Inaba

Ranked #172 on Opinionated About Dining's North America list in 2024, Inaba operates well outside the central Los Angeles sushi circuit in Torrance, where the South Bay's Japanese-American community has sustained serious counter dining for decades. Chef Yasu Hirano's omakase program has climbed steadily through OAD's rankings, signalling a kitchen that has grown sharper with time rather than coasting on early recognition.

South Bay Sushi and the Counters That Shaped It
The South Bay corridor — Torrance, Gardena, Carson — has a longer, quieter relationship with serious Japanese dining than most restaurant coverage acknowledges. These are neighbourhoods built on mid-century Japanese-American settlement, where fish markets, tofu producers, and ramen shops opened not for tourists but for residents who knew the difference between sourced and supermarket. The sushi counters that grew out of that community weren't chasing Michelin inspectors on the Westside; they were cooking for people who had opinions about their fish. Inaba, on Hawthorne Boulevard in Torrance, belongs to that tradition, and its recent OAD trajectory suggests it has outgrown the neighbourhood designation without leaving it behind.
A Ranking Trajectory Worth Reading Carefully
OAD rankings reward consistent improvement in a way that single-year awards cannot, and Inaba's arc through the Opinionated About Dining North America list is instructive. The restaurant received a Highly Recommended designation in 2023, moved to #172 in 2024, then settled at #428 in 2025 , a placement that still holds it inside OAD's ranked tier, which is smaller than it sounds when you consider the depth of competition across the continent. The 2023-to-2024 jump, in particular, is the kind of movement that indicates not a discovery effect but a kitchen reaching a new level. That pattern is different from what you see with newcomers that debut high and drift; Inaba built toward recognition over time.
For context on where that places it within Los Angeles, the city's most-cited sushi counters include Echigo in West LA, Go's Mart in Canoga Park, and Hamasaku in the Westside corridor. Each occupies a different corner of the city and a slightly different register of the omakase tradition. Inaba's South Bay address puts it in a peer conversation with Kusano and a handful of other counters that serve a local clientele first , which tends to produce a different kind of restaurant than one engineered for destination dining from the start.
How the Counter Has Changed
The most useful frame for understanding Inaba is evolution rather than discovery. The restaurant did not arrive fully formed on the OAD radar; it moved through years of building a regular clientele in Torrance before critics with national scope started paying attention. That kind of trajectory produces kitchens that are calibrated to repeat visitors rather than first-timers, which shows up in the rhythm of service, in what gets ordered off-menu, and in the way the counter interacts with its room.
Chef Yasu Hirano has operated in a South Bay context where the standard of comparison isn't set by celebrity omakase pricing or Michelin-circuit press, but by a community of diners who have been eating serious sushi in these zip codes for decades. Counters that survive in that environment do so on consistency and trust, not novelty. The 4.5 Google rating across 311 reviews reflects a customer base that returns and expects to be recognised , a different signal than the spike-and-fade review patterns that follow media-driven openings further north.
The shift from Highly Recommended to a ranked position in OAD's top 200 for North America represents a meaningful threshold. It places Inaba in a peer set that includes counters drawing destination diners from across the country, even if Inaba's own clientele remains largely local. That gap , between how the room feels and what the ranking implies , is part of what makes the restaurant worth paying attention to now.
Torrance as a Dining Address
Part of what the OAD climb does is force a re-evaluation of Torrance as a serious dining address. American restaurant media has historically organised its attention around density: Manhattan blocks, San Francisco neighbourhoods, Chicago districts. Los Angeles is sprawling enough that significant cooking happens in places that don't fit neat editorial narratives, and the South Bay is a consistent example of that. The suburb-coded address on Hawthorne Boulevard is the kind of thing that filters out casual visitors, which means the room at Inaba tends to fill with people who made a deliberate decision to be there.
That dynamic has a parallel in Tokyo, where serious omakase counters have long operated in outer wards, accessible by train but outside the Ginza-Roppongi axis that foreign food media defaults to. Harutaka in Tokyo and Sushi Shikon in Hong Kong represent the other end of the spectrum , highly decorated counters in premium city-centre addresses with international tourist traffic built into the model. Inaba operates with none of that architecture and has still reached a ranking tier that places it in the same broad conversation.
Where Inaba Sits Against LA's $$$$ Tier
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards / Recognition | Address Zone |
|---|---|---|---|
| Inaba | Sushi / Omakase | OAD #172 (2024), #428 (2025) | Torrance / South Bay |
| Hayato | Japanese | Michelin 2 Stars | Downtown LA / Arts District |
| Kato | New Taiwanese / Asian | Michelin 1 Star | West LA |
| Camphor | French-Asian | Michelin 1 Star | Downtown LA |
| Vespertine | Progressive / Contemporary | Michelin 2 Stars | Culver City |
The table above illustrates something worth noting about Los Angeles's serious dining tier: Michelin's LA presence skews heavily toward non-Japanese fine dining, while OAD's rankings tend to capture Japanese counter cooking that Michelin has been slower to recognise. Inaba's OAD placement puts it in a credible peer conversation with Michelin-starred LA restaurants even without holding that designation itself.
Planning a Visit
Torrance sits roughly 20 miles south of central Los Angeles, accessible via the 405 or surface streets through the South Bay. The Hawthorne Boulevard address is a driving destination rather than a walk-in neighbourhood; arrive by car and expect a suburban commercial strip rather than a restaurant-district setting. That context is part of the experience , this is a counter that built its reputation without the foot traffic that benefits higher-profile addresses.
For visitors building a broader Los Angeles itinerary, the city has a deep bench across formats and price points. Our full Los Angeles restaurants guide covers the range, while our Los Angeles hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide cover the rest of the city's premium offering. For those using LA as a base to reach other serious American kitchens, The French Laundry in Napa, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, and Lazy Bear in San Francisco anchor the Northern California circuit, while Alinea in Chicago, Le Bernardin in New York City, and Emeril's in New Orleans represent comparable commitment levels in other US cities.
What Regulars Order at Inaba
At omakase counters with a stable regular clientele, the most revealing ordering pattern is usually what happens after the set sequence ends. Regulars at counters like Inaba, who have built a relationship with the kitchen over repeat visits, typically extend the meal with additional nigiri based on what the chef indicates is at its peak that day rather than anchoring to a fixed additional list. Given that Inaba has been drawing the same South Bay clientele for years , as evidenced by a 311-review Google base with a 4.5 average that implies high return rates rather than one-time visitors , the regulars likely arrive with a working knowledge of seasonal strengths and use that to direct additional orders. The cuisine type and OAD recognition suggest a kitchen serious about sourcing, which means the prompt to the chef about what arrived that morning is likely a more productive question than asking about any specific dish by name.
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