Restaurant in Los Angeles, United States
Bar Amá
450ptsJosef Centeno's Tex-Mex. Easy booking, high return.

About Bar Amá
Bar Amá is Josef Centeno's downtown LA Tex-Mex restaurant, ranked #37 on the LA Times 101 Best Restaurants list for 2024 and #218 in Opinionated About Dining's Casual North America ranking for 2025. The menu shifts seasonally, from green chicken enchiladas to lobster ravioli in green mole, making it worth returning to. Booking is easy, and Sunday dinner at 4 pm is the lowest-friction option.
Should You Book Bar Amá?
If you have been to Bar Amá before, the reason to return is the same reason you probably went the first time: Josef Centeno's menu keeps moving. The Tex-Mex foundation is consistent, but the dishes built on leading of it shift with the season and Centeno's whims. A second visit rarely gives you the same menu as the first, which is a genuine differentiator in a city with plenty of reliable neighbourhood restaurants that never surprise you.
The short verdict: yes, book it. Bar Amá is one of the most consistently praised casual restaurants in Los Angeles, ranked #37 on the LA Times 101 Best Restaurants list for 2024 and ranked #218 in Opinionated About Dining's Casual North America list for 2025. For Tex-Mex in LA specifically, nothing else in the city operates at this level of creative ambition backed by this much recognition.
What to Expect on the Plate
Bar Amá is not a tasting menu restaurant in the formal sense, but there is a clear architecture to how the meal unfolds. You move through shareable starters, the guacamole and queso (including a vegan version that draws its own following), into the more composed plates where Centeno's range becomes clear. Green chicken enchiladas with tomatillo salsa, cheddar, and Monterey Jack have become one of the city's recognised comfort dishes. Then there are the departures: lobster ravioli in green mole with tarragon, flatbread bäcos folded around fried shrimp or chicken escabeche with Thai-chile aioli. The progression from familiar Tex-Mex anchors into genuinely inventive territory is what separates Bar Amá from a direct taqueria.
Centeno's approach draws on four generations of Tejano cooking, filtered through LA's produce culture. Peaches with hazelnuts and goat cheese appear in summer; pomegranate molasses and coconut butter arrive on sweet potatoes in winter. If you are visiting between October and February, the winter menu is the one to target. If you want peak seasonal produce, plan for July or August.
Booking and Timing
Booking is rated easy. Bar Amá is open Tuesday through Saturday from 5–10 pm and Sunday from 4–9 pm, closed Monday. Given the downtown LA location in the Farmers and Merchants Bank Building on 4th Street, Sunday dinner at 4 pm is the path of least resistance for anyone who wants a table without much planning. For a Friday or Saturday, booking a week out is sensible. This is not a restaurant where you need to compete for reservations three months in advance, which puts it in a different category from higher-pressure LA bookings like Somni or Kato.
How Bar Amá Fits the LA Dining Map
For context on where Bar Amá sits in the broader city, see our full Los Angeles restaurants guide. If you are spending time in the city across multiple days, pair Bar Amá with Osteria Mozza for Italian and Providence for seafood. For something at the opposite end of the formality spectrum, HomeState covers casual Tex-Mex at a lower price point with no reservation required.
If you are comparing Tex-Mex further afield, Bullard in Portland and Candente in Houston offer useful reference points, though neither operates with the same seasonal produce-driven ambition. For tasting menu depth in the US, The French Laundry in Napa, Alinea in Chicago, and Lazy Bear in San Francisco are the relevant tier, though Bar Amá operates at a deliberately more casual and accessible register than any of them.
You can also explore our Los Angeles hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide for the rest of your trip.
Practical Details
| Detail | Bar Amá | HomeState (peer) | Kato (peer) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cuisine | Tex-Mex (creative) | Tex-Mex (casual) | New Taiwanese |
| Price range | Not published | $ | $$$$ |
| Booking difficulty | Easy | Walk-in | Hard |
| Hours (dinner) | Tue–Sat 5–10 pm, Sun 4–9 pm | Check current hours | Check current hours |
| Location | Downtown LA | Hollywood / multiple | West Adams |
| OAD 2025 rank | #218 Casual NA | Not ranked | Ranked separately |
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at Bar Amá?
- The green chicken enchiladas are the most documented dish on the menu, praised specifically in the LA Times 101 Best Restaurants coverage as one of the city's recognised comfort foods.
- The queso, including the vegan version, is consistently cited as a reason to visit. Start there.
- The bäcos, Centeno's signature flatbreads, vary by filling, so order whatever current version is on the menu rather than targeting a specific filling.
- The menu shifts seasonally, so ask the server what has changed recently — this is genuinely useful information at Bar Amá in a way it is not at most restaurants.
Is lunch or dinner better at Bar Amá?
- Bar Amá is dinner only. The kitchen opens at 5 pm Tuesday through Saturday and 4 pm on Sunday. There is no lunch service.
- Sunday at 4 pm is the easiest booking and a good option if you want the full menu without weekend evening pressure.
Does Bar Amá handle dietary restrictions?
- The vegan queso is a documented menu item, suggesting the kitchen has experience with plant-based requests.
- Specific allergy or dietary accommodation details are not published. Contact the restaurant directly before booking if this is a deciding factor.
Can Bar Amá accommodate groups?
- Seat count is not published, and private dining details are not available in current data. For groups of six or more, call ahead to confirm availability and whether the layout suits your party size.
- Downtown LA location means parking logistics are worth planning in advance for larger groups driving in.
What are alternatives to Bar Amá in Los Angeles?
- For casual Tex-Mex at a lower price point with no reservation required: HomeState.
