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Bon Appétit magazine - San Francisco Is the Best Food City in the Country Right Now
Aatxe (pronounced ahh-CHAY), a Basque-style tapas bar that serves pintxos (one-bite snacks)
The open kitchen at Lazy Bear:
Beef tonguefilled poppy-seed steam buns at Liholiho Yacht Club:
Baked Hawaiian at Liholiho Yacht Club:
Rintaro, a Japanese Izakaya:
Grilled Chicken Oyster (front), and Chicken Thigh skewers from Rintaro:
Aromatic spiced squab with salted chilli paste at The Progress:
Als Place in SFs Mission named nations top new restaurant by Bon Appétit
Chef/owner Aaron London plates a dish of Stone Fruit Curry, Black Lime-cod, Green Bean and Blueberry:
Grilled salmon head under the brick with sweet and sour sauce:
Tonnarelli with green garlic, bergamot, and bottarga:
Hangar steak:
Sunchoke curry:
Lightly cured Trout with crispy potatoes and sedate mousse:
Warm Brownie with "Payday" filling and ice cream:
Meyer Lemon tart with Strawberry and Lavender ice cream:
August 11, 2015 / Written by Andrew Knowlton
In anticipation of our annual Hot 10 list of Americas Best New Restaurants (August 18!), we announced the 50 nominees last week. Now, were making another big announcement: the best food city in the country.
It started with spiced lamb tartare and ended with roasted chicken served family-style with house-made brown butter couscous. In between there were pickled french fries, mussels escabèche served in a tin, Manila clams in coconut curry with garlic naan, black cod wrapped in chard, grilled beef tongue, and an omelet made with freshly shaved katsuobushi dashi.
Over four days and 15 meals, San Francisco proved itself on culinary fire in 2015.
I visited the city both before and after April 1619, but that four-day trip while on assignment for the Hot 10 (launching August 18!) was like a (delicious) punch in a mouth. Its easy to be jaded when you eat out more than half the year, when you feel like youve seen it all beforeand not just on Instagram! It sounds horrible, but when you eat for a living, citiesand menusstart to blend together. Are new-fangled deviled eggs (at $4 a pop) and toast with avocado sprinkled with Aleppo pepper requirements to open a restaurant these days? Do we need another version of a fried chicken sandwich?
And then it happens: You go somewhere and have a dish or a mealor in this case, several mealsthat reenergizes you, jolting you out of the same old same old. That was San Francisco this year. Ive been doing this professionally for several years now, and I dont think Ive ever experienced such a concentration of exciting and invigorating restaurants in a single year, in a single season. Not even in New York.
I know what youre thinking: East Coast kid heads West after months of winter (no farmers markets, lots of potatoes) and goes nuts over a few fava beans and some microgreens. Oh no. My excitement went well beyond a few pristine ingredients. Yes, eating in the Bay Area can sometimes feel like a farm tour, and you know exactly when green garlic is in season because every single restaurant has it on the menu. This time around was different. The ingredients were all there, but more importantly, there was also a point of view, a voice behind all the peaches and plums and charred spring onion purée.
And that figures. It was a breakout year for a number of chefs Ive long admired. Aaron London (ex-Ubuntu) opened his first solo project, the veg-focused ALs Place; Ravi Kapur also struck out on his own at Liholiho Yacht Club, a globe-trotting spot with a heavy nod to his native Hawaii; sophomore efforts from Melissa Perello at Octavia and Stuart Brioza and Nicole Krasinski at The Progress impressed; and there was a return to fine dining at Mourad from Mourad Lahlou. The list goes on and on: Aatxe, Aster, Cockscomb, Californios. Hawker Fare, Lazy Bear, Lord Stanley, Monsieur Benjamin, Rintaro
Aatxe (pronounced ahh-CHAY), a Basque-style tapas bar that serves pintxos (one-bite snacks)
The open kitchen at Lazy Bear:
Beef tonguefilled poppy-seed steam buns at Liholiho Yacht Club:
Baked Hawaiian at Liholiho Yacht Club:
Rintaro, a Japanese Izakaya:
Grilled Chicken Oyster (front), and Chicken Thigh skewers from Rintaro:
Aromatic spiced squab with salted chilli paste at The Progress:
Als Place in SFs Mission named nations top new restaurant by Bon Appétit
On any given evening, Aaron London can be seen whirling around the cramped kitchen of Als Place, his quirky restaurant on the oft-overlooked corner of 26th and Valencia.
