25 of the best restaurants and bars for your Palm Springs road trip
Like most visitors, I head to Palm Springs to flee life’s stresses: to revel in sunshine and the enormous sky, to watch the colors of the San Jacinto Mountains change from morning to evening, to do as little as possible. A culinary tour is never my primary agenda in the desert — and yet it’s my nature (and my job) to always be looking for my next great meal. Tourist-oriented restaurants abound, so places brimming with individual character that serve consistent, careful cooking tend to be very popular. Palm Springs endures as a weekend playground for Angelenos, so guides covering the best of the dining scene in a town of 45,000 full-time residents can become repetitive. I have my favorites and happily name them.
To stretch my knowledge, though, I also spent a recent week in the area following State Route 111 and eating through nearby Cathedral City and Palm Desert. Charmers serving Filipino, Salvadoran, Balkan and classic French cuisines particularly stood out. Consider them for sustenance on your way to or from Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival, and to add gratifying variety to your dining options during vacation all year round.
Alice B.
Alps Village
All of which is to say: The menu is large and zigzagging and can warrant guidance. Start with cevapcici, skinless beef sausages served over lepina (sometimes called the “pita of the Balkansâ€) and kajmak (a variation of clotted cream similar to Turkish kaymak). Crisp, attractively buckled wienerschnitzel tastes even better paired with kaspaten, a caloric wonder of spätzle, caramelized onions, cheese sauce and optional bacon baked in a cast iron skillet. A Greek salad and a side of sauerkraut both offset the richness and cement the culinary bridges. For dessert there’s an incredible flourless cake made from pillowy meringue and covered in crushed walnuts. Ask for a slice of apple strudel unheated to take home for breakfast.
Bar Cecil
Jeff Brock and Richard Crisman, the hoteliers and life partners whose local properties include the Sparrows Lodge and Holiday House, opened the restaurant in April 2021 as an homage to Sir Cecil Beaton, the famously flamboyant British photographer, designer, author and all-around Renaissance man who died in 1980 four days after his 76th birthday. A photo of Beaton, his wide-brimmed hat cocked at a rakish angle, hangs over the bar, its oak shelves lined with gin bottles, vintage glassware, framed sketches and photographs plus thick books on food and fashion. A big part of the restaurant’s appeal is executive chef and partner Gabriel Woo’s synthesis of styles — a worldly mix of Continental swagger, global-minded modernism and California realness. A route of caviar-studded deviled eggs, shrimp cocktail and steak frites is as satisfying as mussels in Thai-inspired red curry followed by a smoked pork chop or a bowl of cacio e pepe. The martinis are cold and potent, as Beaton preferred them.
Cheeky's
Chef Tanya's Kitchen
El Mirasol
Evening Citizen
Farm
Fernanda's Restaurant
French Rotisserie Cafe
Gabino’s Creperie
The Heyday
Hoja Blanca
Johannes
King's Highway
La Copine
Maleza
Meng's Filipino Cuisine
Mr. Lyons
Paul Bar/Food
Peninsula Pastries
The Real Italian Deli
Rooster and the Pig
Wilma & Frieda
Workshop Kitchen + Bar
Sign up for This Evening's Big Stories
Catch up on the day with the 7 biggest L.A. Times stories in your inbox every weekday evening.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.