San Francisco, CA
One of SF’s best breakfast spots operates out of a warehouse
For at least a decade, I’ve been searching for a San Francisco breakfast burrito that rivals the ones my aunt makes. It’s tough because the love and care with which she serves them to my cousin and me can’t be replicated. Still, I frequently long for steamy soft-scrambled eggs, salty bacon, and crunchy browned potatoes wrapped in a warm flour tortilla. And it’s pretty much impossible to travel 178 miles to her home in the Central Valley for breakfast.
So when I discovered the Deli Lama, a hidden breakfast and lunch spot on the edge of Bayview-Hunters Point, I was eager to try the breakfast burrito because the Instagram pictures looked very similar to the delicious burritos my aunt has been feeding me since I was a kid.
When I walked into the Deli Lama at 150 Toland St., #7, I first noticed the industrial-sized containers of Tapatio hot sauce behind the counter, which is the brand my aunt always uses. This was a strong indication that I would finally put an end to my search for the best breakfast burrito in San Francisco. I scanned the menu while I waited to order, but I already knew what I was going for — the breakfast burrito with bacon.
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The Deli Lama hides in a part of San Francisco known for warehouses and the sounds of buzzsaws and clanking metal. Just off Bayshore Boulevard, it’s in an area of the city that used to be called Butchertown. The eatery is no different from the other businesses operating in the forgotten space between Potrero Hill and the Bayview. It too is run out of a warehouse. It even has one of those roll-up garage doors that make a racket when sliding up and down. The sheet-metal building features two hand-painted signs above the front door that read “Cheesesteaks” and “Burgers” — the only thing distinguishing Deli Lama from the five auto body shops operating in the same building.
It could not be more out of place.
Jimmy Zarur has been the owner of this affordable, hidden-away eatery since 2009. Zarur, who is Palestinian American, was born in San Francisco but grew up in a Daly City household with great cooks, especially his mother and grandmother, who made his favorite musakhan — chicken quarters marinated in sumac, allspice, coriander and cinnamon, slow roasted with caramelized onions and toasted pine nuts.
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He attended culinary school in 2002 and held jobs at different restaurants around the Bay Area for years, such as Thirsty Bear Brewing Co. and Sens. He tried to run his own restaurant for the first time in 2006, similarly serving American breakfast and lunch food in Burlingame, but the business didn’t last.
When Zarur lost his corporate cooking job at the beginning of the pandemic, he didn’t know where to turn. He applied to 20 different jobs “up and down California,” but of course, no one was hiring. Zarur was desperate to find a job. He had a wife and two kids to help support. Naturally, he wanted to stay in restaurants, but the pandemic was especially tough for the service industry, and he couldn’t dodge the troubles.
He was lost, until his cousin, Hanna Sahourieh, helped him return to the kitchen again.
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Toward the end of the summer of 2020, Zarur called his cousin for advice on his next career move. At the time, Sahourieh owned the original iteration of the Deli Lama, which he opened in 2009.
To his surprise, his cousin had an immediate solution. “Why don’t you buy my place?” asked Sahourieh, who happened to be looking to get out of the restaurant business at that time.
Zarur never expected to own his own restaurant again, but since entrepreneurship was in his blood, as he put it, he was ready to give it another go.
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“He did me a huge, huge solid. A huge favor,” Zarur, 45, told SFGATE.
Today, the Deli Lama is succeeding in a remote part of the city, in the shadows of brick and steel, offering some of San Francisco’s most delicious breakfast food.
Despite the location, Zarur says he gets a lot of people walking through his door, from tech workers to city and county employees, as well as police officers and firefighters. With a restaurant in such an industrial place, Zarur relies heavily on his regulars. That might be why he hasn’t changed the core menu at all since he took over. Every now and then, he adds creative specials — for example, a soon-to-come Cubano to fill the pork gap in the menu. He also added catering in 2021. But other than that, Zarur hasn’t felt the need to alter anything.
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“Some people have been coming here for like 10 years,” he said. “They kind of just want what they want.”
What they want is a hearty and affordable breakfast option, like the standout breakfast burrito ($10) — a torpedo-shaped behemoth just as large as any burrito you’ll find at a San Francisco taqueria. When it arrived, the forearm-sized burrito was stuffed with three eggs scrambled to perfection, with ample browning from the grill. The chopped bacon was crispy and tender, with little bits of flavorful fat hiding between the layers of egg and melted cheese. The tater tots were what really made this burrito stand out. With each bite, I could see a glimmer of golden crunch. A dash or two of Tapatio added some zing to the already perfect combination of flavors and textures.
There are other options, too. The breakfast sandwich ($9) comes with two scrambled eggs, American cheese, and the choice of bacon, ham, sausage, turkey sausage or chorizo (steak and hot links cost extra). His French toast “2x2x2” special, which includes a French toast recipe that Zarur has been perfecting for years, as well as two eggs and two pieces of bacon or sausage, is also popular. He said some of his customers call it the best French toast “on this side of the city.” For his two most popular lunch items, the hamburger ($9.50) and cheesesteak ($11), Zarur grinds and shaves the Angus beef in-house.
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Zarur’s dedication to tasty, affordable and hearty foods is what keeps people coming back to the Deli Lama. He enjoys feeding the PG&E workers in their neon green vests just as much as the tech employees in their Patagonia vests. The satisfying meals he makes feed an entire working population of the city that is often overlooked. And now, that includes me, someone who’s finally found a breakfast burrito that tastes like home.
The Deli Lama, 150 Toland St. #7, San Francisco. Open Monday through Friday, 5:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. (breakfast served until 10:30 a.m. only), closed on weekends.
San Francisco, CA
SF is the only city where it's cheaper to buy a home now than in 2019
San Francisco is the only major U.S. city where it’s cheaper to buy a home now than it was five years ago, according to data from real estate listing site Zillow.
