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    Restaurant in San Francisco, United States

    Donaji

    210pts

    Neighborhood Oaxacan spot, easy booking, solid value.

    Donaji, Restaurant in San Francisco

    About Donaji

    Chef Isai Cuevas earned his Michelin Plate by mastering masa and Oaxacan flavors — first at farmer's markets across the city, now from a Mission brick-and-mortar on 24th Street. At $$ pricing, the tamales, handmade-tortilla enchiladas, and complex mole negro represent some of the most credible Mexican cooking in San Francisco. Book it for a low-key date or celebration where food quality matters more than formal atmosphere.

    The Verdict on Donaji

    If you're weighing Donaji against the handful of Oaxacan-leaning Mexican spots in San Francisco, the answer is direct: book Donaji. Chef Isai Cuevas built his reputation at farmer's markets across the city before opening this brick-and-mortar on 24th Street in the Mission, and the transition to a neighborhood restaurant has not diluted what made his food worth seeking out in the first place. A Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and a Google rating of 4.6 across 274 reviews confirm this is not a hype-driven flash in the pan. At a $$ price point, it is among the most credible places in the city to eat serious Oaxacan food without committing to a tasting-menu budget.

    What Donaji Is

    The restaurant takes its name from a Zapotec princess, a deliberate signal that Cuevas is drawing on a specific culinary tradition rather than serving a generalized version of Mexican food. Masa is the organizing principle of the kitchen. The tamales that made Cuevas a fixture on the farmer's market circuit are still the anchor, but the menu extends to antojitos — taquitos, sopes — and enchiladas made with handmade tortillas and finished with a mole negro that earns its reputation through complexity rather than decoration. House-made agua fresca rounds out the menu as a beverage option that works with the earthy, savory register of the food better than most wine pairings would at this price tier.

    The physical space reflects its neighborhood context. This is a cheerful, unpretentious room on a well-trafficked stretch of 24th Street in the Mission. It is not a special-occasion destination in the formal sense , no tablecloths, no tasting menus, no sommelier , but it is the kind of place where the quality of the cooking makes an ordinary Tuesday feel considered. For a date or a low-key celebration where the food matters more than the theater of the room, Donaji competes well above its price class. Groups looking for an impressive but relaxed setting will find it works; groups expecting a grand dining room should recalibrate expectations.

    On Takeout and Delivery

    PEA-R-15 angle is worth addressing directly here: does Donaji's food travel? The honest answer is that masa-forward cooking is among the most transport-sensitive food categories in the Mexican kitchen. Tamales hold reasonably well , the husk wrapper provides insulation , but sopes and taquitos lose textural integrity quickly once off-premises. The mole negro on the enchiladas is the kind of sauce that can survive a container and a short journey, but the handmade tortillas underneath will soften. If off-premise is your only option, tamales are the order to prioritize. For everything else, eating in gives you a meaningfully better version of the dish. Donaji is worth the in-room experience, and the $$ price point makes it easy to justify the trip rather than defaulting to delivery.

    How to Book

    Booking difficulty at Donaji is rated Easy. This is a neighborhood restaurant, not a destination tasting-menu operation, so walk-ins are a realistic option, particularly on weekday evenings. No booking method is listed in the current record, which suggests the restaurant may accept walk-ins as standard or operate through a third-party platform. Check the restaurant's current status before visiting. Given the Mission's density of dining options, arriving with a backup plan adds no friction to your evening. For a weekend dinner or a group of four or more, arriving early in the service is the practical hedge.

    Quick reference: 3161 24th St, San Francisco, CA 94110 | $$ | Michelin Plate 2024 | Google 4.6 (274 reviews).

    How It Compares Within San Francisco Mexican

    Within the San Francisco Mexican category, Donaji occupies a specific lane: Oaxacan technique, masa-led cooking, neighborhood pricing. Bombera takes a more wood-fire-forward approach to its Mexican menu and sits in a different neighborhood register. El Buen Comer and Flores serve overlapping price tiers but with different regional emphases. Comal and Fonda San Francisco are also worth knowing at the accessible end of the market. What separates Donaji is the Michelin Plate credential and Cuevas's documented mastery of masa , if Oaxacan flavors and handmade corn-based cooking are specifically what you're after, this is the address in San Francisco.

    For a wider view of where Donaji sits in the city's dining picture, see our full San Francisco restaurants guide. If you're planning a full visit, our San Francisco hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide cover the rest of the city. If you want to benchmark Donaji's Oaxacan approach against destination-level Mexican cooking, Pujol in Mexico City is the obvious reference point; Alma Fonda Fina in Denver is a useful US peer at a similar price tier. For context on what Michelin recognition looks like at the upper end of the US market, Le Bernardin in New York, Alinea in Chicago, The French Laundry in Napa, Single Thread in Healdsburg, Providence in Los Angeles, and Emeril's in New Orleans represent the broader recognized field.

    Compare Donaji

    Booking Options Near Donaji
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    DonajiMexican$$Easy
    Lazy BearProgressive American, Contemporary$$$$Unknown
    Atelier CrennModern French, Contemporary$$$$Unknown
    BenuFrench - Chinese, Asian$$$$Unknown
    QuinceItalian, Contemporary$$$$Unknown
    SaisonProgressive American, Californian$$$$Unknown

    Comparing your options in San Francisco for this tier.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can I eat at the bar at Donaji?

    Donaji is a neighborhood brick-and-mortar on 24th Street, not a bar-forward operation. Booking difficulty is rated Easy, so walk-ins are a realistic option rather than a gamble. If counter or bar seating exists, it has not been documented in available venue data — call ahead or plan to take a table.

    Is Donaji worth the price?

    At $$ pricing, Donaji is one of the stronger value cases in San Francisco's Mexican category. A Michelin Plate (2024) at neighborhood prices is a rare combination. You're getting handmade tortillas, house-made agua fresca, and a kitchen with demonstrable technique for the cost of a casual dinner.

    What should I order at Donaji?

    The tamales are the anchor — Chef Isai Cuevas built his reputation on them at farmer's markets before opening here. The mole negro enchiladas, made with handmade tortillas, are the other standout. Round it out with antojitos like taquitos or sopes, and order the house agua fresca to drink.

    What should a first-timer know about Donaji?

    This is a Zapotec-rooted, Oaxacan-focused restaurant, not a broad Mexican menu — masa and mole are the throughline. Expect a cheerful, neighborhood-scale room at $$ prices. Booking is easy, so there's no pressure to plan far ahead, but the Michelin Plate recognition means word has spread beyond the immediate neighbourhood.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Donaji?

    Donaji does not operate as a tasting-menu restaurant. It's an antojitos and masa-focused neighbourhood spot at $$ price points. If you want a tasting-menu format in San Francisco, Benu or Atelier Crenn are the relevant comparisons — but Donaji is a different category entirely.

    What are alternatives to Donaji in San Francisco?

    Donaji occupies a specific lane: Oaxacan technique, masa-led cooking, $$ neighbourhood pricing with a Michelin Plate. Bombera takes a more California-Mexican approach if you want a different regional lens. For higher-end Mexican cooking in SF, options thin out quickly — which is part of why Donaji has the attention it does.

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