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At Jim's Restaurant on Mission between 20th and 21st, there were plenty of seats to choose from on Monday. Photo by Hiya Swanhuyser

Fear not, we won’t be missing the beloved green salsa at Jim’s Restaurant for some time. Breakfast is here to stay. 

Mission Local has learned that the Mission Language and Vocational School will take over neighborhood mainstay Jim’s, which invited customers in today for its last day in business under current ownership. This afternoon, a line was seen reaching the corner of the building at 20th and Mission streets, and the diner had to take a waitlist for people to get in. 

Mission Language and Vocational School, a nonprofit that offers workforce development and small-business supportive services, will staff the restaurant with graduates from its catering program and culinary school. The nonprofit will keep on Beto, the longtime cook. The owners, husband and wife Kim Ok Un and Kim Jung Nyun, are retiring

MLVS is expected to take over the restaurant on Jan. 6, 2025.

Customers sitting and standing in a cozy diner with string lights, vintage photos on the walls, and colorful hanging lamps.
Jim’s Restaurant at 2420 Mission St. Photo by Yujie Zhou, Dec. 20, 2024.

Tracy Brown-Gallardo, board chair of MLVS, said the whole plan started when Ms. Kim, the diner’s owner of 32 years, told Brown-Gallardo, a long-time friend, that she planned to retire, and lamented leaving behind her customers. 

“She said it as a joke; she’s like, ‘You love Jim’s, you take over the restaurant,’” said Brown-Gallardo, who initially laughed off the suggestion. 

Then she thought about it some more: “Of course I’m like, ‘Oh my God, you can’t sell it to someone else who’s not going to have this breakfast!’” 

Brown-Gallardo sees the deal as a continuation of the diner and their friendship.

“We’ve been friends for 32 years. She served my mother, me, my daughter, and her daughter,” said Brown-Gallardo. She said they became close enough that Kim attended her daughter’s quinceañera. Over the years, she estimated she has sat in a chair at Jim’s 1,500 times, enjoying the No. 8 omelette or the best French toast in town. 

The plan to transfer ownership to MLVS has been in the works since the start of the year, and is finally on the horizon for next month. Mission Local reported yesterday that Jim’s owners are planning to step down, but Kim did not confirm the coming changes at the time. 

“My focus was on preserving the sense of community that Jim’s has always offered,” said Kim in a statement on Saturday. “My customers became my friends, and I wanted to be sure to pick someone that would continue to create the community of Jim’s clients.”

Jim’s salsas.

The project is MLVS’s first brick-and-mortar business venture, Brown-Gallardo said. The organization will invest the proceeds from the restaurant into hiring its culinary school graduates, who have already been shadowing the staff at the restaurant. Ultimately, the restaurant will expand to dinner service and Sunday meals. It will be an incubator space for pop-ups. 

The restaurant will also serve MLVS’s catered items, which span international cuisine, including chicken stews, fajitas, empanadas and BBQ chicken. 

Kim’s long relationship with Brown-Gallardo will continue. Once Kim has had a rest, you might still catch her around the diner, easing the transition and pouring coffee for her regulars. 

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Reporting from the Tenderloin. Follow me on Twitter @miss_elenius.

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4 Comments

  1. Oh bummer, Ms Kim and her helper raced around that place like nobody’s business. I just enjoyed a large mimosa with her….I had no idea that this was in the works. I am also a bit sorry this place is likely to be taken over by tech bros in the hood and ruin a place I could eat breakfast for a reasonable cost if they “modernize” it and attract the wealthy crowd.

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  2. Glad Jim’s will continue. It’s Mission history. The original Jim had three Mission Street donut shops, at 2420, 3306 (later Taco Loco) and 4468.
    By 1975 they all had new owners.

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