The Top 8 Tasting Menus Near Ramen Champ
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Rank 1. 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.
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Rank 2. 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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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 5. 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 6. 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 7. 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 8. Coastal Kitchen
Contemporary
Tucked inside the Monterey Plaza Hotel, down a flight of stairs that feels like you're being let in on a secret, this is a tasting menu spot where the Pacific Ocean basically becomes part of the meal. The bay view alone is worth the trip, but the kitchen earns its keep with globe-trotting plates built around local catches. Dress up a little; the crowd absolutely did.