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    Restaurant in San Francisco, United States

    3rd Cousin

    355pts

    Serious cooking, real value, book early.

    3rd Cousin, Restaurant in San Francisco

    About 3rd Cousin

    A Michelin Plate–recognized, chef-owned dinner destination in Bernal Heights where Californian and Japanese cooking meet a 380-bottle wine list. Greg Lutes runs both the kitchen and the floor, which gives the room an intimacy that larger San Francisco restaurants cannot match. Book three to four weeks ahead minimum; this is harder to get into than it looks from the address.

    The Verdict

    3rd Cousin is not a special-occasion restaurant in the way that phrase usually reads in San Francisco. It is not trying to compete with the white-tablecloth $$$$ rooms downtown. What Greg Lutes has built on Cortland Avenue in Bernal Heights is something more specific: a serious, chef-driven neighborhood restaurant where the cooking draws on both Californian and Japanese sensibilities, the wine program is deep enough to anchor the meal on its own, and the room is small enough that you feel it when the kitchen is firing well. Michelin has awarded it a Plate in both 2024 and 2025. Opinionated About Dining ranked it among the leading restaurants in North America in 2024 (#569). For a restaurant at this address and price point, that is a meaningful credential. Book it before it becomes significantly harder to get into than it already is.

    What to Expect as a First-Timer

    The most common misconception about 3rd Cousin is that it is a casual neighborhood spot you can drop into on a Tuesday. The $$$$ price tag on cuisine (priced at $$ for a two-course meal in the $40–$65 range) and a wine list running to 380 selections across 600 bottles tells a different story. This is an intentional dinner, not a fallback. Come with a reservation, come with a food-curious companion, and come ready to spend time at the table.

    First-timers should know that Greg Lutes runs the room as both chef and general manager, which means the experience has a personal, owner-operated quality that larger restaurants cannot replicate. Wine Director Oceano Ordoñez and Sommelier Marian Bamba and Sarah Ruben anchor a list that leans toward France and California, with pricing in the $$$ tier — meaning many bottles clear $100. If you are bringing your own bottle, the corkage fee is $65, which is on the higher end for San Francisco but not unusual given the depth of the in-house list.

    The cuisine sits at the intersection of American and Japanese cooking, which in practice means you should expect California produce treated with restraint and precision rather than abundance. Do not come expecting large, protein-forward plates. Come expecting something more considered. For context on what Californian-Japanese cooking looks like at this level, the approach shares DNA with what places like Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg and Caruso's in Montecito do with California ingredients, though 3rd Cousin operates at a more intimate scale and a lower total-spend ceiling.

    The Counter Experience

    The editorial angle on 3rd Cousin that matters most for a first-timer is this: if the restaurant offers counter or bar seating with sightlines into the kitchen, take it. At a room this size, with an owner-chef format, proximity to the kitchen changes the meal. You get the timing of dishes in real time, you can ask questions directly, and the pacing feels less like service and more like a conversation. This is the format that makes small owner-operated restaurants worth the premium over larger, more impersonal rooms. The intimacy is the point. If you are coming as a pair, request the counter. If you are a larger group, confirm seating options when you book.

    Practical Details

    3rd Cousin serves dinner Tuesday through Friday from 5–9 pm, with extended hours Friday and Saturday until 10 pm. The restaurant is closed Sunday and Monday. The kitchen address is 919 Cortland Ave, San Francisco, CA 94110, in Bernal Heights. Bernal Heights is not a neighborhood you are likely to be passing through; make the trip deliberate. For planning your broader San Francisco visit, see our full San Francisco restaurants guide, our full San Francisco hotels guide, our full San Francisco bars guide, our full San Francisco wineries guide, and our full San Francisco experiences guide.

    Nearby restaurants worth considering in context: Ethel's Fancy and Mägo serve a different register but are useful alternatives if 3rd Cousin is fully booked. For something more neighborhood-casual in the same part of the city, Foreign Cinema is a reliable fallback. If you want to calibrate what chef-driven California cooking looks like across the city before booking, Sun Moon Studio and Boulevard are useful reference points at different price tiers. Nationally, 3rd Cousin occupies a similar tier to Citrin in Los Angeles and Providence in terms of serious, chef-owned cooking with a strong beverage program — though the format here is considerably more intimate than either.

    Booking

    Booking difficulty at 3rd Cousin is rated Hard. The restaurant is small, dinner-only, closed two days a week, and holds a Michelin Plate alongside an Opinionated About Dining ranking. That combination puts pressure on the reservation calendar. Plan to book at minimum three to four weeks in advance for a weekday table, and further out for a Friday or Saturday. If you are traveling to San Francisco specifically to eat here, book before you book your flights. Walk-ins are not a reliable strategy for a room of this size and profile. Check the restaurant's current reservation availability through their booking channel and confirm the details directly , phone and website data are not available in our current record, so use Google or a platform like Resy or OpenTable to locate the live booking link.

    For a sense of scale on booking difficulty: 3rd Cousin is harder to get into than Le Bernardin in New York City on a comparable timeline, and comparable in difficulty to well-regarded chef-owned rooms in other cities like Emeril's in New Orleans , both of which reward advance planning over spontaneity. If this is your reference point for serious American cooking in a chef-driven format, also note what Alinea in Chicago or The French Laundry in Napa require in terms of lead time: 3rd Cousin is more accessible than either, but the booking window is real.

