Coconut fried chicken at Lucia. Photo by Khai Nguyen, courtesy of Lucia

The Hit ListLos Angeles

The Resy Hit List: Where In L.A. You’ll Want to Eat in July 2025

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There’s no question we hear more often: Where should I go eat? And while we at Resy know it’s an honor to be the friend who everyone asks for restaurant advice, we also know it’s a complicated task. That’s where the Resy Hit List comes in. 

Consider it your essential resource for dining in Los Angeles: a monthly-updated guide to the restaurants that you won’t want to miss — tonight or any night.

Four Things In Los Angeles Not to Miss This Month

  • Rediscover Your Favorite Restaurant: You know that one restaurant that’s just right because of that one special thing? That’s the entire focus of our Letter of Recommendation series. Maybe it’s the perfect place to meet in the middle (that’d be Marvin), treat yourself to a fancy lunch (Chateau Marmont), or cure your springtime funk (Kismet, obvi). We’ve got you covered for all of that, plus more highly specific recommendations here.
  • Or, Try Something New: A plush hideaway tucked behind Evan Funke’s Mother Wolf serving fancy cocktails and Roman street food; a spice-loving Sri Lankan specialist in East Hollywood; and a Seoul-based noodle soup popup: there’s never been a better time to try a new restaurant. Take a spin by our guide to Los Angeles’ newest restaurant openings here. For the latest opening intel, check out our guide to all the newest spots.
  • Celebrate Summer: On July 17th, it’s a meeting of the stars: Hyper-seasonal, highly acclaimed restaurant Rustic Canyon is hosting a four-course garden dinner with the legendary Weiser Farms. Even if you don’t know the name, if you’ve been in L.A. for any significant amount of time, you’ve eaten their produce. For other sun-drenched events, check out our full calendar here.
  • Ain’t No Mountain High Enough: Sometimes, it’s best to listen to the numbers. And right now, they’re saying that Baby Bistro in Victor Heights is hot, hot, hot. If you’re feeling indecisive, or just want to know where everyone is hanging out without you, head to Resy’s Climbing guide, our data-driven list that’s powered by your reservations. To see what else is climbing, click here.

New to the Hit List (July 2025)
Lucia, Doto, Cannonball, ¡Jaime! Taquería, Marouch

1. Lucia Fairfax

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Photo courtesy of Lucia

Before assuming the role of executive chef at Lucia, Kingston-born culinary star Adrian Forte cooked privately for celebrities like Alicia Keys, Drake, and Virgil Abloh, and was a semi-finalist on Top Chef Canada. Now, he’s paired up with owner Sam Jordan to bring Fairfax something the city’s never seen before: Lucia, a fine dining emporium serving bold, invigorating takes on Caribbean food. Classics, like coconut fried chicken, are served with fermented chili aioli and coconut milk powder. Lychee ceviche arrives spiked with sorrel leche, the hibiscus-infused punch that tastes like a holiday. And the 118-seat dining room is a stunner: some booths are illuminated by cavernous sculptures that look like the Hollywood Bowl. Make sure to try a few of beverage director Melina Meza’s signature cocktails, like the Oxtail Old-Fashioned, which incorporates oxtail-washed bourbon and rye.

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Photo courtesy of Lucia

2. baby bistro Victor Heights

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Perched on the edge of Chinatown, Baby Bistro joins its Alpine Street neighbors Perilla, Baker’s Bench, Cassell’s, and Heavy Water Coffee in what is quickly becoming one of the city’s quirkiest courtyards, and a must-visit destination for in-the-know diners. A self-described “bistro of sorts,” the former roving pop-up is the brainchild of chef Miles Thompson (formerly of Michael’s and Konbi) and co-owner Andy Schwartz, a seasoned wine pro from Lolo in East Hollywood. Set in a restored 100-year-old Victorian bungalow, the intimate 35-seat dining room feels plucked from a different era (or maybe just Europe), with its warm-wood interior, built-in wine shelves, and rustic outdoor seating. The menu is focused and tight, with eight-ish dishes that rotate with the seasons. Currently, there’s a warm weather turnip-and-tofu number, and a refreshing cucumber and squid combo. Or you could just ask them to fire the whole menu. Yeah, maybe do that.

