Fine Dining
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Restaurant Ki is a high-energy, 12-course tasting menu with genre-pushing Korean dishes.
Whether you want to eat a nice dinner or drop it low in the club, here's a list of great ways to ring in 2025.
If you want to impress someone with incredible Imperial-style Chinese food and a blockbuster space, take them to Bistro Na’s in the SGV.
Mori Nozomi is a woman-led sushi restaurant in West LA that serves an elegant, nuanced omakase designed to impress serious sushi fans.
The Tropicale is a ktischy oasis that feels like a Miami supper club. Things get weird here.
Morihiro is a high-end omakase restaurant in Atwater Village—a one-of-a-kind experience that should be on every sushi enthusiast’s to-do list.
Sushi Kaneyoshi is a high-end sushi bar hidden in the basement of an office building in Little Tokyo,
Juliet is a gorgeous French brasserie in Culver City with food that's both pretty and delicious.
Shunji’s omakase will cost you, but it’s worth it to try the different fish varieties and crazy things they do with vegetables.
A meal at Gwen is going to cost you some money, but if you're OK with that, this upscale steakhouse is one of the best dinner spots in Hollywood.
Meteora is an experimental fine dining spot that's a bad dream, jungle excursion, and frustrating dining experience rolled into one.
Ilé' is a Nigerian tasting menu experience in Hollywood that feels more like a swanky apartment hang.
Melisse is a legendary fine dining restaurant in Santa Monica that manages to feel entirely approachable.
Dear John’s in Culver City will transport you back to the glamorous Old Hollywood era you wish you lived in.
Girl & The Goat is the West Coast outpost of the famous Chicago restaurant located in the Arts District.
Lawry’s might be a bonafide chain, but its original Beverly Hills location still has lots of magic.
Hinoki & the Bird is cooler than most options in Century City, and an ideal spot for your next power lunch. Even if you won’t remember the food.
Orsa & Winston is an Italian-Japanese restaurant in DTLA that doesn't make much sense anymore.
Santa Monica’s Via Veneto has the kind of classic, upscale Italian food that New Yorkers claim you can’t find in LA.