Broccoli & Chocolate

restaurants * food events * news

  • About
  • Events
  • Contact
  • Giveaways
  • Twitter

Review: Cafe Jacqueline

June 11, 2012 by Angie Sommer 2 Comments

Looking for a romantic dinner for two in the City? Cafe Jacqueline fits the bill: dim lighting; cozy, high-ceilinged dining area; chic vintage minimalist decor. This North Beach restaurant isn’t your standard Little Italy establishment for sure, but it’s also unique in the City as a whole. Which isn’t something you find too often.

Chocolate souffle. Read on.

What Cafe Jacqueline does is souffles. What is a souffle? It’s something that people of my parents’ and grandparents’ generation revered and feared. Like Donald Trump’s hair nowadays. People probably used to look to Julia Child for guidance on this difficult and notably finicky dish; I’d just go to Jackie*.

Since Wiki says it best, I’ll just quote that a souffle is a “lightly baked cake made with egg yolks and beaten egg whites combined with various other ingredients and served as a savory main dish or sweetened as a dessert”. Yeah, that. As a savory dinner dish, it’s like a ramekin-ed, puffy quiche. As a dessert, it’s like an airy, warm cake.

While some of the fancier restaurants around offer souffles on their menu, this is the only restaurant I know of that is dedicated exclusively to this one dish. Dinner? Savory souffle with cheese and veggies. Dessert? Chocolate or fruity souffle. Each is made for two people to share, making it a great place for a romantic date.

So, naturally, I went with my mom. We shared the spinach souffle for dinner and the chocolate souffle for dessert. You order both at the same time because it takes FOREVER for Jacqueline (I believe she’s the actual person back there, the one with the wooden spoon and all the magic) to queue these things up. A few tips:

  • This is not Applebee’s. You will not be in and out of here in an hour. This is a three-hour minimum ordeal. Prepare adequately.
  • The service is slow (addendum to above). Again, not Applebee’s. They will not come to your table every 45 seconds to make sure you don’t need yet another side of ranch dressing. I found the staff to be courteous and friendly, but they aren’t in a rush and they don’t expect you to be either.
  • Reservations are a good idea. There are a limited number of tables, this place is popular, and there appears to be usually just the one seating. If you’re serious about going, call ahead.
  • The souffles are hot. I know you’re hungry, but you’re going to burn the shit out of yourself if you’re not patient. I learned the hard way; I advise that you do not.
  • You can have groups bigger than two people, but the souffles are meant for two people. As Alicia would say, sharing is caring.

Spinach souffle about halfway through… I was hungry and forgot to take a picture at the start.

Spinach salad

Butter lettuce salad

The food was good. The salads were not the best (spinach was mom’s and she said it was good; butter lettuce was mine and was really just butter lettuce with a light spritzing of something slightly more flavorful than water… could have done without it). The spinach souffle (with gruyere) was really, really good. Salty. Flavorful. Fluffy. Recommended.

The chocolate souffle was good, but I fear I was hoping for something different that downplayed the goodness. What I really wanted was molten chocolate cake (a la Lake Chalet or Buon Appetito) that somehow contained more volume of sugar than there was volume of actual cake. This was a light, fluffy cake with some melty goo in the middle. It was not overly sweet. I think it was well-executed (and, again, ridiculously hot: danger) and tasted very good. But it was not corn-syrup-super-duper-sugar madness that I come to expect (and desire) from a chocolate dessert. Just know that going in and you’ll be fine. Or, don’t be me and you’ll probably be fine too.

Chocolate goo innards of chocolate souffle. Mmmm…

Overall: CJ does a great job. Go, be merry, and eat souffles.

*I’m taking liberties with her name. I hope she’s cool with that.

Cafe Jacqueline on Urbanspoon

Share this post: on Twitter on Facebook on Google+

Filed Under: French Tagged With: North Beach, San Francisco

« Review: Sheba
Review: The Plant »

Comments

  1. Diane says

    June 12, 2012 at 5:20 am

    Yes, the souffle was off the charts awesome! Also, you have to go past the kitchen to use the restroom and I think the lady doing the cooking is the owner. Be sure to say “bonjour”.

    Reply
  2. piropos says

    April 4, 2013 at 1:09 pm

    Thanks for finally talking about >Cafe Jacqueline | broccoli and chocolate <Loved it!

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Diane Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Giveaways

Here at Broccoli & Chocolate, I love to run giveaways for my readers!
See Past Giveaways
Hey! I'm Angie!

Email Subscription

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

SF Neighborhoods

Chinatown
Cole Valley
Embarcadero
Financial District
Fort Mason
Glen Park
Haight
Inner Sunset
Marina
Mission
NOPA
North Beach
Potrero Hill
Presidio
Sea Cliff
SOMA
Union Square

Bay Area Cities

Alameda
Berkeley
Burlingame
Castro Valley
Dublin
Emeryville
Foster City
Fremont
Hayward
Mountain View
Newark
Oakland
Pacifica
Redwood City
San Francisco
San Jose
San Leandro
San Lorenzo
San Mateo
Sausalito
Walnut Creek

Travel

Greater Bay Area
Greater California
Napa Area
Santa Barbara
Travel

Food Category

Food Blogs

Bay Area Bites
Everyday Bites
Food Fashionista
Food Is Gross
Foodhoe's Foraging
Kels Eats
Vegansaurus

© Copyright 2014 Broccoli & Chocolate · All Rights Reserved · Designed by Michelle