    Ratings

    • Google: 4.5 / 5 (370 reviews)
    • Michelin Plate: 2024, 2025
    • Opinionated About Dining: Leading Restaurants in North America, #569 (2024)

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I order at 3rd Cousin?

    The menu sits at the American-Japanese intersection, with California produce as the foundation. Without current menu data confirmed, the practical advice is to follow the server's recommendation on the night , at a room where the chef is also the GM, the staff know what is working. Trust the wine team on pairings: with 380 selections and a France-and-California-leaning list, there is depth here to match most directions the kitchen takes.

    Does 3rd Cousin handle dietary restrictions?

    Contact the restaurant directly before your visit to discuss restrictions. With no current menu or policy data confirmed in our record, do not assume , particularly given the tasting-style format common at Michelin Plate rooms of this type. The smaller the kitchen, the more lead time a dietary restriction requires to accommodate properly.

    What should I wear to 3rd Cousin?

    No dress code is listed, but the price point ($$$$ room, $$$ wine list, Michelin Plate recognition) places this clearly in smart-casual territory at minimum. Bernal Heights is not a formal neighborhood, and 3rd Cousin is not a white-tablecloth restaurant in presentation. Think: what you would wear to a serious meal at a chef-owned room in a residential neighborhood. Overdressing is unnecessary; underdressing would feel off.

    Is 3rd Cousin worth the price?

    Yes, if you are paying for cooking at this level in a city where $$$$ rooms frequently deliver less. A two-course meal in the $40–$65 range (cuisine $$ pricing) is a reasonable entry point for a Michelin Plate restaurant. The wine list adds significantly to the total spend if you engage it, but you are not forced to. Compared to Lazy Bear or Saison, 3rd Cousin delivers a more personal, lower-pressure experience at a lower total cost. The value case is strong for a food-curious diner who does not need ceremony to justify the spend.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at 3rd Cousin?

    Tasting menu availability is not confirmed in our current data , contact the restaurant to verify current formats. If a tasting menu is available, the chef-GM and counter-seating format suggests it would be the right way to experience the kitchen fully. At a Michelin Plate room of this size, the tasting format typically reflects the chef's actual intent more accurately than ordering à la carte.

    How far ahead should I book 3rd Cousin?

    Book three to four weeks out for a weekday table; five to six weeks for Friday or Saturday. The restaurant's Michelin recognition, Opinionated About Dining ranking, limited operating hours (Tuesday–Saturday, dinner only), and small room size combine to make this a Hard booking in San Francisco's competitive dining calendar. If you are visiting from out of town, treat the reservation as the anchor of your trip and plan everything else around it.

    Compare 3rd Cousin

    Is 3rd Cousin Worth It?
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    3rd Cousin$$$$Hard
    Lazy Bear$$$$Unknown
    Atelier Crenn$$$$Unknown
    Benu$$$$Unknown
    Quince$$$$Unknown
    Saison$$$$Unknown

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I order at 3rd Cousin?

    The menu sits at the American-Japanese intersection, built on California produce — so prioritise whatever reflects the season most directly. Given the Michelin Plate recognition and OAD ranking, the cooking earns trust: order broadly rather than playing it safe. The wine list runs 380 selections with France and California as its core strengths, making a pairing or a sommelier recommendation from Oceano Ordoñez or Marian Bamba worth considering alongside your food.

    Does 3rd Cousin handle dietary restrictions?

    Call ahead. The restaurant has no publicly confirmed dietary policy, and at this price point ($$$$ room, $40–$65 two-course baseline) arriving without flagging restrictions is a gamble not worth taking. Greg Lutes runs both the kitchen and the floor as owner-chef-GM, so the team is small and advance notice will matter more here than at a larger operation.

    What should I wear to 3rd Cousin?

    No dress code is listed, but the $$$$ price tag, Michelin Plate, and OAD ranking place this in smart-casual territory at minimum. Treat it like a serious dinner, not a neighbourhood drop-in. Overdressing slightly is the safer mistake at a restaurant operating at this level.

    Is 3rd Cousin worth the price?

    Yes, with one qualification: the cuisine pricing is actually $$ ($40–$65 for two courses), which is notably accessible for a room rated $$$$ and holding a Michelin Plate. That gap between room ambition and food price is where 3rd Cousin earns its case — you are getting cooking recognised by Michelin and OAD without the $$$+ per-head food bill that San Francisco's tasting-menu circuit charges. Factor in the $65 corkage fee if you bring your own bottle, or lean on the 600-bottle list.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at 3rd Cousin?

    Tasting menu availability is not confirmed in our current data — contact the restaurant before your visit to verify current formats. If a tasting menu is offered, the American-Japanese framework and Michelin Plate standing suggest the format would suit the kitchen's range. For confirmed pricing and structure, reach out directly; 3rd Cousin is a small, owner-operated room where the team can answer this precisely.

    How far ahead should I book 3rd Cousin?

    Book three to four weeks out for a weekday table, five to six weeks for Friday or Saturday. The restaurant is dinner-only, closed Sunday and Monday, and seats a limited number of covers — Michelin Plate recognition and an OAD Top Restaurants in North America ranking (#569, 2024) keep demand steady. This is not a walk-in venue at this price point.

    Hours

    Monday
    Closed
    Tuesday
    5–9 pm
    Wednesday
    5–9 pm
    Thursday
    5–9 pm
    Friday
    5–10 pm
    Saturday
    5–10 pm
    Sunday
    Closed

    Recognized By

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