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EOS Restaurant & Wine Bar

901 Cole St San Francisco, CA map / directions (415) 566-3063  reserve online
Website: http://www.eossf.com

Hours  

EOS Restaurant & Wine Bar is a Fusion, Asian, and Eclectic restaurant where most Menuism users came for fun with friends, paid between $25 and $50, and tipped more than 18%.

People describe this restaurant as Cole Valley, OpenTable, Reservations, Ahi And Mango Rolls, Bananamisu, and Tapas Sauces Smal... [ tag it ]

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  • # of dishes people have entered : 33
  • # who want to try this restaurant : 3
  • # who have favorited this restaurant : 1
  • # sites linking here : 0

Overall

****

4.0 avg. based on 2 ratings & 3 reviews

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From the Restaurant

EOS Restaurant and Wine Bar has been dazzling San Francisco diners since 1995. Fusing European and California cuisine with a distinctive Asian flair, EOS is an unparalleled experience. We now feature an all share-plate menu and extensive wine list.

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Reviews

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3 reviews

Award_star_gold First reviewed by:  shaomai
Jun 4, 2007 Link

My follow-up review for this restaurant. Read my previou...

My follow-up review for this restaurant. Read my previous review for this restaurant here

What I ate:
  • ****

    The hangar steak had very tasty meat with a sauce that you’ll sop up after last bit of with break. The fingerlin potatoes were very tasty as the few cornmeal onion rings that came with it.

  • *****

    The pork tenderloin had a wonderful fatty meat with crisp edges and a succulent tamarin glaze. One of my favorite dishes at EOS.

  • **

    The ginger trio was very “cute”, but not a great dessert. The ginger cookies were good, but certainly not great, the pot de creme basically gingerale in an adorable small glass, and the ice creams were great ice creams, but for me ice cream never makes a dessert.

  • ****

    There are lots of molten dark chocolate cakes in the city these days, but this one is up there with the best. It has the typical gooey center, though slightly less dark and rich than sum, and a nice slightly crisp and salty exterior. It comes with a very tasty spiral of cookie and salted caramel ice cream, which is one of my favorite ice creams in the city.

  • ***

    The artichoke was well-cooked, the aoili was tasty i n the ways that aoili usually is, but this wasn’t a knockout dish like many others are.

  • *****

    The passion fruit cheesecake is one of my favorite desserts in the city. The cream cheese perfectly balances the passion fruit, which tends to be too sweet in most desserts. It has a macadamia nut crust which is definitely better than most graham cracker crusts.

  • **

    For the price and restaurant, I expected more from this duck dish. The duck was somewhat dry and lacking potent flavor, the chutney that came with it was sweet with a hint of peppercorn, but still not enough to make this dish worth getting again.

  • ***

    For a signature dish, I feel like EOS could do better. The bananas are caramelized and therefore tasty, but it doesn’t have the same zing as the cheesecake or molten chocolate cake.

  • ***

    The meat is pretty tasty, but for the small size this definitely isn’t one of their best meat dishes. The quail is succulent and slightly fatty, but the sauce isn’t terrific.

  • ****

    I had this too long ago to remember the details, but I remember liking it much more than I expected since I never find ahi tuna that spectacular.

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Jun 4, 2007 Link

A new SF favorite

Hot damn! What a great meal! I came here with six friends and talked about the dinner all weekend. I expected really good food, but this was much better than expected. The sauces were the best part and a large part of each small dish. Our wine flights were all very good from a long list of flights, glasses, and bottles, and though not as great as the dinner, I was very happy with the desserts as well.

