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    Restaurant in Ojai, United States

    The Dutchess

    310Pearl Points

    Ojai's Michelin-recognized Burmese worth booking.

    The Dutchess, Restaurant in Ojai

    About The Dutchess

    The only Michelin Plate-recognized Burmese kitchen in Ojai, The Dutchess pairs chef Saw Naing's cooking with a 220-selection wine list that outpaces most restaurants three times its size. Cuisine prices run $$ while the wine program delivers serious depth at moderate markups. Book two to three weeks out for dinner — it fills.

    The Dutchess, Ojai: Verdict

    Ojai has exactly one Burmese restaurant earning a Michelin Plate, and it seats a limited number of covers — which means The Dutchess fills up. Book at least two to three weeks out for dinner; weekend tables at this 457 E Ojai Ave address move faster than most visitors expect for a small-town California dining room. If Burmese cuisine is on your agenda anywhere between Los Angeles and San Francisco, this is the most purposeful stop you can make.

    The short case for booking: a Michelin Plate in 2024 and again in 2025, a kitchen led by chef Saw Naing, and a wine program overseen by Wine Director Emily Johnston that punches considerably above what you'd find at comparable $$ cuisine pricing. The longer case follows below.

    The Wine Program: The Reason to Linger

    Emily Johnston's list is the clearest differentiator between The Dutchess and every other dinner option in Ojai. At 220 selections across an inventory of 1,300 bottles, this is a wine program sized for a serious urban restaurant, not a Ventura County town with a population under 10,000. California labels anchor the list, as you'd expect, but the depth across the 220 selections gives you genuine choice rather than the obligatory handful of local pours padded with commodity imports.

    Wine pricing lands at $$, which in practice means a range of price points — not every bottle crowds the $100+ tier. That matters when you're already spending at the $$ cuisine level (a typical two-course meal runs under $40 per head, which is the low end of the $$ cuisine band). The corkage fee is $40 if you bring your own, a reasonable number for a program this size. For wine-focused travelers making the trip from Los Angeles or Santa Barbara, that combination , serious selection, moderate markup, considered list , is harder to find than the Michelin recognition alone suggests. Compare the drinks depth here against Rory's Place or Olivella and The Dutchess holds its own specifically on list breadth.

    If you're visiting Ojai specifically for wine, cross-reference our full Ojai wineries guide and our full Ojai bars guide , the wineries in the valley pair naturally with a dinner reservation here.

    The Kitchen: Burmese in California Wine Country

    Burmese cuisine in California is still a category most diners encounter only in the Bay Area. Burmatown in Corte Madera and Teni East Kitchen in San Francisco represent the Northern California standard. The Dutchess operates in a different context entirely: wine country, a tourist-facing small town, and a room that attracts guests whose default cuisine preference runs toward California-coastal or Italian. That chef Saw Naing has earned back-to-back Michelin Plates in this environment is a stronger signal than it would be in a dense urban market.

    The cuisine pricing is $ to $$ (a typical two-course meal under $65, skewing toward the lower end of that band), which means the food is not where you take the financial risk. Lunch and dinner service are both offered, making this viable for a midday stop on a drive through the valley. The owners behind The Dutchess , Zoe Nathan, Josh Loeb, Saw Naing, and Kelsey Brito , bring hospitality experience that translates into a room that functions well even when full. General Manager Matt Pierga runs front-of-house with enough structure that the experience doesn't feel ad hoc despite the informal Ojai setting.

    For context on what a Michelin Plate signals: it's recognition of quality cooking without a star, placing The Dutchess in a tier below starred destinations like Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg or The French Laundry in Napa, but well above the noise level of unrecognized regional restaurants. In Ojai, it's the most credentialed kitchen in town.

    Booking and Logistics

    Moderate booking difficulty means you won't be fighting a release queue at midnight, but you shouldn't assume walk-in availability on a weekend. Two to three weeks advance booking is a reasonable target for dinner; lunch may offer more flexibility depending on the time of year. The address at 457 E Ojai Ave puts the restaurant on the main commercial corridor, direct to find if you're driving in from Highway 33. There is no phone number listed publicly, so booking through the restaurant's online channel is the path of least resistance.

    Dress code is relaxed by any measure , Ojai runs casual, and The Dutchess is not an exception. Groups should note that seat count is not publicly listed; if you're planning a party larger than four, contact the restaurant directly before assuming availability. The $40 corkage fee makes BYOB viable if you're coming from a tasting room earlier in the day. For a fuller picture of the town before you commit to a booking, our full Ojai restaurants guide, Ojai hotels guide, and Ojai experiences guide cover the surrounding options.

    Ratings at a Glance

    • Google: 4.5 / 5 (490 reviews)
    • Michelin Plate: 2024, 2025
    • Cuisine pricing: $ (two-course meal under $40, per venue data)
    • Wine list: 220 selections, 1,300-bottle inventory, $$ pricing
    • Corkage: $40

    FAQ

    What are alternatives to The Dutchess in Ojai?

    • For California coastal cooking at the same $$$ spend, Rory's Place is the clearest alternative and holds strong local reputation. Olivella skews Californian-French and suits diners who want a more European-leaning room. For plant-based options at a lower price point, Hip Vegan is the go-to. Ojai Rotie fills a different niche. None of them offer Burmese cuisine or a wine list of comparable depth to The Dutchess.

    What should I order at The Dutchess?

