clock menu more-arrow no yes mobile
Table setting at Sunset Tower Hotel’s Tower Bar.
Table setting at Sunset Tower Hotel’s Tower Bar.
Wonho Frank Lee

21 Classic Restaurants Every Angeleno Must Try

Throwback to LA's best old school eateries and dives

View as Map
Table setting at Sunset Tower Hotel’s Tower Bar.
|Wonho Frank Lee

Los Angeles is a city blessed with a tapestry of long-standing restaurants. Even after decades of service, these places continue to thrive thanks to a loyal following of dedicated regulars who find comfort in dependable cooking and familiar hospitality. Here now are 21 classic restaurants every Angeleno must try at some point.

Read More
If you buy something or book a reservation from an Eater link, Vox Media may earn a commission. See ourethics policy.

Brent's Deli Northridge

Copy Link

Head to Northridge in the San Fernando Valley for a never-fail Jewish deli experience. Brent’s Delicatessen and Restaurant, operating for more than 55 years, has been serving its pastrami sandwiches, behemoth breakfast plates, and delicate blintzes to ravenous masses coming locally from the Valley and beyond. While the assortment of soups and triple-decker sandwiches bring in the out-of-towners, longtime diners tend to go for more comforting dishes: think fall-apart stuffed cabbage rolls filled with tender beef and covered in a sweet and sour sauce, plump sides of kishka, and steaming potato knishes.

Dimly lit interior of classic Jewish deli Brent’s, with blue-green banquettes and wood-paneled table tops.
Dining room of Brent’s Deli in Northridge.
Stan Lee

Golden Bull Restaurant

Copy Link

Hearkening to an era of stiff martinis and big chops, Golden Bull received a second chance at life with new ownership under Mark Verge, who operates Ashland Hill and Margo’s in Santa Monica. The old school vibes continue to charm the beachside restaurant. Order the incredible prime rib.

Prime rib at Golden Bull
Prime rib from Golden Bull
Golden Bull [Official photo]

Chez Jay

Copy Link

Westside dive bar legend Chez Jay is still humming along on Ocean Avenue in Santa Monica after all these years. Originally opened in 1959, the charm and kitsch of the place remains as strong as the drinks themselves.

The Apple Pan

Copy Link

A much-beloved Westside institution with Ohio-style burgers served in a humble diner-like stand along Pico, the Apple Pan makes consistently good sandwiches and pies. It’s hard to think of a more enduring greasy spoon in LA.

Dan Tana's

Copy Link

Dan Tana’s is the quintessential Hollywood hangout. Opened in 1964, the Italian-American haunt serves late every night of the week, with hits like chicken parmesan and grilled steaks. The bar continues to be a legendary place to grab a drink and hobnob with celebrities.

The Tower Bar

Copy Link

Legendary doesn’t even begin to describe the Tower Bar on the Sunset Strip. This Jeff Klein-owned staple hotel bar has been ground zero for innumerable Hollywood deals and covert discussions over the decades, thanks to its status as a coveted and understated home for socially mobile Angelenos. That might sound like a negative, but it’s definitely not. Tower Bar is an industry haunt in a town where power and access mean a lot, and these days a whole new generation of Old Hollywood-seeking newcomers have begun to populate the shadowy corners of the room. It’s all great fun — and great people-watching to boot.

Sunset Tower Bar
Steak frites at Tower Bar in West Hollywood.
Wonho Frank Lee

Pann's Restaurant

Copy Link

A must-stop on the way to LAX, Pann’s is a diner study in Googie architecture. Though it’s no longer open in the evenings, sitting down to a thick mug of black coffee and a plate of eggs is still a highlight.

Pann’s 2
Pann’s Restaurant
Wonho Frank Lee

Smoke House Restaurant

Copy Link

Burbank’s Smoke House has a few things going for it: For starters, the place is a stone’s throw from some of LA’s biggest studios. It’s also got one heck of a signature dish in its cheesy garlic bread, though reducing the historic place (circa 1946) to just a side menu item wouldn’t quite be fair. No, this Lakeside Drive spot is more than all that, it’s a home for creatives who come for a charred steak and a stiff drink after work, in a dining room that looks just as rustic and fun as it always has.

