Restaurant in San Francisco, United States
Dalida
1,030ptsSerious food and wine, no special occasion needed.

About Dalida
Dalida brings a Michelin Plate kitchen and a Star Wine List-accredited program (610 selections, $$ markup) to San Francisco's Mediterranean category at prices well below the city's $$$$ tasting-menu tier. Chefs Laura and Sayat Ozyilmaz cook with genuine technical seriousness; Wine Director Jerry McGie's French- and Italian-anchored list makes this a strong pick for food and wine enthusiasts who want credentials without the ceremony.
Verdict: One of San Francisco's Most Compelling Mediterranean Tables, With a Wine List That Earns Its Own Attention
You sit down at Dalida and realize quickly that this is not a restaurant built around a single idea. The Mediterranean and Turkish cooking from chefs Laura and Sayat Ozyilmaz covers enough ground that the wine program has real work to do, and Wine Director Jerry McGie is doing it well. A 610-selection list accredited by Star Wine List (2026), priced at a $$ markup, with 2,864 bottles in inventory — this is a drinks program that functions as a co-lead, not supporting cast. If you care about what's in your glass as much as what's on your plate, Dalida earns a booking.
The Restaurant
Dalida holds a Michelin Plate (2025) and landed at number seven on Esquire's Leading New Restaurants list in 2023 — two trust signals that come from different evaluative traditions and point in the same direction. The Michelin designation signals technical seriousness in the kitchen; the Esquire recognition suggests the room has enough energy and personality to register with a general audience, not just the tasting-menu circuit. For a Mediterranean restaurant in a city full of them, that combination is worth noting. It also carries a 2025 Opinionated About Dining Casual recognition for North America, which positions it clearly: this is serious cooking served without the ceremony of San Francisco's $$$$ tier.
The cuisine leans Mediterranean with a Turkish throughline, which gives the kitchen more to work with than a strictly Italian or Greek frame would allow. Expect flavors built around preserved ingredients, bright acid, and spice , the kind of cooking where wine pairing matters and where the French and Italian strengths of McGie's list align with what's arriving from the kitchen. A two-course meal runs in the $40-$65 range, which makes Dalida one of the more accessible serious restaurants in the city. At $$$ for a full evening with wine, you are spending meaningfully less than you would at Lazy Bear, Atelier Crenn, or Benu, and getting a different but credible experience in return.
The Wine Program
The Star Wine List accreditation (2026) is the clearest external signal that Dalida's drinks program has been evaluated and found serious. The list runs 610 selections across 2,864 bottles of inventory, with particular depth in France and Italy , both logical anchors for a Mediterranean kitchen. The markup sits at $$, meaning you will find a range of price points rather than a list engineered to extract maximum spend. The corkage fee is $60 if you prefer to bring your own, which is a reasonable number for this tier of restaurant. For wine-focused diners in San Francisco, this combination of list size, reasonable markup, and critical recognition puts Dalida in a distinct position: credentialed on wine without requiring you to treat the list as a luxury purchase. Compare that to Saison or Quince, where the wine programs are similarly serious but the overall spend is significantly higher. Dalida lets you engage with a curated, well-structured list without the $$$$ commitment those rooms require.
Sommelier coverage comes from both Jerry McGie and Nayelli Mejia, which means there is genuine expertise on the floor to move through the list. For a wine enthusiast visiting from outside San Francisco , or a local who wants to explore the intersection of Turkish-inflected cooking and European viticulture , this is worth the trip on the drinks program alone. For broader regional context, see our full San Francisco wineries guide.
Who Should Book
Dalida works leading for food and wine enthusiasts who want serious credentials at a price point that does not require a special occasion to justify. The $$$ overall spend with a $$ wine list makes it a strong pick for a dinner where you want to drink well without engineering the evening around a budget. It is also a sound choice if you are calibrating your San Francisco itinerary across multiple nights: Dalida covers the Mediterranean-serious slot in a way that none of the $$$$ tasting-menu rooms can, and it leaves budget for a meal at one of those rooms without the whole trip feeling expensive. If you are comparing it to Mediterranean options at other price points elsewhere , Forma in Los Angeles or Ottolenghi in London, for instance , Dalida brings more technical kitchen seriousness and a far more developed wine program than either. Solo diners and couples will find it easier to navigate than large groups given the format, though the address at 101 Montgomery Street in the Presidio area is accessible enough for visitors staying across the city. For the full picture of what San Francisco offers at this level, see our full San Francisco restaurants guide.
