North AmericaRestaurants

Californian restaurants in North America

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  1. A

    Park Chow

    Cozy up by the fireplace downstairs or the patio heat lamps upstairs, and shake that fog-belt chill with reliable, California comfort food like mild curry Smiling Noodles, stalwart spaghetti with meatballs, and caramel gingerbread with pumpkin ice cream. This is one of the most kid-friendly and pet-positive restaurants in the city, with booster seats and water bowls by the door.

    reviewed

  2. B

    Boulevard

    The 1889 Belle Epoque styling of the quake-surviving Audiffred Building is a fitting locale for Boulevard, which remains one of San Francisco’s most consistently creative and widely respected restaurants. Chef Nancy Oakes has a light, easy touch with juicy pork chops, enough local soft-shell crab to satisfy a sailor, and chocolate ganache cake with housemade bourbon ice cream.

    reviewed

  3. C

    Ahwahnee Dining Room

    The formal ambience (mind your manners) may not be for everybody, but few would not be awed by the sumptuous decor, soaring beamed ceiling and palatial chandeliers. The menu is constantly in flux, but most dishes have perfect pitch and are beautifully presented. There's a dress code at dinner, but otherwise shorts and sneakers are OK. Sunday brunch is amazing.

    reviewed

  4. D

    Bouchon

    The perfect, unhurried, follow-up dinner to a day in Wine Country, convivial Bouchon's bright, flavorful California cooking uses only locally grown small-scale-farm produce and meats, which marry beautifully with the more than 50 local wines available by the glass. For romance, book a table on the cozy candlelit patio.

    reviewed

  5. E

    Chez Panisse

    [ourpick] Chez Panisse Genuflect at the temple of Alice Waters: the birthplace of California cuisine remains at the pinnacle of Bay Area dining. Book one month ahead for its legendary prix-fixe meals (no substitutions); or book upstairs at the less-expensive, a-la-carte café.

    reviewed

  6. F

    Aqua

    Prix-fixe dinners here are major FiDi investments, but the $36 three-course business lunch delivers tiny, jewel-like dishes so fresh and delicately handled, you can almost taste the sun in a cherry-tomato sorbet and stormy seas in the geoduck clam ceviche. Trust your savvy server to recommend wine pairings and provide spot-on assessments of a dish, including where that tomato or clam comes from (most ingredients are sustainably sourced) and how it was prepared. Aqua has been justly famed as one of the city’s finest for years now – this is where star chefs Traci Des Jardins and Michael Mina got their starts, among others – so be sure to book well ahead if you’re planning a…

    reviewed

  7. G

    Canteen

    The Mini Cooper of San Francisco restaurants, Canteen packs maximum flair into minimal space. Chef Dennis Leary (of Rubicon fame) jumped off the celebrity-chef-in-Vegas track to preside over the kitchen solo and cook whatever he damn well pleases on any given day, which if you're lucky might include smoked duck with Treviso raddichio and roast figs, and lamb with a pomegranate reduction. There are only three seatings a night at 6, 7:30, and 9.

    Brunches may mean an hour wait, but it's hard to complain with your mouth full and toes curled in delight. Fingers crossed it's a prix fixe night, where the chef pulls out all the stops for around US$50. They can't accommodate parti…

    reviewed

  8. H

    Acquerello

    A converted chapel is a fitting location for a meal that’ll turn Italian culinary purists into true believers in Cal-Italian cuisine. ‘Oh…my…God…’ is the obvious reaction to chef Suzette Gresham’s generous pastas and ingenious seasonal meat dishes, including heavenly quail salad, devilish lobster panzerotti (stuffed dough pockets in a spicy seafood broth), and venison loin chops. Order a la carte, or a prix-fixe of three/four/five courses for $60/72/82. An anteroom where brides once steadied their nerves is now lined with limited-production Italian vintages, which the sommelier will pair by the glass.

    reviewed

  9. I

    Kabuto

    Even doubting sushi-traditionalists and Japanese-food agnostics find themselves worshipping at the sushi bar of Kabuto, a former hot-dog place that’s become a temple of sushi innovation. Every night there’s a line out the door to witness sushi chef Eric top nori-wrapped sushi rice with foie gras and ollalieberry reduction, ono (Hawaiian wahoo fish) with grapefruit and crème fraîche, and the most religious experience of all: the 49er oyster with sea urchin, caviar, a quail’s egg and gold leaf, chased with rare sake.

    reviewed

  10. J

    Range

    Fine American dining is alive and well within Range. Lowly pork shoulder becomes an eye-opener rubbed with coffee and served with bafflingly smooth grits, and bread pudding becomes a main event baked to velvety perfection with local radish sprouts and gooey Gruyère. Although the beer fridge is a repurposed medical cabinet ominously emblazoned with the words ‘Blood Bank, ’ no resuscitation will be necessary after you get the check – mains are priced around $20, with desserts and drinks under $10.

    reviewed

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  12. K

    Bar Bambino

    Rustic Italian fare at communal tables, right off the freeway. The olive-oil tasting is a bit much at $3 to $5 an ounce, but otherwise there’s no denying the appeal of this Southern Italian menu highlighting Californian produce: pasta with Mission figs and pancetta, fresh squash blossoms stuffed with sheep’s milk ricotta, and pine-nut-studded eggplant polpette (meat balls), each for under $15, plus a well-priced, adventurous Italian wine list.

