The long-awaited Palo Alto project is now open on Bryant Street, with French food from next door and drinks that are fun, complex and sometimes alcohol-free.

Bar Zola’s Speak Low (a non-alcoholic cocktail), Rude Boy and Weekend in Tulum (a low-proof cocktail) occupy an entire spectrum of booziness from zero-alcohol to incredibly spiritous. (Photo by Magali Gauthier)

Months after delays brought about by construction permit challenges and the COVID-19 pandemic, Bar Zola, the bar companion to French restaurant Zola, is now open on Bryant St in Palo Alto. Bar Zola features a beverage program which aims to fill a void of craft cocktail bars in Palo Alto. “We’re gonna be the best cocktail bar on the Peninsula,” owner Guillaume Bienaime said.

Opening a bar connected to a well-established restaurant like Zola can be a complex affair, requiring chefs and bar managers to figure out the role cocktails will play as part of the dining experience and how their flavors might support the food menu. Bienaime threw this complexity out of the window when he decided that the mission of Bar Zola would be simple: “I’ve always thought there’s nowhere for you to drink a cocktail in Palo Alto. And so that’s our first goal, to just create a place to drink cocktails.”

Duncan Harrison, Bar Zola’s bar manager, had stints working at District in San Jose, Town in San Carlos and Trick Dog in San Francisco before joining the opening team at Bar Zola. (Photo by Magali Gauthier)

Though both Zola and Bar Zola share a food menu, a kitchen and an owner, the bar feels like a distinct entity. When Duncan Harrison first began working with Bienaime in the early days of the bar’s construction, he proposed a concept cocktail list to complement the restaurant’s classically French bistro dishes. Harrison imagined serving cocktails that felt as French as Zola’s beef bourguignon, featuring mostly French spirits, aperitifs and herbs like tarragon. When Bienaime (who was born in France) first considered the proposal, he thought about his own dual French and Californian identities and suggested that Harrison not limit himself only to French flavors and ingredients.

Returning to the drawing board, Harrison took inspiration from “Meehan’s Bartender Manual,” a comprehensive treatise on how to conceptualize, build and run a bar penned by craft cocktail pioneer Jim Meehan. Adopting Meehan’s strategy of making the bar’s concept fit the neighborhood rather than the other way around, Harrison decided on an intentionally curated menu for the bar’s opening to gauge the response of his customers.

“Bars are supposed to be something that come in to make the neighborhood better, not change it,” Harrison said, adding that his plan was to remain flexible to the tastes of the local community. “If we need more vodka drinks on the menu, we’re going to do it,” he said.

Though Harrison estimates that the opening cocktail menu will only be about half of its eventual length, Bar Zola has still tried to offer something for everybody, or as he puts it—a cocktail menu that is, “unpretentious, fun to drink and complex enough to satisfy just about anybody.” The end result is an assortment of cocktails across five categories: sparkling, citrusy and refreshing, stirred and boozy, low-proof and no-proof (mixed drinks containing no alcohol).

Rude Boy brings the flavors of tiki to the classic old fashioned. The drink is made from Rhum Barbancourt, Plantation pineapple rum and two kinds of bitters for complexity. (Photo by Magali Gauthier)

“It’s kind of like a neo-tiki cocktail list,” Harrison said, referring to the flavors used in many of the bar’s drinks, featuring plenty of citrus and spice — hallmarks of classic tiki cocktails.

Though tiki flavors are certainly abundant in the “citrusy and refreshing” section of the menu, Harrison’s love of the category has also influenced his “stirred and boozy” drinks like the Rude Boy, which he describes as an “old fashioned in a Hawaiian shirt.” The drink is made with a base of both Barbancourt and Plantation Caribbean rums for sweetness and complexity (in place of whiskey), and gets its tiki twist from Bittermens Elemakule Tiki Bitters, which lend cinnamon and allspice flavor, as well as orange bitters and gomme syrup (a sugar syrup thickened with gum arabic) for body and texture.

Where Bar Zola may stand out amongst many other craft cocktail bars on the Peninsula is in Harrison’s approach to thoughtfully crafted cocktails made with low amounts of alcohol, or none at all. “If you come in and spend the money on something that doesn’t have liquor in it, it should be interesting,” Harrison said, noting that most non-alcoholic cocktails he has sampled at bars are merely reproductions of classic cocktails made with non-alcoholic distillates.

