curated natural drinks program, Lido Bottle Works proves that approachable, casual dining and genuine sustainability can coexist without compromise.

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