Four Barrel Coffee
CoffeeMission District#26 of 50

Four Barrel Coffee

San Francisco, California

Photo: Debojyoti Ghosh

Now operating as Tide Coffee, this Valencia Street roaster remains one of the finest in the city. The high-ceilinged industrial space is beautiful, the espresso is pulled with an intensity that borders on ritual, and the single-origin options rotate with a roaster's curiosity that keeps regulars coming back. No Wi-Fi, by design — this is a place for drinking coffee, not working.

Insider tip

The espresso. Just the espresso. Drink it at the bar, standing up, the way it was meant to be consumed.

Get Directions
See all 50 picks in San Francisco

More in San Francisco

You might also like

Tartine Bakery
CoffeeMission District

Tartine Bakery

The line out the door at 18th and Guerrero is a San Francisco institution for a reason. Chad Robertson's bread changed the way a generation thinks about flour and water, and the morning bun — caramelized orange sugar, shatteringly crisp — is the single best pastry in the city. The space is tiny. The wait is real. None of that matters once you're holding that first bite.

Zuni Café
EatHayes Valley

Zuni Café

The roast chicken for two at Zuni is the most famous dish in San Francisco, and it deserves every word ever written about it. Order it first — it takes an hour — then eat the Caesar and oysters while you wait. The copper bar is one of the great seats in American dining. Judy Rodgers built this place, and even after her passing it remains immaculate.

City Lights Booksellers
ShopNorth Beach

City Lights Booksellers

Lawrence Ferlinghetti's cathedral of independent thought has been on Columbus Avenue since 1953. The poetry room upstairs is sacred ground — a low-ceilinged space with a sign that reads 'I sit here and am content.' The curated shelves are still defiantly literary, political, and strange in the best way. This is not a bookstore. It's a manifesto with a cash register.

Coffee picks elsewhere

More coffee we love

CoffeeCapitol Hill · Seattle, Washington

Espresso Vivace

The Capitol Hill espresso bar that taught Seattle what serious espresso was supposed to taste like. David Schomer opened the original cart in 1988 and the obsessive technique has only sharpened — the in-house roast is balanced and intentional, the latte art was practically invented here, and the staff treats every shot like it matters. Order at the counter and stand to drink. Do not, under any circumstances, ask for a flavored syrup.

CoffeeDesign District · Miami, Florida

All Day

A coffee shop and eatery in the Design District that lives up to its name — morning espresso, midday lunch, late-afternoon pastry. The space is airy and white-walled with just enough design-world edge to fit the neighborhood. The coffee program sources from top roasters and the rotating food menu is several notches above typical cafe fare.