    reviewed

  13. L

    Café Myth

    Office jockeys risk the boss' ire to wait in line for Myth's California-style classics, including sushi-grade ahi tuna salad, butternut squash soup with duck confit, and chicken pot pie bursting with organic vegetables. Ditch work early to share a leisurely dinner of large and small plates, and be prepared to a fight over the last bite of seared duck with sprightly orange, earthy shitake mushroom and pistachios, and mellow port wine reduction.

    reviewed

  14. M

    Eos Restaurant & Wine Bar

    A classic overachiever, Eos isn't content to have appreciative crowds licking the last of its classic shitake mushroom dumplings, chorizo sausage mussel small plates, and gooey cardamom chocolate cake. Instead it plies you with eclectic wine flights until you're proclaiming its genius to everyone who'll listen. Since tables are close, that could be everyone in the restaurant - good thing everyone's in a similar state.

    reviewed

  15. N

    Zuni Cafe

    Gimmickry is for amateurs – Zuni has been turning basic menu items into gourmet staples since 1979. Reservations and fat wallets are necessary, but the see-and-be-seen seating is a kick and the food is beyond reproach: organic-beef burgers on focaccia, Caesar salad with house-cured anchovies, crispy roasted free-range chicken with horseradish mashed potatoes, and impeccable chocolate pudding.

    reviewed

  16. O

    Bar Jules

    Small, local and succulent is the credo at this corridor of a neighborhood bistro. The short daily menu thinks big with flavor-rich, sustainably minded pairings like local duck breast with farro, an abbreviated but apt local wine selection and the dark, sinister ‘chocolate nemesis.’ There are no reservations, and waits are a given – but so is simple, tasty food.

    reviewed

  17. P

    George's at the Cove

    If you've got the urge to splurge, the Euro-Cal cooking is as dramatic as the oceanfront location thanks to the bottomless imagination of chef Trey Foshee. George's has graced just about every list of top restaurants in California, and indeed the USA. Three venues allow you to enjoy it at different price points: Ocean Terrace, George's Bar and George's California Modern.

    reviewed

  18. Q

    Spruce

    VIP all the way, with studded ostrich-leather chairs, mahogany walls and your choice of 1000 wines. Expense-accounters forget business and feast on pork tenderloin with crispy pork belly, and ladies who lunch dispense with polite conversation and tear into lavish salads of warm duck confit, plums, and greens grown on the restaurant’s own organic farm.

    reviewed

  19. R

    Tiara Café

    Pretty in pink and with a high ceiling, this Fashion District spot feeds designers, sales clerks and frenzied bargain hunters with healthy, organic fare that can be calibrated to meet vegan and vegetarian needs. The salads are fresh and abundant and the sandwiches are custom-made. Carbo-phobes should try the rice paper–wrapped versions.

    reviewed

  20. S

    Lark Creek Inn

    Lark Creek Inn is in a lovely spot and is a fine-dining experience. It's housed in an old Victorian building tucked away in a redwood canyon, and the farm-fresh American food (roast veal, seared scallops, roasted chestnut ravioli) is gratifying. The main dining room has a Sunday dinner formality, but you can also dine in the adjacent bar.

    reviewed

  21. T

    Namu

    SF's unfair culinary advantages – top-notch organic ingredients, Silicon Valley inventiveness and Pacific Rim flair – are showcased in Korean-inspired small plates of buttery kampachi with chili oil and fleur de sel, bacon-wrapped enoki mushrooms, and Niman Ranch Kobe beef with organic vegetables in a sizzling stone pot.

    reviewed

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  23. U

    JiRaffe

    Raphael Lunetta knows his waves and his kitchen. The avid surfer who studied cooking in France is a wizard when it comes to Cal-French compositions: pork chops are caramelized and paired with cider sauce; glazed salmon comes with saffron lemon couscous and artichokes. It's elegant, complex and supremely satisfying.

    reviewed

  24. V

    Seis Palmas

    The fantastic ocean sunsets from this Carrizalillo clifftop perch are the perfect backdrop for the inventive and delicious Californian-Oaxacan dishes arriving at your table. You might start with green-bean tempura with mustard, and follow it with a grilled whole snapper with grilled veggies and caramelized onions.

    reviewed

  25. Forge in the Forest

    Many of the employees at the Forge are also the owners through a trust. They bring an enthusiasm to this fun place that's infectious. Dine on the well-heated and flower-bordered patio or on an antique table inside. The huge menu features great sandwiches, steaks and pizzas. The bar is a fine place for a drink.

    reviewed

  26. W

    Salt House

    For a business lunch that feels more like a spa getaway, take your choice of light fare such as duck confit or yellowfin tuna with beets. Forget the ice tea, and unwind with wine by the glass and refreshing ginger juleps instead. Service is leisurely, so order that carrot cake with cream-cheese ice cream now.

    reviewed

  27. X

    World Famous

    Watch the surf while enjoying 'California coastal cuisine, ' an ever-changing menu of inventive dishes from the sea (think banana rum mahi and bacon-and-spinach-wrapped scallops), plus steaks, salads, lunchtime sandwiches and burgers and breakfasts, like the Newport omelet with crab, shrimp and spicy sauce.

    reviewed