Daniel G
Google
I’d heard the legend of this place for years. Newspaper clippings, friends swearing it was “the real thing,” and the occasional social-media pilgrim moaning over their plate like they’d found God in butter. After all that noise, I walked in with high hopes.
Friday night, no reservation. we got a seat right away. The staff were warm, Unfortunately, the fellow diners didn’t get that memo. The room was full of Lafayette’s finest: Patagonia vests, uniform checkered shirts, faces that size you up like they’re deciding whether to vote you off the island. That smug suburban entitlement you can smell before the bread hits the table.
We brought a bottle. Corkage: thirty-five bucks. Not the worst tax on human joy I’ve seen.
Escargot and oysters to start. I’ve eaten escargot in places where the sauce alone could make you believe in reincarnation. This wasn’t that. The snail bath had no soul, no garlic whisper, no butter-drunk delirium. It barely had a pulse. The oysters were fine, but oysters are oysters. You have to actively try to mess them up.
For mains we did beef cheeks, Toulouse sausage with pork chop (the special), and the French onion soup. Everything arrived quickly, And everything tasted the same. A kind of democratic blandness. A porridge of meats and vegetables resigned to the same brownish fate. If you blindfolded me, I couldn’t tell one plate from the next.
The French onion soup was the biggest betrayal. Sweeter than any onion soup has the right to be. The cheese draped over the top lacked that Gruyere attitude, the tangy punch that tells you someone cared. The beef cheeks were cooked correctly, but utterly forgettable, drifting somewhere between hospital lunch and rainy-day disappointment. The Toulouse sausage with pork chop followed the same creed: present, technically edible, spiritually vacant.
For all the hype, the price, the Lafayette worshippers in their matching parade uniforms, the whole thing was a letdown.
The fries saved the night. Hot, crispy, salted with intention, the kind of fries that briefly make you forgive the world. The aioli was genuinely excellent. But you don’t return to a French restaurant for the fries. Not when the Bay Area is full of places that know how to coax actual life out of a plate.
Service is solid. Food is not. I wanted to love this place. I really did. But I won’t be back. There are far better temples of French cooking around here, places where the flavors don’t all share the same tragic, beige destiny.