    • Specific dishes are not publicly confirmed in our data, so we won't invent them. What we can say: the kitchen holds two consecutive Michelin Plates under chef Saw Naing, which means the savory courses are where the recognition lives. Ask your server what's running currently , the menu shifts and the staff know what's performing.

    Can I eat at the bar at The Dutchess?

    • Seat count and bar configuration are not confirmed in our data. Given the 1,300-bottle wine inventory and a dedicated wine director, it's reasonable to assume bar seating exists, but contact the restaurant directly to confirm before planning around it.

    Can The Dutchess accommodate groups?

    • No public information on private dining or maximum group size is available. For parties of five or more, reach out directly before booking. The cuisine pricing at $$ per head keeps group costs manageable relative to comparable Michelin-recognized restaurants in Southern California.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at The Dutchess?

    • No tasting menu is confirmed in our data , The Dutchess offers lunch and dinner service, but the format (prix-fixe vs. a la carte) isn't specified publicly. At the $$ cuisine price band, even if a structured menu is available, the spend is conservative by Michelin-recognized standards. For comparison, starred California restaurants like Providence in Los Angeles or Lazy Bear in San Francisco run tasting menus at multiples of this price. Whatever the format, the value-to-recognition ratio at The Dutchess is favorable.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What are alternatives to The Dutchess in Ojai?

    For wine-focused dinners, Ojai Rotie is the closest peer. Olivella is the better call if you want Italian and a lighter price point. Rory's Place suits a casual, neighbourhood-meal format, while Hip Vegan is the move if your group has plant-based requirements. None of them offer Burmese cuisine or a Michelin Plate — so if those credentials matter, there's no direct substitute in Ojai.

    What should I order at The Dutchess?

    Specific menu items are not published in available sources, so dish-level recommendations aren't possible here. What the record does confirm: the kitchen is Burmese, led by chef Saw Naing, and the food pricing sits at $ (a typical two-course meal under $40), which means you can order widely without the bill running away from you. Pair that with the 220-bottle wine list and the value case gets stronger.

    Can I eat at the bar at The Dutchess?

    Bar seating is not documented in the available venue data. Given the restaurant's limited covers and consistent weekend demand, calling ahead to confirm walk-in bar availability is worth doing before you show up without a reservation.

    Can The Dutchess accommodate groups?

    Group capacity details are not in the venue record, but the restaurant's limited-cover format suggests larger parties should contact them directly and book well in advance. For groups where wine is a priority, note that the corkage fee is $40 if you want to bring your own bottles alongside the 220-selection house list.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at The Dutchess?

    A tasting menu format is not confirmed in the available data. What is confirmed: food pricing is $ (under $40 for two courses), which puts The Dutchess at the lower end of the $$$ overall price range — the cost is driven more by wine than by the kitchen. If a set tasting format exists, the Michelin Plate recognition from both 2024 and 2025 suggests the kitchen can support it.

    Location

    457 E Ojai Ave, Ojai, CA 93023

    Ojai, United States

    Compare The Dutchess

    Comparing The Dutchess to Alternatives
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    The DutchessBurmese$$$WINE: Wine Strengths: California Pricing: $$ i Wine pricing: Based on the list\'s general markup and high and low price points:$ has many bottles < $50;$$ has a range of pricing;$$$ has many $100+ bottles Corkage Fee: $40 Selections: 220 Inventory: 1,300 CUISINE: Cuisine Types: Pricing: $ i Cuisine pricing: The cost of a typical two-course meal, not including tip or beverages.$ is < $40;$$ is $40–$65;$$$ is $66+. Meals: Lunch and Dinner STAFF: People Emily Johnston:Wine Director Wine Director: Emily Johnston Chef: Saw Naing General Manager: Matt Pierga Owner: Zoe Nathan, Josh Loeb, Saw Naing, Kelsey Brito; Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024)Moderate
    Rory's PlaceCalifornian, Californian (Coastal)$$$Unknown
    OlivellaCalifornian FrenchUnknown
    Hip VeganUnknown
    Ojai RotieUnknown

    What to weigh when choosing between The Dutchess and alternatives.

    Also Consider

    Among Ojai's sit-down dinner options, The Dutchess is the most credentialed by external recognition: two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024, 2025) put it ahead of every other restaurant on this list on that measure alone. Rory's Place is the closest competitor for a full dinner experience, with California coastal cooking at a $$$ price point and strong local standing. If your preference runs toward familiar California flavors over Burmese cuisine, Rory's Place is the safer bet — but The Dutchess is the more interesting room and the better wine destination.

    Olivella skews Californian-French and suits travelers who want a European-leaning dinner rather than something more unexpected. It's a reasonable choice for a relaxed evening, but it doesn't match The Dutchess on either cuisine distinctiveness or wine list depth. Hip Vegan and Ojai Rotie serve different needs entirely: plant-based and casual, respectively, and both come in at a lower price point. If you're building a full day in Ojai, Hip Vegan works for lunch while The Dutchess handles dinner.

    For food and wine travelers specifically, The Dutchess is the booking to prioritize. Its 220-selection wine list with 1,300 bottles in inventory is not something you find at a town restaurant of this scale, and the $40 corkage fee makes it practical to bring a bottle from a valley tasting room earlier in the day. If the cuisine type is the question rather than the wine, and Burmese isn't what you're after tonight, go to Rory's Place. Otherwise, The Dutchess is the most considered dinner in Ojai.

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