Restaurant in San Francisco, United States
Oakland's most decorated tasting menu. Book it.

Commis is Oakland's two-Michelin-star tasting menu and one of the Bay Area's most consistent high-end bookings. Chef James Syhabout's sourcing-led, California-inflected menu has held two stars since 2010, ranked #53 in Opinionated About Dining's North America list for 2025, and is backed by a 1,035-bottle wine program. Book as far in advance as possible — availability is near-impossible on short notice.
Commis is the right booking for a special dinner where technical precision and locally-sourced ingredients matter more than spectacle. Chef James Syhabout's two-Michelin-starred tasting menu in Oakland's Piedmont Avenue neighborhood has held a two-star rating since 2010, appeared on La Liste's global rankings (78 points in 2026), and landed at #53 in Opinionated About Dining's North America list for 2025. If you are comparing price-to-quality across the Bay Area's $$$$ tier, Commis delivers serious cooking at a level that puts it ahead of most of the region's tasting-menu field. The challenge is getting a table: demand consistently outpaces availability, and this is a near-impossible reservation to secure on short notice.
Commis is the right call for a milestone dinner: an anniversary, a celebration meal, or a serious food trip where you want one Oakland restaurant to anchor the itinerary. It is not a casual drop-in. The format is a tasting menu, dinner only, served Tuesday through Saturday from 5 to 10 PM. The restaurant is closed Sunday and Monday, which matters if you are scheduling around a weekend trip to the Bay Area and assuming you can grab a table on a Saturday with little planning. You cannot. Book as far in advance as possible; last-minute availability is rare. For a party of two wanting a counter seat or a smaller table, you have more flexibility than larger groups, but early booking is non-negotiable regardless of party size.
The dining room on Piedmont Avenue runs long and neat, with a calm, composed atmosphere that lets the food do the work. The energy is cool and relaxed without tipping into casual, which makes it appropriate for a formal occasion without feeling stiff. Soft music keeps the room from silence, and the service is engaged rather than performative. Spatially, this is a room designed for conversation and focus — not for the kind of theatrical productions you get at higher-concept tasting venues. If you want drama in the room itself, look elsewhere. If you want the drama to be on the plate, Commis delivers.
At the $$$$ price point, Commis earns its position through sourcing discipline rather than luxury signaling. Syhabout's menu draws on local California producers: the kind of small-batch, regional sourcing that changes what ends up on the plate from season to season. Donabe-baked scallion rice topped with chanterelles dressed with locally-produced miso is a representative example , the technique is precise, but the sourcing is the story. The same applies to the raw Japanese sea bream dressed with aged soy sauce and fermented plum: individual components sourced carefully, assembled with restraint. The slow-poached egg yolk in onion- and malt-infused cream is a consistent menu anchor that regulars return for. None of this is accidental. Syhabout's Laotian-Thai-Chinese heritage inflects the California-French framework, meaning the sourcing serves a specific culinary logic rather than simply ticking a provenance box. For a value-focused diner, the question is whether that sourcing specificity justifies the spend versus, say, a more direct fine-dining tasting menu at a lower price point. The answer is yes, if the seasonal, ingredient-led format is what you are looking for.
The wine list is a genuine asset. Wine Director Andrew Browne and Sommelier Christian Garcia oversee a program with 1,035 selections and an inventory of 3,500 bottles, with particular depth in France, Germany, Burgundy, and California. Pricing sits at the $$$ tier , many bottles above $100 , so budget accordingly. The corkage fee is $75 if you bring your own bottle, which is worth knowing if you have something specific in mind for a celebration. For wine-focused diners, the pairing option here is among the stronger offerings in the East Bay, on par with what you would find at comparably-rated destinations like Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg or The French Laundry in Napa.
