L & E Oyster Bar

A Silver Lake raw bar that has earned consecutive Opinionated About Dining Casual North America rankings since 2023, L & E Oyster Bar brings serious seafood credentials to one of Los Angeles's most food-literate neighbourhoods. Under chef Spencer Bezaire, the kitchen anchors a collaborative front-of-house approach around cold-water shellfish and precise preparation. The result is a room that punches well above its casual billing.
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- Address
- 1637 Silver Lake Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90026
- Phone
- (323) 660-2255
- Website
- leoysterbar.com

A Raw Bar in the Neighbourhood That Earned It
Silver Lake runs on a particular kind of confidence: the assurance that quality doesn't require a valet stand or a downtown zip code. The neighbourhood's dining scene has, over the past decade, built a track record of technically serious restaurants operating inside casual formats, and L & E Oyster Bar fits that pattern precisely. Positioned on Silver Lake Boulevard, the bar draws a room where the conversation tends to be as considered as the order, this is a crowd that knows the difference between a Kumamoto and a Wellfleet, and the kitchen delivers.
Raw bars occupy a specific and increasingly well-defined tier in American dining. At the high end, you have seafood-focused fine dining rooms like Providence, where tasting menus frame the same Pacific cold-water shellfish in a $$$$ format with Michelin validation. At the other end, oyster happy hours function as bar programming rather than considered eating. L & E holds the middle ground: a place where the sourcing is taken seriously and the format remains genuinely accessible, with a 4.5 Google rating across 389 reviews confirming that the execution holds across a broad audience.
The Collaborative Floor: How the Room Actually Works
At L & E, chef Spencer Bezaire runs a kitchen in close sync with the front-of-house. Casual raw bars often separate their identities neatly: the kitchen does the shucking, the floor does the pours, and the two worlds rarely touch. What distinguishes the better operations in this category is a staff that treats the beverage and service side as an extension of the same curatorial logic that drives the food.
That kind of collaboration shows up in how a room reads to a guest. When a server can explain the origin and salinity profile of each oyster on the board, and match it to a wine or a beer with specificity rather than reflex, the experience shifts. It becomes a conversation rather than a transaction. In Los Angeles, where the seafood bar category has room to develop compared with East Coast cities, that dynamic is more notable because it's less expected. For context on what the East Coast version of this looks like at full intensity, Neptune Oyster in Boston provides a useful comparison point: a city where raw bar culture is embedded in neighbourhood identity in a way that Los Angeles is still building toward.
At L & E, the collaborative dynamic between Bezaire's kitchen and the floor reflects a particular discipline. The casual format demands that the team carry information lightly, without the formality of white tablecloth service to structure it.
Silver Lake's Position in the Broader Los Angeles Food Map
Understanding where L & E sits requires mapping the larger Los Angeles scene with some precision. The city's highest-recognition restaurants operate in a different register entirely: Kato and Hayato carry Michelin stars and work within tightly controlled tasting formats, while Somni operates at the molecular end of the spectrum. Osteria Mozza represents the Italian-influenced middle tier with significant critical pedigree.
L & E is not in competition with any of those rooms. Its comparable set is the growing cluster of neighbourhood-anchored, ingredient-driven casual venues that have given Los Angeles's non-downtown enclaves genuine dining credibility. Silver Lake, Los Feliz, and Echo Park together form a corridor where per-cover spend is lower than in West Hollywood or Beverly Hills but where sourcing standards and kitchen seriousness are often equivalent. That's the dining culture L & E operates within, and the Opinionated About Dining recognition, which ranked the restaurant at #717 in Casual North America in 2025, confirms its place within its category.
Opinionated About Dining's Casual list draws from a pool of hundreds of restaurants across the continent.
The Seafood Bar Category in Los Angeles
Raw bar culture arrived later to Los Angeles than to the Atlantic seaboard, for reasons that are partly geographic (Pacific oyster farming has a different distribution infrastructure) and partly cultural (the city's dining identity was shaped more by Japanese-influenced raw fish traditions than by New England shellfish houses). That historical gap means the category still has room to develop, which makes the venues that do it well more consequential. They're defining a format rather than joining an established one.
The question for any Los Angeles raw bar is whether it can build the same neighbourhood-anchoring role that oyster houses play in Boston, New York, or New Orleans. L & E's Silver Lake address is well-chosen for that ambition: the neighbourhood rewards regulars, and the leading raw bars depend on a repeat-visit culture where guests track seasonal availability and the staff tracks guest preferences. That bidirectional knowledge is what separates a considered operation from a one-visit novelty.
For cross-city reference, the seafood programming at Le Bernardin in New York represents the formal end of the spectrum; Emeril's in New Orleans demonstrates how Gulf Coast seafood traditions play in a large-format casual room. On the West Coast, Lazy Bear in San Francisco and Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg show how Northern California handles the ingredient-first ethos at different price points and formats. At the boundary of what Los Angeles's fine dining scene can produce, Alinea in Chicago and Atomix in New York represent the technical ceiling of American restaurant culture, providing useful context for just how far the casual raw bar format is from, and how deliberately distinct from, the tasting menu world. The French Laundry in Napa rounds out the West Coast formal reference set.
Planning Your Visit
Address: 1637 Silver Lake Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90026. Chef: Spencer Bezaire. Recognition: Opinionated About Dining Casual North America, ranked #717 (2025), #720 (2024), Recommended (2023). Google rating: 4.5 from 389 reviews. Category: Raw Bar / Seafood casual. Address: 1637 Silver Lake Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90026. Chef: Spencer Bezaire. Recognition: Opinionated About Dining Casual North America, ranked #717 (2025). Google rating: 4.5 from 401 reviews. Category: Classic Oyster Bar. Open: Mon: 5–10 PM; Tue: 5–10 PM; Wed: 5–10 PM; Thu: 5–10 PM; Fri: 5–10 PM; Sat: 5–10 PM; Sun: 5–9 PM. Price: about $50 per person.
Standing Among Peers
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| L & E Oyster BarThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Classic Oyster Bar | $$$ | ||
| Water Grill | Classic Seafood House | $$$$ | , | Financial District |
| Bianca | Italian, French & Argentine | $$$ | Culver City | |
| FARMshop Market & Restaurant | Farm-to-Table American | $$$ | Brentwood | |
| Barra Santos | Portuguese Small Plates | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Cypress Park |
| Crudo e Nudo | Modern Seafood Crudo | $$$ | Ocean Park |
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