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3. Alba Los Angeles West Hollywood

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West Hollywood’s latest addition, a snazzy New York import, wears its sophistication on its sleeve. Artfully blurring the line between fine dining and red sauce, Alba’s style is  its own, a glamorous vibe  they’re calling “vacation Italian.” Indeed, a meal here feels like a deleted scene from “The Talented Mr. Ripley,” complete with a dreamy indoor-outdoor space beneath a retractable roof and an impressive 4,000-bottle wine list with  selections that range anywhere from $60 to $18,000. Don’t miss the large-format orecchiette arrabbiata, a rosemary-scented lamb scottadito, or the focaccia della casa, chef (and noted bread baker) Adam Leonti’s specialty: a golden, crusty loaf that demands to be torn into the moment it hits the table. 

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4. Beethoven Market Mar Vista

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Two years (and many hours of construction) later, Beethoven Market has undergone a stunning transformation from beloved neighborhood grocery into a Mar Vista hotspot with a rustic-chic vibe that Nancy Meyers would approve of. The California-Italian menu has everything you need for a mellow summer hang, including handmade pizzas and pastas; focaccia smeared with whipped ricotta and avocado tree honey; and suppli al telefono, crispy little fried rice ball stuffed with fior di latte cheese — plus a stunning patio space. Knowing how much this space meant to the neighborhood, owner Jeremy Adler also ensured the protection and preservation of the building’s bones. Luckily, they’re quite beautiful, particularly the original wooden ceiling and its gorgeous soaring beams, which remain intact today.

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5. Holbox Tasting Menu Historic South-Central

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Unless you’ve been living under a rock (no judgment), you know about Holbox. The groundbreaking mariscos stand inside Historic South Central’s Mercado La Paloma food hall has earned nearly every accolade imaginable, from a Michelin star to a James Beard Award nomination for chef-owner Gilbert Cetina. Yes, Holbox’s stellar reputation precedes it, but that’s not what makes it so special. Whether you’re ordering from the walk-up counter or sitting down for a nine-course tasting menu (offered for dinner on Wednesdays and Thursdays), you can expect exceptional coastal Mexican seafood paired with farm-fresh California produce. You’ll want the kanpachi and uni tostada, a tower of silky yellowtail studded with melt-in-your-mouth sea urchin. You’ll want the scallop aguachile, which arrives bathed in a spicy lime-green marinade. Honestly, you will want everything on the menu. Don’t resist it.

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6. Tomat Westchester

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In a Westchester strip mall just two miles from LAX, you’ll find this three-floor farm-to-table restaurant that redefines airport-adjacent dining. Led by husband-and-wife team Harry Posner and Natalie Dial, Tomat is uncompromising in its use of high-quality, hyper-local ingredients sourced exclusively from farmers’ markets, local fishers, and regional dairy producers. The menu, a unique fusion of Persian, Japanese, and British flavors, is a testament to the couple’s diverse culinary heritage: think saffron-scented tahdig, a Persian rice dish adorned with pickled raisins, pumpkin seeds, and dill, cooked in a Japanese donabe. Try the Future 75, a refreshing cocktail made with gin, sparkling wine, and a hint of lemon  — a collaboration with Future, a queer and women-owned distillery in L.A., with 100% of the proceeds being donated to World Central Kitchen.

