Wednesday, August 15, 2007

900 Grayson - Berkeley - 3.5/4 stars

Visited on:
Several times, last visit on August 13, 2007.

Experience:
This is the fun part of Emeryville area. Artists live here by the galore, artisan shops open here by the bundle, cute little restaurants operate around tiny corners, everything is quite low key, but great if you know where to find them. 900 Grayson is such a place. Even the name is very unassuming: if you know the name, you know where to find it. And that's how I identify with the food they present here - laid-back and easy.


Tons of people come here for brunch on the weekends. I don't think they take reservations, so if you bring 5 of your closest friends with you, you'll end up waiting for more than an hour. During brunch they serve a lot of breakfast items and some lunch items. Plenty of organic ingredients and sustainable farmed produce.


This is what we started with on this day: Potter Creek.


I have no idea if it is related to Harry Potter or not, though probably not. It's simple breakfast fare with great execution. The scrambled eggs is among the best I've ever had, creamy and slightly sagging in the middle, beautifully yellow and yielding on the outside. Light herbs bring out an enticing aroma that you shall not kill with ketchup.


Acme toasts are lightly buttered then grilled. Note that hash brown - the menu said clearly that they do not serve diner food. No ma'am, this is gourmet version of hash brown with Idaho potatoes, crispy on the outside, fluffy on the inside. Easy on the palate, even for the most adamant breakfast rejecters.


Then, we got a bit more adventuresome: Miss Piggy and the General


Again, I have no idea who that General is, but I can sure tell you, that bun is sooooooooooooooo soft. Really soft. It looks like ciabatta, but nooooo. It is very soft, soaking up the homemade barbecue sauce easily while slurping in the juice from homemade slaw. The pork is tender, very well accompanied by the caramelized onion. I wouldn't call it authentic pulled pork by any means, but I think it serves its purpose well here - a soft sandwich that's easy to chew. It might be a bit sweet for some, I personally don't mind sweetness. This is one of the interesting dishes that the different ingredients don't really stand well on its own. You need to take a big bite and mull over how the different pieces work together as a dish. This is more than a team effort - it's synergy. The fries are a bit uneven, some are over fried, but on principle alone, no one should finish that much fries either.




On yet another day, we had the waffle.


This is one seriously good waffle, though not exactly Belgian. I would say that it is a pancake with texture, because usually waffles are a lot thicker. This place serves them thin and light, using the grids to add to the texture of the hot cakes. Even without that glob of butter I would say it is fantastic. With that...even better.


If there is a good-for-you version of corned beef, this must be it.
The Tomboy.


You can see the beef, but you can't taste it, because both taste and texture are very nicely wrapped up by potatoes and the gooey egg yolk flowing from the poached egg. Parsnip is very refreshing, though I would like to have more fuji apple in there. But then, it wouldn't be corned beef, would it?


Then a large cup of chai...very sweet.


900 Grayson doesn't really hit you with gastronomic meteors, but when you wake up in the morning and just want to treat your mouth to something light and breezy, this is the place to go.


Basic information:
900 Grayson
Telephone: 510 704 9900
Business hours: Mon - Fri - 8am - 3:30pm
Sat - 8am - 2:30pm


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Bouchon - Yountville - 5 stars

Visited on:
August 11, 2007.


Experience:
My first visit to Bouchon was way back when Venetian just opened, and I stepped in Bouchon Las Vegas for a brunch. I remember the lobster buffet, but that was about it. Nothing that impressed me very much. For the past few years, I never got up enough interest to try Bouchon Yountville, simply because I really couldn’t remember anything interesting from my previous visit to its sibling.


Then, along came Michelin. I trust the Michelin guide in several areas, mainly French, Italian, Mediterranean, etc...The European cuisines, so to speak. (On a side note: NEVER trust Michelin for Chinese/Asian cuisine if you have some basic understanding of what these things should taste like.) While their 2 star choices sometimes left me baffled – I didn’t really enjoy my Guy Savoy visit – I found their 1 star and 3 star choices to be more than satisfactory. So, when the occasion rose, I planned the trip to Bouchon. Booking 2 weeks ahead of time scored me a table at 5:45. I’m pretty certain this is the first round of seating for the evening. So be warned: book early!


