So please join me in helping to keep our best alive, celebrating what has long been one of the world’s best and richest dining cities and regions. I have vetted, visited, and/or ordered directly from each place… all of which are working hard to adhere to safety guidelines: 

PRESS, Napa Valley 

A modern steakhouse treasure housing one of the best vintage Napa wine collections in the world, PRESS stepped up its game in May when they brought on experienced chef/partner Philip Tessier. Working closely with chef de cuisine Darryl Bell and pastry chef Ivan Marquez, his menu shines well beyond steak. In fact, there is a glorious southern element, which includes a Nashville hot chicken sandwich on their lunch menu, one of the best versions I’ve ever tasted. But the menu’s influence is global, whether that means Peruvian potatoes in a fine dining-worthy potato salad dotted with razor clams and smoked sour cream, or Maryland soft shell crabs playing with collard greens and Padron peppers in a mustard seed relish. 

Delicious pig ears in espelette pepper glaze will convert anyone who thought they were afraid of pig ears. Yes, the wine list remains stellar and Marquez’s desserts are a highlight; think bing cherry sorbet with wild fennel, or a Meyer lemon curd pavlova with Silverado Trail strawberries and Sicilian pistachios. // 587 St. Helena Hwy, St. Helena, pressnapavalley.com

Nam Vietnamese Brasserie, Redwood City

A newcomer with the distinct predicament of opening in February 2020, Nam Vietnamese Brasserie is a fast-casual win for Redwood City and the Peninsula. There’s takeout, delivery, and dining in-house on food that tributes owner Anne Le Ziblatt’s coastal birthplace of Vung Tau, a town in southern Vietnam. You’ll also find an Asian “fusion” touch in elements of their Japanese udon noodles with rock crab and cilantro. As the former proprietor of two of our greatest upscale Vietnamese restaurants, Tamarine (Palo Alto) and former Bong Su (SF), Ziblatt marries upscale with casual in the dishes inspired by her chef-mother Nhan Huynh’s recipes. Honey five-spice chicken with either rice, greens or classic Vietnamese vermicelli noodles, sounds straightforward but is one flavorful, tender dish. // 917 Main Street, nambrasserie.com

SSAL, Polk Gulch

SSAL was one of my top new restaurant openings of 2019. They’ve had to morph from some of their more upscale Korean creativeness (a much-needed niche) to more casual fare. But husband-wife duo, Hyunyoung and chef Junsoo Bae, thankfully keep a refined hand with their Korean comfort food, ensuring SSAL remains one of SF’s best Korean restaurants. Their Yangnyeom chicken in gochujang sauce is swoon-worthy — arguably a top fried chicken dish of any style. But don’t miss their cheesy ttekbokki (stir-fried rice cakes), soondae (Koreak sausages; their version is packed with pork, glass noodles, chive, carrots, peanuts) or any of their kimbap (Korean sushi rolls packed with cooked meat or veggies). Order via DoorDash and Caviar. // 2226 Polk Street, ssalsf.com

Nara Restaurant & Sake Bar, Lower Haight & Polk Gulch

A Lower Haight neighborhood treasure since 2015, Nara Restaurant and Sake Bar is in pickup or delivery mode, as is its second, newer Polk Street sister (via DoorDash, Uber Eats, Caviar). For edomae sushi bar purists like myself, this place is more about casual, Americanized rolls, but they do solid nigiri and offer a range of sake bottles to-go. I avoid fried rolls as a general rule, preferring raw fish, and they do right by “raw” rolls like Big Boss: yellowtail, bluefin tuna, salmon, ikura salmon roe, avocado, cucumber, radish sprouts. Another highlight? Mr. Tako Balls, hilariously named (the Japanese word for octopus is tako). Essentially these are twists on classic takoyaki or “octopus balls,” featuring Spanish octopus tenderly cooked sous-vide for 6 hours. // 518 Haight Street, narasf.com