Musso & Frank Grill

Copy Link

Hollywood’s oldest restaurant might be its very best, even after more than a century serving grilled chops and Continental classics like French onion soup. The pastas are so much better than they should be, like a super-simple fettuccine alfredo or sumptuous rigatoni vodka. And of course everyone has to order a cocktail of some kind, from the ramos gin fizzes to the legendary martinis served with an extra sidecar. There’s something about the quiet dining room, filled with only the sounds of clicking silverware and suave servers pitching the day’s specials, that makes this one of LA’s most special meals.

French onion soup at Musso & Frank.
French onion soup at Musso & Frank.
Matthew Kang

Chosun Galbee

Copy Link

Opened for 22 years now, this is Koreatown’s longest standing premium barbecue destination (old-school classic Woo Lae Oak closed years ago). Chosun Galbee continues to draw fans for its tender, fatty cuts of short rib and marinated beef served with some of the best mul naengmyeon in town. It helps that the modern ambience and elegant service delivers every night.

Chosun Galbee kkotssal arrayed on a plate
Unmarinated beef short ribs on a platter at Chosun Galbee.
Chosun Galbee

El Cholo

Copy Link

這位傳奇family-operated餐廳了the century mark. El Cholo remains packed while still churning out classic traditional enchiladas, burritos, tacos, as well as shaken margaritas. The flour tortillas are worth ordering a dozen before leaving the premises.

A red and green neon sign for El Cholo restaurant.
El Cholo’s iconic neon sign.
Mona Holmes

Kotohira Restaurant

Copy Link

Gardena continues to protect the status of its classic Japanese restaurants, from Otafuku’s soba and izakaya fare to Fukugawa’s regal breakfast bento, but Kotohira has been immortalized ever since Jonathan Gold wrote about owner Tadashi Takahashi’s udon, thick, squiggly, and bouncy like “elastic ropes.” Kotohira continues to serve majestic, affordable lunch bento along with its udon in a bustling Gardena strip mall, and the young folks searching for boba or hot pot might not realize the iconic restaurant that persists.

Lunch bento with tempura and karaage at Kotohira in Gardena, California.
Lunch bento with tempura and karaage at Kotohira in Gardena, California.
Matthew Kang

Jeon Ju Korean Bibimbap Restaurant

Copy Link

This classic Koreatown restaurant serves stone pot bibimbap in screaming hot bowls, though everything from the banchan to the fried fish are excellent here. Opened in 1997, it’s become one of the oldest Korean restaurants in LA under the ownership of Jennifer Lee. Its popularity continues to grow thanks to celebrities like actress Kiernan Shipka, who loves to feature the restaurant on hersocial media.

Langer's Delicatessen

Copy Link

Serving perhaps the greatest pastrami in America, Langer's is a fantastic diner in Westlake offering everything from reuben sandwiches and corned beef to matzo ball soup and lox. It's easily the best Jewish deli in a city full of great delis.

#19 sandwich at Langer’s Deli
#19 sandwich at Langer’s Deli
Wonho Frank Lee

Bill's Taco House

Copy Link

Bill’s is a South LA legend, just below Downtown, that focuses primarily on one thing: the cheeseburger taco. It’s a mashup made purely for Los Angeles, the kind of last-century dining innovation that just makes perfect sense. The orange and yellow corner location today is stuffed with old photos of days gone by, and the cheeseburger taco still beckons all who come in, some 74 years later.

Tacos and more from Bill’s Taco House.
Tacos and more from Bill’s Taco House.
Farley Elliott

Yang Chow Restaurant

Copy Link

45歲的揚州是迷人的在很多ways, from the celebrity photos adorning the walls to its lively dining room and attentive service. Its most popular dishes, like slippery shrimp and Szechuan chicken, have put the Chinatown restaurant on the map and keeps people from all walks of life returning for more.

