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    Restaurant in Los Angeles, United States

    Mélisse

    2,045Pearl Points

    L.A.'s tightest tasting menu. Book early.

    Mélisse, Restaurant in Los Angeles

    About Mélisse

    Mélisse 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.

    Mélisse Is Not the Restaurant You Remember

    If your mental image of Mélisse is a formal French dining room with white tablecloths, silver cloches, and a wine list the size of a paperback novel, you are about 15 years behind. The revived Mélisse is a 14-seat tasting-menu counter set inside the larger Citrin restaurant on Wilshire Boulevard, and it operates with the intensity and precision of a kitchen that has nothing left to prove but keeps proving it anyway. After 25 years, this is not a heritage act coasting on two Michelin stars. It is a working restaurant that earned those stars again in 2024 and 2025 and ranked #95 on Opinionated About Dining's North America list in 2025.

    What You're Actually Booking

    The format is tasting-menu-only, 14 seats, open kitchen. Chef Josiah Citrin runs the room alongside chef-partner Ken Takayama and head sommelier Maja Kuemmerle. The cuisine sits at the intersection of classical French technique and California seasonality: think tomato consommé formed into clear, chewy noodles, or a lamb course that arrives simultaneously as a herb-crusted chop and a fried spring roll with cilantro and mint emulsion. These are not fusion flourishes — they are the moves of a kitchen that has absorbed enough classical training to bend the rules with confidence. The LA Times ranked Mélisse #24 on its 101 Best Restaurants list for 2024, and La Liste gave it 91 points in 2025, placing it firmly in the tier of restaurants where the question is not whether the cooking is serious but whether the format suits you.

    If you have been once, the relevant question for a return visit is not whether the kitchen can still surprise you — it can , but whether you want to experience the full arc of the tasting menu again or whether you would prefer the more relaxed register of the adjacent Citrin dining room. For a special occasion where the progression of the meal is part of the point, book Mélisse. For a dinner where the agenda is conversation more than cooking, Citrin does that job. The distinction matters at this price tier.

    The Tasting Menu Architecture

    What makes the current Mélisse worth the money is the structural ambition of the menu rather than any single course. The kitchen is not assembling a greatest-hits list of luxury ingredients. The arc of the meal is designed so that early courses build context for later ones , acidity and restraint giving way to richness, technique becoming visible precisely when you are most ready to notice it. The strawberry sorbet floating in orange tomato soup is a case in point: it arrives looking like dessert and tastes like a course that reframes everything before it. For diners who have already been once, the pleasure of a return visit is catching that architecture earlier in the meal, now that you know where it is going.

    Compared with other tasting-menu experiences at this level in Los Angeles, Mélisse is the most classically anchored. Kato operates at a similar price point and ambition level but through a Taiwanese-American lens. Hayato is the right call if kaiseki is what you want. Mélisse is the answer when the format you are looking for is French-rooted fine dining that has been genuinely updated rather than preserved in amber. It occupies a comparable tier nationally to The French Laundry in Napa and Le Bernardin in New York City, though the 14-seat scale gives it an intimacy that larger rooms cannot replicate.

    Booking, Timing, and Practical Details

    Getting a table here is genuinely difficult. With only 14 seats and a reputation that extends well beyond Los Angeles , it holds Relais & Châteaux membership and consistent placement on international lists , demand is high relative to supply. Expect to book at least six to eight weeks out for prime weekend evenings; weekday sittings may have slightly more availability but should not be treated as a walk-up option. Contact via email at melisse@relaischateaux.com or by phone at +1 310 395 0881. The website is at citrinandmelisse.com.

    Reservations: Essential; book 6-8 weeks ahead minimum for weekends. Budget: $$$$ , a two Michelin-starred tasting menu at this seat count will be a significant per-head spend; confirm current pricing when booking. Dress: Smart to formal is appropriate given the setting and price tier; this is not a room where casual dress fits the experience. Dietary needs: Contact the restaurant directly before booking , kitchens operating at this level with a fixed tasting menu format need advance notice to accommodate restrictions.

    Ratings and Recognition

    • 2 Michelin Stars (2024, 2025)
    • La Liste: 91 points (2025), 87 points (2026)
    • Opinionated About Dining, North America: #95 (2025), #109 (2023), #134 (2024)
    • LA Times 101 Best Restaurants 2024: #24
    • Les Grandes Tables du Monde (2025)
    • Google rating: 4.5 (395 reviews)
    • Pearl member rating: 4.4/5

    The Verdict

    Book Mélisse if you want the most technically ambitious tasting menu currently running in Los Angeles, delivered in an intimate counter format that makes the cooking feel personal rather than theatrical. At 25 years old, this kitchen is not resting , the 2025 Opinionated About Dining ranking improved on 2024, and the Michelin stars have been consistent. For return visitors, go with the expectation of encountering something new rather than revisiting something familiar. For first-timers comparing this against Providence or Somni, Mélisse is the right call if French classical technique with California produce is your preferred register. If you want to compare the broader Los Angeles fine dining field before deciding, our full Los Angeles restaurants guide covers the category. For planning the rest of your trip, see our guides to Los Angeles hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Mélisse good for a special occasion?

