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Tartine Manufactory: A Guide To Eating At SF's New Foodie Heaven

Tartine sweets
Tartine sweets | © jenly/Flickr

Foodies, rejoice – the Tartine Manufactory is now open, born from the creators of the Mission’s beloved Tartine Bakery. If you make it out to the new location before the rest of the city hears about it, you can outsmart the crowds and long lines that the bakery is known for. Located less than a mile to the east of the original location, the massive Tartine Manufactory will have even more of your hunger needs covered, offering a bakery, an ice cream shop, a coffee manufactory, and a restaurant with a bar.
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Measuring 5,000 square feet, the Tartine Manufactory occupies a big chunk of the Health Ceramics factory at the intersection of 18th and Alabama. Chad Robertson and Elisabeth Prueitt of Tartine collaborated to create a space that incorporates craftsmanship with a one-stop shop for all your food needs. With seating for 100 people, the manufactory aims to turn the focus back to the artisans behind the food. According to Vinny Eng, Tartine’s wine director, ‘Part of the experience and part of the joy that comes with supporting an artisan is seeing the artisan at work. What Chad and Liz really wanted to do, and what this space really affords us, is the opportunity to find more ways to humanize the work, more ways for our staff who think and make and touch the food can have more unplanned interactions with people who are literally receiving the products.’

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The first stop for Tartine lovers should be, of course, the bakery. The bakery space has expanded exponentially from the original location, incorporating a variety of higher-tech bakery equipment. The best news for bread lovers? Instead of producing bread once a day, the manufactory will be baking two or three times a day, offering up fresh goods all day. The bakery’s offerings will include pastries, waffles, donuts, sandwiches, bread loaves, grain bowls, salads, pizza, porchetta, and roast chicken.

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Next stop: the coffee manufactory. Rather than stocking beans from an outside sources, Tartine made the move to begin sourcing and roasting its own coffee beans in Berkeley. The coffee counter will aim to provide quality drip coffee and espresso drinks in the simplest manner possible. Beans will be available by the bag, and Rare Tea Company teas will be available for all your herbal needs.

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Next, the restaurant-bar combo is the perfect spot to grab a meal at any time of day. There will be options made-to-order or pre-prepared if you’re in a hurry. According to chef Sam Goinsalvos, ‘It’s bread-centric. Food that goes great with bread. California cuisine, with some Southern sensibilities, and New York swagger.’ The bar will be open starting midday, offering beer, wine, low-proof cocktails, and more. Heads up: dinner is not yet being served. Check back on the website to see when dinner will be open.

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Last but not least, guests will soon be able to stop by Tartine Cookies and Cream, an ice cream shop in the corner of the manufactory. Expect high-quality ice creams, including soft serve, gelato, ice cream cakes and pies, ice cream sandwiches, and ice cream pops.

About the author

Editor of The Culture Trip's San Francisco section, Courtney is a writer, manager, yoga instructor, feminist, and arts enthusiast. Attempting to fill her days with as much creativity and humanity as possible, she loves to explore the unique spaces and cultural happenings taking place around her, taking inspiration from them to fill these pages with topics like travel, art, literature, music, wellness, and nature along the way.

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