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Best Outdoor Dining Mexican Restaurants in Palms

3 hand-picked restaurants, critic-reviewed and ranked

Last Updated: February 2026

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Our Top Pick
Venice Bakery & Restaurant
Old-school Mexican bakery and café serving house-baked breads and traditional breakfast plates since the neighborhood was still affordable

Notable Picks

$ Palms Bakery, Breakfast
A family-run bakery-café where Cuban coffee culture meets Guadalajaran breakfast traditions—the chilaquiles recipe was brought in directly from Jalisco and paired with plantains from the founder's Cuban household. The counter service moves fast for early-morning regulars who know to grab pan dulce while waiting for eggs. Works best as a no-frills weekend breakfast run where generous portions and reasonable prices offset the functional atmosphere.
Must-Try Dishes: Chilaquiles, Pan Dulce, Bolillos
What Makes it Special: Old-school Mexican bakery and café serving house-baked breads and traditional breakfast plates since the neighborhood was still affordable
$ Palms Mexican
A family-run Salvadoran-Mexican kitchen that has held its corner of West LA since 1981, cooking from recipes that earned national TV attention for its slow-braised meats. The strip mall setting and no-frills counter keep prices honest while the kitchen runs deep on Central American comfort—pupusas alongside Mexican staples—giving it a dual-cuisine range most neighborhood spots can't match. Best suited for regulars who want a reliable weeknight meal without pretense.
Must-Try Dishes: Carne Adobada, Carnitas, Tortilla Soup
What Makes it Special: Family-run Mexican and Salvadoran kitchen serving West LA since 1981, featured on Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives for its carne adobada.

Worthy Picks

7.8
$ Palms Mexican, Tacos
A Palms carneceria that doubles as a full Oaxacan kitchen, turning imported chile de agua, chapulines, and house-made asiento into regional plates you rarely find outside Oaxaca itself. The market-counter format keeps prices low and turnover fast, making it a reliable weeknight stop for tlayudas and mole negro without the sit-down commitment. Expect a no-frills grocery setting where the cooking speaks louder than the decor.
Must-Try Dishes: Tlayudas Preparadas, Molotes, Memelas
What Makes it Special: Oaxacan carneceria and market doubling as a full kitchen, serving regional specialties made with imported ingredients like chile de agua, chapulines, and house-made asiento.