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Permanently Closed
San Francisco, United States

Charles Nob Hill

From its opening in late 1995 until its closure in 2004, Charles Nob Hill occupied a particular position in San Francisco's fine-dining hierarchy: a formal French room on Jones Street where the kitchen's ambitions ran to six- and nine-course menus, the latter composed entirely at the chef's discretion rather than the diner's. That format, relatively uncommon in the city at the time, signalled where the kitchen's priorities lay. The dining room itself was small and deliberately formal, a contrast to the more casual California-inflected restaurants gaining ground elsewhere in the city during the same period. Service drew consistent praise from critics who covered it, and the food was characterised in contemporary reviews as the focal point of the experience rather than the room or the address. Appetizers ran $15–20, main courses $32–46, with tasting menus priced at $70 and $100, placing it squarely in the upper tier of San Francisco dining at the time. The kitchen worked within a French framework, with some sources noting a New American influence that reflected the hybrid sensibility common to serious California restaurants of the mid-to-late 1990s. Chef Perello, who led the kitchen during at least part of the restaurant's run, subsequently moved to Fifth Floor, a trajectory that speaks to the calibre of the operation. The menu was kept deliberately brief, a choice that tends to indicate either tight sourcing discipline or a kitchen confident enough to resist the sprawl of large à la carte lists. Charles Nob Hill closed in 2004, leaving behind a record of well-regarded French fine dining in a neighbourhood that has historically supported that register. For anyone researching the arc of San Francisco's formal dining scene across the late 1990s and early 2000s, it represents a useful reference point: a small, serious room that operated on its own terms for nearly a decade before the city's dining culture shifted decisively toward the informal.

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Address
1250 Jones Street (at Clay Street), San Francisco, 94109-4261, United States
Website
yelp.com
Charles Nob Hill restaurant in San Francisco, United States
About

From its opening in late 1995 until its closure in 2004, Charles Nob Hill occupied a particular position in San Francisco's fine-dining hierarchy: a formal French room on Jones Street where the kitchen's ambitions ran to six- and nine-course menus, the latter composed entirely at the chef's discretion rather than the diner's. That format, relatively uncommon in the city at the time, signalled where the kitchen's priorities lay.

The dining room itself was small and deliberately formal, a contrast to the more casual California-inflected restaurants gaining ground elsewhere in the city during the same period. Service drew consistent praise from critics who covered it, and the food was characterised in contemporary reviews as the focal point of the experience rather than the room or the address. Appetizers ran $15–20, main courses $32–46, with tasting menus priced at $70 and $100, placing it squarely in the upper tier of San Francisco dining at the time.

The kitchen worked within a French framework, with some sources noting a New American influence that reflected the hybrid sensibility common to serious California restaurants of the mid-to-late 1990s. Chef Perello, who led the kitchen during at least part of the restaurant's run, subsequently moved to Fifth Floor, a trajectory that speaks to the calibre of the operation. The menu was kept deliberately brief, a choice that tends to indicate either tight sourcing discipline or a kitchen confident enough to resist the sprawl of large à la carte lists.

Charles Nob Hill closed in 2004, leaving behind a record of well-regarded French fine dining in a neighbourhood that has historically supported that register. For anyone researching the arc of San Francisco's formal dining scene across the late 1990s and early 2000s, it represents a useful reference point: a small, serious room that operated on its own terms for nearly a decade before the city's dining culture shifted decisively toward the informal.

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