Restaurant in Boston, United States
La Brasa
200Pearl PointsOAD-ranked Mexican, easy to book nightly.

About La Brasa
La Brasa is Somerville's nationally recognized Mexican dinner spot, ranked by Opinionated About Dining three years running and easy to book any night of the week. Chef Daniel Bojorquez runs a dinner-only kitchen with a 4.3 Google rating across 528 reviews. For food-focused visitors, it fills a genuine gap in Boston's dining options and rewards repeat visits.
Should You Book La Brasa?
La Brasa is worth your time — and the good news is that getting a table is not a battle. Reservations are easy to secure at this Somerville Mexican spot, which means you can plan a visit without the stress of a months-out booking window. Chef Daniel Bojorquez has built something that Opinionated About Dining has tracked upward three consecutive years: Recommended in 2023, ranked #788 in North America in 2024, and climbing to #825 in the 2025 casual category. That trajectory matters. It tells you this is a kitchen that keeps its standards consistent rather than coasting on early buzz.
If you are a food-focused traveler looking for Mexican cooking that earns recognition on a national ranking list — alongside peers like Pujol in Mexico City and Animalón in Valle de Guadalupe , La Brasa gives you a legitimate Boston entry point into that conversation. This is not a burrito-and-margarita operation. Book it.
Portrait
La Brasa sits at 124 Broadway in Somerville, just across the Cambridge line, and opens every night of the week from 5 to 10 pm. The consistency of those hours matters: no dark Mondays, no abbreviated Sunday service. For visitors building a Boston itinerary, that reliability is genuinely useful. Somerville's dining scene has developed enough weight that a trip across the river is worth factoring in , and La Brasa is one of the addresses that justifies the detour.
Chef Bojorquez runs a dinner-only kitchen, which shapes how you should think about a multi-visit strategy. A single visit gives you a solid read on the program. A second visit lets you work through more of the menu without the pressure of ordering everything at once. The kitchen's OAD recognition in the casual category signals that this is food-driven cooking that does not require a tasting-menu format to deliver substance. That is actually the right context for repeat visits: a menu where you can return with a clear plan rather than trying to cover every dish in one sitting.
Google reviewers land at 4.3 across 528 reviews , a score that reflects broad satisfaction without the artificial inflation you sometimes see at newer openings. Combined with the OAD rankings, the picture is of a restaurant that performs reliably for a wide range of diners, not just critics and regulars who know what to order.
For context on where La Brasa sits in the wider Mexican dining conversation, it is operating in a category where the reference points nationally include places like Smyth in Chicago , though La Brasa's format is more casual and accessible than that tier. Within Boston's broader dining scene, it occupies a distinct lane: Agosto handles Portuguese-inspired fine dining, 311 Omakase covers the high-end Japanese counter, and Abe & Louie's anchors the steakhouse side. La Brasa fills a gap: nationally recognized, casual in format, and specifically focused on Mexican cooking with enough seriousness to earn repeated attention from OAD.
Multi-Visit Strategy
The OAD casual ranking and the dinner-only format together suggest a kitchen that rewards a deliberate approach. On a first visit, treat it as reconnaissance: get a read on the menu's range and identify what the kitchen does most confidently. On a second visit, go with a specific target. Because La Brasa opens seven days a week, there is no difficult-to-land night that requires special planning. Earlier in the week , Tuesday through Thursday , is likely to offer a quieter room if conversation matters to you. Friday and Saturday will run at higher energy. Sunday at 5 pm is a reasonable option if you want a relaxed pace before the week starts. All of this is accessible without booking far in advance, which makes La Brasa an easy venue to build into a multi-night Boston stay alongside addresses like Alcove or Ama at the Atlas.
For deeper Boston planning, see our full Boston restaurants guide, our Boston bars guide, our Boston hotels guide, Boston wineries, and Boston experiences.
Practical Details
Address: 124 Broadway, Somerville, MA 02145. Hours: Monday through Sunday, 5–10 pm. Reservations: Easy to secure , no significant lead time required. Booking difficulty: Low. Awards: Opinionated About Dining Casual North America , Recommended (2023), #788 (2024), #825 (2025). Google rating: 4.3 from 528 reviews. Price range: Not confirmed in available data , check directly with the venue. Dress: Casual format per OAD category; no dress code information confirmed. Leading timing: Tuesday through Thursday for a quieter room; any night works given seven-day service.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is La Brasa good for solo dining?
