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The 8 best new LA restaurants of 2023

A photo of Red logo
by Karen Palmer
Updated 18 December 2023

It’s been a banner year for restaurant debuts in Los Angeles. Not only are a few of 2023’s most exciting new spots in unexpected pockets of the city like Woodland Hills and Pasadena, but some even scored national attention including Eater’s best new restaurant award.

From glitzy red-sauce joints to spots redefining Californian cuisine, these are the new places that made major first impressions in 2023. Read on for a guide to LA’s eight hottest restaurants of the year.

A photo of Casaléna restaurant
4.6
4.6 (1744)
$31 to $50
Italian
Woodland Hills
About the restaurant

A sprawling—and stunning—8,000 square-foot indoor and outdoor space made Casaléna an immediate hotspot when it opened in June. There are five dining areas to choose from, including an atrium with skylights and a glass window-wrapped terrace. The sibling-run Mediterranean restaurant draws crowds for a prolific coastal menu featuring crudos, seafood spaghetti with uni butter, and other crowd faves like short ribs with whipped potatoes. Pair that vacation-like menu with one seriously breathtaking space, and you’ll see why Casaléna is an important part of the Valley’s overdue restaurant renaissance.


Top review
Barbara
Dined 2 days ago
This is the second time I’ve been here. The ambiance, food and service are excellent. Dining in the patio was great. Will recommend Casalena to all my family and friends.
A photo of Lingua Franca restaurant
4.5
4.5 (207)
$31 to $50
Contemporary American
Atwater Village
About the restaurant

Some of LA’s most exciting Californian cooking is unfolding on its riverfront. Lingua Franca opened in February from the team behind hit neighborhood sandwich shop Wax Paper and takes its mantra—“good food for good people”—very seriously. Dishes like clam frites and root beer-braised beef cheek are just a couple of examples of how the restaurant is cranking out comfort food 2.0., which made it a fast favorite for local media and the restaurant industry crowd.


Top review
OpenTable DinerVIP
Dined on 25 Feb 2024
Wonderful every time, a special place in a great neighborhood.
A photo of Loreto restaurant
4.8
4.8 (257)
$50 and over
Mexican
Atwater Village
About the restaurant

Mexico City-based restaurant group Grupo Palmares (also behind downtown favorite LA Cha Cha Chá) launched another stylish Mexican hit in March. Since opening, Loreto has earned a glowing review from the Los Angeles Times’s Bill Addison, who described its phenomenal seafood lineup as being “threaded with pan-regional inspiration.” That translates to lesser-seen dishes like shrimp and serrano aguachile and wood-fired branzino served in warehouse-like digs with pretty design touches like golden shelves and exposed brick for days.


Top review
Maren
Dined 2 days ago
Loreto was amazing. Came here for my partner's birthday and we'll definitely return with friends soon. We ordered a toro sashimi, a ceviche, croquetas and a pasta and it was all above and beyond delicious, as were the cocktails. Service was great and so was the ambiance. Good prices for the quality of experience, too.
A photo of Joyce restaurant
4.5
4.5 (530)
$31 to $50
Regional American (Southern)
Downtown
About the restaurant

The second act from chef Sammy Monsour of acclaimed New Orleans-inspired spot Preux & Proper puts a Southern spin on sustainable seafood. Joyce opened its doors in August and is a force to be reckoned with among LA’s other fish spots, as confirmed by enthusiastic shoutouts from the Los Angeles Times and others. Expect excellent Lowcountry-style dishes like trout caviar deviled eggs and black tiger prawn and oyster perloo. Not to mention zero-waste cocktails—extensions of the restaurant’s super sustainable ethos—by beverage director Kassady Wiggins, including the tequila-forward Hootie Hoo, made with blue algae and salt foam.


Top review
April
Dined 2 days ago
Full transparency: I’m a southerner and didn’t have high expectations for the food. Wow, was I wrong. The food was spectacular. Service and ambiance checked all the boxes too. Great little gem in DTLA. Will definitely visit again when I’m in town.
A photo of Bar Chelou restaurant
4.8
4.8 (446)
$50 and over
Contemporary French
Pasadena
About the restaurant

Not only did this eclectic French restaurant get a rave Los Angeles Times review, it was also named one of Eater’s best new restaurants of 2023. Bar Chelou comes from Trois Mec alum chef Douglas Rankin and sits next to the Pasadena Playhouse, making it a sought-after pre-show dinner spot. Its sexy interiors and pitch-perfect cocktails brought a burst of energy to the somewhat sleepy neighborhood when it opened in January. And then there’s the food: Bistro classics get Spanish and Asian twists resulting in some of the most spectacular dishes in the city, including a perfectly executed rainbow trout with garlic chive pil-pil.


Top review
Jasmine
Dined 4 days ago
I love Bar Chelou! The shelling beans will stay with me forever!
A photo of Jemma Hollywood restaurant
4.6
4.6 (215)
$31 to $50
Italian
Hollywood
About the restaurant

Red-sauce joints are having a moment in LA this year, judging from buzzy newcomers like La Dolce Vita and Donna’s. But Jemma Hollywood, an October opening by Top Chef alum Jackson Kalb, wins the Italian comfort food game with next-level linguine alla vodka and wood-fired pizzas. The warm and casual spot is the latest in Kalb’s rapidly expanding LA empire (Ospi, Jame, Jemma di Mare), proving he’s in serious expansion mode and one of the city’s most exciting chefs right now.


Top review
OpenTable Diner
Dined 2 days ago
Phenomenal! Food is amazing like always! Dani, Shawn, and Taylor were wonderful! Love the staff
A photo of Que Barbaro at Level 8 restaurant
4.6
4.6 (107)
$31 to $50
South American
Downtown
About the restaurant

Level 8 deserves a spot on this list for its sheer ambition: The luxe food hall opened in October at the Moxy + AC hotel and brings together eight cocktail bars and restaurants from some of LA’s culinary heavyweights. Go first for Que Barbaro, lauded chef Ray Garcia’s triumphant return to the kitchen. The former Broken Spanish chef is a pro at smoke-kissed South American dishes like chicken thighs with roasted shallots and aji verde, and his wood-fired showstoppers are just some of the compelling reasons to visit this splashy restaurant playground.


Top review
Sandra
Dined on 7 Dec 2024
The food was outstanding! We of course love the venue. The staff was superb except for our waiter :( this the main reason of the 4 stars.
A photo of Best Bet restaurant
$31 to $50
Italian
Culver City
About the restaurant

The Rose’s Jason Neroni opened a Cali-Italian neighborhood star in July. At Best Bet, Neroni slings three types of pizza (wood-fired, pan-baked focaccia-style, and “crispy mountain style”) topped with ingredients that go far beyond cheese and pepperoni, like shrimp scampi and ’nduja vodka sauce. The stylish spot is set in an iconic A-frame building (once home to one of the country’s first IHOP locations) and decked out with vintage ads, pop culture relics, and art from Neroni’s collection, making it just the kind of cool and funky gem that Culver City needed.


Top review
OpenTable Diner
Dined on 17 Dec 2023
Absolutely loved this spot! Amazing food and immaculate vibes!
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