- For creative tasting menu territory in LA: Kato (New Taiwanese) or Somni (molecular), both at a higher price point and significantly harder to book.
- For a different cuisine style at a similar casual-but-serious register: Osteria Mozza for Italian.
- Nationally, Emeril's in New Orleans and Le Bernardin in New York sit in a different cuisine category but are useful reference points for chef-driven restaurants with long track records. Single Thread in Healdsburg is worth considering if you are already in California and want a more formal tasting menu experience.
Compare Bar Amá
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bar Amá | Opinionated About Dining Casual in North America Ranked #218 (2025); Chef Josef Centeno's homage to the Tex-Mex cooking he grew up on—casual, inventive, delicious dishes inspired by four multi-cultural generations of Tejanos and their love of food. "Takoria" is our bizarro take on a traditional taqueria.; Opinionated About Dining Casual in North America Ranked #237 (2024); LA Times 101 Best Restaurants 2024 - Ranked #37. Josef Centeno named his 12-year-old downtown Tex-Mex bastion in honor of his great-grandmother Gabina Cervantes Martinez. She made her family Tejano dishes alive with fresh vegetables from the farmers market or her garden — an ethos that resonates through the decades in Centeno’s adaptive, borderless Los Angeles kitchen. Peaches are sauteed with hazelnuts and goat cheese in the summer; coconut butter and pomegranate molasses gloss sweet potatoes come wintertime. His mom’s weekday staple recipe, green chicken enchiladas blasted with tomatillo salsa and bubbling with cheddar and Monterey Jack cheeses, has become one of the city’s enduring comfort foods. They soothe even more alongside guacamole, queso (including a gold-standard vegan version) and a limey margarita. The genius of Bar Amá, and Centeno, is the sureness behind his culinary unpredictability. An inspired lobster ravioli in green mole with the unorthodox nip of tarragon might appear on the menu, as will bäcos, his longtime signature flatbreads, perhaps folded around fried shrimp or twangy chicken escabeche with Thai-chile aioli. His whimsies, backed by commanding skills, keep us guessing and returning.; Opinionated About Dining Gourmet Casual Dining in North America Ranked #183 (2023); Opinionated About Dining Casual in North America Highly Recommended (2023) | — | |
| Kato | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
| Hayato | Michelin 2 Star | $$$$ | — |
| Vespertine | Michelin 2 Star | $$$$ | — |
| Camphor | Michelin 1 Star | $$$$ | — |
| Gwen | Michelin 1 Star | $$$$ | — |
What to weigh when choosing between Bar Amá and alternatives.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Bar Amá handle dietary restrictions?
The menu includes a documented vegan queso option, so plant-based diners have at least one confirmed anchor dish. Centeno's cooking draws on fresh produce as a core ethos, which tends to support vegetable-forward orders. For specific allergen needs, check the venue's official channels before booking, as menu items rotate and the database does not include a full dietary breakdown.
What are alternatives to Bar Amá in Los Angeles?
If you want more formal and ambitious, Camphor (French-inflected, DTLA) or Kato (Japanese-Taiwanese tasting menu) are the clearest steps up in price and structure. For maximum commitment, Hayato and Vespertine operate at the top of the LA tasting menu tier but require more planning and significantly higher spend. Bar Amá sits in a different lane: ranked #37 on the LA Times 101 Best Restaurants 2024, it delivers a chef-driven, rotating menu at a casual price point that none of those four match.
Can Bar Amá accommodate groups?
Bar Amá is a casual downtown LA spot rather than a formal dining room, which makes it more group-friendly than tasting menu alternatives like Hayato or Vespertine. The shareable format — starters, bäcos, enchiladas — works well for parties of four to six. For larger groups or a private buyout, call ahead, as booking details are not published online.
Is lunch or dinner better at Bar Amá?
Dinner only. Bar Amá is open Tuesday through Saturday from 5–10 pm and Sunday from 4–9 pm, closed Monday. There is no lunch service, so plan accordingly if you are building a daytime itinerary around downtown LA.
What should I order at Bar Amá?
Anchor your order around Josef Centeno's green chicken enchiladas, which the LA Times called one of the city's enduring comfort foods in its 2024 Top 101 list. The guacamole, queso (including a vegan version), and bäcos flatbreads are consistent fixtures. Beyond those, the menu rotates with the season, so treat the current specials as the main event rather than the safety picks.
Hours
- Monday
- Closed
- Tuesday
- 5–10 pm
- Wednesday
- 5–10 pm
- Thursday
- 5–10 pm
- Friday
- 5–10 pm
- Saturday
- 5–10 pm
- Sunday
- 4–9 pm
Recognized By
More restaurants in Los Angeles
- ProvidenceProvidence is LA's most decorated fine dining restaurant — three Michelin stars, a Green Star for sustainability, and a $325 tasting menu that changes nightly based on the day's catch. Book four to six weeks out minimum. At this price and format, it is the seafood tasting menu benchmark for the city, with service depth and sourcing discipline that justifies the spend for special occasions and returning guests alike.
- KatoKato is the No. 1 restaurant in Los Angeles by two consecutive LA Times rankings, a Michelin-starred Taiwanese-American tasting menu with a 2025 James Beard Award for Best Chef: California. The 10-course menu from Jon Yao is matched by one of the city's deepest wine programs. Book six to eight weeks out minimum — this is among the hardest reservations in the country to secure.
- HayatoHayato is the most coveted reservation in Los Angeles: a seven-seat kaiseki counter in Row DTLA where chef Brandon Hayato Go cooks directly in front of guests and narrates every course. Two Michelin stars, ranked #2 by the LA Times and #10 in North America by OAD. Near-impossible to book, but worth pursuing for a serious special occasion.
- MélisseMélisse 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.
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