We were seated 30 minutes after our reservation, which wasn’t a stellar start, but our first dish made up for it in spades. We got Shiitake Mushroom Dumplings ($13) in a sauce that would have been reason enough to come here. It was not exactly sweet, but it reminded me of burnt caramel and I got every last drop with the bread of the two plates of dumplings we ordered. We also got the pork tenderloin ($14) which had a wonderful meat with a succulent tamarin glaze and hangar steak ($15) which was equally wonderful with fingerlin potatoes and a few very tasty cornmeal onion rings. The quail (~$15) was enjoyable, but unlike the other meat dishes, I wouldn’t recommend any vegetarian convert over it. The artichoke ($10) was soft and buttery and came with a heavy aoili sauce. Definitely a tasty treat, though it didn’t transcend its description. I’m not a big ahi tuna fan, but I thought the ahi tuna tower ($12) was also very memorable. We all got wine flights and were were all very happy with our choices as well as the generous pours.

We thought we didn’t have room for dessert, but when the menu came around we ended up ordering four (with two glasses of port!) The signature EOS Bananamisu (all desserts $8) was tasty, but I wouldn’t make it the signature ambassador for this great restaurant. The ginger trio had enjoyable, but not spectacular cookies, pot de creme, and a “float” that tasted like gingerale. The molten chocolate cake was well made, but not the the best I’ve had in a city that does this dessert so well. The sorbet, like almost every one I’ve had at a nice restaurant, but very good, but not nearly as exciting as the other desserts.

And though not cheap, I was very happy with the final bill of $49 each.

If you like great food and food experiences, gather your similarly-minded friends and dive in.

Update: 06/03/07
Came here on a Sunday with my mom and we both loved this experience. The dumplings ($12) were as terrific as I remembered them, the potato cakes ($5 happy hour/$10 otherwise) were very tasty (and starchy) with a sweet quince and pink peppercorn chutney. The duck ($16) was somewhat disappointing though, since it wasn’t that tender and the chutney that came with it was meh. The passion fruit cheesecake ($8) is now one of my favorite desserts in the city. The cream cheese perfectly balances the passion fruit, which tends to be too sweet in most desserts. The molten chocolate cake ($8) was even better than I remembered it. And the 5:30-7:30 Sun-Thurs happy hour is a great deal since you can get half bottle carafe of select wines for $10 and a glass for $5. The wine we had was very nice. And once again the bread was delectable and perfect for sopping up the sauces. The wait staff was also wonderful. Can’t wait to go back.

What I ate:
  • *****

    This was my favorite dish at the tremendous EOS. The dumplings were in a sesame sauce that would have been reason enough to come here. It was not exactly sweet, but it reminded me of burnt caramel and I got every last drop with the bread of the two plates of dumplings we ordered. The mushrooms were soft and succulent and the dumpling dough was enjoyable.

Extras:
I came here for
fun with friends
My meal cost
between $25 and $50
I tipped
more than 18%
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Jan 22, 2007 Link

blah blah same ol

Maybe it’s just me, but all Asian fusion-y places are just starting to taste the same. I came here with a party of 5 people, so we were able to try quite a few things on the menu. everything was good… but it seemed like my typical experience at any asian fusion place.

the atmosphere of the restaurant is contemporary, and the napkin holders are really cool. our waitstaff was friendly, but because we were tucked into a corner, it often took them a long time to come see if we were ready to order or if we needed dessert menus, etc. but the busboy was extraordinary… never had an empty glass of water!

the food was… i don’t know how to express this. everything was good, just nothing was special. my one memorabi experience was the ahi tuna and mango rolls — i didn’t really taste the mango as much as i expected to, but there were some nice big hunks of ahi in a deep fried eggroll wrapper. i also had the bananamisu for dessert, which was probably one of the more unique dishes (a bruleed banana, cut halfway down the middle, and a hunk of tiramisu), but taste-wise, i didn’t think it was extraordinary.

i think what bothers me is that it was a pretty normal restaurant, for very expensive pricing. maybe i’ve just been to too many fusion places, but eos did not stand out in my book.

What I ate:
  • ****

    The best thing I ate all night

  • ***

    Good… I did enjoy my bruleed banana. The tiramisu was good too. I just didn’t think it was special.

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