The Top 47 Tasting Menus Near Hilda & Jesse
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Rank 1. Quince
Fine dining
Three Michelin stars in a beautifully restored Jackson Square room, Quince is as serious as San Francisco fine dining gets. The chef and his team are obsessed with what's growing right now, most of it from their own farm, and the seasonal Italian-leaning menu shows it. The crowd is dressed up and unhurried, the kind of night that stretches past midnight without anyone noticing. Budget accordingly, and book well ahead.
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Rank 2. Gary Danko
Contemporary French
Fine dining at its most old-school San Francisco, Gary Danko is the kind of place where the servers wear dark suits and wheel an actual cheese trolley to your table. The prix-fixe menu runs three to five courses of contemporary French cooking with global touches, and the room is full of anniversaries being celebrated, deals being closed, and someone's parents in town looking very pleased with themselves.
- AAA Five Diamonds
- Forbes Travel Guide Forbes Four Star
- Wine Enthusiast The Wine Restaurant Hall of Fame
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Rank 3. Benu
Korean
Corey Lee's three-Michelin-star tasting menu in SoMa is the kind of meal people fly to San Francisco specifically to eat. The cooking is deeply technical but rooted in Asian flavors, and the progression from tiny precise bites to full courses feels almost architectural. The room is quiet and grown-up, full of people who booked months out and are absolutely keeping the receipt. Plan your whole evening around it.
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Rank 4. Kusakabe
Sushi
Omakase done with real conviction in the Financial District, where a live-edge elm counter sets the tone for a meal that moves through techniques you didn't expect from a sushi spot. The kitchen keeps things precise without feeling cold, and the crowd tends to be date-night serious, the kind of people who put their phones away after the first photo. Come hungry and ready to let the team surprise you.
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Rank 5. Ssal
Modern Korean
A Michelin-starred tasting menu that takes modern Korean cooking seriously without taking itself too seriously. The couple behind it spotted a real gap in SF's dining scene and built something refined but grounded in flavors that feel genuinely familiar. The room runs small and intimate, the kind of place where couples lean in close and everyone seems slightly dressed up. Korean tradition and French technique share the table here, and neither one is showing off.
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Rank 6. Atelier Crenn
Fine dining
Dominique Crenn is one of those chefs even non-food people have heard of, and her three Michelin stars make this pescatarian tasting menu one of the most serious meals you can have in the city. The cooking is rooted in Brittany but grown up in California, so everything feels refined without being stuffy. The room draws the kind of crowd that dressed intentionally for tonight and plans to talk about it for weeks.
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Rank 7. Trestle
Contemporary New American
A Bib Gourmand prix fixe in the Financial District that actually leaves you feeling like you got away with something. Trestle runs a tight three-course menu that rotates with the seasons, and the room is always packed with people who figured out that "affordable" and "really good" can coexist. The vibe is lively and a little loud, the service is warm, and you walk out full and weirdly happy about what you spent.
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Rank 8. O' by Claude Le Tohic
Fine French
Perched on the fifth floor of a six-story French food complex, this Michelin-starred tasting room is the serious, quiet-down-everyone capstone of the whole operation. The chef pulls off something genuinely tricky: classic French technique grounded in California ingredients, with results that feel neither fussy nor casual. The room runs on polished, unhurried service, and the crowd dresses accordingly.
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Rank 9. Saison
Fine dining
Everything at this two-Michelin-star warehouse spot revolves around a roaring open hearth, which sets the mood instantly. The crowd is Bay Area tech money dressed down just enough to seem unbothered, and the kitchen matches that studied cool with wildly creative Californian cooking. The wine team is genuinely great and won't make you feel bad about your budget. Wear something nice but not a suit, and clear your evening.
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Rank 10. Sato Omakase
Sushi
A sleek omakase counter in Japantown where the kitchen balances real luxury with real restraint, which is harder than it sounds. The crowd leans dressed-up and quietly impressed, the kind of people who did their research. Tradition and a little invention share the menu, and the more low-key bites often land harder than the showier ones. Next door, sibling spot Sushi Sato brings a looser vibe and kinder prices if you want to ease in first.