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7. Daisy Sherman Oaks

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Chef Alan Sanz (previously of Maizano and Pujol), award-winning beverage director Max Reis, and owner Matt Egan, the dynamic trio behind Mírate, No. 12 on North America’s 50 Best Bars 2025 list and the prettiest place in Los Feliz to enjoy mezcal cocktails, have officially landed in the Valley. Their newest restaurant pays homage to traditional Norteño cantinas, while also infusing the trio’s signature playful, and, at times, mystical spirit. “A vortex through time and space has opened in Sherman Oaks, and otherworldly cocktails await those who dare to step inside,” Daisy’s website reads. Vintage Mexican artwork adorns the walls, alongside taxidermy bison heads. Vaquero, or cowboy, energy pulses throughout the multi-level space, finding its way onto the menu through dishes like the crab-topped tostada de cangrejo with smoked chile aioli. Oh, and there will be Tequila. Lots of it.

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8. Esme Culver City

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Esme (“beloved” in Farsi) is a cheery all-day bistro in Culver City that’s surprisingly flying under the radar. The restaurant’s motto—”a little bit of this, a little bit of that”—describes its sprightly menu to a T, which blends Persian, Middle Eastern, and Latin flavors with aplomb. Life partners and co-owners Ivan Corona (formerly of Bouley and Thomas Keller’s Per Se) and Gabby Ardaki run this dual-personality charmer. By day, Esme serves smoked salmon bagels, shakshuka, and merguez sandwiches packed with harissa-scented lamb. At night, it transforms into a cheffy  gastropub, offering mussel toast, Spanish-style striped bass, and sumac-dusted short ribs perched atop a potato rösti throne. Don’t miss their daily happy hour, which runs from 4-6 p.m., when all  beers and wines are buy one, get one half price.

No reservations. Find more info here.

9. 88 Club Beverly Hills

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After a five-year hiatus, Top Chef winner Mei Lin (Nightshade, Daybird) returns to fine dining with 88 Club, an opulent Beverly Hills restaurant that combines echoes of her Michigan childhood with Hong Kong’s famously glitzy banquet culture. It’s a delicious, idiosyncratic jumble, blending technique, nostalgia, and inherent whimsy, in dishes like the nam yu chicken wings, caviar-topped sesame prawn toast, and juicy kung pao scallops. The 44-seat dining room is itself befitting of royalty, with jade-lacquered walls, moody lighting, and vintage art procured by co-owner Francis Miranda. Then, there’s the name, which alludes to the luckiest figure in Chinese numerology — 88 meaning “double fortune; double prosperity.”

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10. Cosetta Santa Monica

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Photo courtesy of Cosetta

The highly anticipated Westside follow-up to Alimento and Cosa Buona is Cosetta, chef Zach Pollack’s breezy new California-Italian restaurant, located on Ocean Park Boulevard. The interior is a total 180 from his previous dimly-lit East side spots, with a cheery indoor-outdoor space that feels like a spa retreat: buttery wooden tables complemented by dark green accents and Space Age orbs floating overhead. Expect Pollack’s signature pizzas — fluffy and with a perfectly blistered crust — alongside an exciting raw bar (hello, chilled snow crab claws), house-baked bread, and a few larger plates, like BBQ prawns in a mouth-tingling Calabrian chili crisp and sand dabs dabbed in a caper-olive tartar sauce. (Say that ten times fast.) There’s kid-friendly menu items, plus decidedly adult offerings like a Cannoli Negroni (the classic cocktail plus cocoa nibs, orange peel, and a ricotta wash), so feel free to bring the whole fam.

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Photo courtesy of Cosetta

11. Doto Virgil Village

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Housed in the former Jewel space in Virgil Village, Doto is a breezy all-day café serving four eclectic menus (morning, lunch, dinner, and weekend brunch). Dishes here run the gamut between traditional Japanese fare and what you would expect from a third wave coffee shop, which might be a bit jarring. Yes, bee pollen-dusted yogurt and bento boxes sit together on the same menu, but don’t think about it too hard. Chef Jared Dowling, who also runs Edgemar in Santa Monica, is obviously having a blast. Here, he treats Doto’s many influences — California ingredients, his affinity for Japanese food, and the plant-based café that previously inhabited the building — like puzzle pieces, cheerfully arranging them as he sees fit.

