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Price≈$40
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseConversational
CapacityIntimate

Cafe Tiramisu occupies a slip of a dining room on Belden Place, the pedestrian alley in San Francisco's Financial District that functions as the city's closest analogue to a Parisian passage. Among the neighborhood's Italian-leaning options, it draws a consistent lunch and dinner crowd that treats Belden's covered-alley setting as destination rather than convenience.

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Address
28 Belden Pl, San Francisco, CA 94104
Phone
+14154217044
Cafe Tiramisu restaurant in San Francisco, United States
About

Belden Place and the Case for Italian on a San Francisco Alley

Cafe Tiramisu is an Italian restaurant at 28 Belden Pl in San Francisco's Financial District. Belden Place, a one-block pedestrian alley running between Pine and Bush streets, concentrates several European-style restaurants under awnings that turn the narrow lane into something resembling a covered European piazza on weekday evenings. That context matters for understanding how Cafe Tiramisu has held its address at 28 Belden Pl: the alley's format does much of the atmospheric work before you sit down, and the restaurants here compete on consistency and neighborhood fit.

Italian cuisine in this tier of American dining has been through a significant repositioning over the past two decades. The category once defaulted to red-sauce familiarity; it now splits more sharply between high-concept contemporary Italian (the direction taken by Quince in nearby Jackson Square, operating at the $$$$ tier with tasting menus and a Michelin-starred pedigree) and trattoria-adjacent formats that prioritize recognizable dishes executed with care. Cafe Tiramisu operates in the second register, which places it in a different comparable set from the city's progressive fine-dining circuit anchored by spots like Atelier Crenn, Benu, Lazy Bear, and Saison.

The Belden Alley Setting

Approaching along Belden on a weekday evening, the alley reads as its own microclimate: umbrella-covered tables pushed into the pedestrian lane, the ambient overlap of several kitchens, and a density of outdoor seating that softens what is otherwise a strictly corporate block. The format has more in common with the covered passages of Lyon or the side-street restaurant rows of Bologna than with anything purpose-built for San Francisco. That accident of urban geography gives restaurants here an atmospheric shortcut that interior-only dining rooms in the same zip code do not have. Cafe Tiramisu has operated within this setting long enough to be treated as part of the alley's identity rather than a newcomer taking advantage of it.

Italian Technique, California Ingredients: The Broader Pattern

The editorial angle worth examining at any Italian restaurant in Northern California is the relationship between imported culinary method and the produce available within a short radius. California's agricultural output, Central Valley stone fruit, Sonoma County dairy, Bay Area-adjacent greens, Pacific seafood, creates conditions that Italian kitchens on the peninsula can exploit in ways that Italian restaurants elsewhere in the country cannot replicate as directly. The tradition of Italian cooking already prizes locality and seasonality at its source; transplanted to California, those values encounter an ingredient supply that in some respects exceeds what is available in many Italian regions.

This intersection is most visible at the more ambitious end of the spectrum. Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg builds an entire operating model around it, with on-site farming feeding a tasting menu format. At the trattoria register, the same logic applies more quietly: pasta dough made with California-milled flour, sauces built from seasonal tomatoes, proteins sourced from producers who have built relationships with the restaurant over years. The technique remains Italian; the ingredient provenance is Californian. For a city like San Francisco, which has the farmers' market infrastructure (the Ferry Building Marketplace operates year-round) and a dining culture that has long rewarded producer relationships, this alignment is a baseline expectation rather than a differentiator.

How Cafe Tiramisu executes within this framework is difficult to assess without confirmed menu data, but the pattern itself is worth understanding as context for any visit. Italian kitchens that ignore California's seasonal windows in favor of imported, shelf-stable ingredients tend to read as dated; those that build menus around what the state produces in a given month tend to read as current regardless of their price point. The restaurant's longevity on Belden suggests it has maintained enough relevance to hold its position through multiple shifts in the city's dining expectations.

Where Cafe Tiramisu Sits Among San Francisco's Italian Options

San Francisco's Italian dining options span a wider range than the city's reputation for progressive California cuisine sometimes suggests. At the leading, Quince operates with a tasting menu format, seasonal Italian-Californian alignment, and the kind of wine program that places it in conversation with The French Laundry in Napa and Le Bernardin in New York City as a special-occasion destination. Further down the price register, the city has a collection of neighborhood Italians that draw regulars more on proximity and familiarity than on destination dining logic. Cafe Tiramisu occupies a middle ground: a restaurant with a defined address and a long-running presence, in a setting (Belden Place) that has its own destination character, without the tasting-menu format or price point of the city's fine-dining Italian tier.

For comparison purposes, the table below positions Cafe Tiramisu against selected San Francisco peers across a few logistical dimensions. Cafe Tiramisu is listed as a midpriced Italian restaurant on Belden Place.

VenueCuisinePrice TierFormatNeighbourhood
Cafe TiramisuItalianNot confirmedÀ la carte / casualFinancial District (Belden Pl)
QuinceItalian, Contemporary$$$$Tasting menuJackson Square
Atelier CrennModern French, Contemporary$$$$Tasting menuCow Hollow
Lazy BearProgressive American$$$$Communal tastingMission District
BenuFrench-Chinese, Asian$$$$Tasting menuSoMa

Planning a Visit

Belden Place is accessible on foot from Montgomery Street BART station in under five minutes, which makes it a practical choice for pre- or post-theater dining or a Financial District lunch that doesn't require a car. The alley's outdoor seating is weather-dependent: San Francisco's fog patterns mean that evenings cool quickly year-round, and the gap between a warm afternoon and a cold outdoor dinner on Belden can be significant. The summer months, counterintuitively, are often foggier and cooler than September and October, which tend to be the city's warmest weeks. If outdoor seating is part of the appeal, a September or October visit reduces the chance of dining in a fleece.

Cafe Tiramisu is open Monday through Saturday from 11 AM to 10 PM and closed on Sunday. Reservations are recommended, and the price point is about $40 per person.

Travelers building a multi-city itinerary around Italian-Californian dining might also consider Addison in San Diego, Providence in Los Angeles, Frasca Food and Wine in Boulder, Smyth in Chicago, Atomix in New York City, Blue Hill at Stone Barns in Tarrytown, The Inn at Little Washington, Emeril's in New Orleans, and Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler in Brunico, a reference point for what Italian regional cooking looks like when it operates at maximum ingredient specificity in its home territory.

Signature Dishes
Pappardelle with Wild Boar SauceTiramisuSpaghetti MarinaraGnocchi in Brown Butter

At a Glance

Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Cozy
  • Intimate
  • Romantic
  • Classic
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Casual Hangout
  • Special Occasion
Experience
  • Terrace
Sourcing
  • Local Sourcing
Views
  • Street Scene
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelConversational
CapacityIntimate
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingStandard

Warm, cozy European cafe charm with intimate indoor tables and charming outdoor patio.

Signature Dishes
Pappardelle with Wild Boar SauceTiramisuSpaghetti MarinaraGnocchi in Brown Butter