Of the 100 largest U.S. cities by population, San Francisco is the single example that saw home values fall between November 2019 and November 2024, based on what the company calls the “Zillow price index.”
The city saw the typical home price decline by 3.7% during that period. All other cities saw prices increase. Across the Bay, Oakland had the smallest increase, with the average home value rising 2.1%. Among other major U.S. cities, prices rose 37.58% in Los Angeles; 38.34% in Austin, and 69.26% in Miami.
Cheaper is one thing. But cheap? That’s a different story.
According to Zillow, the typical home value in San Francisco in November 2024 was $1.26 million, versus $1.31 million five years ago. In 2019, San Francisco had by far the highest typical home price across all major cities, coming in more than 30% over second-place San Jose.
In 2024, San Francisco was one of four cities, all in California, with typical home prices over $1 million.
Kara Ng, a senior economist at Zillow, said San Francisco was an outlier in the first place.
“Five years ago, San Francisco was far and away the most expensive city to buy a home in the U.S.,” Ng said, adding that the pandemic fueled the ability for a highly paid but price-constrained workforce to flock to more affordable areas.
San Francisco, CA
Drive-thru turkey drive in San Francisco collects holiday meals families in need
SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) — Holiday help was there for a community in need.
A drive-thru turkey donation drive was held in San Francisco on Saturday, benefitting the San Francisco-Marin Food Bank. It brought a big donation response from the community, coming at a time when the need for food has never been greater.
Holiday turkeys and hams were arriving by the minute at a donation site near St. Emydius Church in San Francisco.
“Makes you feel good. That’s what you’re supposed to do,” said Ron Isola from Daly City.
The rainy weather didn’t stop anyone from showing up and helping out, especially Linda Peppars.
MORE: North Bay food bank issues holiday SOS for donations
“I live in the neighborhood and I just like helping people. God has blessed me. Why not bless other people? That’s the whole thing about life, especially today,” Peppars said.
It’s the 13th year for this turkey drive, started by volunteer Pierre Smit.
“I’m here from a different country. I came with nothing. If I had some some money, I would bring a few turkeys to St. Anthony’s,” Smit said.
It’s now a community-wide effort, benefitting the San Francisco-Marin Food Bank.
Hundreds of turkeys were donated, including lots of hams.
MORE: How Salvation Army’s Red Kettle campaign helps others achieve ‘2nd chance at a 1st-class life’
“We’re currently serving 50,000 households every week. These turkeys and hams will go to some of our agency partners who are putting on Christmas lunches and dinners,” Abbott said.
It comes at a critical time for most Bay Area food banks that responding to food insecurity.
One in six people in Santa Clara and San Mateo are getting help from Second Harvest of Silicon Valley.
That agency is feeding a half million people every month.
In Napa, demand for food assistance has tripled compared to this time last year, and the North Bay’s Redwood Empire Food Bank is serving thousands more families, just in the past five months.
MORE: Toys for Tots aiming to reach 70,000 gift goal in Alameda Co.
“Our number one concern is inflation. We purchase some of the food we distribute. It’s costing us two times what it did pre-pandemic,” Abbott said.
It’s why this food drive is so important.
“It’s hard. Everybody doesn’t have what you have and visa versa,” Peppers said.
As a show of thanks, everyone who donated got a round of applause from volunteers.
Copyright © 2024 KGO-TV. All Rights Reserved.
San Francisco, CA
San Francisco Giants Predicted to Sign Corbin Burnes to Massive Contract
The San Francisco Giants have been quite busy so far this offseason improving a team that has been mediocre the last few years.
So far, the Buster Posey era in San Francisco has been a good one, as after years of not being able to land big free agents, the new president of baseball operations has already changed that narrative.
This winter, the Giants were able to sign star shortstop Willy Adames to a big contract to come in and be the new face of their lineup. The talented shortstop gives San Francisco the middle of the order hitter that was the number one priority for them this offseason.
Now, they have turned their attention to replacing Blake Snell, who left in free agency for the Los Angeles Dodgers. Currently, the Giants are one of the potential suitors for the top pitching prize in free agency, Corbin Burnes.
Recently, Zachary D. Rymer of Bleacher Report predicted that San Francisco would sign the talented right-hander to a massive eight-year, $250 million deal.
That’s an enormous commitment to a pitcher who is 30 years old. But, Rymer points out all the reasons to make the deal. Burnes is a Cy Young winner, has a 2.87 ERA in his past five seasons and only one pitcher — Zack Wheeler — has a better wins above replacement (WAR) than Burnes does since August of 2020.
The concern among some analysts has been a declining strikeout rate (8.4 per nine innings), his lowest since 2020. But, as Burnes has evolved into more of a ground-ball pitcher, perhaps the dropping strikeout rate is overblown, he writes.
“You could therefore make the case that he’s already aging gracefully, which is to say nothing of how he’s never been on the injured list with an arm or shoulder injury,” Rymer wrote.
Without a doubt, Burnes has been one of the best pitchers in baseball the last few seasons, as he has pitched well for both the Milwaukee Brewers and the Baltimore Orioles. Last season with the Orioles, Burnes totaled a 15-9 record, 2.92 ERA, and had over 180 innings pitched once again.
There has been some talk about his strikeout rate dipping, especially last year. However, as he ages as a pitcher, this could be seen as a positive thing, as his performance wasn’t impacted by his ability to strikeout hitters decreasing.
With the contract likely to be a long one, the ability to get ground ball outs later in his career could keep him as a productive pitcher well into his late 30s.
For the Giants, signing the best pitcher in free agency would be a big win for them this offseason, and a feather in the cap for Posey in his first winter in charge.
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