Tucked away in the Museum of Fine Arts in downtown St. Pete is what I consider to be one of our city’s foremost culinary gems. Café Clementine is, in my opinion, the best artisan bakery and casual kitchen in the city.
I’ve been visiting Clementine since July 2023, and I rave about it to anyone who will listen. It’s high time I formalize my crazed compliments into a review, so that it’s out there for everyone to see.
They’re primarily a bakeshop, with a generous selection of pastries, savory bakes and breads that rotate every couple of weeks. But this café is also a perfect spot for brunch – they have a seasonal brunch menu with a great variety of tea options and some creative non-espresso coffee as well. Occasionally, the hot kitchen team will put some brunch specials on the menu, and those dishes have turned out to be the ones that have imprinted permanently on my brain.
To give you some background – after I graduated high school in India in 2020, I started and ran a full-time home bakery business for six months. I then decided to pursue two culinary degrees from Le Cordon Bleu, Paris. As you can imagine, I had the absolute time of my life eating my way through every boulangerie, pâtisserie and restaurant in Paris (and throughout France). After graduating from culinary school and moving to St. Pete for university, I loved how many coffee shops there were, but I never thought I’d find an artisan bakery that could meet the Parisian standards.
Café Clementine is now my new standard. The owners, Paulina and Vince, are some of the kindest people you’ll ever meet. I highly recommend keeping up with Clementine on their Instagram – the team’s passion, candor and compassion for the community is so evident. The manager, Jayme, is one of my favorite people. Over the year(s?), after I cemented my status as a firm regular, Paulina and Jayme will set an item aside for me if it’s near closing time and I’m scared it’ll sell out.
But, first and foremost, the food just speaks for itself. The regular pastry menu is so diverse and the quality shines through every time. You can always expect to find croissants (flavored and regular), morning buns, savory scones, mini teacakes, cookies and even more in the case. I adore their dedication to doing the classics well; they laminate all of their croissants and pain au chocolats in house, and the staple brown butter chocolate chip cookie is a force to be reckoned with. I knew the Clementine team and I were kindred spirits when I tasted the sea salt flakes on that cookie (Maldon sea salt on cookies and brownies is actual magic).
With that being said, it’s the bold flavor combinations and variety of goods that keeps me coming back. I also have tremendous respect for the reasonable pricing. Café Clementine has had an incredible two-year run so far, and their ingredients are sustainably and locally sourced – if they raised their prices, honestly, I don’t think anyone would have batted an eye.
But they haven’t, and honestly, they’re one of the few places in St. Pete that consistently deliver an absolute bang for every buck.
Here are some of my favorite eats from Café Clementine.
Have you ever had a meal that was so unbelievably sublime, that you actively mourn its absence in the days since you last had it? This is that meal for me. Being eloquent is proving really difficult for me right now, because I just want to say, “OH MY GOD IT’S SOOO GOOD.”
It was one of the most well balanced plates I’ve had in my life. The sweet potato gnocchi was crisp on the outside and pillowy perfection inside, its sweetness complemented by the nutty, herby pepita (pumpkin seed) pesto. I thought it was so creative to make pesto out of pumpkin seeds instead of pine nuts, and as someone who’s a big fan of texture in dishes, I adored its chunkiness along with the bite of the crispy sage.
What really brought it all home, was the fluffy béchamel on the bottom – one of the five French mother sauces, béchamel sauce is a familiar creamy white concoction with a signature hint of nutmeg. It’s great, but it’s usually a touch too rich for me. This béchamel was inexplicably light and flavorful. I could’ve eaten a bowl full of it.
This was a seasonal special by Chef Nico. Wherever you are Chef Nico, I hope your pillow always stays cold on both sides and your pain au chocolats have an extra chocolate baton in them.
I discovered my love of citrus in dessert when I was at culinary school. Many of the recipes in my pastry curriculum highlighted ingredients like passionfruit, lime and lemon in delicous cremeuxs and gels. This tartlet is, to me, the best way to appreciate the magnificent key lime. The key lime curd was wonderfully tart and the chantilly cream provided some lightly sweet relief. What’s more, even the tart shell (something we spent very long on at culinary school), was deliciously golden brown, crispy and not too thick.
As soon as it’s key lime season, you must get this one from Café Clementine.
This was another brunch item – I can’t remember whether it was a regular menu item or a special – that I had in October 2023. While I can’t recall the details, I remember it being Mediterranean themed, and I think that middle patty was lamb.
It tasted just like the middle eastern kebabs I’ve eaten on countless occasions, with some bright pickled onions and arugula cutting through the richness of that sauce. I believe this was the housemate focaccia too. All this to say, if they have brunch specials, you should definitely get one.
Another shot of the German chocolate cake that changed my life. Nothing annoys me more than a dry cake, and after having tried countless variations of their large and small cakes, I can confidently say they know how to make a moist, flavorful sponge.
Days after I had that glorious sweet potato gnocchi, this French onion soup was the next Chef’s special. And guess what – underneath the absolutely delicious, sweet, smoky onions in that rich, beefy, peppery broth, were a few of those same sweet potato gnocchi. It was such an innovative way of using the leftover prepped pasta, and it delivered a much-needed textural balance.
I had posted on my food instagram that same day, (@frosted_by_mahika) that the only thing that would have improved this meal would have been a side of some crusty bread to soak up the leftover sauces.
Among their regular selection of savory bakes, you will usually find some brioches, scones and croissants. I love roasted red pepper, so this one was right up my alley.
This hidden gem is a true triumph in artisan bakes and eats. If I were to make a day-long itinerary for someone who’s visiting St. Pete for the first time, I’d put Café Clementine at the very top of the list.
Artisan bakery and cafe located in the Museum of Fine Arts in St Petersburg.
PLEASE NOTE: Reviews reflect a certain moment in time. Some restaurants stay extremely consistent over many years, and some change for the better or worse. Some things that may change are: chefs, recipes, food suppliers, ingredients, philosophies, ownership, etc. We always hope that you have the same good, or great experience we had.