The Cavalier
EatSoMa#29 of 50

The Cavalier

San Francisco, California

Photo: Eldar Murtazin

A British-inflected brasserie in the Hotel Zetta that manages to make things like deviled eggs, fish and chips, and steak tartare feel both classic and entirely modern. The room is gorgeous — tufted leather, brass fixtures, a long bar made for lingering. Anna Weinberg and Jennifer Puccio built a restaurant that feels like it's been here for decades, which is the highest compliment.

Insider tip

The burger at lunch is one of the best in SoMa. The sticky toffee pudding at dinner is mandatory.

Make a Reservation
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.

Eat picks elsewhere

More eat we love

EatRiNo · Denver, Colorado

Beckon

A hidden tasting-menu restaurant tucked behind Call, its casual sibling. You walk through what looks like a normal restaurant and end up in a 22-seat room where chef Duncan Holmes serves one of the most inventive prix fixe meals between the coasts. It feels like a secret because it basically is one. Denver's most ambitious kitchen, operating in near-silence.

EatThe Strip · Las Vegas, Nevada

Sage

Shawn McClain's modern American restaurant at Aria is the Strip's most quietly excellent fine-dining room — a James Beard winner cooking with seasonal vegetables and house-made pastas in a space that feels like it could be in Chicago or San Francisco. No theatrics, no tableside flair, just careful, confident food.