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    Restaurant in Los Angeles, United States

    Mori Nozomi

    805Pearl Points

    Eight seats. Book fast. Worth it.

    Mori Nozomi, Restaurant in Los Angeles

    About Mori Nozomi

    Mori Nozomi is the most compelling sushi omakase to open in Los Angeles in 2024 — Michelin-starred, eight seats, and built around a kaiseki-inflected progression that goes well beyond a standard nigiri format. Reservations are hard to secure and evenings-only Tuesday through Saturday. Book if you are serious about the format; expect to plan weeks ahead.

    Who Should Book Mori Nozomi — and When

    If you are a serious sushi eater in Los Angeles looking for the most distinctive omakase experience to open in the city in years, Mori Nozomi is where you should be spending your $$$$ budget. This is the reservation for a long anniversary dinner, a celebratory meal with someone who knows the difference between nigiri formats, or a solo trip to the counter if you want to eat something genuinely considered rather than simply expensive. It is not the right choice if you want a quick weeknight bite or a flexible walk-in option — the eight-seat counter runs Tuesday through Saturday evenings only, and reservations vanish fast.

    The Meal: How It Builds

    Mori Nozomi earned its 2025 Michelin star less than a year after opening in March 2024, which tells you something about the quality floor here. But what the star does not capture is the architecture of the meal itself. Chef-owner Nozomi Mori , who grew up near Osaka, spent years in luxury retail before landing in Los Angeles in 2017, and found her calling behind a sushi counter , has built a kaiseki-inflected omakase that moves deliberately from one course to the next, each section doing different work on the palate.

    The meal follows an L.A.-specific sequence: kaiseki-inspired small plates arrive before nigiri, giving the progression a structure that is closer to a composed tasting menu than a direct fish procession. Mori sources from the Santa Monica Farmers Market for her pickles, which arrive with the acidity and snap of something made with genuine intention. The first vegetables of the season go into tempura finished with bottarga, a combination that is savoury, briny, and light in the same bite. The rice is clean and the fish is cut with precision, but the meal's most memorable moments come from the seasonal Japanese seafood , rarer cuts that hit the full range of textures and flavours a top-tier omakase should reach. A hairy crab ankake, served in the shell, and an assertive red miso soup are among the courses that mark Mori's individual voice most clearly.

    The finale is a dashimaki tamago served straight from the pan, followed by hand-made mochi filled with sweet red bean paste and whisked matcha. These wagashi are made each morning by Mori herself. That closing sequence , the warmth of the egg, the softness of the mochi, the clean finish of the tea , completes the meal's arc in a way that feels considered rather than conventional. If there is a caveat, it is the tea pairing: the concept is genuinely interesting, but the execution currently leans toward chilled brews and sparkling-water-diluted sips rather than freshly steeped examples. Worth knowing before you add it to your booking.

    Team is all-female, the room serves eight guests per night, and the energy is focused and intimate rather than performative. The atmosphere at the counter is calm and attentive , this is not a loud room or a scene-driven space. If you are coming for the show, recalibrate. If you are coming to eat something thoughtfully constructed, you will leave satisfied.

    Credentials and Recognition

    Recognition Mori Nozomi has accumulated in its first year is substantial by any measure. Beyond the Michelin star, the restaurant ranked #53 on the LA Times 101 Best Restaurants 2024 list and #6 on Esquire's Leading New Restaurants of 2024. Opinionated About Dining, which scores restaurants through a data-driven aggregation of critic and enthusiast opinion, placed it at #148 in North America in 2024. For a restaurant less than a year old at the time of judging, that is a strong signal. Among the new openings of 2024 in Los Angeles , a city with more high-end sushi options now than at any previous point in its history , Mori Nozomi drew more critical attention than any other sushi counter. For context on where this sits in the national conversation, comparable early-career critical moments happened for Atomix in New York City and Lazy Bear in San Francisco , both of which went on to become fixtures on long-term best-of lists.

    Booking Mori Nozomi

    Booking difficulty here is high. Eight seats per night across five evenings means roughly 40 covers per week total. Reservations open on a rolling basis and fill within minutes of release. If you are targeting a specific date, set a reminder for when that window opens and move quickly. There is no meaningful walk-in possibility. For planning purposes, treat this like booking Hayato or The French Laundry in Napa , the lead time is measured in weeks, not days.

    Practical Details at a Glance

    DetailMori NozomiHayatoKato
    Price tier$$$$$$$$$$$$
    Booking difficultyHardHardHard
    Seats8 per nightSmall counterSmall counter
    FormatOmakaseKaisekiTasting menu
    Evenings openTue–Sat (7–10 pm)Limited nightsLimited nights
    Michelin1 Star (2025)2 Stars1 Star

    The restaurant is located at 11500 W Pico Blvd in the Sawtelle corridor, in the former space of Mori Sushi (no relation). For a broader look at where Mori Nozomi fits in the city's dining scene, see our full Los Angeles restaurants guide. If you are planning a full trip around the meal, our Los Angeles hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide are useful starting points.

    How It Compares

    Within Los Angeles's $$$$ omakase tier, Mori Nozomi is the strongest new entry of 2024. Hayato holds two Michelin stars and offers a kaiseki format that is technically more elaborate , if you want the most decorated Japanese tasting experience in the city, Hayato is still the benchmark. But Mori Nozomi's individual voice and the warmth of its eight-seat counter make it the more personally engaging meal for most diners. Kato operates in an adjacent creative space , inventive tasting menus with deep pantry knowledge , and is a strong alternative if the omakase format feels too prescribed for you.

