Look, I get it. And I feel for you. You were among the literal tens of thousands of souls who couldn’t land a seat at Noma’s Los Angeles residency, missing the chance to fork over $1,500 to eat fermented forest floor fare in Silver Lake. Reservations vanished in under three minutes after going live on Monday. Alas.
Hungry? Sign up for The Eat Index, our weekly food newsletter, and find out where to eat and get the latest restaurant happenings in Orange County. Subscribe here.But if you, or your aspiring-chef offspring, still crave what is poised to be a gastronomically acclaimed experience minus the booking bloodsport, you don’t need a miracle or PR connections. You just need to look closer to home: These five choice spots in Orange County offer gastronomically acclaimed meals at a far kinder price.
21 Royal
Priced at $18,000 per seating, 21 Royal offers you and up to 12 guests of your choice a chance to experience a multicourse meal. The venue, hidden above Pirates of the Caribbean in New Orleans Square, was originally slated as an apartment for Walt Disney and his family. As for the menu? According to the restaurant’s website, “To obtain the freshest and finest ingredients available, the chefs work directly with premier suppliers — both local and international — including farmers, fishermen and other sustainable sources.” Past menu items have included seafood soup in sea urchin foam, roasted foraged chanterelles and Kobe pastrami.
Cost is $18,000 per seating with a maximum of 12 guests, which comes to around $1,500 per head for a dozen diners. Cost also includes valet service at Disney’s Grand Californian Hotel and Spa, as well as a single-day park hopper ticket valid for the day.
Find it: Disneyland, 1313 Disneyland Drive, Anaheim; 714-300-7749, 21royaldisneyland.com/disneyexperiences.com/disneyland/tag/21-royal
Chrysalis at Darkroom
Tucked inside Santa Ana’s Darkroom, Chrysalis is an intimate, experimental sanctuary that offers a similarly ambitious and avant-garde experience with its 8- to 14-course tasting menus. Its current Flavors of Modern Spain (running through Feb. 12) explores the Iberian peninsula. Highlights include bluefin tuna cured in dry-aged beef and artichoke with whipped idiazabal cheese. From salt cod dumplings to Galician-style beef with grilled apple romanesco, it is a high-concept designed for those who view dining as edible art.
Cost is $161 per guest, wine pairing $65, nonalcohol pairing is $43. À la carte menu also available at Darkroom.
Find it: 3751 S Harbor Blvd, Santa Ana; 657-777-3275, wearedarkroom.com
Hana Re
Holding a five-year Michelin-star streak from 2019 to 2024, Hana re in Costa Mesa offers a masterclass in omakase philosophy under the meticulous eye of chef Atsushi Yokoyama. Guests surrender to a curated progression of artfully composed dishes that might include chawanmushi with smoked trout roe or the rare shiro ika somen (squid sashimi, snow pea and sea urchin). With only two seatings per night, this intimate, 10-seat spot provides one of Orange County’s best sushi experiences.
Cost is $250 per person.
Find it: Located at the LAB Anti-Mall at 2930 Bristol St., Costa Mesa; 714-545-2800, hanaresushi.com
Knife Pleat in Costa Mesa. (Photo by Tom Bonner, courtesy of Knife Pleat)Knife Pleat
Speaking of Michelin sparklers, French gastronomy can be found at the South Coast Plaza eatery, which has maintained a one-star ranking since 2021. Chef Tony Esnault and restaurateur Yassmin Sarmadi’s Knife Pleat offers The Collection, a multicourse tasting menu. Esnault’s precision is on full display here, like the Osetra Caviar chawanmushi with forest mushroom and a Péigord black truffle consommé with winter vegetables. Proteins include California squab with pink lady apple and Tajima wagyu beef. Winding down the menu is a series of delicate patisserie-style desserts like tonka bean chocolate and yuzu sorbet.
Cost is $295 per guest, $175 for wine pairing, À la carte menu also available.
Find it: Located at South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bristol St., Costa Mesa; 714-266-3388, knifepleat.com
Marché Moderne
For a coastal alternative that matches the technical precision of Noma, Marché Moderne along the Newport Coast offers a five-course Menu Degustation that blends French tradition with California whimsy. The tasting menu highlights Florent and Amelia Marneau’s mastery of texture and flavor, featuring standouts like the langoustine (lobster) dieppoise with Kaluga caviar and a mesquite cold smoked duck breast paired with amaretto jus. The experience finishes with nuage de fraise, the duo’s ethereal “strawberry cloud” composed of Harry’s Berries and pistachio mousseline.
Cost is $168 per person, $15 cheese tasting, $75 wine in five pairings. À la carte menu also available.
Find it: 7862 E. Pacific Coast Highway, Newport Beach; 714-434-7900, marchemoderne.net
Dishes at Mayfield in San Juan Capistrano, from left: eggplant toast with eggplant, confit garlic labneh and pistachio dukkah grilled seeded sourdough; Falafel with shishito peppers, tahini, amba and tzatziki; Crudo with striped bass sashimi, citrus and pomegranate, cucumber, sesame seeds and pickled fresno, on Wednesday, March 8, 2023. (Photo by Mark Rightmire, Orange County Register/SCNG)Mayfield
Bringing Mediterranean-inspired energy to the South County dining scene, George Barker’s Mayfield offers a refreshing “supper club” approach to the multicourse experience. Guests can choose between a solo diner menu or a larger group feast featuring technical standouts like thousand layer potatoes, tuna lavash tostadas and braised lamb shank. High marks go to the litany of desserts like baked alaksa, bread and butter pudding, sticky toffee pudding or chocolate crémeux
Supper club menu costs $60 per person (children 10 and under are $30 each), solo diner menu runs $56 per guest, with the vegetarian menu costing $42 each. À la carte menu also available.
Find it: Mayfield, 31761 Camino Capistrano, San Juan Capistrano; 949-218-5140, www.mayfieldoc.com
Omakase by Gino
At Gino Choi’s namesake spot in Santa Ana, Choi provides an exclusive 10-seat counter experience that captures his improvisational spirit and prowess. With only two seatings per night (Wednesday through Sunday), guests can witness Choi’s seasonal muses spring to life through creations like briny uni udon crowned with black truffles and rich ankimo (monkfish liver) pâté. From Kusshi oyster topped with Siberian caviar and the freshest catches of the day, the menu remains a fluid celebration of premium ingredients and technical bravado.
Costs $275 per guest.
Find it: 304 N Main St, Santa Ana, instagram.com/omakasebygino
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