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12. Sora Craft Kitchen Fashion District

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Chef Okay Inak cut his teeth at fine dining juggernauts Per Se, Eleven Madison Park, and Mélisse,  before launching his first solo restaurant — a labor of love that Inak and his wife, Sezen Vatansever, made possible with self-financing and most of their life savings. Here, Inak performs an extraordinary one-man show: as the restaurant’s sole staff member, he operates the entire 16-seat dining room himself — prepping, cooking, food running, serving, and cleaning — which suffuses the restaurant with an aura of genuine, one-of-a-kind hospitality. Regional Turkish specialties and recipes passed down from the Turkey-born chef’s family are on display here, like içli köfte, a luxurious satchel stuffed with spiced beef and laced with Aleppo pepper-infused butter. Save room for something sweet, such as the peynir helvasi, or cheese halva, which uses housemade cheese and arrives atop a gossamer bed of pistachios.

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13. Cannonball South Pasadena

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The talent at this new South Pasadena bistro does the talking while you dive in.  Helmed by Matt Molina and Joe Capella, two titans of the L.A. dining scene, Cannonball is the latest addition to their already impressive portfolio, which also includes Hippo, Triple Beam Pizza, and Everson Royce Bar. Their latest is moody and sophisticated: walls are painted in a heavy dark blue and Art Deco lighting fixtures twinkle overhead. The globally-influenced menu (think fideos alongside potstickers) pays homage to Molina’s previous hits, including a burger outfitted with a four-inch thick patty made of prime chuck, and golden, flaky biscuits slathered in honey butter. At the bar, Capella flexes his beverage expertise, with a wide-ranging selection of international wines and crafted cocktails.

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14. RVR Venice

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Like chef-owner Travis Lett’s previous ventures (Gjelina, Gjusta, that impossibly tasteful apartment on the Westside the restaurant group casually rents out, etc.), RVR is a certified hit. Sure, the stylish Japanese izakaya (pronounced “river”) feels light-years away from the smoke-filled dens of Tokyo. (Between its dreamy Abbot Kinney digs and the floor-to-ceiling vinyl collection, RVR shares more DNA with Japanese listening bars than the country’s drinking taverns.) But fussy details like that tend to fade away while you’re eating roasted mushrooms draped in miso butter, or gyoza stuffed with Peads & Barnetts pork belly. At the helm at RVR are executive chef Ian Robinson and wine director Maggie Glasheen (previously of Anajak Thai), who’ve teamed up for a robust menu of hand rolls, binchōtan charcoal-grilled meats and seafood, and ramen served with house-made noodles.

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15. ¡Jaime! Taqueria El Segundo

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After helping Angelenos fall in love with crispy Provolone and regional Italian favorites like mandilli (“silk handkerchief”) pasta, the chef behind Jame Enoteca, Ospi, and Jemma heads once again to El Segundo. Meet ¡Jaime! Taquería, the newest addition to chef Jackson Kalb’s restaurant empire, a California-Mexican spot where guests eat Michoacán-style sweet corn tamales and spicy prawn aguachiles under a bright neon sign that reads, “Feed me tacos and tell me I’m pretty.” Much like Kalb’s other restaurants, ¡Jaime! offers a killer beverage program. Start with the three-shot tequila flights, served with a slice of citrus and grasshopper salt around the rim. Beyond the dinner menu, there’s also weekday lunches, Taco Tuesday specials, weekend brunch, and a daily Happy Hour from 3 to 5:30 p.m.

