Restaurant in Los Angeles, United States
Las Segovias
290Pearl PointsLA Times Top 100. Go for the nacatamal.

About Las Segovias
Ranked #93 on the LA Times 101 Best Restaurants 2024, Las Segovias in Huntington Park is the clearest case for Nicaraguan cooking in Los Angeles. The nacatamal, a brick-sized steamed tamale with bone-in pork, is the dish the LA Times called superior to nearly every other version in the city. Booking is easy, pricing is neighbourhood-level, and the food justifies the drive from anywhere in LA.
The Verdict
Las Segovias earned the #93 spot on the LA Times 101 Best Restaurants 2024 list, and that recognition is the clearest signal you need. If you've already eaten here once, you know the nacatamal is the reason to return. If you haven't been, that dish alone justifies the drive to Huntington Park. This is a family-friendly, cash-friendly neighbourhood restaurant with zero pretension and a focused menu of traditional Nicaraguan cooking that outperforms venues charging twice as much for atmosphere.
Portrait
Las Segovias sits at 8014 Seville Ave in Huntington Park, a working-class neighbourhood southeast of downtown Los Angeles that doesn't get much fine-dining attention but runs deeper on regional Central American cooking than most of the city's trendier corridors. The dining room is lively and communal in feel, with space that opens at the rear into a small marketplace selling sandals, clothing, and snacks. That detail tells you what kind of place this is: rooted in a community it actually serves, not one it's performing for.
The LA Times description of the nacatamal as superior to "just about every other steamed leaf- or husk-wrapped tamale" in the city is the kind of specific, evidence-backed claim that matters when deciding whether to make the trip. The brick-sized tamale is filled with bone-in pork ribs or chops, rice, potato, tomato slivers, green olives, and raisins, all wrapped in banana leaf. The pork bones take on a custardy texture from the slow steam, and the sour orange gives the whole thing a faint bitter brightness. This is not the kind of dish you find replicated across Los Angeles with any consistency.
The quesillo is served in a plastic bag, the way it would be sold street-side in Nicaragua. The corn tortilla is thick, almost cake-like, folded around mild white cheese and crema. The indio viejo arrives as a bowl of shredded beef in thick savory gravy. Grilled meat platters come with gallo pinto and fried cheese. The house condiment, diced onions in a vinegar-chile sauce close to Tabasco, sharpens everything. For drinks, the cacao refresco, milk with crushed whole cacao beans served in an oversized cup, is the right call.
Service here is warm and direct, not choreographed. Your server hands you a Big Gulp-sized cacao with a straw and tells you it's very nice. That's the register. There's no tasting menu preamble, no lengthy recitation of provenance. The trade-off is that you won't get the attentive pacing of a formal dining room, but for a restaurant at this price point, the lack of ceremony is not a weakness. It keeps the focus on the food and the table, which is where it belongs.
A 4.1 rating across 485 Google reviews confirms this is not a hidden local secret in the making, it's an established restaurant with a loyal repeat customer base. If you're returning after a first visit, come with a group so you can cover more of the menu. The nacatamal, quesillo, and indio viejo together represent the most direct path through what the kitchen does well.
Booking
Booking here is direct. No reservation platform is required for a venue at this neighbourhood price point, and the Google reviews volume suggests consistent traffic rather than impossible walk-in odds. Plan for peak times on weekends; arriving early gives you the leading shot at a full table order without a wait.
Practical Details
| Detail | Las Segovias | Typical LA Casual Dining |
|---|---|---|
| Booking difficulty | Easy | Easy to Moderate |
| Price range | Not published (neighbourhood pricing) | $–$$ |
| Awards | LA Times 101 Best 2024 (#93) | Rarely awarded |
| Dress code | None | Casual |
| Group-friendly | Yes, family-style format suits larger tables | Varies |
| Neighbourhood | Huntington Park (southeast LA) | Across the city |
Las Segovias is part of a broader Los Angeles dining scene worth mapping out before your visit. See our full Los Angeles restaurants guide, Los Angeles hotels guide, Los Angeles bars guide, Los Angeles wineries guide, and Los Angeles experiences guide for fuller coverage across the city.
For a wider frame of reference on what LA's restaurant scene looks like at other price points, Providence sits at the top of the city's seafood category, while Osteria Mozza remains the standard-bearer for Italian in the mid-to-upper tier. At the tasting menu level, Kato and Somni represent the most technically ambitious cooking in the city right now. Hayato is the right call if you're in the market for Japanese omakase at the top of the format. None of those are comparisons to Las Segovias on price or format — they're context for understanding where it sits and why its LA Times recognition matters as much as it does.