The cocktail list at Bar Zola is “highly tiki influenced,” according to bar manager Duncan Harrison. Citrus juices and bitters feature heavily in Bar Zola’s “neo-tiki” drinks. (Photo by Magali Gauthier)

Harrison has also considered the modified drinking habits of customers during the pandemic. “Going out to a bar and having like five or six drinks is kind of becoming less and less logistically possible,” Harrison said, noting that many customers are reluctant to use ride-sharing services that would have otherwise assured safe passage home after a long night. Seeking to provide low-alcohol offerings that are delicious enough for customers to order a second round while still drinking responsibly, Bar Zola uses smaller quantities of flavorful liqueurs and cordials like Haus Alpenz Byrrh Grand Quinquina (an aromatic wine-based aperitif) and Grand Marnier for complex flavor with less alcohol.

For customers who prefer not to drink alcohol at all, Harrison noted that one of the most popular drinks served during the bar’s soft opening has been a non-alcoholic one. The Speak Low is made with muddled grapefruit and celery, lime juice and a hibiscus-cashew orgeat that Bar Zola makes themselves. “Spirits provide body just as much as they provide booziness,” Harrison said, noting that the cashews in the drink provide important structure, mouthfeel and richness usually imparted by spirits.

To make the kumquat-infused mezcal in the Smoke and Mirrors — which the bar describes as a “spicy margarita in a fur coat” — Bar Zola blends kumquats and mezcal before clarifying the mixture using agar-agar (a plant-based gelatin); The French Connection is the clearest indication of Bar Zola’s French roots, featuring Christian Drouhin Calvados, La Quintinye Vermouth Royal Blanc, Lucien Jacob Creme de Cassis and pear cider from acclaimed calvados maker Domaine Didier Lemorton. (Photos by Magali Gauthier)

Though other housemade syrups like the hibiscus-cashew orgeat and unique liquors like Pineau des Charentes abound in Bar Zola’s drink wells, Harrison says he wants to keep the menu as “unpretentious” as possible. “We’re never going to tell you that there’s Ticaloid [a culinary stabilizer] and xanthan gum in our hibiscus-cashew orgeat,” Harrison said, noting that he wants to remove the “guesswork and Googling” that can come from trying to read an overly complicated cocktail menu.

Instead, Bar Zola relies on flavor-driven descriptors to help customers find cocktails that best match their tastes. In the case of the low-alcohol Coupe de Ville, for example, the base of Martini & Rossi Fiero (a bittersweet vermouth imbued with flavor from Spanish oranges) is simply described as “Italian, red, bitter,” on Bar Zola’s menu.

Another area where Bar Zola hopes to be unpretentious is in its ability to provide access to cocktails that don’t break the bank. Though house cocktails are priced at fifteen dollars each (not uncommon for craft cocktails in the area), Harrison says that the team at Bar Zola will always be able to recommend a well-made classic cocktail like a daiquiri for between $10 and $12.

“Bars are supposed to be something that come in to make the neighborhood better, not change it”—Duncan Harrison, Bar Zola’s bar manager. (Photos by Magali Gauthier)

Though that price point will be a welcome one to budget-conscious drinkers, Harrison says offering cocktails in that range is also about giving more options to the bar’s regulars. “Our staff is going to be intimately trained on our spirits list and what would work best in the classics,” he said, adding that a Bar Zola regular who always drinks from the menu should be offered the chance to branch out and try something else for the same price, or less than that of the house cocktails, depending on the customer’s choice of spirit.

While Zola remains closed for dine-in service, Bar Zola will serve an abbreviated version of the restaurant’s pre-pandemic menu, which diners can enjoy inside, or in a newly constructed parklet. Bienaime has combined a number of small bites like olives, salmon tartine and tuna tartare with larger entreés of Hokkaido scallops cooked in a carrot-truffle nage with shiitake mushrooms, or steak au poivre served with pommes frites.

Bar Zola will be open from Thursday to Saturday, from 5p.m. until late.

Bar Zola // 585 Bryant St, Palo Alto; 650.521.0651


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Zack Fernandes

Bay Area transplant by way of Singapore and Philadelphia. I make burgers by night. Find me @zachareats on Instagram and at zackfernandes.com

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