Restaurant in San Francisco, United States
Slanted Door, The
100ptsOAD-recognized Vietnamese worth the trip.

About Slanted Door, The
The Slanted Door brings Charles Phan's Vietnamese cooking — recognized by Opinionated About Dining in 2023 and 2024 — to a suburban San Ramon address that is calmer and easier to book than the restaurant's former Ferry Building presence. It is a solid special-occasion pick for the Bay Area, though visitors based in San Francisco should factor in the drive. Booking is easy relative to the city's top-tier competition.
Verdict
The Slanted Door is worth booking if you want Vietnamese cooking with genuine culinary ambition, recognized by Opinionated About Dining as a recommended and ranked casual pick in North America. The current San Ramon location is a meaningful departure from the Ferry Building presence that built the restaurant's reputation, so go in with clear eyes: this is not the waterfront flagship of old. That said, Charles Phan's kitchen still draws enough of a following to earn a 4.1 on Google across 382 reviews, and for a special-occasion Vietnamese meal in the Bay Area, it remains one of the more considered options available.
The Restaurant
The Slanted Door made its name translating Vietnamese cooking for a fine-casual American audience at a time when that kind of ambition was rare in the cuisine. The move to San Ramon's suburban address represents the restaurant's most significant recent evolution, shifting the energy from the Ferry Building's tourist-and-tech-lunch crowd to something quieter and more neighborhood-anchored. The atmosphere here is noticeably calmer than the old location's waterfront buzz — expect a composed dining room rather than a high-energy scene. If you were drawn to the original for its kinetic, occasion-worthy feel on the bay, the current version offers a more relaxed register. That trade-off works in your favor if you are planning a dinner where conversation matters more than spectacle.
For a special occasion, the restaurant's recognition by Opinionated About Dining gives it a credible floor of quality. OAD's casual North America list is selective enough that a ranked entry signals real cooking rather than reputation coasting. Chef Charles Phan's approach to Vietnamese food has always emphasized technique and sourcing over novelty, which means the kitchen rewards diners who are paying attention rather than those looking for theatrical presentation. A counter or bar seat, if available, is the recommended way to experience that cooking up close — it shortens the distance between kitchen and table, and in a restaurant where the craft is the point, that proximity adds to the meal.
The San Ramon address (6000 Bollinger Canyon Rd, Suite 1300) means this is not a drop-in spot for visitors staying in the city. Plan the trip deliberately. If you are coming from San Francisco proper, factor in the drive; this is suburban Contra Costa County, not the Mission or the Financial District. For Vietnamese food closer to the city center, Crustacean offers a different but ambitious take on Southeast Asian cooking, and Saigon Sandwich is the practical pick for a quick, no-occasion meal. For a sit-down Vietnamese experience closer to the Peninsula, Tamarine in Palo Alto is a direct peer comparison worth considering.
Booking is rated Easy, which is a practical advantage over most Bay Area restaurants at this recognition tier. You do not need to plan weeks out or join a waiting list, which makes The Slanted Door a viable option for spontaneous special-occasion dinners or last-minute celebrations. That accessibility is a genuine differentiator in a city where Lazy Bear and Atelier Crenn require significant advance planning.
For broader Bay Area and Northern California dining context, see our full San Francisco restaurants guide. If you are building a full trip around the meal, our San Francisco hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide are worth a look. For Vietnamese cooking benchmarks outside California, Camille in Orlando and Tầm Vị in Hanoi offer useful reference points at opposite ends of the formality spectrum.
Know Before You Go
- Address: 6000 Bollinger Canyon Rd, Suite 1300, San Ramon, CA 94583
- Cuisine: Vietnamese
- Chef: Charles Phan
- Awards: Opinionated About Dining Casual North America Ranked #785 (2024); Recommended (2023)
- Google Rating: 4.1 (382 reviews)
- Booking Difficulty: Easy
- Leading For: Special occasions, date nights, solo dining at the counter
- Location Note: San Ramon , not San Francisco city proper; allow travel time from the city
- Dress Code: Not specified; smart casual is safe for a special-occasion visit
How It Compares
Compare Slanted Door, The
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Slanted Door, The | Opinionated About Dining Casual in North America Ranked #785 (2024); Opinionated About Dining Casual in North America Recommended (2023) | — | |
| Lazy Bear | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
| Atelier Crenn | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
| Benu | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
| Quince | Michelin 3 Star | $$$$ | — |
| Saison | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
How Slanted Door, The stacks up against the competition.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at Slanted Door, The?
The venue database doesn't list specific current dishes, and The Slanted Door's menu has evolved significantly across its locations. Charles Phan built the restaurant's reputation on Vietnamese-American cooking that goes beyond pho-and-banh-mi defaults, so the stronger bets are typically protein-forward mains and anything with a regional Vietnamese angle. Check the current menu directly before visiting, as the San Ramon iteration may differ from the Ferry Building-era lineup most diners remember.
Is Slanted Door, The good for a special occasion?
It works for a low-key celebration rather than a formal milestone dinner. Opinionated About Dining rates it in the casual tier — ranked #785 in North America in 2024 — so the setting is relaxed rather than ceremonial. If you want a Vietnamese meal with genuine culinary credibility behind it, it delivers. For a true special-occasion format in the Bay Area, Benu or Quince carry more occasion weight.
Can I eat at the bar at Slanted Door, The?
Bar seating availability isn't confirmed in the current venue data for the San Ramon location. The original Ferry Building outpost had counter and bar options, but the San Ramon address at Bollinger Canyon Road is a different physical space. check the venue's official channels to confirm seating configurations before you go.
Is Slanted Door, The good for solo dining?
Vietnamese cooking in a casual format is generally well-suited to solo diners — portions are typically shareable but not locked into it, and the pacing is relaxed. The San Ramon location's OAD casual designation suggests a low-pressure environment. That said, solo dining works best when you can order two or three dishes; at a Vietnamese restaurant, that's the norm rather than the exception.
What are alternatives to Slanted Door, The in San Francisco?
For Vietnamese specifically, the Mission District has a range of options at lower price points. For comparable ambition in a different cuisine, Lazy Bear offers a more theatrical tasting-menu experience, while Benu is the Bay Area's most decorated fine-dining room. If you want chef-driven cooking without the tasting-menu format, Atelier Crenn covers the creative-casual space. The Slanted Door remains the only OAD-recognized Vietnamese option in this tier in the Bay Area.
Does Slanted Door, The handle dietary restrictions?
Vietnamese cuisine structurally accommodates a lot of dietary variation — fish sauce and shellfish-based stocks are common, so pescatarian and gluten-sensitive diners should flag specifics when booking. The venue record doesn't detail a formal dietary policy for the San Ramon location. Call ahead if restrictions are significant; the OAD casual designation suggests a kitchen flexible enough to accommodate reasonable requests.
Recognized By
More restaurants in San Francisco
- SaisonSaison is the right call for a serious San Francisco celebration dinner: 2 Michelin stars, an OAD #3 North America ranking for 2025, and a personalised open-hearth tasting menu built around your preferences. The wine list — 2,540 selections with deep Burgundy holdings — is among the strongest in the country. Dinner only, Tuesday to Saturday. Book far in advance and contact the team before arrival to shape your menu.
- Atelier CrennAtelier Crenn is San Francisco's most decorated tasting-menu restaurant: three Michelin stars, a World's 50 Best ranking, and a 14-course pescatarian menu built around Dominique Crenn's Poetic Culinaria concept. At $$$$ with near-impossible reservations, it is the right booking for a milestone occasion — but confirm the pescatarian-only format suits your table before you commit.
- QuinceQuince holds 3 Michelin Stars in San Francisco's Jackson Square and earns them with a pasta-forward tasting menu grounded in Northern California produce and Italian technique. The wine list runs to 1,700 selections and the 2023 remodel produced a room worth the $$$$ price point. Book two months out minimum — this is one of the hardest tables in the city to secure.
- BenuThree Michelin stars, a No. 7 ranking in Opinionated About Dining's North America list, and nearly 20 courses of Corey Lee's technically precise Asian-inflected cooking make Benu one of the most credentialed tables in the country. Book at least six to eight weeks out — closer to three months for a weekend date. The quiet, contemplative room suits serious food travellers over groups seeking a convivial night out.
- Lazy BearLazy Bear holds two Michelin stars and a Pearl Recommended designation, and it earns both through a genuinely distinctive dinner-party format — menu booklets, communal energy, and a James Beard-nominated wine program with over 10,500 bottles. Book the upstairs mezzanine, arrive ready to participate, and plan well ahead: reservations run near impossible and the 2024 remodel has only increased demand.
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