Commis is at 3859 Piedmont Ave, Oakland , accessible from San Francisco but not in it, which matters for trip planning. If you are visiting the Bay Area specifically for restaurant experiences and want to combine Commis with San Francisco proper, you will need to factor in transit or a car. For the broader Bay Area restaurant picture, see our full San Francisco restaurants guide. The Google rating holds at 4.7 across 661 reviews, which, for a two-Michelin-star tasting venue, reflects genuine guest satisfaction rather than casual foot traffic. Dress code is not published, but the two-star environment and price point suggest smart casual at minimum , treat it the way you would any similarly-rated venue. For comparable experiences in other cities: Alinea in Chicago, Le Bernardin in New York City, and Providence in Los Angeles are the relevant peer set nationally.
Yes, for what it delivers. Commis holds two Michelin stars and has maintained that rating since 2010, which gives it a track record that shorter-tenured $$$$ venues cannot match. The sourcing-led, California-inflected tasting menu punches at a level comparable to nationally-ranked peers. If your benchmark is value per dollar spent on a special-occasion tasting menu in the Bay Area, Commis sits above most of the regional competition , with more cooking specificity than many venues charging the same. The wine program adds cost, so budget for the full experience rather than food alone.
Commis is a tasting menu format , you do not order à la carte. The kitchen decides the progression. That said, the slow-poached egg yolk in onion- and malt-infused cream is a menu anchor that appears consistently and is the dish most associated with Syhabout's cooking at this restaurant. Dishes drawing on local chanterelles, fermented plum, and small-batch miso reflect the seasonal sourcing philosophy that defines the menu at any given time. If you have dietary restrictions, communicate them well in advance of your reservation rather than at the table.
Dinner is your only option. Commis does not serve lunch , hours are Tuesday through Saturday, 5 to 10 PM, with Sunday and Monday closed. There is no weekend lunch service. If your schedule only allows a daytime visit, Commis is not the right fit; consider Quince or other Bay Area venues with broader service windows instead.
Three things: the reservation is hard to get, so book as far out as possible; it is in Oakland, not San Francisco, so plan your logistics accordingly; and the format is a fixed tasting menu, not à la carte, so come ready to surrender the meal to the kitchen. The room is calm and unhurried , this is not a quick dinner. Budget 2.5 to 3 hours minimum. Wine pairing will add meaningful cost to the bill given the $$$ wine pricing tier. First-timers who have eaten at comparable two-star venues like Benu or Lazy Bear will find the pacing and format familiar.
Smart casual is the practical floor. Commis has not published a formal dress code, but the price point ($$$$ cuisine, two Michelin stars) and the composed atmosphere of the room set the expectation clearly. You will not be turned away for a well-put-together casual outfit, but jeans and a T-shirt would feel underdressed. For reference, treat it the way you would dress for any comparably-rated tasting menu venue in the Bay Area , think along the lines of what you would wear to Atelier Crenn or Quince.
Yes, at the $$$$ price point, Commis earns its position through sourcing discipline and technical precision rather than spectacle. Two Michelin stars held since 2010 and a Top 53 ranking from Opinionated About Dining in 2025 give the price tag verifiable backing. If you want a tasting menu where local California ingredients and Syhabout's Thai and Chinese heritage drive the cooking, the value is there. If you want tableside theater or a louder room, Lazy Bear or Saison may suit you better.
Commis runs a set tasting menu, so ordering choices are limited. The slow-poached egg yolk in onion and malt-infused cream is a recurring fixture and worth looking out for, as is the donabe-baked scallion rice with chanterelles and local miso. The format is dinner only, Tuesday through Saturday, so there is no à la carte option to navigate.
Dinner is your only option. Commis is open Tuesday through Saturday, 5–10 pm, with no lunch service. Plan your Bay Area day accordingly if you are coming from San Francisco.
Commis is in Oakland at 3859 Piedmont Ave, not San Francisco, so factor in travel time from the city. The room is calm and composed, the pace is deliberate, and the menu is a set tasting format with no à la carte. It has held two Michelin stars since 2010 and fills consistently, so book ahead rather than hoping for a walk-in. The wine list runs to 1,035 selections with 3,500 bottles in inventory, making it worth consulting Wine Director Andrew Browne's team when you arrive.
The atmosphere is cool and relaxed but not casual, so dress accordingly: neat, put-together clothing fits the room without requiring formal attire. Think of it as the kind of place where a blazer reads right but a tie would be out of place.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.