Piccino is perfect for pizza and salad
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Piccino’s classic pizza margherita is exemplary.
(Courtesy photo)
Piccino’s classic pizza margherita is exemplary.

SAN FRANCISCO (Map, News) - Piccino, a smart corner cafe in a remodeled, navy blue Victorian comes as a surprise in gentrifying Dogpatch, a sunny microneighborhood at the bottom of the eastern slope of Potrero Hill.

Who would expect to find rows of untouched, pre-earthquake cottages on a narrow tree-lined block amid warehouses, truck depots and workshops?

A surge of well-being washes over a wind-whipped San Franciscan eating outside at a protected small table under a tree on the sidewalk in this hidden urban oasis. Potrero Hill serves as a windscreen. And when the food radiates the vibrancy of local and organic raw materials, the bliss is complete.

If the world associates Dungeness crab, sourdough and chardonnay with San Francisco, actual residents consider salad, pizza and a glass of pinot as the real iconic meal. Piccino executes the latter with conviction.

Every salad shines. Bright green asparagus, sliced into ribbons, is woven into peppery wild arugula in a fluffy salad made savory with microscopic bits of crisp bacon and shavings of Parmesan ($9).

Baby romaine leaves ($8.50) confetti-ed with Meyer lemon zest, toasted walnuts and dabs of creamy Bellwether ricotta come off clean yet exciting.

Spiky wild arugula again (it’s the season) comes with sugary baby beets, shaved fennel and dots of goat cheese in a tart dressing delicately scented with coriander ($9), an inspired touch.

While few would cross town for a salad (except me and maybe Alice Waters), many travel the world to find their favorite pizza. The T-Third might just get them there. A Piccino pizza has a sexy, crisp, thin crust and restrained toppings that balance flavor and texture in proper proportion. It serves one to two.

My favorite, salciccia ($12.50), is a white pizza paved with creamy mozzarella, blobs of moist housemade Italian sausage and thick, juicy rings of caramelized onion — rich and savory yet light.

For tomato-sauce lovers, the classic pizza margherita ($9.50) is the test. The eloquent crust is paved with flagstones of creamy mozzarella on a surface of tomato sauce subtly seasoned with savory and maybe a little coriander. Whatever magic Piccino practices on the sauce, it convinced me. With a sprinkling of hot red chile flakes, this classic margherita satisfied deeply.

The simple menu offers a handful of other dishes, like a bland warm pasta salad ($8.50) — I have never met one I liked — at lunch; and, at dinner, braised lamb shoulder ($18) with fregola (round, couscous balls) and pickled grapes which add a level of excitement.

But the reason to come here is for pizza and salad. Add a glass of Italian or French wine; a Montepulciano from Abruzzo at $6 a glass works just fine. To end, try an impeccable espresso made with Blue Bottle coffee.

The design of this cool little place extends from the structure to the table top. Almost half of the space is dedicated to an open kitchen and a coffee bar. Patrons sit at six copper-topped tables pushed very close together along a wooden banquette in the window. Wine comes in thick tumblers, food on hand-crafted asymmetrical slabs of glazed clay, each different and quirky; water, in a Straus milk bottle.

However, the choice seats on a pleasant afternoon are outside on the Dogpatch sidewalk, once a district of meat cutters and stray dogs, and now the newest San Francisco retreat.

Patricia Unterman is author of the “San Francisco Food Lovers’ Pocket Guide” and a newsletter, “Unterman on Food.” Contact her at pattiu@concentric.net.

Piccino

Location: 801 22nd St., San Francisco

Contact: (415) 824-4224 or www.piccinocafe.com

Hours: Tuesday-Friday from 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Sunday from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.; closed Monday

Price range: $6.50 to $9 for soup and salad; $9.50 to $13 for pizza

Recommended dishes: Romaine with almonds and ricotta; arugula, beet and goat cheese salad; asparagus salad; individual pizza

Credit cards: MasterCard, Visa

Reservations: Not accepted

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Comments from Examiner Readers

1:50 PM MST on Fri., Jul. 4, 2008 re: "North Beach Italian done right"

Examiner Reader said:
PATHETIC Patricia !! Kiss ass. The artichoke is DISGUSTING !! Brown gravy !! God help me !! Iceberg lettcue with salami ! PLAALEEZZE !!!!!!! this is aninsult to my Italian ancestry.

2 agree | 2 disagree
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1:21 PM MST on Thu., Jul. 3, 2008 re: "North Beach Italian done right"

Examiner Reader said:
Joey and Eddie's -- I've only been there for dessert, but it was sooo bad. Pistachio panna cotta and cannolis. Huge portions, but way, way WAY too sweet. Total lack of subtlety in the flavor. I think they must order pre-packaged desserts? I don't know, but the dessert was so bad that it scared me off of trying any of the food (although I love this chef from his recent days at Pesceria!).

2 agree | 2 disagree
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8:08 PM MST on Tue., Jun. 24, 2008 re: "Lichee Garden knows family-style cooking"

Examiner Reader said:
let's move to another restaurant already. It's not like there is a shortage in this city.

