SFReview
photo credit: Erin Ng
Marlena
This spot is Permanently Closed.
Throw a dart in San Francisco and it would hit a restaurant with a seasonal menu. Think Rich Table, Routier, or State Bird Provisions—restaurants where menus change depending on what’s at the farmers market. This concept has become so quintessentially SF that it’s almost a rarity to find a spot that doesn’t pride itself on using hyper-local ingredients.
Marlena in Bernal Heights is another one of those seasonal restaurants with a four-course, prix-fixe menu that completely changes every few weeks. But theirs makes us excited to come back, time and time again.
Marlena’s dining room, with its muted blue color scheme and open kitchen, resembles practically every other “California cuisine” spot in town. And even though the food—from deconstructed pasta to pork collar with cauliflower foam—feels like it might have been dropped onto your table from some stuffy, big-deal fine dining restaurant, Marlena isn’t as pretentious as it could be. It’s run by a husband-and-wife duo, who you might see putting finishing touches on dishes at the pass or dropping off shiny, still-warm milk bread rolls at your table. By the end of your first visit, you’ll already feel like a regular.
photo credit: Erin Ng
The main attraction here, rightfully so, is the incredible prix-fixe menu (it’s also your only option). At $75 per person, the price for the tasting menu is on the lower end of what you’ll see at other SF restaurants. It’s four courses, with two options at every turn. Some dishes are tweaked almost daily, and the whole menu changes out every few weeks—so no two meals will ever be the same, no matter how many times you come in. You might end up with a Brentwood corn bisque poured tableside that’s so silky and rich it might inspire you to name your firstborn “Corn.” Or a soft Hokkaido scallop topped with tangy pickled strawberries and a lacy squid ink tuile that shatters when you bite into it. It’s almost sad to finish each plate, because you know that you might not ever be able to eat the same one again.
Once you’ve worked your way through the starters, smaller dishes, and heartier entrées (usually a fish and a pork dish, but there are vegetarian options if you ask), you’ll arrive at the desserts. This is the section on the menu where the seasonality shines the most. You might get a refreshing peach crumble in the summer, or an earthy pumpkin cake artfully dotted with pepitas and pomegranate seeds in the fall. Every bite feels like a sweet ode to the current season, and the perfect note to end your meal on.
Since there are two options per course, our favorite way to do a meal at Marlena is to come with one other person, order the entire menu, and split everything. Throughout the night, turtleneck-wearing Bernal Heights couples on weeknight dates or small groups of friends celebrating a milestone birthday will slide into their tables and fill the dining room with a relaxed, warm buzz. And even before your first course has been cleared from the table, you’ll be plotting the next time you can make a reservation here.
Food Rundown
Little Gems
photo credit: Erin Ng
Hokkaido Scallop
photo credit: Erin Ng
Milk Bread With Cultured Butter
photo credit: Erin Ng
Ricotta Gnudi
Farro Verde
photo credit: Erin Ng
Seared Black Cod
photo credit: Erin Ng
Berkshire Pork Collar
photo credit: Erin Ng