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    Restaurant in Los Angeles, United States

    Damian

    600pts

    Book dinner. Cervantes is cooking seriously.

    Damian, Restaurant in Los Angeles

    About Damian

    Damian is the clearest argument in Los Angeles for what a $$$ dinner ticket can deliver. Chef Chuy Cervantes runs a Michelin Plate, OAD Top 400 kitchen inside a converted Arts District warehouse, turning out contemporary Mexican cooking rooted in Pacific coast tradition and California produce. Book 2–3 weeks ahead for weekends; Thursday and Sunday are more accessible.

    Verdict

    If you have not been to Damian yet, book dinner for Thursday or Friday and go soon. If you have been before, here is what brings people back: the cooking keeps getting sharper, and the Arts District warehouse setting has aged into one of the most comfortable rooms in Los Angeles for a serious dinner that does not require a suit or a special occasion. At $$$, Damian sits below most of its Michelin-recognised peers on price while consistently outperforming them on the casual-to-quality ratio. The LA Times ranked it #65 on the 101 Best Restaurants list for 2024, and Opinionated About Dining placed it at #314 in North America for 2025 (up from #332 in 2024). A Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025 confirms the kitchen's consistency. This is not a compromise meal. It is one of the clearest arguments in Los Angeles for what a neighbourhood-calibre price point can actually deliver.

    About Damian

    Damian is a project from Enrique Olvera's Casamata group, the same organisation behind Pujol in Mexico City, and that lineage matters when you are deciding whether to book. The kitchen in Los Angeles operates with the discipline of a fine-dining operation but packages it inside a former warehouse in the Arts District with an atmosphere that skews relaxed. Chef Chuy Cervantes leads the cooking, which is rooted in Mexican culinary tradition and shaped by Pacific coast influences while leaning hard into California's seasonal produce. That combination is rarer than it sounds. The menu at any given time might feature fried artichokes on an oval huarache with potato puree, costillas enmoladas served with pickles in a format inspired by Korean bo ssam, salmon tostadas with Sungold tomato sauce and chicatana ants (a luxury Oaxacan ingredient), or other dishes that treat Mexican technique as a foundation rather than a costume. The cooking crosses registers without losing coherence.

    The most meaningful recent change at Damian is the discontinuation of brunch service. The LA Times described it as one of the city's great weekend daytime meals, though it never built a consistent audience. Its absence is a genuine loss for weekend lunch planners, but it also clarifies the venue's identity: Damian is now fully a dinner restaurant. The upside is that the evening operation feels more focused. For a daytime option on the same block, Casamata also runs Ditroit, a taqueria at the back of the building open Thursday through Sunday, where the fish flauta with crema, salsa verde, cabbage slaw, and cotija is worth going out of your way for.

    The setting rewards first-timers who arrive without over-managing expectations. This is a converted warehouse, so the architecture is open and lofty rather than intimate and quiet. It reads as a design-forward space without being precious about it. The kitchen sends food that smells of chiles and char and citrus as dishes travel past, which is one of the cleaner signals that you are in a Mexican kitchen operating at a serious level rather than a restaurant that gestures toward Mexico while cooking something else. The service is warm but not hovering. The room stays engaged without becoming loud in a way that kills conversation, at least earlier in the evening.

    First-timers should know a few things before sitting down. The format is a la carte, not tasting menu, so you control the pace and the spend. The $$$-range pricing is honest: you can eat well here for considerably less than a comparable evening at most of Los Angeles' Michelin-starred restaurants. Order broadly, because the dishes are designed to share and the kitchen's range becomes more apparent across four or five plates than it does across two. The protein-forward dishes show off the Mexican technique most clearly, while the vegetable courses demonstrate how seriously the kitchen takes California produce. You will not be pushed toward a set experience, which is exactly right for this room and this price point.

    For context on where Damian fits within Los Angeles Mexican dining more broadly: it occupies a different register than high-volume neighbourhood spots like Carnes Asadas Pancho Lopez or Carnitas El Momo, and a different one than the Yucatecan specialist Chichen Itza. It is closer in ambition to Broken Spanish and Chulita, though the Casamata pedigree and the OAD ranking put it in a more internationally recognised tier. If you are cross-referencing contemporary Mexican cooking across cities, Alma Fonda Fina in Denver covers some of the same seasonal-meets-Mexican territory at a comparable price point, but Damian is working at a higher level of technical ambition.

    Ratings and Recognition

    • Michelin Plate — 2024 and 2025
    • Opinionated About Dining — #314 Casual North America, 2025 (up from #332 in 2024)
    • LA Times 101 Best Restaurants , #65, 2024
    • Google , 4.5 out of 5 (540 reviews)

    Booking and Hours

    Damian is closed Tuesday and Wednesday. Dinner runs Monday, Thursday, and Sunday from 5:30 to 9 pm, Friday from 5:30 to 10 pm, and Saturday from 5 to 10 pm. Book 2 to 3 weeks ahead for Friday and Saturday. Thursday and Sunday are more accessible, and those are the sessions to target if your schedule is flexible. There is no walk-in guarantee at this recognition level, but earlier in the week you have a better chance. No booking method is listed in current data, so check Damian's direct reservations channel.

