Restaurant in Los Angeles, United States
Colapasta
250ptsTwice Bib Gourmand. Book it for the price.

About Colapasta
Colapasta is a Michelin Bib Gourmand Italian restaurant in Santa Monica — recognised in both 2024 and 2025 — where chef Stefano De Lorenzo delivers serious pasta-focused cooking at a $$ price point that is genuinely rare in Los Angeles. With a 4.7 Google rating from over 570 reviews, it is one of the clearest value cases in the city's Italian dining scene. Book it when you want quality without the fine-dining bill.
Verdict: Book It for the Value, Go Back for the Pasta
Picture the scene: a casual room on 5th Street in Santa Monica, plates of fresh pasta landing on tables at a price point that makes you double-check the bill. That combination — Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition two years running (2024 and 2025), a Google rating of 4.7 across 571 reviews, and a $$ price tag — is the clearest signal that Colapasta is doing something right and doing it consistently. Chef Stefano De Lorenzo's Italian spot earns its keep not on spectacle but on execution, and if you have been once and left happy, the question is not whether to return but how soon.
What Colapasta Delivers
The Bib Gourmand designation is a specific kind of Michelin recognition: it marks restaurants where the food quality is high enough to earn serious consideration but the price point stays accessible. Across Los Angeles, that combination is rare. Most Italian restaurants in this city either lean into the trattoria-casual register without the kitchen firepower to back it up, or they push into fine-dining territory , think Osteria Mozza and Angelini Osteria , where the craft is evident but so is the check. Colapasta sits in a different lane: genuinely good Italian food at a price that removes the mental arithmetic from the evening.
For a returning visitor, the practical question is what to prioritise. The name itself , colapasta, Italian for colander , signals where the kitchen's identity lives: pasta is the point. If you came the first time and ordered broadly, a return visit is the right moment to go deeper on the pasta side of the menu. Italian cooking at this register rewards repeat visits because it is built on consistency and technique rather than novelty. Seasonal shifts matter here, too. Early in the year, look for the kitchen to be working with what late winter and early spring in California produces , lighter, brighter preparations that reflect the region's agricultural calendar.
The Santa Monica address puts Colapasta in a neighbourhood that draws both locals and visitors, which means the dining room can shift registers depending on the night. Weekday evenings tend to run calmer; weekends fill fast. For a group planning dinner in this part of the city, that timing consideration is practical advice rather than a vague caution.
Groups and the Private Experience
Colapasta's database record does not confirm a dedicated private dining room or a formal group booking programme, so take the following as informed context rather than confirmed policy: Italian restaurants at this format and price point , compact, neighbourhood-rooted, pasta-focused , typically handle groups at larger tables in the main dining room rather than through a separate private space. That is not necessarily a drawback. For a group of four to six, a main-room table at Colapasta will deliver the full atmosphere of the room, which is part of what you are paying for.
For comparison, venues like Bestia in the Arts District operate at a larger scale and can more readily accommodate bigger parties with dedicated event options. If you have a group of eight or more and private dining is a hard requirement, it is worth confirming directly with Colapasta before committing. For groups in the four-to-six range who want good Italian food in Santa Monica without a large spend, the main room is likely the right call. Pair the evening with a look at Los Angeles bar options nearby if the group wants to continue after dinner.
For other Italian options worth comparing in the city, Antico Nuovo and Bianca operate in the accessible-Italian register and are worth knowing as alternatives depending on your part of the city. If you are building out a wider Los Angeles dining itinerary, the full Los Angeles restaurants guide gives you a broader view of where Colapasta sits in context.
How Colapasta Fits the Broader Italian Canon
Bib Gourmand Italian restaurants have a particular pedigree internationally. At the high end of the global Italian dining spectrum, places like 8½ Otto e Mezzo Bombana in Hong Kong and cenci in Kyoto show how Italian technique travels , but they operate at a very different price tier. Colapasta's value proposition is specific to Los Angeles: it is the kind of restaurant that raises the question of whether you need to spend four times as much to eat meaningfully better Italian food in this city. Based on two consecutive Bib Gourmand awards and a 4.7 Google rating, the evidence suggests you often do not.
