6 Best Restaurants in The Valley, Los Angeles

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We've compiled the best of the best in The Valley - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Porto's Bakery

$ | Burbank Fodor's Choice

Waiting in line at Porto's is as much a part of the experience as indulging in one of its roasted pork sandwiches, walnut raisin batards, or guava-and-cheese refugiados. This constantly humming Cuban bakery and café has been an L.A. staple since Rosa Porto founded it 65 years ago. Crowds constantly fill two lines, even on weekdays, but it gives patrons time to peruse the colorful cases filled with both savory and sweet treats and counter service is quick and efficient. Whether you choose to eat a Cubano or clam chowder in a bread bowl in the recently enlarged seating area, grab a honey latte and try the brand new strawberry cheese croissant, or fill a to-go box with potato balls, chicken croquettes, or other fan faves, your stomach will thank you. 

Borekas Sephardic Pastries

$ | Sherman Oaks

Borekas, barely more than a walk-up takeout window and some patio furniture run by a husband-and-wife team, proves less is often more by doing five or six variations on one dish extremely well—the namesake Sephardic Jewish pastry. Choose from savory or sweet versions of this Israeli staple, which are all vegetarian, flaky, and filling, and pair well with coffee, herby iced tea, or a sweet-and-salty limonana slushy. The latter is a special—if they have it when you go, do not skip it. Savory options, whether they are stuffed with cheese and za'atar or mushrooms, onions, and truffle, comes with pickle chunks, a soft-boiled egg, tomato pulp, and schug.

5530 Van Nuys Blvd., Los Angeles, CA, 91401, USA
818-688–4588
Known For
  • Flaky hot Sephardic pastries
  • Turning borekas into bread pudding
  • Homemade schug sauce and pickles
Restaurant Details
Closed Sat.

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Cara Vana Coffee Shop

$ | North Hollywood

Brewing caffeinated concoctions using Sightglass Coffee and Art of Tea products since 2018, this woman-owned café and breakfast/pastry pit stop is at its best when adding Latin flair to classics to create drinks like dulce canela chai, tamarind cold brew, or horchata (oatchata for the dairy intolerant) lattes. The vibe is a little mid-century mod, a little boho between the orb light fixture, angular couch, and displays selling crystals, handmade soap, and fresh flowers. Enjoy breakfast burritos and café de lola's alongside your pooch on the sunny patio or frijoles on toast with a flat white at the communal table up front.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Good Neighbor Restaurant

$ | Studio City

Its walls may be heavy with framed photographs of stars, and folks from the biz might regularly grace its tables for breakfast burritos and craft-your-own omelet, but this Cahuenga Pass diner is every bit as down-to-earth as your next-door neighbor, even after 40-some years. It gets pretty busy, but a plateful of that comfort cooking is worth the wait. If you’re in a rush, grab something caffeinated or a fruit smoothie from the Neighbarista.

Hank's Bagels

$ | Sherman Oaks

L.A.'s pandemic bagel boom is still going strong—even a New York Times critic admitted that some of the best are being baked in California these days—and Hank's hand-rolled bagels and bialys, especially the rosemary sea salt and salty chocolate chip flavors, are at the top of the game. Top them with creamy schmears, dip them in five types of salad including whitefish, lemony chicken, and potato, or mix and match ingredients like pickled onions, braised greens, and fontina to build a sandwich. To be honest, they're also pretty great fresh out of the oven and plain. Be aware that they close early if they sell out and all seating is outside. There are also locations in Burbank and Calabasas.

Wanderlust Creamery

$

This travel-inspired artisanal ice cream brand famous for its use of malted crunch may have nine outposts across Southern California now, but this is the scoop shop that started it all. The brainchild of an American-Filipino food science major/former mixologist/native daughter of the S.F.V. packs a bag for your palette, taking you to the four corners of the Earth, one creamy sphere at a time. On any given trip to Wanderlust, you could find yourself in New Zealand (Hokey Pokey), Japan (Sakura Crunch), Brazil (Passionfruit Cacao), or the Pacific Northwest (Smoky Road).