Yountville is this quaint little town that is imbibed with flavorful smells, either from the kitchens or from the sun-baked grape leaves. There are several delightful hotels there, like the Villagio, and a bunch of Michelin stars clustered around. Not too far from its 1-star mate - Bistro Jeanty – sits Bouchon, unassuming red canvas with a nice little patio area, kind of like the bistro that you’d walk into for a quick bite down in the Provence.



Not so for the interior décor – alabaster white high ceilings with fresco, golden gilded mirrors, discreet golden lamp fixtures, it looked just like a poster Parisian café, like le Grand Café or Café des Fleurs. The only part that baffled me a lot was the indoor plant. I still cannot understand the need for the tall, green, leafy thing in there. Maybe that’s where Paris meets California.




This is how they provide you with the menu there – around the napkin.



I personally think it is cute, hope they use biodegradable paper. The menu presents a very nice round of popular Parisien café food, though of different…categories, shall we say. Normally you don’t find Plat de Fruits de la Mer appearing on the same menu with Croque Madam AND ris de veau. But again, you normally don’t find a $16 Croque Madam either. All in all, I’d say that the menu at Bouchon tries to collect as many French café/bistro favorites in one menu as possible. A true something-for-everybody. Which of course, tempted us to order beyond our normal capacity.


Fanny Bay Oysters from British Columbia ($16 approx)



Do you see how clean the shells are? How even the sizes are? This is what you get when you pay $16/half dozen vs $8/half dozen – the handpick process. Normally I wouldn’t go for Fanny Bay, because they are too “fat” for my taste, but I make an exception in summer. I wasn’t disappointed. Slightly briny in taste, but the sweetness flowing out from the white bulbous body more than make up for the brininess, esp. coupled with the wine vinegar. Bouchon’s recipe departs from the original of red wine vinegar + raw onion by adding a lot of black pepper. I won’t know how it would work on the lighter variety of Pacific oysters, like Sweetwater or Kumamoto, but it works well with Fanny Bay.


Ris de Veau ($15 approx)



Or sweetbread, as it is known. I won’t go into specifics about where that came from, you can find out more here, but it’s perfectly okay if you don’t read up about it. The only thing that one needs to know about sweetbread, is that it can either be great or horrible, depending on how talented the chef is. In this case, Bouchon scored a 100 in my score card. It is soft, but not mushy, offering that essential resistance to your bite which is the mark of fresh and healthy organs. I’d compare it with a nice, silky tofu, only the tofu dissolves more cleanly, while the sweetbread tends to linger and curl around your taste buds. The mustard sauce is lightly sweet, flavorful enough to enhance the natural sweetness of the sweetbread, removing any trace of gaminess, but does not take away its earthy undertone. Amazing cherry tomatoes, exquisite bundle of tartness and sweetness. Perfect for refreshing the palate. I thought I would’ve hated the lettuce leaves, because they looked so forlorn and squishy, but to my great surprise, it was crunchy!! Almost like a salad!! I personally prefer cooked lettuce, because it removes the grassy taste, leaving only the nice sweet juices, but it’s so hard to do it well. Bouchon excelled right here. A fabulous start of a meal.


Soup of the day – Corn with fresh cream and fried onion strings



Drinking the soup is like drinking liquefied organic corn, fully ripened to its prime maturity, all starchiness gone, offering up a clarity bright as sunshine. Fresh cream adds a bit more smoothness to the liquid with sauteed onion strings to add a crunchy texture to the soup. This is when I realized why I loved the dishes here so much – somehow, they manage to extract that elixir of taste from every ingredient and magnified it to encompass the entire plate. Just like parfum is the most exquisite nuance of flower fragrance, devoid of any impurity that distorts it essence, so are Bouchon’s dishes, yet the flavor and texture profile is distinctly French. The perfect, perfect marriage of French cuisine with the Californian cuisine spirit.