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Rank 11. Birdsong
Contemporary
Live fire runs through everything at this two-Michelin-star tasting menu spot in SoMa, where the chef somehow makes open-flame cooking feel playful rather than primal. The room is tall and elegant, the crowd is dressed up and leaning in, and the kitchen keeps finding ways to surprise you right up to dessert. It's the kind of meal where rugged technique and genuine whimsy end up in the same bite.
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Rank 12. Le Comptoir
Pescatarian French
A Michelin-starred counter tucked beside Atelier Crenn, where a small handful of guests each night get a front-row seat to a pescatarian French tasting menu being plated right in front of them. The marble bar, the careful pours, the intricate little courses, it all feels like a dinner party where the host is showing off, and you're genuinely glad they are. Dress like you mean it.
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Rank 13. Nisei
Japanese
A Michelin-starred tasting menu on Polk Street built around a genuinely interesting idea: what does Japanese cooking look like when it grows up in America. The chef is a real presence here, and the room takes the food seriously without taking itself too seriously. Couples and curious diners fill the seats, dressed up but not stiff. The sake pairing is worth doing, and the wagashi cart at the end is a lovely, unexpected touch.
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Rank 14. 7 Adams
Californian New American
A Michelin-starred tasting menu in a slim, railway-style room on Sutter, where the open kitchen runs so quietly it makes everywhere else feel chaotic by comparison. The cooking is Californian in the best sense, technically sharp and totally unshowy, the kind of meal where every course feels inevitable rather than clever. Couples on milestone dinners and serious food people who actually dress for the occasion tend to fill the seats.
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
- Esquire 2024 · The Best New Restaurants in America
- The New York Times The 25 Best Restaurants in San Francisco Right Now
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Rank 15. Lazy Bear
Fine dining
A two-Michelin-star tasting menu spot in the Mission that somehow feels like a very wealthy person's mountain cabin, and pulls it off without irony. The food is big and confident, the kind of cooking that winks at comfort and nostalgia while doing something genuinely ambitious with it. The crowd leans festive and dressed up, people celebrating something or just treating a Tuesday like it deserves a occasion.
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Rank 16. Californios
Fine dining
Two Michelin stars for a Mexican tasting menu sounds like a fever dream, but Californios pulls it off without a trace of self-importance. The room feels more like a dinner party than a temple, with colorful art on the walls and a playlist that actually slaps. The chef takes Mexico's culinary heritage seriously and then runs with it somewhere unexpected. Dress up a little, bring someone you want to impress, and clear your evening.
- Michelin Guide 2 Stars
- 50 Best 2025 · #14 · North America's 50 Best Restaurants
- Eater 2015 · The Best New Restaurants in America
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Rank 17. Kiln
Nordic New American
A two-Michelin-star tasting menu in a stark warehouse space that somehow feels warm once you're inside. The kitchen leans Nordic, leaning hard into curing, fermenting, and drying things until something quietly extraordinary comes out the other side. The food looks almost too simple, then lands with real force. The crowd tends toward people who planned the reservation months ago and are dressed just enough to feel like they earned it.
- Michelin Guide 2 Stars
- Condé Nast Traveler 2024 · The best new restaurants in the world
- Esquire 2023 · The Best New Restaurants in America
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Rank 18. Sons & Daughters
Fine dining
Two Michelin stars in a spot that feels more like a dinner party than a temple of fine dining. Sons & Daughters does a Nordic-influenced tasting menu where vegetables and foraged things get treated with the same obsessive care as anything else on the plate. The room is roomier now, the service is genuinely world-class without being stiff, and the crowd leans creative and curious rather than expense-account.
- Michelin Guide 2 Stars
- AAA Four Diamonds
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Nominee · Best Chef: California · Harrison Cheney
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Rank 19. Yuji
Japanese
Nine seats at a counter in Japantown, and if you're late they start without you, full stop. Yuji serves kappo, the slightly looser cousin of kaiseki, which means a long procession of beautiful, seasonal Japanese courses that take you from delicate little bites all the way through to rice and miso soup at the end. The crowd is small by definition, so everyone in the room is there on purpose, dressed quietly, and paying close attention.
