Best Quick Bites Chinese Restaurants in Downtown LA
6 hand-picked restaurants, critic-reviewed and ranked
Last Updated: February 2026
Our Top Pick
Paul's Kitchen
One of LA’s longest-running Cantonese spots with true midcentury character.
Notable Picks
8.8
A downtown legacy since 1946, Paul’s Kitchen serves classic California-Cantonese dishes like chop suey, egg foo young, and chow mein in a cash-only dining room filled with Dodgers memorabilia. Thousands of multi-platform reviews and decades of regulars point to comforting, consistent food and generous family-style portions at working-class prices.
Must-Try Dishes:
Tommy Lasorda Special, Wor Won Ton Soup, Chasu Egg Foo Young
What Makes it Special: One of LA’s longest-running Cantonese spots with true midcentury character.
8.2
A downtown Asian-fusion workhorse with a menu wide enough to keep families moving: noodles, sushi, rice bowls, and shareables. The space is casual and fast-paced, making it easy for group meals before events or shopping. Best when you want variety and reliable crowd-pleasers.
Must-Try Dishes:
garlic noodles, rainbow roll, crispy orange chicken
What Makes it Special: Huge pan-Asian menu that’s easy for mixed-age groups.
Worthy Picks
7.9
A casual Northern-Chinese noodle and dumpling spot that’s friendly to families thanks to fast service and comforting staples. Portions are generous, flavors are bold but approachable, and the menu is easy to share across the table. Not fancy, but dependable for kid-approved carbs downtown.
Must-Try Dishes:
beef roll, soup dumplings, hand-pulled noodles
What Makes it Special: Fast dumplings and noodles built for sharing.
7.9
A hand-pulled biang biang noodle counter in the Arts District where the draw is watching thick, chewy noodles get stretched to order and tossed in Szechuan garlic or tingling cumin sauces built from imported Chinese ingredients. It runs as a focused, budget-friendly operation—short menu, fast turnover, outdoor seating—where the noodle work itself is the main event. Best suited for a quick, high-flavor lunch when you want real hand-pulled technique without a sit-down price tag.
Must-Try Dishes:
Szechuan Garlic Noodles, Tingling Cumin Noodle with Lamb, House-Made Dumplings
What Makes it Special: Hand-pulled biang biang noodles made fresh to order with bold Szechuan and cumin sauces using ingredients imported from China
7.9
A fourth-floor Korean-Chinese noodle house tucked inside a Garment District building, turning out oversized bowls of hand-pulled jjamppong and jajangmyeon at lunch-counter prices. The format is straightforward—pick your noodles, sit down, and work through a portion built for appetite over presentation. It rewards the kind of eater who measures a spot by bowl size and broth depth rather than ambiance.
Must-Try Dishes:
Jham Phong (Spicy Seafood Noodle Soup), Naeng Chae Myeon (Cold Noodles), Jha Jhang Myun (Black Bean Noodles)
What Makes it Special: Fourth-floor Korean-Chinese noodle house in the Garment District serving oversized bowls of hand-pulled jjamppong and jajangmyeon at lunch-counter prices
#6
China Cafe
7.6
A long-running Grand Central Market counter doing classic California Chinese-American plates in a fast, cafeteria rhythm. Portions are generous and the cooking hits comforting notes—think chow mein, fried rice, and wonton soup—more about nostalgia and value than modern regional precision. Service is brisk and no-frills, fitting the market crawl vibe.
Must-Try Dishes:
House wonton soup, Hong Kong-style chow mein, BBQ pork fried rice
What Makes it Special: An OG GCM stall serving unchanged Chinese-American comfort since 1959.