Cafe Envy, Bayview

Cafe Envy is one of our great black-owned restaurants from someone whose roots go deep in Bayview. “Auntie” April Spears has long done right by fried chicken and waffles at Auntie April’s. In 2018, she opened Cafe Envy, which recently reopened outdoor dining, while going strong with takeout. There’s no fried chicken at Envy, rather it’s all about barbecued oysters, salmon sliders, taco bowls, and seafood gumbo. Save room for Mama’s lemon crunch pie for dessert. // 1701 Yosemite Avenue, facebook.com/CafeEnvySF 

Kingston 11, Oakland

Though I miss chef Nigel Jones’ SF modern Jamaican restaurant, Kaya, his OG traditional Jamaican restaurant in Oakland is still going strong — albeit in takeout mode. Those popular saltfish fritters remain a staple, alongside jerk chicken and curry goat. I’m a sucker for plantains with black bean sauce and especially saltfish and ackee, Jamaica’s national dish. Salted codfish contrasts the mildly sweet ackee fruit served alongside it.  // 2270 Telegraph Ave, Oakland, kingston11eats.com  

Violet’s, Outer Richmond

As a neighborhood watering hole serving quality comfort food, Violet’s reopened sidewalk seating on June 15 (which books up fast), and continues to offer a steal of an eat-in or to-go $40 meatloaf dinner for two. The generously-sized meal includes exemplary meatloaf (like you wish your mom would make), with lush mashed potatoes, chocolate chip cookies, and a huge, garden-fresh accompanying salad that is so much more than a mere side salad. There are also a la carte options like grilled carrots in beet puree, pistachios and creme fraiche, spring pea risotto, or a buttermilk fried chicken platter with potato salad. // 2301 Clement Street, violets-sf.com 

Pearl, Outer Richmond

Richmond legend, the tiny Pizzetta 211 opened a shining sister restaurant, Pearl, on the same block in 2018, one of the year’s best newcomers. Now, Pearl has expanded its sidewalk seating down the block where co-chefs Mel Lopez and Joyce Conway continue to serve those stellar housemade pastas (like their signature white bolognese and a summery ricotta agnolotti), wood-fired dishes and unique chicory Caesar salad. Seafood shines in dishes like halibut crudo dotted with strawberry, serrano chiles, and almonds in a nuoc cham vinaigrette, or seared scallops over lentils laced with turmeric yogurt, Indian spices and kohlrabi (aka German turnips). // 6101 California Street, pearl6101.com

Pomella, Oakland

Ba-Bite was a Piedmont neighborhood favorite for healthy Middle Eastern food and thankfully since its closure, chef/owner Mica Talmor is back with the launch of Pomella, which recently opened outdoor dining with an expanded menu. It’s another order-at-the-counter concept that translates easily to eat-in or take-out. Fresh quality pervades her modern California-Israeli food, especially entrees like grilled salmon with smoked tomato vinaigrette or grilled eggplant over harissa couscous in tahini sauce. Also try fresh veggie juices, a range of mezze and salads, and oh-so-good za’atar chips with hummus. // 3770 Piedmont Ave. Unit B, Oakland, pomellaoakland.com 

Beit Rima, Castro and Cole Valley

One of our greatest Middle Eastern restaurants now has three separate locations, all housed in former Burgermeisters. Thankfully, Samir Mogannam’s father founded that longtime local burger chain after immigrating to the U.S. decades back. Now Samir is tributing his family heritage by turning former Burgermeister into Beit Rima. James Beard nomination and all later, this beloved, order-at-the-counter trio perfects food inspired by Samir’s mother’s Jordanian heritage and father’s Palestinian roots. Standouts are many, including muhammara, superb hummus ma’lehma (with ground beef), or whole fried branzino fish.  // 3 locations: Castro, Cole Valley, Daly City, beitrimasf.com/locations 

//Should you be interested, please sign this petition and reach out to your representatives to help “save restaurants,” asking the government to pass the crucial stabilization fund they are currently considering for independent restaurants, which is gaining bi-partisan support but in urgent need of more signatures. Feature photo by Albert Law/Porkbelly Studio, courtesy of SSAL SF.