Inside The Business Of Luxury Dining At Hotel Bel-Air

Hotel Bel-Air has never been in the business of chasing the new. Its market position has always been about constancy: a place that can command the loyalty of high-net-worth regulars while still holding enough cultural cachet to attract the city’s cyclical cast of celebrities.

And boy, have they. Marilyn Monroe’s final magazine shoot took place here. Elizabeth Taylor honeymooned here. Grace Kelly, Cary Grant, Howard Hughes—the guest list reads like a condensed history of 20th-century glamour. But, as many-a-shuttered Old Hollywood institution can attest to, legacy alone isn’t enough to keep a property at the top of Los Angeles’ fiercely competitive luxury landscape. And the Dorchester Collection knows it.

Since the operator took over management in 2008, the strategy has been to preserve the hotel’s history while methodically modernising its most public-facing spaces. The latest example is The Restaurant at Hotel Bel-Air, its all-day dining room and terrace, which has just emerged from a targeted revamp under culinary director Joe Garcia.

The design changes are subtle to the casual eye, but calculated. The hotel’s signature pale pink palette (or, as they’d call it, “blush”) now extends across the terrace, connecting the indoor and outdoor areas. Alcove seating has also been reconfigured for privacy—a priceless commodity in La La Land—while a new marble bar draws guests in earlier, keeps them later and increases bar spend without needing to upsell a second entrée.

With that said, the food has had a phenomenal little facelift of its own. For Garcia, who joined in 2022, the mission was to modernize carefully and slowly, as opposed to a scattergun embrace of trends. “I take inspiration from the Spanish Colonial architecture and the hotel’s legacy,” he says. “I want to reinterpret classic dishes and flavor combinations with modern equipment, contemporary techniques, and locally-sourced ingredients.”

That philosophy has translated into a menu that is smaller, more focused, and, in my personal opinion, faultless. The loup de mer is crisp-skinned over eggplant caviar, roasted sweet peppers, tomato confit, and basil, finished with a saffron bouillon poured to order. Elegant without tipping into impractical ceremony. The sweetcorn Agnolotti, with butter-poached Maine lobster, preserved lemon, and compressed French tarragon, has the richness to justify the price point but the acidity to keep guests coming back to repeat tastes. The Onion Dip, a play on the retro party food classic, is the very definition of culinary indulgence; a blend of sweet, caramelised Vidalia onions and crème fraîche, garnished with pickled pearl onions, crispy onions, chives, and caviar (of course).

What Garcia doesn’t do is create highly-orchestrated Instaplates designed to succeed in a single edited image, which can’t survive a 50-cover dinner service. “That’s not how a real kitchen with real customers operates,” he says. “I’d rather remain timeless and let the ingredients we spend so much time sourcing speak for themselves.”

With that said, he knows looks are paramount—especially in Bel-Air. “I’ll never forget one of the first lessons I learned as a young cook when I heard that “the eye eats first.” I always keep this in mind and make sure that there is plenty of color on the plate. It is very rare to go to a restaurant in LA these days and not see people at times spend more time taking pictures of the food than they do eating it, so it’s my job to make sure that the food is being presented in an elegant but not overly opulent way.”

His Pommes Lyonnaise is a perfect example. “Knowing what the traditional Pommes Lyonnaise consists of, combined with an understanding of the traditional cooking method and how it is usually served, empowers you to take liberties such as deciding what type of fat you use to cook the potatoes.

“What kind of allium would you like to use? The dish is traditionally made with onions—but why can’t shallots be used? Or Leeks? Would you like to use duck fat? What about clarified butter? Why not brown butter? What about dry-aged beef tallow? Can I add black truffles? The innovative possibilities are endless.”

Beyond his core menu, Garcia and his team have also put a huge amount of effort into the pastry cart, appearing each morning carrying almond croissants, cream puffs, cinnamon rolls—all from The Patisserie. “We are very proud of the work and research and development that was required to get our Viennoserie to the point where it is now,” Garcia says. “It is really a showcase of the hard work and dedication that our bakery team puts in on a daily basis.”

Like every tweak, the cart serves multiple purposes: it drives visibility for the pastry team, creates a secondary sales channel, and allows the kitchen to test items in front of a captive audience before committing to production-scale rollout.

Programming has been recalibrated to encourage local loyalty. The Sunday Night Dinner series—held on the first Sunday of each month—offers family-style menus that change with the season, filling a gap in LA’s luxury weekday-power-lunch dining calendar.

September’s End-of-Summer Barbecue will be the opposite: a one-day, $350-per-head event with chefs like Burt Bakman, Saw Naing, Jackson Kalb, Ray Garcia, Jeremy Fox, and Ashley James, backed by sponsors including Louis XIII and Telmont.

Of course, the competitive set for The Restaurant isn’t every high-end dining room in LA, but other hotel restaurants with comparable brand equity: The Polo Lounge at The Beverly Hills Hotel (thankfully, also a Dorchester Collection gem), Jean-Georges at the Waldorf Astoria Beverly Hills, The Belvedere at The Peninsula, et al. Each certainly has its draw, but Hotel Bel-Air’s undeniable advantage is discretion, a guest list that doesn’t leak, a property layout that lets dining feel genuinely separate from the rest of the city, and that all-important no-picture protocol.

That’s one of the many reason why the redesign works. The cosmetic updates are not just for aesthetis—they drive dwell time, boost beverage revenue, and improve the experience for both locals and in-house guests. The programming serves both audiences without cannibalising either. And the hotel’s history only goes to bolster their five-star efforts.

Though some may try to accuse them of it, The Restaurant isn’t betting on nostalgia. It’s betting that in a city addicted to it, there’s still a market for precision, privacy, and a product that knows exactly what it is. The harder—and more valuable—way to secure a restaurant a legacy of its very own.

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/lelalondon/2025/08/15/inside-the-business-of-luxury-dining-at-hotel-bel-air/