Beyond LA, the kind of regional authenticity Las Segovias represents appears at venues like Lazy Bear in San Francisco and Emeril's in New Orleans, both of which anchor their menus in specific culinary traditions rather than genre-blending. At the fine dining end of the spectrum, Le Bernardin in New York, Alinea in Chicago, The French Laundry in Napa, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, Atomix in New York, and Alain Ducasse at Louis XV in Monte Carlo define what maximum ambition looks like at the top of the global category. Las Segovias is not competing in that tier, but its LA Times placement puts it in the company of restaurants that are taken seriously on merit.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are alternatives to Las Segovias in Los Angeles?
For LA Times-recognised neighbourhood cooking at a similar price point, Las Segovias has few direct rivals in the Nicaraguan category. If you want broader Central American options, look at other Huntington Park and South LA spots on the same 101 list. For a completely different register of cooking with comparable critical credibility, Kato in West Adams offers serious tasting-menu work, but the format, price, and audience are entirely different.
Does Las Segovias handle dietary restrictions?
The menu is built around traditional Nicaraguan dishes — nacatamal with bone-in pork, shredded beef indio viejo, grilled meats, fried cheese — so the kitchen skews heavily toward meat. Specific dietary accommodation details aren't documented, so if you have strict requirements, call ahead or visit during an off-peak hour when staff have time to talk through options.
Is Las Segovias good for a special occasion?
It works well for a casual celebration or a deliberate food trip with people who appreciate regional cooking. The atmosphere is family-friendly and lively rather than formal. If you're marking a milestone that calls for white tablecloths and a wine list, this isn't that venue — but for a group who wants genuinely good food and a story to tell, the LA Times #93 ranking gives you something to frame the outing around.
Can I eat at the bar at Las Segovias?
Seating configuration details aren't in the available data. Las Segovias is a neighbourhood family restaurant rather than a bar-forward space, so counter or bar seating in the traditional sense is unlikely to be the main draw. Walk-in dining appears accessible at this type of venue — arrive, sit, eat.
What should a first-timer know about Las Segovias?
Order the nacatamal first — the LA Times review is unambiguous that it's the anchor dish, a brick-sized steamed tamale with bone-in pork that earned the #93 spot on the 2024 list. Add the quesillo (served street-style in a plastic bag) and a glass of cacao refresco. The marketplace at the rear of the dining room sells sandals, clothing, and snacks, so factor in extra time if you want to browse after eating. No reservation platform is needed — this is a walk-in neighbourhood spot.
Location
8014 Seville Ave, Huntington Park, CA 90255
Los Angeles, United States
Compare Las Segovias
| Venue | Price |
|---|---|
| Las Segovias | |
| Kato | $$$$ |
| Hayato | $$$$ |
| Vespertine | $$$$ |
| Camphor | $$$$ |
| Gwen | $$$$ |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Also Consider
- Kato, New Taiwanese, Asian, $$$$
- Hayato, Japanese, $$$$
- Vespertine, Progressive, Contemporary, $$$$
- Camphor, French-Asian, French, $$$$
- Gwen, New American, Steakhouse, $$$$
Las Segovias and the comparison venues on this list are not competing for the same diner on the same night. Kato, Hayato, Vespertine, Camphor, and Gwen are all operating at $$$$, with tasting menus, formal service, and booking windows measured in weeks. Las Segovias operates at neighbourhood pricing with walk-in availability and no dress code. The only meaningful comparison is which of these venues earns its price point most honestly, and on that metric, Las Segovias has a strong case.
If you're deciding between a $$$$ tasting menu and a Huntington Park drive, the calculus depends on what you're optimising for. Kato offers technically precise New Taiwanese cooking and consistent critical recognition; it's the right call if format and service depth matter as much as the food. Hayato is the standard for Japanese kaiseki in LA and worth the price if that's your format. Vespertine and Camphor are for diners who want a full evening built around the meal itself. Gwen covers the steakhouse end of the $$$$ tier with a butcher shop attached. None of these deliver what Las Segovias delivers: a specific, award-recognised regional dish you cannot replicate elsewhere in the city at any price.
For value-per-dish, Las Segovias wins without contest in this comparison set. The LA Times 101 Best placement at #93 puts it in the same editorial conversation as some of the most expensive restaurants in the city, which is the point. If you're building a week of LA dining and want one meal that punches on quality without a reservation two months out or a three-figure per-head bill, Las Segovias is the clearest answer in this group.
Recognized By
Explore Los Angeles
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