Restaurant in San Francisco, United States
Yo También Cantina
175Pearl PointsDaytime cantina worth the Inner Sunset detour.

About Yo También Cantina
Yo También Cantina is a daytime cantina on the eastern edge of San Francisco's Inner Sunset, opened in 2018 by Kenzie Benesh and Isabella Bertorelli. The tamal bowl has earned a following for good reason, and the parklet is one of the better spots in the neighborhood to settle in with a nonalcoholic michelada. Go for a relaxed weekday lunch; skip it if you need dinner service.
Verdict: A Daytime Cantina Worth Returning To
If your first visit to Yo También Cantina was about the tamal bowl, your second visit should be about everything around it. Opened in 2018 by Kenzie Benesh and Isabella Bertorelli at 205 Hugo St. on the eastern edge of the Inner Sunset, this daytime restaurant has held its ground as one of the more considered casual Mexican spots in San Francisco. The format is low-key, the parklet is genuinely pleasant, and the nonalcoholic michelada — sparkling water, fruit puree, chamoy rim — is the kind of thing you find yourself thinking about on the way home. Book this if you want a relaxed, affordable daytime meal in a neighborhood that rewards lingering. Skip it if you need dinner service or a full bar.
The Experience: Daytime Light, Parklet Culture, and the Tamal Bowl
Walk up to Yo También Cantina on a clear Inner Sunset morning and the visual case for staying a while makes itself quickly. The parklet out front is set up for exactly the kind of unhurried loitering that San Francisco's better neighborhood spots encourage: good light, street-level people-watching, and a drink in hand that doesn't require alcohol to be interesting. The nonalcoholic michelada is the obvious order, the chamoy rim gives it enough edge to feel like a real drink rather than a consolation prize.
The tamal bowl has been singled out by food writers as the antidote to the soggy, under-seasoned slop bowls that became a casualty of the fast-casual wave. That framing is useful: Yo También Cantina is not trying to be a destination tasting room or a scene restaurant. It is a daytime cantina with genuine craft in the cooking, and the tamal bowl is the proof point. For food-focused visitors exploring the Inner Sunset neighborhood, the question is not whether this is worth a stop, it is, but whether the menu depth rewards repeat visits. Based on the kitchen's track record since 2018, it does.
Does the Food Travel? Takeout and Off-Premise Considerations
For a daytime spot of this type, takeout is a legitimate option worth thinking through. The tamal bowl, by its nature, holds reasonably well, tamales are structurally sturdier than most bowl formats, which tend to collapse into mush within twenty minutes of leaving the kitchen. The nonalcoholic michelada, however, is a drink designed around the moment: the chamoy rim and sparkling water component both degrade quickly, and that specific drink does not travel. If you are ordering off-premise, focus on the food and skip the drinks entirely. The parklet experience, which is a real part of what makes this place work, is obviously lost in takeout, so weigh that accordingly. If you are nearby and can eat in or at the parklet, do that instead.
Timing: When to Go
Yo También Cantina operates as a daytime restaurant, which narrows your window but also simplifies the decision. Weekday mornings and early afternoons give you the parklet at its finest, less crowded, better light, easier to settle in without feeling rushed. Weekend mornings in the Inner Sunset draw neighborhood foot traffic, so expect more competition for outdoor seating. The nonalcoholic michelada is a natural warm-weather order, but the Inner Sunset's microclimates mean it can be cool and foggy even in summer, the parklet is comfortable most of the year, not just in peak season. Go earlier rather than later to avoid any sellout risk on popular items like the tamal bowl.
Practical Details
Yo También Cantina is at 205 Hugo St. in the Inner Sunset. It is a daytime restaurant, so plan accordingly, this is not an evening option. Booking difficulty is low; for a casual daytime cantina of this type, walk-ins are the norm rather than the exception. Pricing information is not confirmed, but the format and neighborhood positioning suggest an accessible price point well below San Francisco's dinner tasting-menu tier. For groups, the parklet provides additional capacity beyond the interior, which helps. For solo diners, the counter or parklet format is comfortable without the self-consciousness of a large formal dining room.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Is Yo También Cantina good for solo dining?
