A16 (restaurant)
A16 | |
---|---|
Restaurant information | |
Established | February 2004 |
Current owner(s) | Shelley Lindgren |
Chef | Rocky Maselli[1] |
Food type | Italian |
Dress code | Casual |
Street address | 2355 Chestnut Street |
City | San Francisco |
County | San Francisco |
State | California |
Postal code/ZIP | 94123 |
Country | United States |
Coordinates | 37°48′00″N 122°26′31″W / 37.799931°N 122.442081°W |
Website |
www |
A16 is an Italian restaurant in California. There are two locations: the original location in San Francisco and a second location in Oakland. The restaurant's cuisine focuses on the Italian region of Campania. In 2014, the restaurant was named to the Top 100 Restaurants in San Francisco list by Michael Bauer of the San Francisco Chronicle.[2]
Description
The original A16 in San Francisco is located in the Marina District. The Oakland location is in the Rockridge neighborhood.[3] The San Francisco restaurant's dining room is long and narrow. In the middle of the restaurant is an open kitchen.[4] There is bar seating in the front and patio seating in the back.[5]
The Oakland location was designed by Cass Calder Smith of CCS Architecture. The space is described as "rustic-industrial". There entrance has large glass windows. The bar is made of thick marble. The exposed brick walls are an original component of the building architecture and wooden beams are visible on the ceiling. The ocean-themed artwork is by Kelly Tunstall. This location seats 85 and 125 including a private dining room.[6]
Menu
A16's menu focuses on the cuisine of Campania, Italy.[3] A16 is well known for its wood-fired pizza. Other dishes include braised octopus, fettuccine made with black pepper served with pig's trotters, sirloin steak and goat chop. Main courses come with a side dish of the diners choice, including cannellini beans or broccoli with calabrian chiles and colatura di alici. For dessert, the restaurant serves a chocolate tart with sea salt.[4] The menu offers many local ingredients from the San Francisco Bay Area, including coffee from Blue Bottle Coffee Company.[3] The San Francisco location offers three-course lunch meals for $20. During lunch time, the kitchen staff can be seen butchering fresh animal meat for dinner service, including pig, rabbit, goat, chicken, and duck.[7]
The wine list is maintained by owner and sommelier, Shelley Lindgren. It lists over 1,500 bottles of wine and focuses on Southern Italian wine.[6]
History
A16 was founded in February 2004 by Shelley Lindgren, a sommelier turned restaurateur. The restaurant is named after the Autostrada A16 in Italy.[3] Christophe Hille was the founding chef, followed by Nate Appleman. He was awarded the James Beard Rising Star Chef Award in 2009 and then quit A16 to move to New York. After he left, Liza Shaw became executive chef. As of 2006, Jane Tseng was pastry chef.[5] A16 opened up a pop-up restaurant in Tokyo, Japan in 2009 at the Marunouchi Park Building. The menu was tailored to be financially cost effective (i.e. they removed fennel from the menu due to how expensive it was at the time) and the kitchen staff had to modify their habits to meet the kitchen provided by Mitsubishi, which included a gas stove instead of a wood oven.[8] In 2012, Christopher Thompson became Executive Chef. In 2013, Lindgren opened a second location in Oakland.[4] This second location has a full liquor license, unlike the original.[6] Thompson moved to the Rockridge location and left in 2014. That year, Rocky Maselli became executive chef at both locations.[1]
The restaurant is popular as a lunch spot for food and wine industry workers, including Robert Finigan, who frequented the restaurant prior to his death.[9]
Reception
In 2014, Zagat rated A16 a 24.[10] Michael Bauer of the San Francisco Chronicle has named A12 one of his favorite restaurants in San Francisco. In 2013 he gave it a three star review.[4] Bauer has listed A16 in his annual Top 100 Restaurants in San Francisco list seven times.[11] Over the years, Bauer has expressed concern about the quality of the original A16 suffering due to the opening of the new Oakland restaurant, and a frequent overturn of executive chefs. However, Bauer frequently reviews the restaurant and often states that the restaurant has not suffered despite these challenges and changes.[5] Bauer and Zagat both noted that A16 is a loud restaurant. Zagat described it has having an "off putting noise."[10]
The restaurant is well known for its wine list, which is maintained by owner Shelley Lindgren. The wine list was named one of the top three in the country by Lettie Teague in 2010.[12] It was also nominated for a James Beard Award.[6]
References
- 1 2 Garrett, Rose. "Chef Shuffles". San Francisco Eater. Vox Media. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
- ↑ Bauer, Michael. "A16". San Francisco Chronicle. Hearst Newspapers. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
- 1 2 3 4 "About us". A16. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
- 1 2 3 4 Bauer, Michael. "A16 review: Italian gem defies risks of expansion". SF Gate. Hearst Publications. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
- 1 2 3 Bauer, Michael. "A16". SF Gate. Hearst Publications. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
- 1 2 3 4 Pape, Allie. "A16 Rockridge, An East Bay Pizza Palace". San Francisco Eater. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
- ↑ Palmer, Tamara. "A16's Accidental Meat Show". SF Weekly. SF Weekly. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
- ↑ Kim, Ryan. "Diners like A16's Tokyo restaurant". SF ate. Hearst Publications. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
- ↑ Kane, Yukari Iwatani. "A16". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
- 1 2 "A16". Zagat. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
- ↑ "reviews". A16. A16. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
- ↑ Teague, Lettie. "Wine Lists to Love". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
Further reading
- Appleman, Nate and Shelley Lindgren. A16: Food + Wine. Berkeley: Ten Speed Press (2008). ISBN 1580089070
External links
Media related to A16 (restaurant) at Wikimedia Commons