Fried Chinese shrimp at Yang Chow on a plate.
Slippery shrimp at Yang Chow.
Cathy Chaplin

Cielito Lindo

Copy Link

Cielito Lindo has been serving its famous rolled tacos slathered in avocado salsa since 1934. The proud tradition continues today as the restaurant anchors bustling Olvera Street in Downtown's northern edge.

Philippe the Original

Copy Link

Opened since 1908, Philippe is famous for its bustling lunchtime crowd and made-to-order service. Served simply with one’s choice of meat — and, crucially, degree of dipped-ness — the century-old French dip is the kind of inexpensive, satisfying, and wholly unique meal that reminds eaters with every bite that Los Angeles has been cooking great food for a very long time.

An abundant spread of French dip sandwiches and more at Philippe.
Philippe the Original
Wonho Frank Lee

Al & Bea's Mexican Food

Copy Link

Opened in 1966, this legendary Boyle Heights restaurant serves tremendous bean-and-cheese burritos that were immortalized by the late food writer Jonathan Gold. However, the Mexican American community has revered these burritos for much longer than Gold’s review, and this roadside stand has been a fixture in this neighborhood for almost 55 years.

Al & Bea’s breakfast burrito wrapped in yellow paper and held in a hand.
Al & Bea’s
Farley Elliott

La Casita Mexicana

Copy Link

Jaime Martín del Campo and Ramiro Arvizu first opened La Casita Mexicana in 1998 in Bell, serving classic Mexican fonda fare like enchiladas tres moles, chiles en nogada, and mole poblano in a colorful, vibrant room. Now, 25 years later, it’s arguably the finest sit-down Mexican restaurant in Los Angeles, continuing to serve the Southeast LA community with polished but reasonably priced fare.

Jaime Martin del Campo and Ramiro Arvizu of La Casita Mexicana.
Jaime Martin del Campo and Ramiro Arvizu of La Casita Mexicana.
Elizabeth Daniels

Sea Harbour Seafood Restaurant

Copy Link

洛杉磯的一個已長達20年之久的粵式海鮮和dim sum palaces continues to turn out some of the best regional, celebratory Chinese food along a busy stretch of Rosemead. Chef Tony He has opened some of the most legendary restaurants in North America, but this iconic spot, which originally opened in Vancouver, continues to draw healthy weekend lines for shumai, har gow, roast duck, fresh sauteed lobster, and steamed fish in a luxurious open dining room.

Dim sum plates at Sea Harbour.
Dim sum at Sea Harbour in Rosemead.
Wonho Frank Lee

Loading comments...

Brent's Deli Northridge

Head to Northridge in the San Fernando Valley for a never-fail Jewish deli experience. Brent’s Delicatessen and Restaurant, operating for more than 55 years, has been serving its pastrami sandwiches, behemoth breakfast plates, and delicate blintzes to ravenous masses coming locally from the Valley and beyond. While the assortment of soups and triple-decker sandwiches bring in the out-of-towners, longtime diners tend to go for more comforting dishes: think fall-apart stuffed cabbage rolls filled with tender beef and covered in a sweet and sour sauce, plump sides of kishka, and steaming potato knishes.

Dimly lit interior of classic Jewish deli Brent’s, with blue-green banquettes and wood-paneled table tops.
Dining room of Brent’s Deli in Northridge.
Stan Lee

Golden Bull Restaurant

Hearkening to an era of stiff martinis and big chops, Golden Bull received a second chance at life with new ownership under Mark Verge, who operates Ashland Hill and Margo’s in Santa Monica. The old school vibes continue to charm the beachside restaurant. Order the incredible prime rib.

Prime rib at Golden Bull
Prime rib from Golden Bull
Golden Bull [Official photo]

Chez Jay

Westside dive bar legend Chez Jay is still humming along on Ocean Avenue in Santa Monica after all these years. Originally opened in 1959, the charm and kitsch of the place remains as strong as the drinks themselves.