Salade de Chevre Chaud ($9.50)



This is not really the Chevre Chaud I expected, though I have had chevre chaud like this before in Paris. Slightly heated, not quite melted, herb encrusted – mostly rosemary. The salad leaves are only slightly flavored, no more than EVOO, salt, and a bit of vinegar. So the cheese became the dressing for the salad. Nice use of ingredients, but that’s not all. The point of amazement here is the size of the leaves. This is a poster child case of how perfect technique and understanding of the eating action enhances natural flavors. My friend said that eating salad reminds her of being a cow, because you chew and chew. No matter how fresh salad leaves are, they are still a kind of grass, so eventually you would taste that underlying bitterness + rough fibers that make up their leaves before you can swallow. Not so in Bouchon. The size of the individual leaves is just enough so that within 2 quick bites you can swallow, BEFORE you had time to feel the grittiness of the fibers. Truly amazing salad experience.


Aile de Raie ($26?)



Raie = ray. Aile = wings. So: Wing of Ray. Don’t you get the sense that those ray fins should taste really, really good when you go into an aquarium? Yes, they do taste really, really good. Tender and smooth long muscles, good firm texture but never dry because of the glucose from the soft bones, it is just about my favorite fish, but it is not that easy to cook. For some reason, a lot of restaurants over-grill the fin, so it would become a dry and chewy mess. I think it is because they remove the bones before grilling. Bouchon leaves the bone in to grill, then removes the bones at the table. I so wanted to break decorum and ask the server to leave me the soft bones to gnaw for a bit, but I restrained myself. The ray is baked with a slice of lemon with a bunch of thyme balanced on top. That’s not for decoration – I could really taste a slight ting from the lemon, mellowed by the thyme on the skin. Underneath the fish piled caramelized onions. Again, full, strong flavor, nice resisting texture, a really good juxtaposition to the silkiness of the fish. Loved the olive oil + olive tapenade sauce. Just the right balance between saltiness and sweetness, a nice Mediterranean interpretation.


Lamb shank ($32)



It is good. Lamb is not too soft and I like my lean meat to have a bit more of fight remaining in it. Otherwise, all nice juice/flavor would leak out. The interesting thing about the lamb is that it has a hint of smokiness, like…hickory, maybe. Perhaps that’s the wood they used to grill the lamb? In any case, lamb was very good – part easily at the point of the nice, a substantial texture to bit into, very little work required for chewing. The shredded carrots were both sweet and sour, offsetting the nice smokiness of the meat. But all of the above was as expected. I’d be an idiot not to realize by now that Bouchon would serve up a great dish. What took me by surprise was how a component of this dish exceeded great. It was sublime. It was mind-blowing. It was a revelation. The component is: the humble, everyday staple starch – mashed potatoes. I can't believe I didn't take a picture of it!!!! You probably wouldn’t believe me, but I really almost cried when I first tasted the mashed potatoes. First was the texture – so silky, so soft, so “melting”…so beyond my imagination of how potatoes could taste. Second was the taste. I thought I had tried all variety of organic potatoes available to me through the major markets, vendors, farmer’s market, you name it. Nothing EVER came close to the cleanness of the gentle and warm potato sweetness presented in this dish. Corn soup realization once again. It might sound melodramatic, but some dishes really could touch your heart deeply because of the amount of care and attention poured into it by the chef, the careful thought and consideration that went into the devising and delivery of the dish, and the idea that someone took so much time and effort in preparing something so simple for your 5 minute enjoyment. I guess this is why cuisine art touches me so much, because it is so very personal.


Shoestring French Fries



I think I saw this on Antony Bourdain’s show in which he declared that Bounchon had the best shoestring French Fries ever. Don't know about that, but definitely very good fries. Crispy exterior fracture with the slightest pressure, potato goodness oozing out from the break. A tad of oregano. Who needs ketchup???


Profiteroles with mint and vanilla ice cream



Even though I couldn’t manage any more, I managed this. Great crispy choux, minty minty mint ice cream and creamy creamy vanilla ice cream. Loved the dark chocolate sauce. A very satisfactory finish to the meal.


