Restaurant in Los Angeles, United States
majordōmo
1,200ptsBook it. Large-format dishes, serious repeat value.

About majordōmo
majordōmo is David Chang's most accomplished restaurant and one of Los Angeles' most consistent dinner destinations: a Michelin Plate, OAD-ranked, Pearl-recommended room where Korean-inflected large-format cooking meets a genuinely strong wine program. At $$$, it sits below the city's tasting menu tier but delivers comparable creative ambition. Book two to three weeks ahead for the best selection of tables.
Verdict: Worth the Effort to Book
Getting a table at majordōmo takes planning but not obsession. Demand is real — this is a Michelin Plate restaurant that has held a spot on the LA dining scene's short list since opening in 2018, ranking #69 on Opinionated About Dining's Casual North America list in 2025 and landing on the LA Times 101 Best Restaurants in 2024. But unlike the city's truly impossible reservations, you can get in with two to three weeks' notice if you're flexible on night. The question isn't really whether you can book — it's whether the format is right for you. If large-format, shareable plates built around Korean-inflected California cooking sound like your evening, book it. If you prefer individual plating and a quieter room, look elsewhere.
The Restaurant
majordōmo sits on Naud Street in northern Chinatown, in a warehouse space that looks exactly like what it is: an industrial building converted into a dining room where the design choices feel deliberate rather than decorated. The room is high-ceilinged, open, and visually dominated by the kind of raw architectural bones that Copenhagen street-fashion crowds have been gravitating toward since the restaurant opened. That crowd still shows up. The energy in the room is part of the experience , loud, communal, and confident , which means it works well for groups and celebrations, and less well for quiet conversation.
The cooking comes from Chef Tim Mangun, working within the creative framework that David Chang's Momofuku group established at Momofuku Noodle Bar in New York and has refined across multiple cities. At majordōmo, the California context shapes the menu more than it does elsewhere in the group. Dishes are built around large-format proteins and fermented, smoke-forward flavors that reference Korean technique without being a Korean restaurant. The smoked bo ssäm , a pork shoulder you tear apart with tongs and wrap in perilla leaves with kimchi and ssamjang , is the dish the restaurant is known for, and it earns that reputation. The crispy rice with mushrooms draws comparisons to tahdig and holds up on repeat visits. These aren't delicate plates. They are meant to be shared, pulled apart, and argued over.
The wine program is worth paying attention to. Sommelier David Cortes and sommelier Hana Liu oversee a 515-selection list with 3,175 bottles of inventory, priced at $$, meaning there's a genuine range rather than a trophy-only cellar. Strengths are in France, California, and Italy. The $40 corkage fee is fair if you have something you want to bring. For a restaurant at this price point and energy level, the wine program is more considered than you might expect.
Dinner Is the Format Here
majordōmo serves dinner only, Tuesday through Sunday (Monday through Thursday 5:30–10 pm, Friday 5:30–10:30 pm, Saturday 5–10:30 pm, Sunday 5–10 pm). There is no lunch service, which is relevant if you're comparing it against restaurants like Osteria Mozza or venues that offer a more accessible midday entry point. The absence of lunch means the kitchen is focused entirely on dinner execution, and it shows , but it also means you can't use a weekday lunch to test the room before committing to a full evening spend.
Within dinner, timing matters. Early tables (5:30–6:30 pm) are more conversational; the room gets progressively louder through the evening. If you're coming for the food and want to actually discuss it, book the earliest available slot. If you're coming for the full energy of the room, the 8 pm window on a Friday or Saturday delivers that. The large-format dishes also take time to arrive and are meant to be paced, so don't book if you're working to a hard schedule.
At $$$ per head, majordōmo sits below the city's $$$$ tasting menu tier , places like Kato, Hayato, and Somni , and offers considerably more flexibility. You're not locked into a set progression; you choose what you want, share it, and the bill reflects how many large-format items you order. For two people ordering carefully, you can eat well here for less than a tasting menu elsewhere. For a group of four going deep on the menu, the per-head cost climbs.
For broader context on where majordōmo fits against the full range of Los Angeles dining, from seafood-forward fine dining at Providence to the West Coast's most reservation-intensive rooms, see our full Los Angeles restaurants guide. If you're planning a longer visit, our Los Angeles hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide are useful companions. For the wine-focused visitor, our Los Angeles wineries guide covers the region's growing producer scene.
Pearl has flagged majordōmo as a recommended restaurant for 2025. The OAD ranking improvement from #69 (2025) to a prior #48 (2023) reflects some movement in critical positioning, but the fundamentals , kitchen consistency, wine program quality, and room energy , have remained stable across multiple award cycles. This is a restaurant that has earned its relevance rather than coasting on opening-year buzz.
Know Before You Go
- Address: 1725 Naud St, Los Angeles, CA 90012 (northern Chinatown)
- Hours: Mon–Thu 5:30–10 pm | Fri 5:30–10:30 pm | Sat 5–10:30 pm | Sun 5–10 pm
- Cuisine: New American with Korean and Asian influences; large-format sharing plates
- Price range: $$$ per head (cuisine); wine list priced $$
- Booking difficulty: Moderate , plan two to three weeks ahead; earlier slots easier to secure
- Wine program: 515 selections, 3,175 bottles; strengths in France, California, Italy; corkage $40
- Meals served: Dinner only
- Google rating: 4.7 (1,210 reviews)
- Awards: Michelin Plate (2024, 2025); OAD Casual North America #69 (2025); LA Times 101 Best Restaurants 2024 (#60); Pearl Recommended 2025
- Key staff: Chef Tim Mangun; Wine Director David Cortes; Sommelier Hana Liu; GM Jared Hill
How It Compares
majordōmo's $$$ pricing puts it in a different bracket from most of its serious Los Angeles competition. Kato and Hayato are both $$$$ tasting menu restaurants where you're committing to a set experience at a fixed, higher price. If you want control over what you spend and what you order, majordōmo wins that comparison easily. If you want the intimacy and precision of a chef-driven omakase or tasting progression, Kato and Hayato offer something structurally different, not just more expensive.