For reference on what Michelin-recognised restaurants look like elsewhere in the country at the other end of the spend spectrum, Le Bernardin in New York, The French Laundry in Napa, and Alinea in Chicago represent what full Michelin star investment looks like. Colapasta is not competing in that category, and it does not need to. Its case rests entirely on delivering at its own price point, and it is making that case convincingly.
Know Before You Go
- Address: 1241 5th St, Santa Monica, CA 90401
- Cuisine: Italian
- Price range: $$ (Bib Gourmand value positioning)
- Awards: Michelin Bib Gourmand 2024 and 2025
- Google rating: 4.7 / 5 (571 reviews)
- Chef: Stefano De Lorenzo
- Booking difficulty: Easy
- Leading timing: Weekday evenings for a quieter room; weekends fill faster
- Groups: Confirm capacity and group options directly with the restaurant before booking for parties of 6+
- Hours and phone: Not confirmed in our data , check current listings before visiting
How It Compares
For more on eating and drinking in Los Angeles, see our guides to Los Angeles hotels, Los Angeles experiences, and Los Angeles wineries. Further afield, if you are comparing accessible high-quality dining in other cities, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Emeril's in New Orleans, and Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg offer useful points of reference for what the Michelin-recognised mid-to-upper register looks like across the West Coast and beyond.
Compare Colapasta
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Colapasta | Italian | Michelin Bib Gourmand (2025); Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024) | Easy | — |
| Kato | New Taiwanese, Asian | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Hayato | Japanese | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Vespertine | Progressive, Contemporary | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Camphor | French-Asian, French | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Gwen | New American, Steakhouse | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
A quick look at how Colapasta measures up.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can Colapasta accommodate groups?
The venue record does not confirm a private dining room or dedicated group programme, so large parties should call ahead to check availability. At $$ pricing with Bib Gourmand recognition two years running, it is a practical choice for small groups who want quality without a high per-head cost. If a private room is a hard requirement, venues like Gwen offer more formal group infrastructure. For casual gatherings of four to six where value matters, Colapasta is a strong fit.
What should I wear to Colapasta?
The $$ price point and casual Santa Monica address on 5th Street signal a relaxed dress environment. Clean, comfortable clothes are appropriate — there is no indication from the venue record that a dress code is enforced. Think neighbourhood dinner rather than special-occasion formality.
What should a first-timer know about Colapasta?
Lead with the value case: Colapasta has held the Michelin Bib Gourmand in both 2024 and 2025, which means Michelin inspectors consider the food quality significant relative to the price. Chef Stefano De Lorenzo runs an Italian-focused kitchen at a $$ price point in Santa Monica, so expectations should be set around honest, well-executed pasta rather than elaborate tasting-menu theatre. Go hungry, order the pasta, and do not expect white-tablecloth ceremony.
What is Colapasta known for?
Colapasta is primarily known for Italian in Los Angeles.
Recognized By
More restaurants in Los Angeles
- ProvidenceProvidence is LA's most decorated fine dining restaurant — three Michelin stars, a Green Star for sustainability, and a $325 tasting menu that changes nightly based on the day's catch. Book four to six weeks out minimum. At this price and format, it is the seafood tasting menu benchmark for the city, with service depth and sourcing discipline that justifies the spend for special occasions and returning guests alike.
- KatoKato is the No. 1 restaurant in Los Angeles by two consecutive LA Times rankings, a Michelin-starred Taiwanese-American tasting menu with a 2025 James Beard Award for Best Chef: California. The 10-course menu from Jon Yao is matched by one of the city's deepest wine programs. Book six to eight weeks out minimum — this is among the hardest reservations in the country to secure.
- HayatoHayato is the most coveted reservation in Los Angeles: a seven-seat kaiseki counter in Row DTLA where chef Brandon Hayato Go cooks directly in front of guests and narrates every course. Two Michelin stars, ranked #2 by the LA Times and #10 in North America by OAD. Near-impossible to book, but worth pursuing for a serious special occasion.
- MélisseMélisse is a two Michelin-starred, 14-seat tasting-menu counter in Santa Monica — one of Los Angeles's most technically ambitious dinners. Book if French classical technique applied to California produce is your preferred register. With only 14 seats and consistent international recognition, reservations require six to eight weeks of lead time minimum.
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