All in all, a perfect evening. I’ll be back, most assuredly!
This also gave me a great boost of enthusiasm for French Laundry. I'll make it there yet!

Basic information:

Bouchon

Phone: (707) 944-8037

Hours of Operation: 11:30am - 12:30am daily


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Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Wood Tavern - Rockridge - 4 stars

Visited on:

June 15, 2007


Comments:

Great new restaurant, very delicious, excellent addition to the Oakland Rockridge community.


Experience:

That night we just decided to go to a new restaurant to try something new. The new Wooden Tavern seems to be the perfect choice. Replacing the vegetarian Grasshopper, it is located next to one of the best chocolateries in the Bay Area. We called ahead to inquire about availability and was informed that we might just make the last walk-in table. True to the hostess's word, when we arrived, we had the perfect cozy table ready for us. Lots of great ambiance too, with the wooden beams and beautiful abstract landscape paintings. And onto the dinner.


We started with a wonderful salad with shaved parmiggiano and caramelized sweet bell peppers. Now, I don't know what those seed-like...seeds are, not sesame, but they have a really good texture! Kind of like tomato seeds, actually. Very delicately flavored, nice citrusy contrast with the sweet caramelized bell peppers.




But what blew my mind was the lamb carpaccio. I knew it was a risk when I ordered it, but I went ahead with it anyway. The worst scenario was that it could be inedible, no big deal, but this time, I scored big. Move out of the way, beef carpaccio. Lamb carpaccio is the only way to go! Soft, tender, snowflake meltiness, so much better than beef with same amount of fat, because lamb is by nature more silky. Then there's that hint of lamb taste. It was not gamey. It was very elegant, if I were to describe it in colors, I would say that it is a rich and earthy orange with a vein of dark red running through, strong, exciting, yet sophisticated. Shaved parmesan cheese, watercress, and whole black pepper + EVOO just enhanced the entire dish. Seriously yummy.



For the main dish, we debated between pork chop and duck, but picked pork chop because it looked so good going to other people's table. We were not disappointed either. Pork chop was beautifully pinkish in the middle, soft and juicy all the way, extremely tender. Fresh corn and peas bring a summer sweetness to the overall dish. Mouthwateringly good...




I had the Wicked Fish Stew, I have to admit that I was very attracted by the name "wicked". It was right! I especially loved the monk fish in it: soft but spongy at the same time, the ideal characteristics of the fish. Really sweet shrimps, really fresh clams and mussels, but my, the soup is sooooooooooo spicy!! The reason is because of the spicy sausages in there, but the sausages were among the most memorable ingredients of the evening. After a few mouthfuls, strangely, the spiciness would grow on you and you would just keep drinking even though it burned in your mouth. Huh...like opium?? Just can't give it up!





Unfortunately, the desserts did not look very inspiring, so we skipped it.

More duck breasts made its way past us...must try it next time.

Basic information:

6317 College Avenue, Oakland, CA 94620

(510) 654-6607

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Grand Cafe - San Francisco - 3 stars

Visited on:

June 8, 2007

Comments:

Very impressive looking restaurant, why so few people for breakfast?

Experience:

That day was a day of accidents. Canteen isn't open on weekdays, Slow Club isn't open on Monday, but I wanted breakfast in the city, so we went to Grand Cafe. Very beautiful interior with two floor high sculptures and Muscha posters, stain glass windows everywhere. Very art deco in style. I only wanted a light breakfast, so ordered two items with my friend.


This is a tarte tartine with egg salad and caviar. Now, anyone who has had a regular tarte tartine knows that this should only be a piece of baguette smeared with butter and maybe jam. (Which reminds me of my first experience of tarte tartine: I just arrived in Paris and went to this cafe for breakfast. Being new there and to the French language, I totally confused tarte tartine with tarte tatin - reveresed apple pie. So imagine my surprise when I saw this! *Huh...this looked nothing like the tarte tatin that I had last night....*) Grand Cafe indeed serves up a grand tarte tartine. Tastes very good too. Egg salad is not too sour with just the right amount of mayonnaise and the baby spinach leaves were nicely mixed with the salad so you don't get a raw leaf stained with mayo taste. Shredded raw beets is a nice touch that compliments the mustard undertone in French mayo very well. There was more caviar than I expected, I think it is farmed Oestra - all the better. Wild caviar should be left the way it is: wild. The sharp saltiness of the caviar mixed with egg salad and spinach made it all the better.