Yes. The parklet at 205 Hugo St. is well-suited to solo visitors — grab a seat, order the tamal bowl, and linger with one of the nonalcoholic micheladas without feeling rushed. Daytime-only operations mean the pace is relaxed rather than turnover-driven.
What should I wear to Yo También Cantina?
Come as you are. Yo También Cantina is a daytime cantina in the Inner Sunset with a parklet out front — this is firmly casual territory. Dress for a neighbourhood lunch, not a dinner reservation.
Is Yo También Cantina good for a special occasion?
Only if your version of a special occasion is low-key: a birthday brunch or a casual celebration suits the format well. For a formal milestone dinner, the daytime-only hours rule it out entirely — look elsewhere in SF for that.
What are alternatives to Yo También Cantina in San Francisco?
For a step up in formality and price, Lazy Bear and Benu operate in a completely different register — tasting menus rather than tamal bowls. If you want daytime or casual dining with strong neighbourhood character, Yo También Cantina has a specific niche that most SF fine-dining options don't fill.
Does Yo También Cantina handle dietary restrictions?
The venue data does not specify dietary accommodations. The nonalcoholic michelada — sparkling water, fruit puree, chamoy rim — is one menu item known to be available, but check the venue's official channels before booking around specific restrictions.
Can Yo También Cantina accommodate groups?
The parklet setting suggests some outdoor flexibility, but Yo También Cantina reads as a small neighbourhood spot rather than a large-group venue. For parties over four, call ahead to confirm capacity — the format favours pairs and small groups.
How far ahead should I book Yo También Cantina?
Booking logistics are not specified in available data, but daytime-only restaurants of this type in popular SF neighbourhoods can fill on weekends. Show up early or check for reservations; arriving mid-week gives you the best chance of a parklet seat without a wait.
Location
205 Hugo St, San Francisco, CA 94122
San Francisco, United States
Compare Yo También Cantina
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Yo También Cantina | Easy | ||
| Lazy Bear | Progressive American, Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Atelier Crenn | Modern French, Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Benu | French - Chinese, Asian | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Quince | Italian, Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Saison | Progressive American, Californian | $$$$ | Unknown |
How Yo También Cantina stacks up against the competition.
Also Consider
- Lazy Bear, Progressive American, Contemporary, $$$$
- Atelier Crenn, Modern French, Contemporary, $$$$
- Benu, French - Chinese, Asian, $$$$
- Quince, Italian, Contemporary, $$$$
- Saison, Progressive American, Californian, $$$$
How It Compares
Yo También Cantina does not compete in the same category as San Francisco's marquee tasting-menu restaurants. Lazy Bear, Atelier Crenn, Benu, Quince, and Saison are all $$$$ tasting-menu or fine-dining operations requiring advance booking, formal preparation, and a significantly higher per-head spend. If that is your target, Yo También Cantina is not a substitute, it is a completely different meal type.
Where the comparison is useful is in understanding what Yo También Cantina does that San Francisco's higher-end restaurants do not: it is accessible, walk-in friendly, daytime-only, and built around a neighborhood rhythm rather than a destination dining occasion. For food-focused visitors who want to eat well across a range of price points during a San Francisco trip, anchoring one daytime meal here while reserving evenings for Benu or Atelier Crenn is a reasonable structure. The tamal bowl alone justifies a detour to the Inner Sunset.
If your interest is specifically in casual Mexican cooking in San Francisco, the Mission District offers a broader and denser comparison set. But Yo También Cantina's combination of considered cooking, parklet culture, and nonalcoholic drink options gives it a distinct position for daytime dining in the Inner Sunset that is not easily replicated by a Mission taqueria. For visitors building a full San Francisco dining itinerary, see our full San Francisco restaurants guide for a complete picture across price tiers and neighborhoods.
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