We hope you can join us for this adventure into the contemporary culinary scene of Mexico City! Our main dining room presents guests the opportunity to taste the evolution of Mexican food, while El Garage Urbano is a more casual atmosphere where guests can relax and play classic cantina games like dominoes and cards while enjoying their mezcal. Now open, El Garage Urbano also operates as Mercado Urbano on Sundays where guests can purchase Carnitas Michoacan, homemade salsas and tortillas to go.
Not often does a restaurant’s atmosphere perfectly complement its food, but at Tsunami Panhandle we’ve created a place for you and your friends to enjoy delicious and fresh sushi in an atmosphere that makes you want to stay awhile. Our hip, urbane culture features dim lights, lounge music, and a good looking wait staff that’s here to make sure your dining experience is nothing something of fantastic. Tsunami Panhandle’s head Chef, Shinsuke Hagino, creates sushi flavors that are fresh and nothing but delicious. All of our sushi rolls are made with the sea’s freshest bounty paired with one of the most sophisticated sake selections found on the west coast. The bar also offers an array of high end Japanese single malts; with more than 150 whiskey expressions. Tsunami Panhandle is perfect for a fresh and delicious meal partnered with sophisticated drinks. Grab your friends and come to Tsunami Panhandle and experience our hip and urbane atmosphere while enjoying the freshest sushi in the San Francisco area.
Wine Kitchen is the vision of Greg Faucette and Jason Limburg. They share over a decade of culinary experience, having worked together at Commonwealth, Contigo, and Bar Tartine, as well as at Per Se and Spruce. With their fine dining background comes a dedication to quality and consistency. With their ongoing working relationship comes a desire to create a lively and friendly environment. We believe food and wine are capable of speaking for themselves. Thus, our atmosphere is casual and fun, our service warm and relaxed. Whether you just want a glass of wine and a snack, or a full meal with several pairings, we welcome you and your friends and family to Wine Kitchen. Looking forward to seeing you down on Divis!
Established in 2014. Conceived with the hope of bringing Brooklyn style pizza to San Francisco, Presidio Pizza Company strives to stay true to its New York roots while embracing the vitality of San Francisco cuisine. The inspiration for adopting Presidio as our namesake reflects the history of the community, and our appreciation for what the Presidio represents. Today, the Presidio is a San Francisco icon that is reserved for the community, dedicated to conservation, and a stable presence from bay to breakers. It is our hope that Presidio Pizza Company will adopt a similar footprint in our community. Our goal at the Presidio Pizza Company is to provide a warm and welcoming environment, where the Divisadero community can congregate to enjoy quality food and wine, and neighborhood hospitality!
Friday, September 16 12-10pm Saturday, September 17 12-10pm Sunday, September 18 12-8pm
A stay at "Inn on Castro" -- the only accommodations at Castro and Market Streets -- affords an incomparable way to experience San Francisco's charm and hospitality from the heart of the City's gay and lesbian community. Stunningly decorated with contemporary furnishings, the Inn is a restored Edwardian building. The individual bedrooms are warm and inviting and brightly accented with original paintings. Large bouquets of fresh flowers are abundant throughout the Inn. The cozy living room, with its fireplace and deeply tufted Italian module seating, is a marvelous place to unwind in -- just great to curl up with a good book and enjoy a brandy, compliments of your hosts. We serve our well-known full breakfast in the adjacent dining room.
Traditional Mexican food including chile verde, carnitas, pastor and the other usual choices. We like to keep it changing with daily specials and weekly specials like Bacon wrapped hot dogs or pomegranate spinach salads etc.
The William Westerfeld House sits across the street from the northwest corner of Alamo Square at 1198 Fulton Street (at Scott St.) in San Francisco. Constructed in 1889 at a cost of $9,985, the home is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is San Francisco Landmark Number 135.William Westerfeld, a German-born confectioner, arrived in San Francisco in the 1870s. By the 1880s, he had established a chain of bakeries. He hired builder Henry Geilfuss to design for his family of six a 28-room mansion with an adjoining rose garden and carriage house.When Westerfeld died in 1895, the home was sold to John Mahoney, noted for building the St. Francis Hotel and the Palace Hotel after the 1906 earthquake. Mr. Mahoney replaced the rose garden with flats to meet the city's dire need for housing.