There are restaurants you visit because you are hungry, and then there are restaurants you visit because you need to remember why you fell in love with a place. Lon’s at the Hermosa, tucked inside the historic Hermosa Inn in the Paradise Valley corridor of Scottsdale, belongs firmly in the second category. The moment you step onto the torch-lit terrace and feel the warm desert air settle around you, something shifts. The noise of the day falls away, and you are exactly where you are supposed to be.
The Hermosa Inn itself has a remarkable story. The property was originally the hand-built adobe home and studio of cowboy artist Lon Megargee in the 1930s, and the bones of that legacy are everywhere — in the thick adobe walls, the rough-hewn wooden beams, and the artwork that lines every corridor. Dining here is not just a meal; it is a genuinely immersive encounter with the creative spirit of the American Southwest.
Chef Jeremy McLachlan leads the kitchen with a philosophy that is refreshingly straightforward: source the best possible ingredients from regional farmers, ranchers, and foragers, and then get out of their way. The result is a menu that reads like a love letter to the Sonoran Desert. On a recent visit, the wood-roasted beet salad arrived at the table looking almost too beautiful to touch, stacked with creamy whipped goat cheese and toasted pistachios. The pan-seared duck breast, served alongside a vibrant green mole and charred corn, was the kind of dish that prompts you to slow down and actually pay attention to what you are eating.
The wine list is thoughtfully curated, leaning heavily into small-production Arizona and California labels, and the bar team turns out mezcal-forward cocktails that complement the smoky, earthy notes of the food beautifully. Ask for a table on the patio if the weather cooperates — and in Scottsdale, it usually does. Watching the last light of the sun drop behind the mountains while saguaros stand silhouetted against an amber sky is the kind of experience that gets described in postcards and completely undersells itself.
Sunday brunch at Lon’s deserves its own mention. The spread is generous and unhurried, with dishes like green chile shakshuka, house-made pastries, and a Bloody Mary built with local spirits. Families, couples, and solo diners with a book all seem equally at ease here, which speaks to the warmth of the service staff. Nobody rushes you. Nobody makes you feel like a table to be turned.
Reservations are strongly recommended, particularly for weekend evenings, and valet parking is available. Lon’s is located at 5532 North Palo Cristi Road, just west of the 32nd Street corridor in the northern reaches of Paradise Valley. It sits close enough to Old Town Scottsdale to pair naturally with an evening stroll, yet feels removed from the louder energy of the tourist corridor.
Some places in a city hold its identity together — they remind you of what the land once was and what the people here have chosen to celebrate. Lon’s at the Hermosa is one of those places. Go once, and you will find yourself planning the next visit before you have even finished dessert.