    Yes, and it's one of the stronger cases for it in Los Angeles. The 14-seat counter format means the room never feels like a factory, and two Michelin stars (2024, 2025) signal the kitchen is operating at a level that justifies the occasion. Just know the format is tasting-menu-only, so this works best when both parties are committed to a multi-course evening rather than a quick dinner.

    Does Mélisse handle dietary restrictions?

    Tasting-menu-only restaurants at this level typically accommodate dietary restrictions when notified well in advance, and with only 14 seats, the kitchen has the bandwidth to do so. Contact Mélisse directly at melisse@relaischateaux.com or +1 310 395 0881 before booking to confirm what the current menu can accommodate. Don't wait until the night of.

    How far ahead should I book Mélisse?

    Book as far out as the reservation window allows — at 14 seats and with two Michelin stars plus Relais & Châteaux membership, availability moves fast. Aim for at least four to six weeks out minimum; closer to eight if your date is a Friday or Saturday. Last-minute tables surface occasionally but are not a strategy worth banking on at $$$$.

    What are alternatives to Mélisse in Los Angeles?

    For a counter-format tasting menu with comparable technical ambition, Hayato in downtown L.A. is the clearest alternative — Japanese kaiseki rather than French, but similar intimacy and price point. Kato is a shorter tasting menu with more creative risk and a lower seat count. Vespertine operates at a similar price ceiling but prioritises conceptual theatrics over classical cooking. Camphor is the pick if you want French technique without the commitment of a full tasting menu.

    What should I wear to Mélisse?

    Mélisse is a two Michelin-starred Relais & Châteaux property at $$$$, so treat it accordingly: smart, polished dress is appropriate and expected. A jacket is not formally required for men, but showing up in casualwear will feel out of place given the room's scale and price point. When in doubt, dress as you would for a serious business dinner.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Mélisse?

    Yes, if multi-course tasting menus are a format you actively enjoy. The LA Times ranked Mélisse #24 on its 2024 list of 101 Best Restaurants, and the current iteration under Josiah Citrin and Ken Takayama is considered more ambitious than the restaurant's earlier incarnation. If you prefer à la carte flexibility or shorter meals, Camphor or Kato will suit you better at a lower price.

    Is Mélisse worth the price?

    At $$$$, Mélisse sits at the top of the Los Angeles market — and the credentials back it: two Michelin stars, a 4.4/5 Pearl rating, La Liste Top Restaurants recognition in both 2025 and 2026, and Opinionated About Dining placement across three consecutive years. The 14-seat format means you are paying for a kitchen that is genuinely cooking for your table, not for a large dining room's overhead. For the price, the value holds if ambitious tasting menus are your category.

    Location

    1104 Wilshire Blvd, Santa Monica, CA 90401

    Los Angeles, United States

    Compare Mélisse

    Getting a Table: Mélisse and Alternatives
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    MélisseFrench, Modern French$$$$Near Impossible
    KatoNew Taiwanese, Asian$$$$Unknown
    HayatoJapanese$$$$Unknown
    VespertineProgressive, Contemporary$$$$Unknown
    CamphorFrench-Asian, French$$$$Unknown
    GwenNew American, Steakhouse$$$$Unknown

    What to weigh when choosing between Mélisse and alternatives.

    Also Consider

    • Kato — New Taiwanese, Asian, $$$$
    • Hayato — Japanese, $$$$
    • Vespertine — Progressive, Contemporary, $$$$
    • Camphor — French-Asian, French, $$$$
    • Gwen — New American, Steakhouse, $$$$

    How Mélisse Compares in Los Angeles

    At the $$$$ tasting-menu tier in Los Angeles, Kato and Mélisse are the two most compelling options, but they serve different preferences. Kato operates through a Taiwanese-American lens with a looser, more improvisational feel; Mélisse is more formally structured, classically anchored, and technically exacting. If you care about French technique and want a clear through-line from first course to last, Mélisse is the call. If you want something less predictable in format and more rooted in Asian culinary tradition, Kato wins. Both are genuinely difficult to book. Hayato is the right comparison if kaiseki is what you are after — it operates at a comparable price point and intimacy level, but the experience is entirely different in character and register.

    Vespertine is the most avant-garde option in the group — more conceptually challenging, more polarising, and harder to recommend as a default choice. Book Vespertine if you want the meal to be a provocation; book Mélisse if you want it to be a demonstration of craft. Camphor sits in a different category: it draws on French and Asian technique but in a less formal setting and at a more accessible booking difficulty. For a high-end dinner where the agenda is more relaxed, Camphor is an easier yes. For a special occasion where the tasting-menu format and the room's intimacy are part of the point, Mélisse and Kato are the two names to weigh first.

    Gwen rounds out the $$$$ tier but operates in a different format — a steakhouse with a dry-aging program rather than a tasting-menu counter. If your group is split between wanting a set menu and wanting to order freely, Gwen is the compromise. If everyone is committed to a full tasting experience and French technique is the draw, Mélisse has no direct competition in Los Angeles at the moment.

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