A Tradition of Hospitality

Zagat Survey Raves, "Excellent
game", "outstanding service" and an
"exceptional setting" on a creek bank make this "very fancy" San Jose French
situated in an old boarding house "well worth the drive" for a "special celebration".
In
the mid 1800s, just a few years before the great California Gold
Rush, Andres Castillera, a Mexican officer with the Artillery
discovered his own riches in the lush green hills of an area known
as New Almaden. Castillera’s bounty was cinnabar, a precious metal commonly
referred to as “quicksilver,” and word of his discovery
spread quickly. It wasn’t long thereafter that the small community
was
thriving with miners anxious to stake their own claims.
In 1848, a
creekside boarding house
was constructed in New Almaden to house the area’s hard-working crews.The two-story building
(the first two-story hotel in California) provided the miners with a comfortable place to sleep and hot meals, served in
rustic dining room downstairs. The old boarding house remained in operation in
this capacity up until the 1930s, when it was converted
into the Cafe Del Rio, a popular restaurant which served
New Almaden for almost 40 years.
Today,
this historically significant building houses La Foret an exquisite french
restaurant named, appropriately enough, for
its
lush forest surroundings. As one of San Jose’s finest dining establishments,
La Foret is proud to carry on the time-honored
tradition of hospitality that began in New Almaden more than
100 years ago.
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