Hilda and Jesse



Holding a Michelin star for consecutive years in 2024 and 2025, Hilda and Jesse operates at the more accessible end of San Francisco's decorated American dining tier, a $$$ price point against a field of $$$$ peers. Located on Union Street in the Marina, it positions itself between neighborhood warmth and serious culinary intent, with Chef Ollie K.C. Liedags steering a kitchen that has earned sustained critical recognition.
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- Address
- 701 Union St, San Francisco, CA 94133
- Phone
- (415) 872-7023
- Website
- hildaandjessesf.com

Union Street, Starred Kitchens, and Where Hilda and Jesse Sits in the Picture
San Francisco's Michelin-starred American dining tier has largely consolidated around a $$$ price architecture. Lazy Bear, Saison, and the broader cohort of progressive American tables in the city operate at a spend level that signals occasion dining first, neighborhood restaurant second. Hilda and Jesse cuts against that pattern. At a $$$ price range and an address on Union Street in the Marina, it occupies a narrower and more interesting position: a Michelin-recognized kitchen that reads, in format and feel, closer to a place you might return to on a Tuesday than a room you save for anniversaries.
That positioning matters more than it might initially appear. The Marina is a residential neighborhood with a dining culture that skews casual without being unsophisticated. Union Street has historically supported wine bars, brasserie-style American cooking, and neighborhood staples, venues like Union Larder represent the area's appetite for ingredient-led, considered food without high-theater service. Hilda and Jesse arrives in that context as something slightly different: a room with genuine culinary credentialing, led by Chef Ollie K.C. Liedags, holding a Michelin star.
The Approach to Sequencing: How the Meal is Structured
In a city where the dominant model for starred American cooking involves long, choreographed tasting menus, Atelier Crenn's poetic multi-act format, Benu's French-Chinese precision across a dozen courses, Hilda and Jesse represents a different thesis about what a progression through a meal can look like. The American restaurant category has, over the past decade, bifurcated sharply between the full omakase-style commitment and the à la carte neighborhood table. The interesting middle ground, where a meal still has forward movement and a sense of narrative arc without demanding three hours and a $300+ per-person outlay, is rarer and harder to execute.
What the kitchen here is doing, structurally, belongs to that middle register. The meal is designed to move, from lighter, brighter opening gestures through to richer, more grounded plates, without the rigidity of a locked tasting menu. That flexibility is partly what earns the $$$ designation against peers who charge more for the certainty of the sequence. The tradeoff is that the reader bears some of the compositional work: decisions about how to order, what to sequence, and how to pace the table are collaborative rather than delegated entirely to the kitchen.
Across American fine dining more broadly, this format is having a moment. Wayfare Tavern operates on a similar principle of generous, ingredient-focused American cooking without the tasting-menu apparatus. Further afield, Selby's in Atherton and The Surf Club Restaurant in Surfside represent the same impulse in different markets: serious kitchens expressing themselves through classic American hospitality codes rather than avant-garde formats. Hilda and Jesse belongs to that tradition more than it belongs to the experimental tier represented by Alinea in Chicago or the hyper-technical precision of Le Bernardin in New York City.
Reading the Room: Atmosphere as Editorial Signal
The Union Street address places the restaurant in a corridor of the city that faces Washington Square Park and feeds into the residential blocks of the Marina. The physical environment of this stretch operates differently from the Financial District or SoMa rooms where many of San Francisco's other starred kitchens are located. There is less theater in the approach, less of the urban-grand-arrival feeling that frames dinner at a place like House of Prime Rib. What you get instead is the intimacy of a neighborhood setting with the culinary seriousness that two consecutive Michelin stars communicate.
That combination is not accidental. The dining rooms that hold sustained critical attention in American cities increasingly tend toward one of two poles: the maximalist spectacle room or the stripped-back, material-focused space where the cooking does the persuading. Hilda and Jesse operates in the latter register. The Google review score of 4.0 across 525 reviews is worth contextualizing: Michelin-starred rooms with more demanding formats, stricter dress codes, or higher price floors often score lower on consumer review platforms than their critical standing would suggest, because the expectation gap between a starred room and a neighborhood table can produce friction with guests who arrive with one set of assumptions and encounter another.
Chef Ollie K.C. Liedags and the Question of Culinary Lineage
In San Francisco's starred kitchen ecosystem, chef credentials function partly as a shorthand for style and comparable set. The city's most decorated American tables tend to have chefs whose training places them within recognizable lineages, from the French Laundry school, from the Californian produce-first tradition, or from contemporary international programs. Chef Ollie K.C. Liedags leads the kitchen at Hilda and Jesse, and the star award confirms that the guide's inspectors consider the cooking consistent and of a quality that warrants the credential. What the Michelin recognition does not tell you is the precise stylistic territory the kitchen occupies. What the Michelin recognition does confirm, across two years, is that the kitchen is operating with sufficient discipline and quality to satisfy inspectors who are comparing it against a field that includes The French Laundry in Napa, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, and Providence in Los Angeles.
That sustained recognition across two years matters more than a single-year star in one respect: it signals that the kitchen is not a flash-in-the-pan critical moment but a stable operation maintaining standards. The American dining category rewards consistency, and Michelin's re-confirmation of the star in 2025 places Hilda and Jesse in the smaller cohort of California restaurants that have demonstrated they can hold the standard rather than briefly achieve it.
Where It Fits in the Neighborhood Dining Circuit
For visitors building a San Francisco dining itinerary, the Marina neighborhood offers a different texture than the more commonly cited fine dining corridors. Plow, a few miles south in Potrero Hill, represents the city's serious approach to daytime cooking. Bardo Lounge anchors a different register of the city's hospitality offering. Emeril's in New Orleans provides a useful national comparison point for the kind of American cooking that holds a popular following alongside critical recognition. Within San Francisco specifically, the starred American tier is dominated by higher-spend formats, which makes the $$$ positioning at Hilda and Jesse a meaningful data point for readers who want critical-level cooking without a $$$$ commitment.
See our full San Francisco restaurants guide for broader context across the city's dining tiers, alongside our full San Francisco bars guide, our full San Francisco hotels guide, our full San Francisco wineries guide, and our full San Francisco experiences guide.
Know Before You Go
- Address: 701 Union St, San Francisco, CA 94133
- Neighborhood: Marina / Union Street corridor
- Price range: $$$
- Awards: Michelin 1 Star (2024 and 2025)
- Chef: Ollie K.C. Liedags
- Cuisine: American
- Booking: Reservations are essential
- Hours: Mon: 5:30–9 PM; Tue: Closed; Wed: Closed; Thu: 5:30–9 PM; Fri: 5:30–9 PM; Sat: 10 AM–2 PM; Sun: 10 AM–2 PM
The Minimal Set
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Hilda and JesseThis venue — the venue you are viewing | American | $$$ |
| Lazy Bear | Progressive American, Contemporary | $$$$ |
| Benu | French - Chinese, Asian | $$$$ |
| Atelier Crenn | Modern French, Contemporary | $$$$ |
| Quince | Italian, Contemporary | $$$$ |
| Saison | Progressive American, Californian | $$$$ |
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