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    Restaurant in Los Angeles, United States

    San Laurel

    635pts

    Book it for the terrace and the theater angle.

    San Laurel, Restaurant in Los Angeles

    About San Laurel

    San Laurel is the José Andrés Group's Spanish-Californian flagship inside the Conrad Los Angeles, holding a Michelin Plate (2025) and positioned steps from the Walt Disney Concert Hall. At $66+ per person before drinks, it delivers one of downtown LA's strongest combinations of serious food, terrace views, and pre-theater logistics. Book the terrace table and order the jamón Ibérico de Bellota.

    San Laurel, Los Angeles: The Verdict

    Expect to spend $66 or more per person for a two-course meal before drinks — and at that price, San Laurel earns its keep. This is the signature restaurant of the Conrad Los Angeles, operating under the José Andrés Group banner, and it delivers a Spanish-Californian experience that holds up against the city's most competitive fine-dining tier. It earned a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025, which tells you it's cooking at a level that Michelin considers worth tracking. If you're visiting downtown LA for the first time and want one dinner that combines serious food, a view that stops conversation, and a room connected to the cultural energy of the Grand Avenue arts corridor, this is where to book.

    What to Expect: First-Timer's Guide

    San Laurel sits at 100 S Grand Ave, directly adjacent to the Walt Disney Concert Hall. That location is not incidental — it shapes the entire experience. The Frank Gehry-designed building's stainless-steel curves are visible from the terrace, and at sunset, the light bouncing off those curves is the kind of thing you'll want to sit with a drink for. Book a terrace table specifically if you're coming for the first time; the view is the room's strongest asset and the interior, while handsome, doesn't deliver the same payoff.

    The menu sits at the intersection of Spanish tradition and California produce. Wine Director Jay Cosico oversees a list of around 150 selections with 2,500 bottles in inventory, weighted toward California and Spanish producers. The wine list is priced at $$$, meaning expect many bottles above $100 , this is not a list for casual house-wine drinking, but it rewards anyone who cares about Iberian producers.

    Chef Jeffry Chen leads the kitchen under the José Andrés Group framework. The cooking here is anchored by ingredients with clear Spanish provenance , the jamón Ibérico de Bellota, sourced from acorn-fed pigs, is flagged by Michelin's inspectors as a non-negotiable order. It's available at both breakfast and dinner, which tells you something about how seriously the kitchen treats it. The bone-in wagyu from Blackhawk Farms, served with kale, maitake mushrooms, escabeche, and truffle jus, is the inspectors' pick for the strongest main course on the menu. Order both if you're doing this properly.

    The cocktail program leans theatrical: expect billowing smoke, beakers, and props. The Foggy Hill and Bergeron's Secret Chest are the go-to orders if you want the full production. For a first visit, lean into it , the theatrics set a tone that the kitchen then sustains. This is not a restrained, quietly serious dining room in the manner of Hayato or Kato. It's a room that wants to be felt.

    Late-Night and Pre/Post-Theater Angle

    This is where San Laurel has a genuine structural advantage over most of its downtown peers. The venue sits steps from the Walt Disney Concert Hall and the LA Opera, and the kitchen runs a dedicated à la carte pre-theater menu that is designed to get you seated, fed well, and out in time for curtain. If you're attending a LA Philharmonic or LA Opera performance, San Laurel is the most logical dinner anchor in the area , not just geographically, but operationally. The staff are trained for this flow and the management actively works to pace your meal to your schedule.

    The late-night angle extends beyond pre-theater. If the Dodgers are playing a home game, time your reservation for around 10 p.m. and you may catch a complimentary fireworks display in the distance if the team wins. It's the kind of detail that sounds minor but lands well at the end of a long dinner. For a first-timer to downtown LA, that combination of location, timing, and spectacle is hard to engineer elsewhere.

    San Laurel also has a chef's table available with kitchen views and a dedicated tasting menu format , the right call for a milestone dinner or a celebratory occasion where you want the kitchen to pace and curate the evening. The standard dining room works for pre-theater efficiency; the chef's table works for anniversaries and extended celebrations where pace matters less than depth.

    For broader context on where San Laurel sits in the global Spanish fine-dining conversation, it's worth knowing the José Andrés Group operates in competitive markets worldwide. Comparable Spanish-influenced restaurants at the fine-dining tier include ZURRIOLA in Tokyo and Arco by Paco Pérez in Gdańsk. Within the US, the caliber of cooking here is in the same conversation as destination restaurants like The French Laundry in Napa and Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, though San Laurel's format is more accessible and less locked into a single tasting-menu progression.

    If you're building a broader LA itinerary, cross-reference our full Los Angeles restaurants guide, Los Angeles hotels guide, Los Angeles bars guide, Los Angeles wineries guide, and Los Angeles experiences guide to complete the picture. For other serious LA restaurant options, Providence leads on seafood, Osteria Mozza anchors the Italian category, and Somni is the city's most technically ambitious tasting menu right now.

    Practical Details

    Reservations: Book at least 2–3 weeks in advance; this is a hard-to-book room, particularly for terrace tables and the chef's table. Dress: Casual elegant , the venue's own descriptor , meaning no shorts or sneakers, but a jacket is not required. Smart casual with a little intention is the right read. Budget: $66+ per person for two courses before drinks; wine adds significantly given the $$$-tier list. Parking: Self-parking and valet both available. Accessibility: Private dining, outdoor seating, kid-friendly, gluten-free and vegetarian options available. Meals served: Lunch and dinner.

    Compare San Laurel

    Price vs. Value: San Laurel
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    San Laurel$$$$Hard
    Kato$$$$Unknown
    Hayato$$$$Unknown
    Vespertine$$$$Unknown
    Camphor$$$$Unknown
    Gwen$$$$Unknown

    Comparing your options in Los Angeles for this tier.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I wear to San Laurel?

    The dress code is casual elegant — think polished separates or a blazer rather than a suit. Jeans are likely fine if they're clean and paired with something considered. This is a Conrad Hotel dining room adjacent to Disney Concert Hall, so the crowd skews dressed-up by LA standards, especially on concert nights.

    How far ahead should I book San Laurel?

    Book 2–3 weeks out at minimum, longer if you want the terrace or the chef's table. Terrace seats fill fastest, particularly on evenings when the LA Philharmonic or LA Opera is running next door. If you're timing dinner around a Dodgers home game for the potential fireworks view around 10pm, plan even further ahead.

    Can San Laurel accommodate groups?

    Yes — the venue has private dining available, which makes it a workable option for celebrations or business dinners. For larger parties, request the private room rather than relying on main floor seating, which is better suited to tables of 2–4. At $66+ per head before drinks on a Spanish-Californian menu with a 2,500-bottle cellar, the format suits a group that wants a full evening rather than a quick meal.

    Can I eat at the bar at San Laurel?

    Bar seating is available and the cocktail program is a draw in its own right — the performance-style drinks like the Foggy Hill are worth ordering regardless of where you sit. The bar is a reasonable option if you want a lighter commitment than a full dinner reservation, though the full menu and wine list are the main event at this price point.

    What should I order at San Laurel?

    The jamón Ibérico de Bellota starter is explicitly flagged as a priority by Michelin inspectors — the José Andrés Group sources it from acorn-fed pigs and it's available at both lunch and dinner. The bone-in wagyu from Blackhawk Farms, served with kale, maitake mushrooms, and truffle jus, is cited as one of the stronger main course options. If you're at the bar, start with one of the theatrical cocktails before committing to the food menu.

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