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Tucked into a corner of the Japantown mall near the Webster Street exit, Oma is a wood counter omakase spot so small you could genuinely walk past it twice. But the nigiri punches well above its square footage, with clean flavors and silky fish that feel like a genuine find. Pick a prix-fixe tier to match your mood, and the prices stay reasonable. Regulars lean in quietly while the chef works; nobody's here to be seen.
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Rank 21. Nightbird
Californian New American
A tasting menu spot in Hayes Valley where the food is as considered as the carved owl on the front door. The chef changes the menu with the seasons, so whatever lands on the table feels intentional rather than tired. Arrive early and duck into the adjacent Linden Room for a cocktail first, because the crowd here, the kind who wear a blazer like it was their idea, knows that's part of the deal.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: California · Kim Alter
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Rank 22. Mijoté
French
A French prix fixe in a Mission wine bar that somehow feels like a Paris side street without any of the attitude. The chef trained in Japan and then went deep on French technique, and the cooking shows it: seasonal, ingredient-forward, nothing fussy. Natural wines pair well with pretty much everything on the table. The crowd is neighborhood regulars who know a good thing and aren't rushing anywhere.
- James Beard Awards 2025 · Nominee · Best Chef: California · Kosuke Tada
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- Los Angeles Times 2025 · The 101 Best Restaurants in California
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Rank 23. Ken
Omakase Japanese
Six seats, no sign on the door, and a chef who genuinely seems to enjoy surprising you. Ken is an omakase counter in the Lower Haight where the nigiri leans creative without being weird about it, and the small plates tend to steal the show anyway. The room is intimate in the way that actually means intimate, not just small. Expect a crowd that researched this pretty carefully before showing up.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- The Infatuation #6 · The 25 Best Restaurants In SF
- San Francisco Chronicle Best Sushi Restaurants in San Francisco Bay Area
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Rank 24. jū-ni
Omakase Sushi
A twelve-seat omakase counter just off Divisadero where the energy is younger and looser than the format usually allows. The team moves with the kind of confidence that makes a long tasting feel like a party rather than a ceremony. It draws the neighborhood's well-paid creative class, all smart-casual, leaning in. The nigiri is the heart of it, carefully sourced and precise without being stuffy about it.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- San Francisco Chronicle Best Sushi Restaurants in San Francisco Bay Area
- The Infatuation The 18 Best Restaurants In NoPa
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Rank 25. Noodle in a Haystack
Ramen Noodles
A ramen omakase in the Richmond that landed on the New York Times restaurant list, which is a sentence you'll want to read twice. The team walks you through a multi-course tasting menu built entirely around noodles, and somehow it never feels gimmicky. The room is small, the tickets aren't cheap, and the crowd looks like people who planned this dinner weeks out and are thrilled they did.
- The Infatuation Infatuation’s Highest-Rated Restaurants In America
- The New York Times 2023 · The Restaurant List
- Bon Appétit 2023 · America's Best New Restaurants
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Rank 26. Omakase
Edomae Sushi
Serious Edomae sushi in a room so small it feels like the chef is cooking just for you, because essentially they are. Fish comes straight from Tokyo's Toyosu market, cured and aged the old-school way, and the nigiri are the kind that make you put your phone down. The crowd is quiet, attentive, slightly reverent. Show up on time, or don't bother showing up at all.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- San Francisco Chronicle Best Sushi Restaurants in San Francisco Bay Area
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Rank 27. Wolfsbane
Fine dining
A sleek Dogpatch tasting menu spot where the chef brings serious fine dining chops and a genuinely personal point of view, weaving California produce through Nordic, Japanese, and French instincts without it feeling like a mood board. The cooking is precise and quietly ambitious, the kind that rewards paying attention. The crowd tends toward date-night serious and special-occasion celebratory, dressed up just enough to match the room.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- The Infatuation The Hit List: New San Francisco Restaurants To Try Right Now
- San Francisco Chronicle 2026 · #71 · Top 100 Restaurants in the Bay Area
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Rank 28. Prubechu
Chamorro
Prubechu is almost certainly the only Chamorro restaurant you'll walk into this year, and the staff know it, so they're genuinely happy to walk you through the menu without making you feel like a tourist. It's a casual Mission spot serving the Indigenous food of Guam, heavy on coconut, grilled meats, and dishes you won't recognize but will want to reorder. The covered outdoor picnic tables, floral oilcloth and all, do their best impression of a Pacific island.