My friend had an egg benedict. Which is good, but of course cannot compare to Canteen's, but what could? Lots of meaty mushrooms and ham underneath that contrasted nicely with tomatoes. Good enough on a regular day.




One thing that is worth mentioning: the orange juice is very good, but they just pour for you before you could see that it was 4.25 a wineglass glass. So, just be mindful of this. Apart from that, nice decor, great ambiance, totally friendly personnel. Nice breakfast experience in all.


Basic information:
501 Geary Street (between Shannon St & Taylor St), SF

(415) 292-0101

www.grandcafe-sf.com

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Canteen - San Francisco - 5 stars

Visited on:
Many times, latest on July 1, 2007.

Comments:
Five stars, best breakfast restaurant in SF, best egg Benedict anywhere. Best pancake ever tasted, though it is not exactly an American pancake.

Experience:
The restaurant itself is very small, adjacent to the now Academy of Arts student houses. It is kind of hard to tell from the outside, but if you see lots of people crammed inside a small space, that is Canteen. However, I've been there around 12, 12:30 a couple of times and I never had to wait. Brunch hours are the busiest for sure.

So today we started with their brioche. It is sometimes off the menu, so need to ask. Each small fluffy lump is about 3 inches high, about 1/3 of the size of a regular loaf of brioche. Golden top, soft powder sugar, melting bread warm from the oven. Hmm...who needs those extra 2/3 of a loaf?

Brioche




The next dish to come up is a tomato and prawn cold soup. Imagine our surprise when it was "white"! The first taste made us all gasp in surprise - it does taste like nothing but tomatoes, but such clarity in the texture! Refreshingly crisp with shredded basil, just like waking up on a sea cliff and draw in your first deep breathe of the morning with a hint of seafood on the sea breeze. If that air could be had for breakfast, it would taste something like this soup. Prawns are very juicy and sweet. There are 5 of them, quite generous!

Tomato and prawn soup




Next is fish hash, which is truffles compared to your regular button mushroom of a hash. Nice chunky pieces of soft fish with even creamier potatoes in a light but savory saffrony sauce. Then add in that poached egg...so incredibly yummy.



Then of course la piece de resistance - Egg Benedicte. There was an unfortunate accident today: one of the eggs was broken when served. Quel horreur! When I showed it to the chef, he immediately tossed that egg into the trash and offered me another plate on him. How could I turn him down? When the second plate arrived, I could tell that the first plate was done by sous-chef, because this time it was as my memory: the white splits open at the lightest pressure of the knife, warm yolk runneth down along the grilled ham and muffin...a mouthful is a moment of bliss in culinary paradise. And did I mention the sauce? Amazing, amazing hollandaise...so light in texture that it was like the foam of regular hollandaise but with the full flavor and body of a much thicker sauce. We had no trouble finishing plus moping up the second plate, no sir!
Egg Benedict - first plate: see egg on upper corner broken?



Egg Benedict - second plate: must be done by the chef himself



The night before, I was watching Iron Chef "pork chop", so I was seized with an unreasonable longing for pork chop, as many fans of the shows would have experienced frequently. And guess what? Pork chop showed up in Canteen's daily changing menu that day! What can I say...must be dharma. Of course I had to order it, and this beautiful piece of pork arrived. Where there was fat, there was the perfect melding of fat and lean meat, soft as a ripe peach. Where there was only lean meat, it was perfectly pinkish in the middle with a nice firm but yielding texture, dripping with juice. The white beans added the un-needed but much appreciated extra protein. Honey mustard sauce gave an extra kick that saves the dish from being to heavy for a breakfast item. Now, this is what I call a breakfast steak!