    If you are weighing Mori Nozomi against other high-end Los Angeles experiences outside the Japanese category, Somni and Providence both offer tasting menu formats with serious technical ambition. Providence is the better choice if seafood in a French-influenced frame is what you are after; Somni skews more experimental and theatrical. For something entirely different at the same price point, Camphor and Vespertine represent the French-Asian and progressive contemporary ends of the L.A. $$$$ spectrum respectively.

    On a national scale, the closest analogues in format and ambition are Atomix in New York and Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg , both of which layer personal philosophy into a structured tasting format without losing the thread of hospitality. Mori Nozomi is in that conversation. Alinea in Chicago and Le Bernardin in New York remain the benchmarks for technical precision in their respective categories, but they are doing fundamentally different things than what Mori Nozomi is attempting.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What are alternatives to Mori Nozomi in Los Angeles?

    Hayato is the closest comparison at the top end — it holds two Michelin stars and runs a kaiseki-forward format, so it suits diners who want more structural ceremony than Mori Nozomi's produce-driven omakase. For $$$$ sushi without the same booking difficulty, Kato offers a counter experience with strong critical recognition but a different flavour profile. If you want a longer, more theatrical evening, Vespertine operates in a different genre entirely. Mori Nozomi is the call if seasonal Japanese seafood and an all-female kitchen team making wagashi and pickles in-house is the specific format you're after.

    Is Mori Nozomi good for solo dining?

    Yes — the eight-seat counter format at 11500 W Pico Blvd is built for solo diners. A single seat is easier to secure than a pair, which matters when reservations book out almost immediately after opening. The chef-driven omakase progression means you're engaged with the meal from start to finish, with no need for a companion to anchor the experience.

    Can I eat at the bar at Mori Nozomi?

    The entire restaurant is a counter — eight seats, no separate bar or à la carte option. Every guest is seated at the omakase counter for the same set-price progression. If you arrive expecting a drop-in drink or a shorter format, this is not the right venue; the omakase is the only experience on offer.

    What should a first-timer know about Mori Nozomi?

    Expect a kaiseki-influenced omakase that runs through seasonal small plates before nigiri, finishing with housemade wagashi and whisked matcha — it moves differently from a conventional sushi omakase. The restaurant opened in March 2024, earned a Michelin star in 2025, and landed at #53 on the LA Times 101 Best Restaurants list, so the quality bar is documented. Book as soon as the reservation window opens: eight seats across five evenings means roughly 40 covers per week, and slots go fast.

    Is Mori Nozomi good for a special occasion?

    It's a strong choice for a two-person occasion where the meal itself is the event. At $$$$ pricing with a Michelin star, the spend signals intent, and the format — housemade mochi, whisked matcha, seasonal Japanese seafood — has enough distinctive moments to mark the evening. For larger groups, the eight-seat counter makes parties of more than two logistically difficult to book together; Hayato's private room option is a better fit for four or more.

    Location

    11500 W Pico Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90064

    Los Angeles, United States

    Compare Mori Nozomi

    Worth the Price? Mori Nozomi vs. Peers
    VenuePrice
    Mori Nozomi$$$$
    Kato$$$$
    Hayato$$$$
    Vespertine$$$$
    Camphor$$$$
    Gwen$$$$

    What to weigh when choosing between Mori Nozomi and alternatives.

    Also Consider

    • Kato, New Taiwanese, Asian, $$$$
    • Hayato, Japanese, $$$$
    • Vespertine, Progressive, Contemporary, $$$$
    • Camphor, French-Asian, French, $$$$
    • Gwen, New American, Steakhouse, $$$$

    Within Los Angeles's top-tier Japanese dining category, Hayato holds the edge on pure Michelin credentials, two stars to Mori Nozomi's one, and its kaiseki format is more technically elaborate. If you are benchmarking purely on critical decoration, Hayato is still the reference point. But Mori Nozomi's eight-seat counter and the personal distinctiveness of Nozomi Mori's cooking make it the more intimate and individually voiced meal. For a first visit to L.A.'s high-end Japanese scene, Mori Nozomi is the more exciting choice right now; Hayato rewards repeat visitors who want the city's most rigorous kaiseki.

    Kato sits in a different but adjacent lane, inventive tasting menus rooted in Taiwanese and Asian pantry depth rather than Japanese tradition. If the omakase format feels too structured, Kato gives you comparable ambition with more creative latitude. Vespertine and Camphor occupy the progressive and French-Asian ends of the $$$$ spectrum respectively: Vespertine is the choice if you want the most theatrical experience in the city; Camphor is the better pick if you want French technique with Asian influences in a room that is slightly easier to book.

    Gwen is the outlier in this group, a steakhouse and charcuterie-focused New American at the same price tier. Book Gwen if your priority is exceptional meat in a polished setting rather than a tasting menu format. For a two-person special occasion where the meal itself is the event, Mori Nozomi and Hayato are the two strongest arguments in Los Angeles; the decision comes down to whether you want a single chef's personal voice (Mori Nozomi) or the city's most formally structured Japanese experience (Hayato).

    Hours

    Monday
    Closed
    Tuesday
    7–10 pm
    Wednesday
    7–10 pm
    Thursday
    7–10 pm
    Friday
    7–10 pm
    Saturday
    7–10 pm
    Sunday
    Closed

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