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Best Family Friendly Mexican Restaurants in Mid-City

3 hand-picked restaurants, critic-reviewed and ranked

Last Updated: February 2026

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Our Top Pick
Comedor Tenchita
A 76-year-old Oaxacan grandmother cooks rotating Zapoteco moles and handmade antojitos on a backyard comal every Sunday in Mid-City

Notable Picks

$$$$ Mid-City Mexican
Doña Hortensia Melchor runs a Sundays-only backyard comedor in Mid-City, rotating handcrafted Zapoteco moles and Tlacolula antojitos that shift weekly—rare regional preparations like higaditos that are nearly impossible to find elsewhere in LA. The format is a residential backyard with colorful tablecloths, a live comal, and festive energy, so come for the depth of the Oaxacan home-cooking tradition rather than any polished dining experience.
Must-Try Dishes: Tlayuda, Molotes, Black Mole with Chicken and Rice
What Makes it Special: A 76-year-old Oaxacan grandmother cooks rotating Zapoteco moles and handmade antojitos on a backyard comal every Sunday in Mid-City

Worthy Picks

$ Mid-City Mexican, Tacos
A Washington Blvd taqueria that runs a tight street-food menu—carne asada tacos, tortas, and weekend menudo—at prices that keep Mid-City regulars circling back. The format is order-and-wait counter service with portions built for volume, not presentation. It works best as an everyday neighborhood stop where you already know your order.
Must-Try Dishes: Tacos, Carne Asada, Torta
What Makes it Special: Neighborhood standby for Mexican street food with a loyal following on Washington Blvd
$ Mid-City Mexican, Burritos
A dedicated Oaxacan kitchen that has held its corner of Venice Blvd for two decades, specializing in regional preparations — multiple mole varieties, proper tlayudas, chapulines — that most LA Mexican restaurants don't attempt. Portions run large and most entrees stay under $17, making it a practical family spot where the bill stays low and the leftovers come home. Recent reviews suggest some unevenness in execution, so catching the kitchen on a good day matters.
Must-Try Dishes: Mole, Tlayuda, Chilaquiles
What Makes it Special: Dedicated Oaxacan kitchen turning out regional specialties like mole, tlayudas, and chapulines that most Mexican restaurants don't attempt