- The Infatuation #25 · The 25 Best Restaurants In SF
- San Francisco Chronicle Best restaurants for outdoor dining in the Bay Area
- San Francisco Chronicle 2026 · #53 · Top 100 Restaurants in the Bay Area
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Rank 29. Anomaly
Contemporary
There's no sign outside, just a street number on a quiet residential block, which is basically the whole personality of this modernist tasting menu spot. It has the feel of a supper club someone's keeping deliberately low-key. Inside, it's intimate and a little conspiratorial, the kind of room where everyone seems pleased with themselves for finding it. The chef does genuinely creative, beautifully plated work without leaning too hard on the foam-and-gel theatrics.
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Rank 30. 3rd Cousin
New American
Bernal Heights doesn't scream "dinner destination," which is exactly why this cozy neighborhood restaurant feels like a find. The chef built a following through pop-ups before opening here, and the locals clearly never left. It's the kind of intimate room where everyone seems to be a regular. The cooking is seasonal and inventive without being exhausting about it, landing somewhere between comforting and genuinely surprising.
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Rank 31. Kibatsu
Sushi
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Rank 32. NARA
Sushi Wine Bar
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Rank 33. Commis
Contemporary
Oakland's got a two-Michelin-star tasting menu restaurant, and it feels nothing like the words "two-Michelin-star tasting menu restaurant" suggest. Commis is cool and unhurried, tucked into a neighborhood strip, with a room full of people who dressed up just enough to feel like themselves. The chef weaves Thai and Chinese influences into precise, locally sourced cooking that manages to feel both elegant and genuinely personal.
- AAA Four Diamonds
- Michelin Guide 2 Stars
- James Beard Awards 2022 · Nominee · Best Chef: California · James Syhabout
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Rank 34. Robin
Omakase Sushi
Robin is an omakase sushi spot in Hayes Valley where the menu is basically a surprise every single time, because the chef builds your meal around what you choose to spend rather than a fixed script. The combinations lean wild, think fish paired with chiles or truffle, and it works in a way that shouldn't. Expect a sleek room full of people who planned this dinner two weeks out and are very pleased with themselves about it.
- Bon Appétit 2018 · America's Best New Restaurants
- San Francisco Chronicle Best Sushi Restaurants in San Francisco Bay Area
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Rank 35. Sorrel
Contemporary
Sorrel is a Michelin-starred fine dining spot in Pacific Heights where the pasta alone justifies the reservation. The chef trained at Quince and it shows, turning out impossibly light gnudi and boldly sauced shapes that feel like the whole point of the meal. The rooftop garden keeps things genuinely seasonal. Expect a well-dressed crowd being very careful not to look like they're trying too hard. Go hungry, and order the pasta.
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Millennium is the vegan restaurant that makes even devoted carnivores forget what they're missing. It's a proper sit-down dinner spot in Oakland, with a full a la carte menu most nights and a four-course prix fixe on weekends. The kitchen applies real technique to seasonal produce, turning out dishes that feel genuinely ambitious rather than compensatory. The crowd is relaxed and mostly looks like they've been coming here for years, because a lot of them have.
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Rank 37. Wakuriya
Japanese
A Michelin-starred kaiseki counter in San Mateo where the chef single-handedly turns out a monthly changing tasting menu that treats California ingredients with serious Japanese technique. This is quiet, unhurried, grown-up dining, the kind where the regulars already know to just let the kitchen do its thing. The room is small and focused, which sets the tone perfectly for food that earns your full attention.
