Restaurant in Los Angeles, United States
Al Baraka Restaurant
330Pearl PointsLA Times #27. Book it without overthinking.

About Al Baraka Restaurant
Ranked #27 on the LA Times 2024 Best Restaurants list, Al Baraka has been serving Palestinian home cooking in Anaheim's Little Arabia since 2003. The daily specials — particularly Saturday mshakhan and kufta with tahini — are the reason critics and regulars keep returning. Easy to book, halal, and meaningfully less expensive than most venues with comparable critical recognition in LA.
Ranked #27 on the LA Times 101 Best Restaurants 2024, Al Baraka Is the Palestinian Home Kitchen Anaheim Has Been Waiting For
Since 2003, Al Baraka has been serving halal Palestinian cooking out of a modest address at 413 S Brookhurst St in Anaheim's Little Arabia district. The LA Times didn't rank it #27 on its 2024 Best Restaurants list by accident. This is a kitchen run by Magida Shatarah, whose husband Aref wheels dishes to the table on a cart — a service format that tells you something important about the experience before you've taken a single bite. What you're eating here is Palestinian home cooking that rarely surfaces on restaurant menus: Musakhan, Mansaf, kufta with tahini, kubba laban, molokhia. If that repertoire means anything to you, book now.
What the Room Feels Like
Al Baraka is a family-run room, not a designed dining concept. The atmosphere is low-key and communal — the kind of place where conversation carries easily and the energy is shaped by regulars rather than by ambient playlists or lighting schemes. Expect a quiet, unhurried pace. This is not a venue for celebrating with a loud group; it's suited to a smaller gathering where the food is the event. That cart rolling out from the kitchen sets the tone: generous, direct, unpretentious. The noise level stays low enough for a proper conversation, which makes it a better call than most spots for a long dinner with someone you actually want to talk to. If you're coming from central Los Angeles, factor in the drive to Anaheim, this is a destination trip, not a spontaneous weeknight stop.
What to Order If You've Been Before
If your first visit covered the kufta with tahini (and it should have), the daily specials list is where the kitchen really shows its range. Saturdays bring mshakhan: roast chicken spiced and browned, piled onto flatbread with sumac-stained onions. It's a dish that belongs to autumn and to Palestinian tradition, designed to be eaten by hand in composed bites of bread, chicken, and onion. The tabbouleh reads bright and sharp rather than flat. The molokhia, a pureed jute mallow soup, is soothing and not commonly found on LA menus. Kubba laban, beef and bulgur croquettes in a yogurt sauce, is worth ordering whenever it's available. Beyond those, scan the specials each visit; the menu rotates by day and season, so returning diners will consistently find something new to anchor their order around.
Booking and Logistics
Booking difficulty here is easy by LA standards, no months-long waitlist, no high-stakes reservation release. Al Baraka is accessible, which makes it a refreshing alternative to the planning overhead required by venues like Hayato or Somni. Phone and website details are not confirmed in our database, so plan to check current hours and reservation availability directly. Driving is the practical choice given the Anaheim address; parking in the area is generally available. The halal certification is confirmed, which matters for a meaningful segment of diners who have limited comparable options at this quality level in Southern California.
Value and Price Context
Price range data is not confirmed in our records, but the context here is clear: Al Baraka is a family-run, neighbourhood Palestinian restaurant in Anaheim, not a tasting-menu operation. You are not paying $$$$ per head. The value proposition is strong relative to the calibre of cooking, and the LA Times recognition puts it in the same 2024 conversation as significantly more expensive restaurants across the city. For Palestinian cuisine specifically, there is no obvious peer at this recognition level in the LA area, which makes the price-to-quality argument even more direct. If you're used to spending $100+ per head at destinations like Osteria Mozza or Providence, Al Baraka will likely cost you meaningfully less for cooking that earned comparable critical attention this year.
Who Should Book
Book Al Baraka if you want cooking that is precise, culturally specific, and not replicated elsewhere in the LA dining scene at this standard. It's a strong call for solo diners, couples, and small groups of three or four who can share across the specials. It's not the right venue for large celebrations, corporate dinners, or anyone whose priority is the room rather than the food. If you're planning a trip to Orange County or Anaheim for other reasons, this is worth building an evening around. For more on what else to eat and drink in the wider region, see our full Los Angeles restaurants guide, our full Los Angeles bars guide, and our full Los Angeles experiences guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Al Baraka Restaurant good for solo dining?