6 agree | 4 disagree
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2:34 PM MST on Tue., Jun. 24, 2008 re: "Lichee Garden knows family-style cooking"

Examiner Reader said:
Lichee Garden is by far the best Chinese restaurant I've had in town. Immigrating here from Hong Kong four years ago, I often miss out on the "authentic" Chinese food except at LG, where you can never go wrong with any dishes. I suggest you to try all Unterman's recommendations (as those are the common orders I make), and try the salt and pepper crab (the best fried crab I've ever had). I go to LG about twice a week with my family, and always enjoy the atmosphere and service from Annie. Always ask for what the chef's recommendation of the day is, and always be willing to try new dishes. The House Sparerib is classic with the perfect sweet and sour sauce. And trust me, LG does not use the same sauce for everything (that's what House of Nanking does). Just order a variety of dishes (like Unterman). I always leave LG with a smile.

7 agree | 6 disagree
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12:06 PM MST on Sat., Jun. 21, 2008 re: "Lichee Garden knows family-style cooking"

Examiner Reader said:
ugh - think Untermann has lost her tastebuds. This is just another in a long line of reviews where she seems to have eaten at the restaurant on the one day it sparkled. More likely, they know who she is and pull out all the stops. I've eaten there two or three times when in North Beach, and never been impressed...sticky floors, aged linens on tables (with original spots, I think) and nothing special on the menu you can't find in a million other Chinese restaurants. You want good Chinese food around Chinatown? Head to Great Eastern - they can even get me to eat the chicken feet appetizer, their food is THAT good!

8 agree | 7 disagree
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12:18 AM MST on Fri., Jun. 20, 2008 re: "Lichee Garden knows family-style cooking"

Examiner Reader said:
Gee would you have said a table full of Asians, African Americans, Pacific Islanders, or just is a "table full of caucasions" not offensive? Imagine - "I revisited with a table full of Africans..."

5 agree | 4 disagree
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8:46 PM MST on Thu., Jun. 19, 2008 re: "Lichee Garden knows family-style cooking"

Examiner Reader said:
Lichee Garden has sticky chairs and floors. Their food taste the same no matter what it is. They seem to use the same sauce for all their entrees.I equate their food to McDonald's. For authentic tasty chinese food, go to Great Eastern or R&G lounge.

7 agree | 3 disagree
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8:33 PM MST on Thu., Jun. 19, 2008 re: "Lichee Garden knows family-style cooking"

Examiner Reader said:
i misss their dim sum from tea times??

5 agree | 4 disagree
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4:58 PM MST on Thu., Jun. 5, 2008 re: "Perfect pizza is at the ‘Place’ on Noriega"

Examiner Reader said:
I will have to try the pizza place but from the picture the crust does not look thin it looks california thin.

4 agree | 4 disagree
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12:14 PM MST on Thu., May. 15, 2008 re: "A slice of the Middle East"

Examiner Reader said:
layaly have the best middle_eastren food in the bay.there food is delicious and have consistant recepie. what you taste today you'll taste tommorrow. it's a winner. I love the hookah lounge, they sereve very good hookahs & have very unique Tobacco Flavors. the hookah lonuge opens at 8pm -12am & 8pm - 2:00(fri & sat)on the weekends.i recommend this place cause it's a winner

9 agree | 5 disagree
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3:01 PM MST on Thu., May. 8, 2008 re: "Take Mom out to the ballgame at AT&T Park"

Examiner Reader said:
My mother would beat me like a rented mule if I took her to a baseball game for Mother's Day.

7 agree | 6 disagree
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7:50 AM MST on Wed., Apr. 2, 2008 re: "Namu’s intricate flavors entice your palate"

Examiner Reader said:
I visited Namu on a trip to San Fran a year back when the restaurant had just opened. The space is minimal and hip, and the food fantastic - the black cod was superb!

7 agree | 7 disagree
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10:51 PM MST on Tue., Apr. 1, 2008 re: "Namu’s intricate flavors entice your palate"

Francis Kim said:
actually namu never closes early. the restaurant that always closes early was written right next to the namu article. I believe everyone is getting confused. And on thursday, friday, and saturday they stay open till 1am!!!! that is awesome.

8 agree | 7 disagree
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3:58 PM MST on Thu., Mar. 27, 2008 re: "Jazzy soul food in the heart of the Fillmore"

M.S. Jackson said:
Ms. Unterman's laughable dialectic suggests she is feeding on some of the large sausages at the Soul Food joint and getting more than her fill!

7 agree | 8 disagree
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4:55 PM MST on Sun., Mar. 16, 2008 re: "Jazzy soul food in the heart of the Fillmore"

Examiner Reader said:
I suspect they close before the posted closing time to save on staff costs on nights when the amount of business does not cover expenses. I give them another six months.

8 agree | 13 disagree
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12:28 PM MST on Thu., Feb. 21, 2008 re: "Review: Innovative Japanese dining with a California twist"

Examiner Reader said:
Go early in the evening because they'll close early if the mood stikes them. Even if you have a reservation.

36 agree | 54 disagree
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