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16. Hamlet’s Kitchen Glendale

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There’s probably a witty Shakespeare reference to be made here (“to lula kabob or not lula kabob…”), but let’s focus on the rich selection of barbecued meats instead. Hamlet’s Kitchen, truly one of the gems of Glendale, is a reliably fantastic pit stop for lunch. Located in the back of a strip mall in the shadow of a neighboring Toyota dealership, there’s always a sense of peace emanating from this Armenian takeout spot. And there is truly nothing better than finding yourself here on a random Tuesday, ordering a ton of kebabs, like the chicken or beef lula — ground meat infused with spices and a wreath of bright, fragrant herbs, served over a bed of buttery rice. Round it out with a few sides, like eggplant caviar and creamy hummus, and an Armenian pear soda, a sparkling delight made of natural fruit syrups.

No reservations. Find more info here.

17. Found Oyster East Hollywood

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Found Oyster, chef Ari Kolender’s postage stamp-sized East Hollywood ode to seafood, is still one of the most sought-after tables in town.  And now, for the first time, you can actually make a reservation there (hello!). Gone are the days of walking up, putting your name down, and waiting for an hour to be seated. (Although the walk-in will never die at Found Oyster — as their website cheekily reminds us, “Wham bam, thank you, clam!!”) For the uninitiated, Found Oyster is an East Coast-style seafood shack that lives next to the city’s bluest, most Scientology-est building. Gorge yourself on the raw bar, paying special attention to the wonderfully plump oysters sourced from general manager Joe Laraja’s family’s farm in Massachusetts, the peel ‘n eat prawns, and a lobster roll that rivals the best in Maine.

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18. A TÍ Echo Park

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This modern Mexican pop-up, roving around L.A. since 2021, has finally entered its next chapter: a residency in Echo Park. The dimly lit restaurant and bar (with a fun playlist ranging from nostalgic hip hop to R&B) is a playground for chef Andrew Ponce’s (formerly of Bestia, Jon & Vinny’s and Taco María) farmers market-influenced take on upscale Mexican food. His tiny-but-mighty menu sings with dishes like crispy duck mole with house-made blue corn tortillas, and an amplified hard-shelled taco made with braised beef shank that pays homage to Tito’s Tacos. While everything is a labor of love, including bar director Dave Fernie’s Japanese-laced Latin cocktails (like a michelada punched up with dashi), Ponce aims to keep things casual with simplified menus and an easygoing atmosphere that fits nicely in the neighborhood.

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19. Mom Please Ukranian Food Brentwood

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When the Kochetkov family arrived in sunny Los Angeles, it wasn’t palm trees or movie stardom they craved. It was a piece of home. After escaping the war in Ukraine, Oleksii Kochetkov and his mother, Olena, became refugees in a foreign country. So, they did what came naturally: They cooked. Soon, word spread about their home-style Ukrainian comfort food — syrnyky, or cottage cheese pancakes, dusted with powdered sugar and adorned with freshly cut fruit; holubtsi (cabbage rolls) stuffed with beef and simmered in a sunset-red tomato sauce; delicately folded pelmeni (dumplings) with chicken. With locations in Playa del Rey and Brentwood (both of which are charming and exceedingly homey), the Ukrainian café’s menu has expanded to include avocado toasts and croque madames, but it’s no secret that the dishes inspired by the Kochetkovs’ home country are the true showstoppers.

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20. Marouch East Hollywood

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Photo courtesy of Marouch

There’s a reason Marouch, open since 1982, is a Los Angeles institution. Between the convivial hospitality, array of traditional Lebanese, Armenian, and Middle Eastern dishes, and flaky baklava that remains stuck in your mind (and on your fingers), every night here feels like a reason to celebrate. Meals should start with a meze combination, an all-star sample platter of varying sizes, and at some point, include at least one dish that has the word “kebab” in it. The muhammara is a must, too, arriving a deep shade of red and smoky with hot red pepper paste. Pair it all with Marouch’s housemade pita and wipe every bowl clean.

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Photo courtesy of Marouch

Kat Hong is a food writer living in Los Angeles. Follow her on Instagram or check out her very professional website. While you’re at it, follow Resy, too.