Yes — La Brasa's dinner-only format and easy reservation policy make it a low-friction solo option. The OAD casual ranking signals a kitchen focused on the food rather than spectacle, which tends to suit solo diners who want to eat well without navigating a scene. If bar seating is available, that is worth requesting.
What are alternatives to La Brasa in Boston?
For a different cuisine register, Sarma in Somerville offers a mezze-driven menu at a comparable casual price point and is similarly easy to book. O Ya is in a different tier entirely — it is a special-occasion omakase destination with pricing to match. La Brasa is the stronger call if you want a focused neighborhood dinner without the commitment of a high-ticket tasting format.
What should I order at La Brasa?
Specific menu details are not confirmed in available records, so ordering recommendations beyond the cuisine category — Mexican, under chef Daniel Bojorquez — would be speculative. Check the current menu directly before your visit; the OAD casual recognition suggests the kitchen has earned its reputation on consistent execution rather than rotating novelty.
Can La Brasa accommodate groups?
La Brasa is open every night of the week from 5 to 10 pm, and reservations are easy to secure, which is a practical plus for groups who need flexibility. Specific private dining or large-party policies are not confirmed, so check the venue's official channels before booking a group of six or more.
Is La Brasa good for a special occasion?
It works for a low-key special occasion — the OAD casual ranking (ranked #788 in North America in 2024, rising to #825 in 2025 within a competitive field) signals a kitchen that delivers above its weight class. That said, if the occasion calls for a more formal setting or a tasting menu format, O Ya is the Boston-area answer. La Brasa suits a celebratory dinner among people who care about the food more than the room.
Is lunch or dinner better at La Brasa?
La Brasa is dinner only — it opens at 5 pm every day of the week. There is no lunch service to compare.
Can I eat at the bar at La Brasa?
Bar seating details are not confirmed in available records for La Brasa at 124 Broadway, Somerville. Given the casual OAD-ranked format and nightly dinner hours, bar seats are plausible — but call ahead to confirm availability and walk-in bar policy before showing up without a reservation.
Location
124 Broadway, Somerville, MA 02145
Boston, United States
Compare La Brasa
| Venue | Cuisine | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|
| La Brasa | Mexican | Easy |
| Neptune Oyster | Raw Bar-Seafood | Unknown |
| O Ya | Japanese | Unknown |
| Sarma | Turkish | Unknown |
| Sam LaGrassa’s | Sandwiches | Unknown |
| Santarpio’s Pizza | Pizzeria | Unknown |
Comparing your options in Boston for this tier.
Also Consider
- Neptune Oyster, Raw Bar-Seafood, Raw Bar-Seafood
- O Ya, Japanese, Japanese
- Sarma, Turkish, Turkish
- Sam LaGrassa’s, Sandwiches, Sandwiches
- Santarpio’s Pizza, Pizzeria, Pizzeria
How La Brasa Compares
La Brasa's closest peer in the Boston area for casual-but-serious neighborhood dining is Sarma (Turkish, Somerville). Both venues occupy the nationally recognized casual category and operate in Somerville, which means the comparison is direct. Sarma's format is more small-plates and drink-friendly; La Brasa focuses on Mexican cooking with OAD recognition that has tracked upward across three years. If you are choosing between the two for a single evening, the decision comes down to cuisine preference rather than quality differential, both are credible. If you want the easier booking, La Brasa has the lower friction.
Neptune Oyster is the city's most prominent casual dining address for raw bar and seafood, and it consistently requires more advance booking than La Brasa. If you are weighing where to spend booking effort, Neptune Oyster demands more lead time and queue patience; La Brasa does not. Santarpio's Pizza and Sam LaGrassa's operate in entirely different categories, pizza and sandwiches respectively, and are not direct competitors in terms of format or occasion type. O Ya sits at a higher price point and operates in the Japanese omakase tier, making it a different decision entirely: go to O Ya for a high-spend occasion, La Brasa for a food-serious dinner that does not require a special-occasion budget.
For a Boston trip where you are building a multi-night itinerary, La Brasa is the right slot for Mexican cooking with national credentials and no booking headache. Neptune Oyster is the right slot for seafood if you plan ahead. Sarma covers Turkish small plates. O Ya covers the high-end Japanese counter. These four addresses do not overlap, which means there is no reason to treat La Brasa as a fallback, book it on its own terms.
Hours
- Monday
- 5–10 pm
- Tuesday
- 5–10 pm
- Wednesday
- 5–10 pm
- Thursday
- 5–10 pm
- Friday
- 5–10 pm
- Saturday
- 5–10 pm
- Sunday
- 5–10 pm
Recognized By
Explore Boston
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