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Rank 38. Navio
Contemporary
Fine dining inside the Ritz-Carlton Half Moon Bay, where the Pacific puts on a show through the windows whether you ask it to or not. The kitchen leans into the coastal setting with polished, ingredient-forward cooking that feels luxurious without being stiff. Couples dressed just a little too nicely for a Tuesday fill the room, and honestly, that's the right call. Sunset reservations go fast for obvious reasons.
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Rank 39. Protégé
Contemporary New American
Two French Laundry veterans run this Michelin-starred spot in Palo Alto, and the pedigree shows without making you feel underdressed. It's upscale-casual fine dining where the tasting menu is genuinely thoughtful and the wine list is the kind that makes the table go quiet for a minute. The lounge does à la carte if you'd rather not commit to the full experience. The crowd skews tech money with the good taste to spend it here.
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Rank 40. Table Culture Provisions
Fine dining
A tiny ten-table tasting menu spot in downtown Petaluma that punches way above its zip code. The cooking is California-seasonal with a real French backbone, and the team pulls it off without any of the stiffness that usually comes with that combination. Couples on big-deal dinners and locals who've quietly adopted it as their spot fill the room. Pick four courses or go the full seven if the night calls for it.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- San Francisco Chronicle Best fine dining restaurants in San Francisco Bay Area
- San Francisco Chronicle 2026 · #75 · Top 100 Restaurants in the Bay Area
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Rank 41. Kenzo
Kaiseki Japanese
A Michelin-starred kaiseki counter tucked into downtown Napa, where the meal unfolds in quiet, unhurried courses that make the wine-tasting crowds outside feel like another world. The 25-seat room is serene and minimal, and the counter seats are the ones to request so you can watch the chefs work. Pair it with sake or pours from the estate's own Napa wines, and clear your evening.
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Rank 42. La Toque
Contemporary
Fine dining inside the Westin Verasa, where a giant inflatable toque marks the entrance and the open kitchen keeps the room buzzing with quiet theater. The tasting menu leans seasonal and confident, with a serious wine list that suits the Napa crowd dressed up for anniversaries and milestone birthdays. Ken Frank has been doing this for years, and it shows in a room that feels earned rather than decorated.
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Rank 43. The French Laundry
French
Thomas Keller's three-Michelin-star fine dining landmark in Yountville is about as serious as American restaurants get, and scoring a table here feels like a minor personal achievement. The room is quietly perfect, the service operates on a different level, and the French-rooted tasting menu is the kind of meal people recount for years. The crowd dresses up, speaks softly, and absolutely photographs the bread.
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Spacious dim sum hall in a Cupertino strip mall that gets properly packed on weekends, with families crowded around steamer crates and a live seafood tank doing its bubbly thing in the corner. The taro puffs are genuinely worth the visit on their own. The baked barbecue pastries are flaky and the shrimp balls have that satisfying crunch. Dress casually, arrive hungry, and don't expect a quiet table.
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Rank 45. Le Papillon
European
Le Papillon is the kind of old-school fine dining room that has been around forever and still earns it, a proper white-tablecloth night out in San Jose where the staff actually seem happy to see you. Come for a special occasion or a fancy date and choose between a six-course tasting or a shorter prix fixe built around whatever's seasonal. The room skews quiet and grown-up, which is exactly the point.
- The Infatuation The Best Restaurants In San Jose
- San Francisco Chronicle Best restaurants in San Jose
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Nine seats, one counter, and a level of quiet that means you will absolutely hear your neighbor's story about having too many cars. This is kaiseki in a small Saratoga dining room, where the chef mists soup bowls to simulate dew and trims grapes so they stand upright rather than roll. It sounds fussy, but in the room it just feels like someone cares deeply. Between courses, the chef silently practices piano on the counter. The crowd dresses accordingly.
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Rank 47. ADEGA
Portuguese
Portuguese tasting menus aren't exactly flooding San Jose, which is what makes Adega worth the trip. It's an upscale, sit-down-and-commit kind of night, the sort where the wine list alone could keep you busy. The kitchen leans into classic Portuguese ingredients, the seafood especially, all dressed up with enough polish to impress whoever you're trying to impress. The room is low-key for the price, which honestly just means the food does the talking.