Camphor is worth considering if your preference runs to French-Asian flavors in a quieter, more refined room. It operates at $$$$ but delivers a different register , more composed, less communal. Vespertine is in an entirely separate category: a $$$$ progressive tasting experience designed as much for spectacle as for eating, and a poor substitute if what you actually want is shareable Korean-California cooking in a lively room. Gwen is the comparison if you're deciding between majordōmo and a high-quality meat-focused evening , Gwen is a steakhouse with more individual plating and a refined butcher program; majordōmo is the call if you want more cultural range and a lower per-head floor.
For the explorer looking for depth and creative range at $$$ without the formality of a tasting menu, majordōmo is the clearest recommendation in its tier. If budget is less of a constraint and you want to compare against what the rest of the country is doing , Le Bernardin in New York, The French Laundry in Napa, or Alinea in Chicago , majordōmo holds its own on energy and kitchen identity, even if it's operating in a different format and price register.
Frequently Asked Questions
- How far ahead should I book majordōmo? Two to three weeks is usually enough for most nights. The restaurant's Michelin Plate status and OAD ranking mean demand is consistent, but it hasn't reached the weeks-out-impossible level of the city's hardest bookings. Friday and Saturday evenings are tightest; Monday through Wednesday are your leading shot at short-notice availability.
- Can majordōmo accommodate groups? The large-format menu is genuinely built for groups , the bo ssäm and other sharing plates are designed for four or more people. Parties of six or more should contact the restaurant directly, as larger configurations may require specific table arrangements. The communal format means groups get more out of the menu than solo or two-leading diners proportionally.
- Can I eat at the bar at majordōmo? Bar seating is a useful option if you're in Los Angeles solo or as a two-leading looking for flexibility. The full menu is available at the bar, and it's a reasonable way to access the restaurant on shorter notice than a dining room reservation requires.
- Is majordōmo good for solo dining? Possible but not optimal. The large-format dishes are priced and portioned for sharing, so a solo diner will either over-order or miss the most interesting items on the menu. Bar seating helps with the logistics. If solo dining is your primary mode in Los Angeles, Hayato or a counter-format restaurant is a better fit structurally.
- Does majordōmo handle dietary restrictions? The menu's Korean-influenced, pork-forward cooking means vegetarian and pork-free diners will have a more limited selection than omnivores. Contact the restaurant directly ahead of your visit , the kitchen's capability and willingness to accommodate isn't something that can be confirmed without checking.
- What are alternatives to majordōmo in Los Angeles? For Korean-influenced creative cooking at a similar or higher price tier, Atomix in New York is the national reference point, but in Los Angeles the closest comparison in energy and cultural range is Kato , though Kato operates as a tasting menu at $$$$ and is structurally different. For a more accessible Korean-American entry point, Momofuku Noodle Bar in New York gives you the group's DNA at a lower price. In Los Angeles itself, Lazy Bear in San Francisco and Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg offer comparable creative ambition in the broader California region if you're building a trip around dining.
Compare majordōmo
Frequently Asked Questions
Can majordōmo accommodate groups?
Groups are a good fit here. The warehouse-scale space and large-format dishes like the Whole Plate Short Rib are designed for the table to share, which suits parties of four or more. Book as far in advance as possible for larger groups — demand is consistent at a restaurant that has held OAD Top 100 status across multiple years.
Can I eat at the bar at majordōmo?
Bar seating is not confirmed in the available venue data, so check the venue's official channels before planning around it. The full dinner menu runs until 10 pm on most nights (10:30 pm Friday and Saturday), giving you reasonable flexibility on arrival time if seating options are limited.
Does majordōmo handle dietary restrictions?
The kitchen leans heavily on Korean-inflected flavors and shared proteins, so vegetarians or those avoiding pork should flag restrictions clearly at the time of booking. The menu is not explicitly restriction-friendly by format, but a restaurant operating at this price point ($$$ per head) and recognition level should be able to accommodate with advance notice.
What are alternatives to majordōmo in Los Angeles?
For tasting-menu precision at a higher price point, Kato and Hayato are the obvious alternatives — both are $$$$ and reservation-intensive. If you want comparable ambition at $$$ without the Korean-Californian format, Camphor in Downtown LA is worth a look. majordōmo's edge is the shared, large-format style, which neither Kato nor Hayato offers.
Is majordōmo good for solo dining?
Solo dining is possible but not the optimal format. The large-format dishes are built for sharing, so a solo diner will either over-order or miss the best items on the menu. If you're eating alone, focus on the smaller plates and consider sitting at a bar seat if available — worth confirming when you book.
How far ahead should I book majordōmo?
Book two to three weeks out as a baseline. majordōmo has held consistent demand since opening in 2018 and carries Michelin Plate recognition plus a 2025 OAD Top 100 ranking, so prime Friday and Saturday slots go fast. Thursday dinner is your best shot at a shorter lead time without sacrificing the full experience.
Hours
- Monday
- 5:30–10 pm
- Tuesday
- 5:30–10 pm
- Wednesday
- 5:30–10 pm
- Thursday
- 5:30–10 pm
- Friday
- 5:30–10:30 pm
- Saturday
- 5–10:30 pm
- Sunday
- 5–10 pm
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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