SFReview
photo credit: Carly Hackbarth
7 Adams
Included In
In SF’s fancy restaurant universe, most tasting menus aren’t worth the money. Too many places serve tiny portions and underwhelming food. This isn’t the case at 7 Adams. For $87 per person, this relaxed fine-dining restaurant is serving five incredible courses you’ll still be reminiscing about 52 weeks later.
It makes sense that this snug Fillmore spot is a winner. It's run by the husband-and-wife duo behind Marlena, the Bernal Heights star that earned national acclaim for its seasonal prix fixe menu before it abruptly closed after only three years. 7 Adams is essentially Marlena 2.0. The approach to the seasonal menu is pretty much the same—with the addition of a standout pasta course, bar seating, and a shinier space that looks like a hotel lobby mashed with a minimalist library from the year 3000. Plump mushroom lamps and lights shaped like sheet ghosts keep the dining room perpetually moody, making it easy to get comfortable for the masterful show ahead. While service is efficient and attentive, you’ll never feel rushed.
photo credit: Carly Hackbarth
photo credit: Carly Hackbarth
The first two starter courses are served individually, and then you have two options for the pasta course, entrée, and dessert. The move is to bring a date (or a group that’s divisible by two) so you can have bites from every sweet, salty, and umami-packed plate. Since the menu changes with the seasons, you’ll want to keep coming back at least quarterly. You might get a wintry butternut squash velouté accentuated with bitter endives and silky wagyu beef fat that’s luxury on a spoon. Or a beautifully seared corvina one week, and the next, a pork collar so tender it collapses with a poke. Whatever seafood or meat dish you wind up with will eliminate any need to stop at a drive-thru on the way home.
photo credit: Carly Hackbarth
photo credit: Carly Hackbarth
photo credit: Carly Hackbarth
photo credit: Carly Hackbarth
photo credit: Carly Hackbarth
The pasta course is a key player in the night’s success. Squash-filled caramelle, celery root ravioli, and tagliatelle are pumped up with elegant finishers—think cheese foam, truffle, or capers fried to salty perfection. Each one is simple but impactful. You’ll want to scrape the entire plate clean and lick every last smear of decadent lamb ragu off your fork.
Even though dinner is $87 (not including drinks), and the price point is more affordable than other upscale tasting menu options, it’s not objectively cheap—you’re likely not coming to 7 Adams on a weeknight whim. Reserve this 90-minute dinner when you have something to raise a glass to. You won’t forget it any time soon.
Food Rundown
photo credit: Carly Hackbarth
Milk Bread With Cultured Butter
photo credit: Carly Hackbarth
Hokkaido Scallops
Red Kabocha Squash Caramelle
photo credit: Carly Hackbarth
Ricotta Gnudi
photo credit: Carly Hackbarth
Berkshire Pork Collar
Seared Corvina
photo credit: Carly Hackbarth