The Apple Pan

A much-beloved Westside institution with Ohio-style burgers served in a humble diner-like stand along Pico, the Apple Pan makes consistently good sandwiches and pies. It’s hard to think of a more enduring greasy spoon in LA.

Dan Tana's

Dan Tana’s is the quintessential Hollywood hangout. Opened in 1964, the Italian-American haunt serves late every night of the week, with hits like chicken parmesan and grilled steaks. The bar continues to be a legendary place to grab a drink and hobnob with celebrities.

The Tower Bar

Legendary doesn’t even begin to describe the Tower Bar on the Sunset Strip. This Jeff Klein-owned staple hotel bar has been ground zero for innumerable Hollywood deals and covert discussions over the decades, thanks to its status as a coveted and understated home for socially mobile Angelenos. That might sound like a negative, but it’s definitely not. Tower Bar is an industry haunt in a town where power and access mean a lot, and these days a whole new generation of Old Hollywood-seeking newcomers have begun to populate the shadowy corners of the room. It’s all great fun — and great people-watching to boot.

Sunset Tower Bar
Steak frites at Tower Bar in West Hollywood.
Wonho Frank Lee

Pann's Restaurant

A must-stop on the way to LAX, Pann’s is a diner study in Googie architecture. Though it’s no longer open in the evenings, sitting down to a thick mug of black coffee and a plate of eggs is still a highlight.

Pann’s 2
Pann’s Restaurant
Wonho Frank Lee

Smoke House Restaurant

Burbank’s Smoke House has a few things going for it: For starters, the place is a stone’s throw from some of LA’s biggest studios. It’s also got one heck of a signature dish in its cheesy garlic bread, though reducing the historic place (circa 1946) to just a side menu item wouldn’t quite be fair. No, this Lakeside Drive spot is more than all that, it’s a home for creatives who come for a charred steak and a stiff drink after work, in a dining room that looks just as rustic and fun as it always has.

Musso & Frank Grill

Hollywood’s oldest restaurant might be its very best, even after more than a century serving grilled chops and Continental classics like French onion soup. The pastas are so much better than they should be, like a super-simple fettuccine alfredo or sumptuous rigatoni vodka. And of course everyone has to order a cocktail of some kind, from the ramos gin fizzes to the legendary martinis served with an extra sidecar. There’s something about the quiet dining room, filled with only the sounds of clicking silverware and suave servers pitching the day’s specials, that makes this one of LA’s most special meals.

French onion soup at Musso & Frank.
French onion soup at Musso & Frank.
Matthew Kang

Chosun Galbee

Opened for 22 years now, this is Koreatown’s longest standing premium barbecue destination (old-school classic Woo Lae Oak closed years ago). Chosun Galbee continues to draw fans for its tender, fatty cuts of short rib and marinated beef served with some of the best mul naengmyeon in town. It helps that the modern ambience and elegant service delivers every night.

Chosun Galbee kkotssal arrayed on a plate
Unmarinated beef short ribs on a platter at Chosun Galbee.
Chosun Galbee

El Cholo

這位傳奇family-operated餐廳了the century mark. El Cholo remains packed while still churning out classic traditional enchiladas, burritos, tacos, as well as shaken margaritas. The flour tortillas are worth ordering a dozen before leaving the premises.

A red and green neon sign for El Cholo restaurant.
El Cholo’s iconic neon sign.
Mona Holmes

Kotohira Restaurant

Gardena continues to protect the status of its classic Japanese restaurants, from Otafuku’s soba and izakaya fare to Fukugawa’s regal breakfast bento, but Kotohira has been immortalized ever since Jonathan Gold wrote about owner Tadashi Takahashi’s udon, thick, squiggly, and bouncy like “elastic ropes.” Kotohira continues to serve majestic, affordable lunch bento along with its udon in a bustling Gardena strip mall, and the young folks searching for boba or hot pot might not realize the iconic restaurant that persists.