To this point, the 6-month-old restaurant has been on some, but not all, diners radars, but that is likely to change in a big way this week. On Tuesday, Bon Appetit declared the humble Als Place the countrys best new restaurant. The magazine also touts San Francisco as the best food city in the country right now.
The last time a Bay Area restaurant made such headlines was 2011, when State Bird Provisions won that same honor. Almost overnight, the Fillmore Street restaurant exploded into a viral sensation. Lines snaked down the block; computer hackers even created programs just to procure reservations.
Whether that drastic transformation happens at Als Place which takes its name from the chefs initials remains to be seen, but the national attention should be a boost for the little independent restaurant.
Modest budget
Als Place is an anomaly in the citys current food landscape, built on a shoestring budget amidst multiplying big-budget competitors taking advantage of the restaurant boom.
Suddenly in the last year, things have really, really blown up here, said London. Weve always had an unfair advantage with the amazing products, but we just always werent taking advantage. Nothing has changed; were just cooking harder and better now.
However, the surge has proved to be a blessing and a curse for the restaurant industry.
Its made cooking in San Francisco super-competitive, continued London. Theres an oversaturation of restaurants. Its forcing everyone to be at their absolute A game. Theres plenty of money to open restaurants in San Francisco right now, but there are not unlimited staff and guests.
Distinctive menu
The charismatic, wild-eyed London, whose long hair is usually pulled back into a bun, serves up eclectic dishes like pickled french fries with smoked applesauce, or a savory cod curry made with stone fruit, blueberries, green beans and charred lime. The menu at Als Place centers on seasonal vegetables and seafood. Meat is billed as a side dish here, and starters are dubbed snackles. Influences span the globe, from the sweet-and-sour sauce that accompanies the roasted fish head to the burrata served with fig oil, squash and almonds.
Its a fun place to dine. Thats a big thing for me, said Andrew Knowlton, the deputy editor at Bon Appetit who spearheaded the list. Theres something about every dish that you realize that theres something going on here. Someone is smart and excited about what hes doing. I feel like (London) is on 26th and Valencia doing his own, weird thing.
Its literally his place. He built it himself. He runs it himself.
A Sonoma native who now lives in San Francisco, the 31-year-old London made his name at Ubuntu, the pioneering vegetarian restaurant in Napa made famous by Jeremy Fox. When Ubuntu closed in 2011, London who took over the kitchen when Fox left in 2010 went on a self-imposed sabbatical from restaurant cooking.
Als Place is just one of many great new restaurants in the city this year, though, making for a breakout year that has not gone unnoticed from a national perspective.
A second Mission restaurant made Bon Appetits top 10 list as well: Japanese Izakaya Rintaro.
San Francisco knows it has good food, and Im not telling them anything they dont know, but its been a long time since Ive been so excited about a city and its restaurants all at once, said Knowlton, rattling off the local chefs who have opened restaurants in the last 12 months: Ravi Kapur, Melissa Perello, Mourad Lahlou, Chris Cosentino, Ryan Pollnow, Thomas McNaughton, Stuart Brioza and Nicole Krasinski.
As he points out, these arent up-and-coming chefs; these are established talents who already have run top-tier kitchens for years.
London says the surge is just part of a natural ebb and flow, but it hasnt been an easy first six months for his restaurant.
As with many other local restaurants, staffing has been an issue; he persuaded a number of friends to help open the restaurant, but still felt the sting of the cook shortage sweeping the Bay Area. For a month and a half, he ran the restaurant without any full-time cooks.
Amid a surge of new restaurants in San Francisco many of them higher-profile and better-funded Als Place has occasionally been lost in the mix.
That shouldnt be the case anymore.
These days, the hyperactive London has two cohorts cooking alongside him in the open kitchen of the Best New Restaurant in America, in the Best Food City in America.
He is still putting in marathon days in the tiny kitchen, and breathlessly pursuing his version and vision of California cuisine.
Its like the most driven athlete or musician in the world: Heres one person who believes incredibly in what hes doing, said Knowlton. I dont think Als Place could exist anywhere else other than San Francisco.
Chef/owner Aaron London plates a dish of Stone Fruit Curry, Black Lime-cod, Green Bean and Blueberry:
Grilled salmon head under the brick with sweet and sour sauce:
Tonnarelli with green garlic, bergamot, and bottarga:
Hangar steak:
Sunchoke curry:
Lightly cured Trout with crispy potatoes and sedate mousse:
Warm Brownie with "Payday" filling and ice cream:
Meyer Lemon tart with Strawberry and Lavender ice cream: