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    Restaurant in San Diego, United States

    Solare

    310pts

    Solid Italian at $$ with a serious wine list.

    Solare, Restaurant in San Diego

    About Solare

    Solare in Point Loma holds back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition (2024–2025) and runs one of San Diego's more serious Italian wine lists — 245 selections, 3,800 bottles — at a mid-range price point of $40–$65 per person. For Italian dining with genuine wine depth and consistent kitchen credentials at the $$ tier, it is the most defensible booking in its category in San Diego.

    Solare, San Diego: The Verdict

    At the $$ price point — roughly $40 to $65 per person for a two-course meal before drinks — Solare in Point Loma is the Italian restaurant in San Diego that delivers consistent quality without asking you to commit to a splurge. Two consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions (2024 and 2025) confirm that the kitchen is operating at a level that earns serious attention. If you want Italian in San Diego at a price that leaves room for a bottle from the wine list, this is where to book. The question is whether the service and room match the credential , and for most diners, they do.

    The Room and the Experience

    Solare sits at 2820 Roosevelt Road in Point Loma, a neighbourhood defined more by its proximity to the harbour and Liberty Station than by any restaurant-row density. Walking in, the visual register is warm and deliberate: the kind of Italian-American dining room that signals investment in the long game rather than trend-chasing. It does not have the industrial-cool look of some newer openings in North Park or Little Italy, and that is a point in its favour if you are booking for a group that includes anyone over 40 or for a dinner where conversation matters more than atmosphere points on Instagram.

    Randy Smerik runs the operation as owner, general manager, and wine director simultaneously , a combination that is unusual and worth noting. When one person holds all three roles, the risk is that something gets shortchanged; at Solare, the wine program is the area where that investment is most visible. The list carries 245 selections across an inventory of approximately 3,800 bottles, with particular depth in Italian and California wines. Corkage is set at $30, which is reasonable for San Diego, and the list's pricing tier , $$ , means there are bottles under $50 alongside more serious options at the higher end. For a food-and-wine explorer, this list is one of the primary reasons to choose Solare over comparable Italian options in the city.

    Service: Where the Price Point Gets Tested

    The PEA-R-05 question for Solare is whether the service earns the $$ price point or undermines it. Based on a Google rating of 4.5 across 821 reviews , a sample large enough to be meaningful , the answer is that it earns it. Chef Denice Grande leads the kitchen, and the Michelin Plate recognition across two consecutive years suggests the food quality is not accidental. Michelin Plate status means the inspectors found cooking worth noting but stopped short of a star; for Italian at this price range in a mid-size American city, that is a genuine credential rather than a participation trophy.

    The service dynamic at Solare is shaped by its owner-operator structure. When the owner is also the floor manager, there is typically more accountability for the guest experience than at a corporate-group restaurant where GMs rotate. This does not guarantee exceptional service on every visit, but it does shift the odds. For a food-and-wine enthusiast who wants to ask detailed questions about the wine list without being handed off to someone who does not know it, this structure matters. Compare this to some of the larger Italian restaurants in Little Italy, where the volume of covers can make the floor feel transactional.

    For other Italian options in San Diego, Cesarina in Mission Hills brings a tighter, Roman-inflected focus; Ciccia Osteria in Ocean Beach runs a smaller room with a neighborhood feel; Cucina Urbana in Bankers Hill covers a broader Italian-American range at a similar price tier; and Siamo Napoli targets Neapolitan pizza specifically. None of these carry Michelin recognition, which gives Solare a meaningful edge for diners who use awards as a quality signal.

    The Wine List: A Real Differentiator

    With 245 selections and 3,800 bottles in inventory, Solare's wine program is operating at a scale that most Italian restaurants at this price point do not attempt. The Italian and California focus makes sense given the cuisine and the geography. For wine-focused diners, this is not a secondary consideration , it is one of the two or three leading reasons to pick Solare over its direct competitors. The $30 corkage fee means that if you have a bottle you want to bring, the economics are reasonable. If you are comparing wine programs among San Diego Italian restaurants, Solare's depth is genuinely harder to match. For context on how serious wine programs at this level compare internationally, see 8½ Otto e Mezzo Bombana in Hong Kong or cenci in Kyoto , both Italian restaurants operating with significant wine investment in non-Italian cities, similar in spirit if not in price tier.

    Practical Details

    Reservations: Easy , book online or by walk-in; no extended lead time required for most nights. Budget: $$ ($40–$65 per person for two courses before wine and tip). Wine corkage: $30. Meals served: Lunch and Dinner. Dress: Smart casual; no strict code reported. Address: 2820 Roosevelt Road, Point Loma, San Diego, CA 92106.

    Ratings at a Glance

    • Google: 4.5 / 5 (821 reviews)
    • Michelin: Plate recognition 2024 and 2025
    • Wine list: 245 selections, 3,800-bottle inventory; strong Italian and California depth
    • Price: $$ cuisine / $$ wine

    How It Compares

    Within San Diego's Italian category, Solare's clearest competition is at the same $$ price tier. Cucina Urbana and Cesarina are the most direct alternatives, both solid and well-regarded , but neither carries Michelin recognition, and neither runs a wine program at Solare's depth. If your priority is a serious wine list alongside credentialed Italian cooking at a mid-range price, Solare wins that comparison clearly.

    FAQs

    • Is Solare good for solo dining? Yes , the owner-operator model and mid-size room make solo dining comfortable rather than awkward. The wine list gives you something to engage with if you want to, and the $$ price point means a two-course meal with a glass of wine does not require a commitment. It is a better solo choice than larger, higher-volume Italian spots in Little Italy where single diners can feel like an afterthought.
    • What should I order at Solare? Specific menu items are not confirmed in the available data, so treat staff recommendations as your guide. What is confirmed: the kitchen holds two consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions under Chef Denice Grande, which signals consistent technical quality in the Italian canon. Ask the floor , with Randy Smerik running both the room and the wine program, the staff answers should be reliable. Pair your food with something from the Italian section of the wine list, where the depth is strongest.
    • How far ahead should I book Solare? Booking difficulty is rated easy , same-week reservations are generally achievable, and the restaurant is not operating at the demand level of a Michelin-starred venue. That said, weekend dinners in Point Loma can fill; a few days' notice is sensible for Friday or Saturday. No extended lead time is needed the way you would for, say, Addison at the $$$$ tier.
    • What should a first-timer know about Solare? Three things: the wine list is the standout feature, so use it rather than defaulting to cocktails; the Michelin Plate recognition means the kitchen is operating above the casual Italian baseline, so order with that in mind; and Point Loma is not a walkable restaurant district, so plan your transport accordingly. Budget $40–$65 per person before wine. For a fuller picture of where Solare fits in the city, see our full San Diego restaurants guide. You can also browse San Diego hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences to plan around the meal.

    Compare Solare

    Solare vs. Similar Venues
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    SolareItalian$$WINE: Wine Strengths: Italy, California Pricing: $$ i Wine pricing: Based on the list\'s general markup and high and low price points:$ has many bottles < $50;$$ has a range of pricing;$$$ has many $100+ bottles Corkage Fee: $30 Selections: 245 Inventory: 3,800 CUISINE: Cuisine Types: Italian Pricing: $$ i Cuisine pricing: The cost of a typical two-course meal, not including tip or beverages.$ is < $40;$$ is $40–$65;$$$ is $66+. Meals: Lunch and Dinner STAFF: People Randy Smerik:Owner Wine Director: Randy Smerik Chef: Denice Grande General Manager: Randy Smerik Owner: Randy Smerik; Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024)Easy
    AddisonFrench, Contemporary$$$$Michelin 3 StarUnknown
    CallieGreek, Mediterranean Cuisine, Californian-Mediterranean$$Unknown
    TrustNew American, American$$$Unknown
    Sushi TadokoroSushi, Japanese$$$Unknown
    SoichiJapanese$$$$Michelin 1 StarUnknown

    Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Solare good for solo dining?

    Yes. At the $$ price point ($40–$65 for two courses), Solare is accessible enough for a solo dinner without the financial commitment of a tasting-menu venue. Booking is easy with no extended lead time required, so last-minute solo visits are realistic. The wine program — 245 selections, $30 corkage — gives solo diners a reason to linger rather than rush.

    What should I order at Solare?

    Specific menu items are not documented in our current data, so we won't guess. What the record confirms: this is Italian cuisine at a $$ price point with lunch and dinner service, a Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025, and a wine list with 245 selections skewed toward Italy and California. Order from the Italian core and pair with something from the list — that's where Solare's value is clearest.

    How far ahead should I book Solare?

    Booking is straightforward — online reservations or walk-ins work for most nights, with no extended lead time typically required. That puts Solare in a different category from harder-to-book San Diego spots like Soichi or Sushi Tadokoro. For weekend evenings, a day or two of lead time is sensible; weekday lunches and dinners are generally accessible without planning ahead.

    What should a first-timer know about Solare?

    Solare holds Michelin Plate recognition for 2024 and 2025 — a signal of consistent quality rather than a starred destination. Budget $40–$65 per person for two courses before drinks, and factor in the wine list: 245 selections, strong Italian and California coverage, $30 corkage if you bring your own. It sits at 2820 Roosevelt Road in Point Loma, near Liberty Station. The format is approachable — no dress code anxiety, no months-long reservation chase.

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