    Practical Details

    DetailDamianBroken SpanishChichen Itza
    Price tier$$$$$$$$
    CuisineContemporary Mexican (Pacific/CA)Modern MexicanYucatecan Mexican
    AwardsMichelin Plate, OAD #314, LA Times #65, James Beard-nominated
    ClosedTue–WedVariesVaries
    FormatA la carte dinner onlyA la carteA la carte
    SettingConverted warehouse, Arts DistrictDowntown LAMercado La Paloma

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    Compare Damian

    Comparing Damian to Alternatives
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    DamianMexican$$$Opinionated About Dining Casual in North America Ranked #314 (2025); Michelin Plate (2025); A Casamata restaurant in Los Angeles’ Arts District serving contemporary cuisine rooted in Mexican culture, inspired by the Pacific coasts’ culinary traditions, while celebrating seasonal Californian produce.; Opinionated About Dining Casual in North America Ranked #332 (2024); Michelin Plate (2024); LA Times 101 Best Restaurants 2024 - Ranked #65. An oval huarache piled with fried artichokes and spread with potato puree. Glossy costillas enmoladas served with pickles and wraps inspired by Korean bo ssam. Salmon tostadas spread with Sungold tomato sauce and smoky, glassy chicatana ants (a luxury ingredient in Oaxaca and other regions of Mexico). Damian remains the rare Los Angeles bridge linking Mexico City’s alta cocina momentum with Southern California’s culture and bounty. I was sad to see the restaurant discontinue brunch this year; it was one of L.A.’s great weekend meals that admittedly never quite found a steady audience. Its disappearance reminds me to return more often for dinner — for the incredible cooking led by Jesús “Chuy” Cervantes, the unflagging hospitality and the gorgeous, mod setting in a former Arts District warehouse. For a daytime meal Thursday through Sunday, there’s always Ditroit, the taqueria around back also run by Enrique Olvera’s restaurant group, Casamata. Seize on its peerless fish flauta dressed in crema, punchy salsa verde and cabbage slaw with a sprinkling of cotija.; Opinionated About Dining Casual in North America Recommended (2023)Moderate
    KatoNew Taiwanese, Asian$$$$Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    HayatoJapanese$$$$Michelin 2 StarUnknown
    VespertineProgressive, Contemporary$$$$Michelin 2 StarUnknown
    CamphorFrench-Asian, French$$$$Michelin 1 StarUnknown
    GwenNew American, Steakhouse$$$$Michelin 1 StarUnknown

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is lunch or dinner better at Damian?

    Dinner is the move. Damian discontinued brunch, and lunch is no longer served at the main restaurant. For a daytime option, Ditroit — the taqueria operated by the same Casamata group around the back of the building — runs Thursday through Sunday. Dinner at Damian is where the full Chuy Cervantes kitchen fires: Thursday and Friday evenings are the easiest nights to get a feel for the room without weekend volume.

    What should a first-timer know about Damian?

    Damian is a Casamata project, the same group behind Pujol in Mexico City, so the cooking operates at a higher register than the Arts District address might suggest. It holds a Michelin Plate and ranked #314 on OAD Casual North America in 2025. The restaurant is closed Tuesday and Wednesday, so plan accordingly. Come with an appetite for seasonal California produce reframed through Mexican technique — dishes have previously included chicatana ants and glossy costillas enmoladas, which signals the kitchen's ambition.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Damian?

    Damian is priced at $$$, which is significant but not outlier territory for a Michelin Plate restaurant from a group of this calibre. Whether the format justifies the spend depends on your appetite for contemporary Mexican cooking over a set progression rather than à la carte flexibility. For comparison, Hayato at a higher price point asks more of the guest; Damian's approach is more accessible while still being driven by serious kitchen intent. If the Casamata lineage means anything to you, the price holds up.

    What should I order at Damian?

    The LA Times 101 Best Restaurants entry for Damian specifically calls out the salmon tostadas with Sungold tomato sauce and chicatana ants, the oval huarache with fried artichokes and potato puree, and the glossy costillas enmoladas with pickles. These are among the dishes that have drawn consistent editorial recognition. Menu specifics shift with the season, so treat this as a baseline rather than a fixed list — the kitchen leans into what California produce is doing at any given moment.

    What should I wear to Damian?

    The setting is a converted Arts District warehouse — visually considered but not formal. The room is described as a 'gorgeous, mod setting,' which reads as dressed-up casual: smart enough to match the cooking's ambition, relaxed enough that a jacket is not expected. Think the kind of outfit you'd wear to a serious gallery opening rather than a white-tablecloth institution.

    Hours

    Monday
    5:30–9 pm
    Tuesday
    Closed
    Wednesday
    Closed
    Thursday
    5:30–9 pm
    Friday
    5:30–10 pm
    Saturday
    5–10 pm
    Sunday
    5–9 pm

    Recognized By

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