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San Francisco, United States

Craftsman and Wolves

CuisineBakery
Executive ChefWilliam Werner
LocationSan Francisco, United States
Opinionated About Dining

On Valencia Street in the Mission, Craftsman and Wolves occupies a different tier from San Francisco's heritage bakeries. Chef William Werner's training in fine-dining kitchens shapes a pastry program that has earned consecutive Opinionated About Dining recognition from 2023 through 2025, climbing from recommended to a ranked position in North America's cheap eats category. The format is counter-service and daytime only.

Craftsman and Wolves restaurant in San Francisco, United States
About

Valencia Street and the Mission's Pastry Counter

Valencia Street in San Francisco's Mission District has long operated as a corridor where independent food businesses test ideas before they migrate elsewhere or disappear entirely. The street rewards foot traffic and penalizes complacency. Among the bakeries that have taken hold here, Craftsman and Wolves at 746 Valencia occupies a specific position: a pastry counter that draws on fine-dining technique rather than artisan-bread heritage, which places it in a different conversation than the sourdough-focused operations that define much of the city's bakery identity.

Walking the block, the shop's design reads as deliberate. The aesthetic aligns with the Mission's shift over the past fifteen years from neighbourhood institution to design-conscious food destination. That transition has produced both losses and gains for the district's character, and the bakeries that survive it tend to be those with a clear technical point of view rather than simply a neighbourhood following. Craftsman and Wolves has cultivated both.

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Fine-Dining Training in a Counter-Service Format

San Francisco's bakery scene divides roughly into two camps. The first follows the sourdough and fermentation tradition — Tartine Bakery being the reference point that defined the city's reputation internationally, with a legacy that has shaped how bread culture developed on the West Coast. The second camp is smaller and less loudly defined: pastry-focused operations where the kitchen logic comes from classical and contemporary restaurant training rather than from bread culture. Craftsman and Wolves sits in this second camp.

Chef William Werner's background is in restaurant kitchens at the fine-dining level — the kind of training where precision and repetition matter more than improvisation, and where dessert and pastry are treated as disciplines equal to savoury cooking. That orientation shows in a program that favours technical construction over rusticity. The contrast with Neighbor Bakehouse, which leans into a more utilitarian, grain-focused approach, or with Jane The Bakery, whose identity is rooted in accessible neighbourhood familiarity, illustrates where Craftsman and Wolves sits in the peer set. It is closer in spirit to b. patisserie, which also brings formal European pastry training to a counter-service context, though the two shops make different decisions about format and register.

The relationship between fine-dining kitchens and standalone pastry operations is worth understanding as a broader pattern. Chefs who have worked inside structured restaurant hierarchies , places like Le Bernardin in New York City, Alinea in Chicago, or California's own The French Laundry in Napa and Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg , often bring a different technical vocabulary to pastry than bakers who came up through bread programs. The results can feel more constructed, occasionally more cerebral, and sometimes more challenging to the casual visitor expecting direct morning fare. That tension is part of what makes operations like Craftsman and Wolves worth attention.

What the Awards Trajectory Signals

Craftsman and Wolves has appeared on the Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in North America list for three consecutive years. The progression matters more than any single year's placement: a recommended listing in 2023, a ranked position at #297 in 2024, and a rank of #366 in 2025. The 2025 number represents a lower rank numerically than 2024, which is worth noting plainly. OAD rankings reflect the preferences of a specific evaluator community weighted toward serious food engagement, so movement within that system reflects a particular audience rather than general popularity. The 4.4 rating across more than 1,000 Google reviews provides a counterpoint: broad consumer satisfaction at a high level.

For context on where Craftsman and Wolves sits in the wider San Francisco food picture, Arsicault Bakery occupies a separate competitive tier , built around a croissant that generated significant national press attention and a James Beard Award, which positions it differently in terms of its primary identity signal. Craftsman and Wolves' recognition comes through a different channel, oriented toward the serious eater rather than the mainstream food media cycle.

Across North America, the bakery-as-destination format has expanded considerably in the past decade. Radio Bakery in New York City and 26 Grains in London represent different expressions of the same impulse: counter-service operations that function as serious food destinations rather than convenience stops. The category now competes for the same attention as full-service restaurants among a certain type of traveller, and OAD's Cheap Eats list formalises that shift by placing bakeries, taquieras, and ramen counters on the same evaluation framework as destination dining.

The Mission Context and Timing

The Mission has enough dining density that a single-category visit is rarely how the neighbourhood works in practice. The bakery sits within walking distance of the district's concentration of taquerias, natural wine bars, and chef-driven restaurants that have accumulated over two decades of development. San Francisco's geography compresses restaurant options in a way that rewards planning by neighbourhood rather than by single address. A morning stop at Craftsman and Wolves fits naturally into a longer Mission itinerary, and the weekday closing time of 3:30 pm means the window is tighter than it might appear.

For a fuller picture of where to eat, drink, and stay across the city, see our full San Francisco restaurants guide, our full San Francisco bars guide, our full San Francisco hotels guide, our full San Francisco wineries guide, and our full San Francisco experiences guide. For the wider California fine-dining picture, Providence in Los Angeles and Emeril's in New Orleans represent other nodes in the serious-eating network that this audience tends to move between.

Know Before You Go

  • Address: 746 Valencia St, San Francisco, CA 94110
  • Hours: Monday to Friday 7:30 am – 3:30 pm; Saturday and Sunday 8:00 am – 4:00 pm
  • Booking: Walk-in counter service; no reservations
  • Recognition: Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in North America , #366 (2025), #297 (2024), Recommended (2023)
  • Google Rating: 4.4 from 1,019 reviews
  • Neighbourhood: Mission District, San Francisco
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