Pork chop



Finally, the dessert. Think of a thick slice of really great crepe with fresh strawberry compote hidden underneath, then you have an idea of what the pancake is like. It has a strong taste of egg, and high quality eggs too, no mistake about that. It is like the homemade crepes that my mom used to make me for breakfast, so I feel nostalgic about the dish. My friend who went there for the first time was totally stunned by her first bite that she couldn't speak for a long time. Later, she told us that she could feel tears welling to her eyes. Now she's been called one of the most stoic, expressionless people you could ever meet, so this is high compliments indeed from her. Warm, actually hot pancake, thin in the middle to accommodate the compote, thick on the edges to add extra chewiness to a slice so you can taste the dough as well as the compote. Sour cream sauce again light as a dream, brown sugar syrup is only a dark shadow of sweetness that highlighted the slight tang of fresh strawberries. I cannot think of a more perfect pancake dish than this.

Strawberry pancake with sour cream and brown sugar syrup




Four people, absolutely full, about $65 for all dishes (I added in the price of the egg benedict) and one orange juice, one latte, tip not included. Very satisfactory as usual, love Canteen, can't wait to come back, say...next week.:p

Basic information:
http://www.sfcanteen.com/

817 Sutter Street, SF

415 928 8870

They also serve lunch and dinner, brunch on weekends only. They recently changed their business hours, so call ahead to ask and reserve for dinner.

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Thursday, June 28, 2007

My experience with Michael Bauer's Bay Area 100, 2007- well, 19 of them anyway.

My response to Michael Bauer's Bay Area 100. Many restaurants I haven't tried yet. Must make an effort. Here are the ones I have tried: 19 out of a hundred.


Canteen
Excellent, exceptional choice. Not only the food is good, but also really amazing creativity. Egg Benedicte is the most amazing poached egg to be had anywhere – how could egg white melt in your mouth like snow?!?! Sauce hollandaise is more foam than cream, so you get all the flavor without the stickiness. Fantastic strawberry pancake too. A more soft, dewy, eggy concoction than the usual version, slightly thicker at the edges so you can better appreciate the texture and butter/egg perfection, thinner toward the middle for a great marriage with strawberry compote. As for the meat dishes…did the chef make his vocation to ensure that everything melts in your morning-tired mouth? The halibut fades away like a dream with the slightest jaw pressure, leaving the lasting sweetness of fish flesh. Lamb is delicately flavorful, very appropriate for breakfast dish. And have I mentioned the fantastic French toast and out-of-the-world brioche? In all, a must of the musts.


Tartine Bakery
Tartine is a pilgrimage. Standing in the line is a part of the ritual. You worship the fruit tart that you managed to obtain before the person behind you, but you envy the banana cream tart the person in front of you snitched. You want to be a cow here – four stomachs, but you can’t, so you always leave with longing eyes. The croques are nothing short of a meal in itself, very satisfying and delicious. I have never managed to buy a loaf of bread here. Somehow, the universe always conspired against me so it was always sold out 10 minutes before I got there. Good. Then I get more reasons to keep trying.

Bay Wolf (Oakland)
Great winter restaurant. Pretty good summer restaurant too if you want something heavier and richer, or if you just want good food that feels very right to your palate, like an old friend. They make very good cold charcuterie and pates, always serve up huge portions, so beware of that. The décor is really traditional and most of the clientele are older people in 50s+, but who cares. Retro is the new edgy.

Koi Palace (Daly City)
I wouldn’t frequent this place if I were you. You’d be force-fed: ppl placing dim sum on your table then stamp the sheet without even asking for your approval. You might get involved in a gun fight: a shuttle driver told me how he had to stop his friend from pulling a gun out after grappling with another guy in the restaurant over “whose table is that.” A family member had an $800 dinner there – the restaurant just said: we have good fish and good crab today. Care to try? There are better choices out there for dim sum.

Yank Sing
Speaking of better choices for dim sum, this is not one of them. When you see glass tea pots in a Chinese restaurant, you know this is a place that satisfies the fantasy of non-Asians while serving mediocre food in beautiful dishes.