Practical Details
Dalida serves lunch and dinner. The address is 101 Montgomery Street, Suite 100, San Francisco, CA 94129. Booking difficulty is moderate , plan ahead but this is not a two-month reservation situation. Google reviews sit at 4.5 across 521 ratings, which is a strong signal of consistent execution. Corkage is $60 if you bring your own bottle. Wine pricing is $$ on the list. A typical two-course meal without drinks is $40-$65. Full evening spend with wine lands at $$$. For accommodation nearby, see our full San Francisco hotels guide. For drinks options around the city, see our full San Francisco bars guide.
Quick reference: Mediterranean/Turkish, $$$, Michelin Plate 2025, Star Wine List 2026, 610-selection wine list, $60 corkage, lunch and dinner, moderate booking difficulty, 101 Montgomery St SF.
How It Compares
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Frequently Asked Questions
Is the tasting menu worth it at Dalida?
The venue data does not confirm a tasting menu format, so book expecting à la carte Mediterranean and Turkish cooking from chefs Laura and Sayat Ozyilmaz. A typical two-course meal runs $40–$65 before drinks, which is reasonable given the Michelin Plate recognition and Esquire's #7 ranking among new US restaurants in 2023. If you want a fixed multi-course format, Benu or Quince are the clearer bets in San Francisco.
What should a first-timer know about Dalida?
Go with an appetite for both food and wine — the Star Wine List accreditation (2026) means the 610-bottle list is genuinely worth your attention, not just decoration. Cuisine spans Mediterranean and Turkish, so expect a broader flavor range than a single-country Mediterranean room. The address is 101 Montgomery Street, Suite 100, SF 94129; plan ahead for booking as demand is moderate.
Is Dalida worth the price?
At $$$ overall with cuisine pricing landing in the $40–$65 range for two courses, Dalida punches above its price tier: a Michelin Plate, an Esquire top-10 debut, and a Star Wine List-accredited program with 610 selections are credentials that typically accompany higher price points. Wine pricing sits at $$ with a $60 corkage fee if you bring your own. Compared to Saison or Atelier Crenn, the cost is significantly lower for a comparable level of external recognition.
What should I wear to Dalida?
The venue data does not specify a dress code, but the Michelin Plate, Esquire recognition, and $$$ price signal a room where most guests dress neatly — think polished casual rather than formal. A jacket is not required, but showing up in beachwear would be out of place.
Is Dalida good for solo dining?
The wine list alone makes a solo visit worthwhile — Wine Director Jerry McGie oversees 610 selections with strengths in France and Italy, and the sommelier team can guide a single diner through pairings without needing a group to share bottles. Lunch service adds a lower-stakes entry point for solo guests who want to try the kitchen at a lighter commitment.
Can Dalida accommodate groups?
Nothing in the venue data confirms private dining or group-specific spaces, so check the venue's official channels before assuming large parties are easy to place. For groups of four or more where a private room is a priority, Quince or Benu offer more documented private dining infrastructure in San Francisco.
Recognized By
More restaurants in San Francisco
- SaisonSaison is the right call for a serious San Francisco celebration dinner: 2 Michelin stars, an OAD #3 North America ranking for 2025, and a personalised open-hearth tasting menu built around your preferences. The wine list — 2,540 selections with deep Burgundy holdings — is among the strongest in the country. Dinner only, Tuesday to Saturday. Book far in advance and contact the team before arrival to shape your menu.
- Atelier CrennAtelier Crenn is San Francisco's most decorated tasting-menu restaurant: three Michelin stars, a World's 50 Best ranking, and a 14-course pescatarian menu built around Dominique Crenn's Poetic Culinaria concept. At $$$$ with near-impossible reservations, it is the right booking for a milestone occasion — but confirm the pescatarian-only format suits your table before you commit.
- QuinceQuince holds 3 Michelin Stars in San Francisco's Jackson Square and earns them with a pasta-forward tasting menu grounded in Northern California produce and Italian technique. The wine list runs to 1,700 selections and the 2023 remodel produced a room worth the $$$$ price point. Book two months out minimum — this is one of the hardest tables in the city to secure.
- BenuThree Michelin stars, a No. 7 ranking in Opinionated About Dining's North America list, and nearly 20 courses of Corey Lee's technically precise Asian-inflected cooking make Benu one of the most credentialed tables in the country. Book at least six to eight weeks out — closer to three months for a weekend date. The quiet, contemplative room suits serious food travellers over groups seeking a convivial night out.
- Lazy BearLazy Bear holds two Michelin stars and a Pearl Recommended designation, and it earns both through a genuinely distinctive dinner-party format — menu booklets, communal energy, and a James Beard-nominated wine program with over 10,500 bottles. Book the upstairs mezzanine, arrive ready to participate, and plan well ahead: reservations run near impossible and the 2024 remodel has only increased demand.
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