Lunch bento with tempura and karaage at Kotohira in Gardena, California.
Lunch bento with tempura and karaage at Kotohira in Gardena, California.
Matthew Kang

Jeon Ju Korean Bibimbap Restaurant

This classic Koreatown restaurant serves stone pot bibimbap in screaming hot bowls, though everything from the banchan to the fried fish are excellent here. Opened in 1997, it’s become one of the oldest Korean restaurants in LA under the ownership of Jennifer Lee. Its popularity continues to grow thanks to celebrities like actress Kiernan Shipka, who loves to feature the restaurant on hersocial media.

Langer's Delicatessen

Serving perhaps the greatest pastrami in America, Langer's is a fantastic diner in Westlake offering everything from reuben sandwiches and corned beef to matzo ball soup and lox. It's easily the best Jewish deli in a city full of great delis.

#19 sandwich at Langer’s Deli
#19 sandwich at Langer’s Deli
Wonho Frank Lee

Bill's Taco House

Bill’s is a South LA legend, just below Downtown, that focuses primarily on one thing: the cheeseburger taco. It’s a mashup made purely for Los Angeles, the kind of last-century dining innovation that just makes perfect sense. The orange and yellow corner location today is stuffed with old photos of days gone by, and the cheeseburger taco still beckons all who come in, some 74 years later.

Tacos and more from Bill’s Taco House.
Tacos and more from Bill’s Taco House.
Farley Elliott

Related Maps

Yang Chow Restaurant

45歲的揚州是迷人的在很多ways, from the celebrity photos adorning the walls to its lively dining room and attentive service. Its most popular dishes, like slippery shrimp and Szechuan chicken, have put the Chinatown restaurant on the map and keeps people from all walks of life returning for more.

Fried Chinese shrimp at Yang Chow on a plate.
Slippery shrimp at Yang Chow.
Cathy Chaplin

Cielito Lindo

Cielito Lindo has been serving its famous rolled tacos slathered in avocado salsa since 1934. The proud tradition continues today as the restaurant anchors bustling Olvera Street in Downtown's northern edge.

Philippe the Original

Opened since 1908, Philippe is famous for its bustling lunchtime crowd and made-to-order service. Served simply with one’s choice of meat — and, crucially, degree of dipped-ness — the century-old French dip is the kind of inexpensive, satisfying, and wholly unique meal that reminds eaters with every bite that Los Angeles has been cooking great food for a very long time.

An abundant spread of French dip sandwiches and more at Philippe.
Philippe the Original
Wonho Frank Lee

Al & Bea's Mexican Food

Opened in 1966, this legendary Boyle Heights restaurant serves tremendous bean-and-cheese burritos that were immortalized by the late food writer Jonathan Gold. However, the Mexican American community has revered these burritos for much longer than Gold’s review, and this roadside stand has been a fixture in this neighborhood for almost 55 years.

Al & Bea’s breakfast burrito wrapped in yellow paper and held in a hand.
Al & Bea’s
Farley Elliott

La Casita Mexicana

Jaime Martín del Campo and Ramiro Arvizu first opened La Casita Mexicana in 1998 in Bell, serving classic Mexican fonda fare like enchiladas tres moles, chiles en nogada, and mole poblano in a colorful, vibrant room. Now, 25 years later, it’s arguably the finest sit-down Mexican restaurant in Los Angeles, continuing to serve the Southeast LA community with polished but reasonably priced fare.

Jaime Martin del Campo and Ramiro Arvizu of La Casita Mexicana.
Jaime Martin del Campo and Ramiro Arvizu of La Casita Mexicana.
Elizabeth Daniels

Sea Harbour Seafood Restaurant

洛杉磯的一個已長達20年之久的粵式海鮮和dim sum palaces continues to turn out some of the best regional, celebratory Chinese food along a busy stretch of Rosemead. Chef Tony He has opened some of the most legendary restaurants in North America, but this iconic spot, which originally opened in Vancouver, continues to draw healthy weekend lines for shumai, har gow, roast duck, fresh sauteed lobster, and steamed fish in a luxurious open dining room.

Dim sum plates at Sea Harbour.
Dim sum at Sea Harbour in Rosemead.
Wonho Frank Lee

Related Maps

Baidu
map