Yes, and arguably more so than most LA restaurants at this recognition level. The room is low-key and family-run, so solo diners don't feel out of place. Coming alone actually makes it easier to work through the daily specials list, which is where the kitchen's range shows. Al Baraka ranked #27 on the LA Times 101 Best Restaurants 2024 — it doesn't require a group to justify the trip.
What should a first-timer know about Al Baraka Restaurant?
Start with the kufta with tahini — it's the dish the LA Times called out specifically, and it's the clearest statement of what Magida Shatarah's cooking does. Check what day you're going: Saturdays bring mshakhan, roast chicken on flatbread with sumac-stained onions, which is among the most culturally specific dishes on the menu. The restaurant has been serving Palestinian home-style cooking in Anaheim's Little Arabia since 2003, so this is an established kitchen, not a trend.
Can I eat at the bar at Al Baraka Restaurant?
Bar seating is not documented for Al Baraka — this is a family-run Palestinian restaurant, and the format is a communal dining room rather than a bar-and-counter setup. If counter dining is a priority, this isn't the venue for it, but the accessible booking and relaxed room make it easy to walk in without a reservation strategy.
Is Al Baraka Restaurant good for a special occasion?
It works well for a meaningful dinner rather than a celebration with ceremony. There's no tasting menu format or wine program to build an occasion around, but the cooking is precise and culturally specific enough that it reads as a deliberate choice. A #27 ranking on the LA Times 101 Best 2024 gives it the credibility to anchor a dinner for guests who care about food over atmosphere.
What are alternatives to Al Baraka Restaurant in Los Angeles?
For Palestinian or Levantine home cooking specifically, Al Baraka has little direct competition at this standard in the LA area. If you're choosing between LA restaurant experiences by prestige tier, Kato and Hayato are both more formal and significantly more expensive, with omakase or tasting-menu formats. Al Baraka is the right call when you want precise, culturally grounded cooking without the reservation difficulty or price point those venues require.
What should I order at Al Baraka Restaurant?
The kufta with tahini is the anchor order — seasoned ground beef baked in a pan with tahini and lemon, called out by name in the LA Times review. Beyond that, check the daily specials: Saturdays bring mshakhan, a roast chicken and flatbread dish with sumac onions. The tabbouleh and molokhia (pureed jute mallow soup) are worth adding if available, and the kubba laban rounds out a representative spread of what Palestinian home cooking looks like at Al Baraka's standard.
Location
413 S Brookhurst St, Anaheim, CA 92804
Los Angeles, United States
Compare Al Baraka Restaurant
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Al Baraka Restaurant | Easy | ||
| Kato | New Taiwanese, Asian | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Hayato | Japanese | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Vespertine | Progressive, Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Camphor | French-Asian, French | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Gwen | New American, Steakhouse | $$$$ | Unknown |
What to weigh when choosing between Al Baraka Restaurant and alternatives.
Also Consider
- Kato, New Taiwanese, Asian, $$$$
- Hayato, Japanese, $$$$
- Vespertine, Progressive, Contemporary, $$$$
- Camphor, French-Asian, French, $$$$
- Gwen, New American, Steakhouse, $$$$
Comparing Al Baraka against the other LA venues in Pearl's current set requires some honesty about category: Kato, Hayato, Vespertine, Camphor, and Gwen are all $$$$ operations with tasting menus, counter formats, or high-end a la carte pricing. Al Baraka operates at a different price tier entirely. That is not a weakness, it is precisely the value argument. The LA Times put it at #27 in 2024, a list that also included venues charging $200+ per head. Al Baraka almost certainly does not.
If your decision is between Al Baraka and a $$$$ tasting menu like Hayato or Vespertine, the choice comes down to what you're optimising for. Hayato delivers a focused, technically demanding Japanese omakase in a counter format; Vespertine is a full sensory-concept dinner. Neither attempts what Al Baraka does, and neither will cost less. For value in the LA critical tier, cooking that earned serious recognition without the $$$$ overhead, Al Baraka is the clearest option in this comparison set. Kato is the closest in spirit (cultural specificity, chef-driven precision, family-scale operation) but runs significantly more expensive and requires harder booking.
If you're planning an LA dining trip and want to cover the range, a practical sequence would be: Al Baraka for Palestinian home cooking (easy booking, lower spend), then one of the $$$$ venues for a longer, more elaborate evening. Camphor or Gwen work well as the higher-spend counterpart, both are easier to book than Hayato and offer more flexibility than a tasting-only format. For anyone whose budget or interest doesn't extend to $$$$ dining, Al Baraka is the strongest single recommendation in this group.
Recognized By
Explore Los Angeles
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