Bistro Jeanty (Yountville)
Oh…how do I love thee? Let me count the ways. You serve authentic bistro food that I miss so much about France. You have this fun communal table at which I grabbed the bread of my neighbors by mistake, but they offered it to me anyway. Your portions are satisfying, so when my friend and I finished 3 appetizers, 2 main dishes, 2 side dishes, and started to attack the half-foot tall rice pudding, my neighbor couldn’t restraint themselves from commenting: my, you surely could eat! Pig trotters, sweetbread, escargots, great lamb, all choices are good, the more exotic “organs” a dish has, the better. San Francisco location is not so good. 20% decrease in food-wow.

Dining Room at the Ritz-Carlton
Top notch fine dining experience. Friendly but highly trained servers. Fantastic tasting menu. I have a posting in the blog somewhere. Check it out.

Vik's Chaat Corner (Berkeley)
They serve a lot of things here, they taste pretty good, but I guess I’m not the best judge.

Delfina
When I want to impress on visitors what
California cuisine and San Francisco dining experience is like, I take them to Delfina. Oh, and Delfina Pizzeria is not to be missed too. You could even throw in a visit to next-door Tartine, then grab some late night snack from the other next-door Bi-Rite. A gourmet street, 18th street is.

Oliveto (Oakland)
Best pasta place in town – hands down. The effort spent on each pasta dish is very laudatory, plain presentation, but the smell, the taste, the oomph of the sauce! Like the one time I had salt-packed mullet roe tagliatelle, or the nettle fettucine, and let’s not forget the Bolognaise paparadelle…I’m drooling. Previous part-owner went to open Fra Mani – my favorite salami brand now.


Pizzaiolo (Oakland)
I went there on a bad night – my pizza was burnt. Can’t comment rightly, but I’d be very surprised if it could be better than Delfina Pizzeria.


A Cote (Oakland)
Great drinks, great little dishes, a bit on the heavy and oily side, but very good nonetheless. My favorite tapas place. My only complaint is: why so many people know about this place?!?!?! The wait without reservation is a nightmare…


Chez Panisse (Berkeley)
Ever since my unfortunate experience at Chez Panisse on a Monday night, I stopped going. I prefer its café, but to me, it is still nothing too exceptional. Good, but not something that I get a craving for – unlike Oliveto, Delfina, Tartine, even Dining Room.


Zuni Cafe
Burger heaven…you have to get the burger…read my lips: you have to get the burger. Granted, the other dishes are good, because this is a very good restaurant, but the burger blows out your mind, it reveals a whole new chapter about burger that you never knew, it enlightens your comprehension of patty between bread, it is epiphany. Do you know how a good aioli and bread combination could draw out the finer undertones of minced meat so all the fragrance, fat, and flavor of the meat rushes at you, tastes so much better than just having the meat alone? Just like the right cheese with the right wine. That’s how good the burger is – perfect vintage of a perfect year.

Limon
Grilled foie gras and scallops at a Peruvian restaurant. How unexpected. How mouthwatering good. I tried 80% of their menu already and everything has been good. My only complaint is that I wish they’d change their menu more often. My previous review.

Hog Island Oyster Co.
This is not my favorite oyster company, and definitely not my favorite locale for getting oyster. Nothing beats
Tamales Bay in winter months.

Swan Oyster Depot
Crab. Lots of crab. For those who want Dungeness but can’t be bothered to peel, this is the right place. But eating cold seafood at
10am in the morning in November with that howling wind at your back, sitting on a cold stainless steel chair at a stainless steel bar…Well, that’s the only way you can get in. My review from August 2006.

Cesar (Berkeley)
I like this place, but the portions are quite small. Room is small too. Good tapas, a bit different from A Cote: lighter in fare. Nice place to have a drink with friends.


Zarzuela
I haven’t been here after its change in ownership, but before, their paella was amazing and it was the top tapas Spanish tapas place for me in the city. Period. I should go back again.

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