The Top 100 Restaurants Near Julia Jean’s Ice Cream
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Rank 1. Sunn’s
Korean
At Sunn's, Chef Sunny Lee elevates banchan from supporting cast to main event, producing six daily small plates that bend Korean tradition toward France and Italy in a kitchen barely larger than a closet. Crushed olives tangle with eggplant namul; hot mustard stands in for Dijon—stubbornly original gestures in a room that refuses to apologize for its ambitions.
- Food & Wine 2025 · Sunn’s Salad · Best Dishes Our Editors Ate This Year
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Semifinalist · Emerging Chef · Sunny Lee
- Esquire 2025 · The Best New Restaurants in America
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Rank 2. Corima
Mexican
Chef Fidel Caballero's cooking on Allen Street charts an uncompromising path through Mexican tradition, whether from the kitchen counter or the boisterous dining room. Sourdough tortillas made with Sonoran wheat and chicken fat arrive with recado negro butter—a detail that suggests the ambition threading through every plate.
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
- 50 Best 2025 · #36 · North America's 50 Best Restaurants
- Bon Appétit 2024 · America's Best New Restaurants
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Rank 3. Ernesto’s
Basque Spanish
Ernesto's pairs sleek midcentury-modern design with Basque cooking that transforms humble ingredients—tripe, squid, jamón—into silken, communal pleasures. The wine list mines small organic Spanish producers with the devotion of an archaeologist, matching the restaurant's electric, perpetually crowded dining room.
- USA Today 2024 · Restaurants of the Year
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- Eater 2026 · The 38 Best Restaurants in New York City
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Rank 4. Wu's Wonton King
Cantonese Chinese
Wu's operates as a modern version of the traditional Cantonese coffee shop, its wonton soup and congee anchoring a menu that expands into stir-fries and whole fish with equal confidence. The Essex and East Broadway corner has become a gathering spot for group celebrations, where the BYOB policy and generous portions make it feel like an extension of someone's living room.
- Roadbook The Best Restaurants in New York City
- Grub Street 2026 · The 40 Best Restaurants for Kids (and Parents!)
- Eater The Best Lower East Side Restaurants
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Rank 5. Scarr’s Pizza
NY-Style Pizza
A narrow storefront on Orchard Street where flour ground in the basement becomes dough for both round and square pies sold by the slice. Scarr's elevated the slice shop—not through pretension, but through the kind of ingredient discipline that makes a line of people worthwhile.
- 50 Top Pizza 2025 · #13 · 50 Top Pizza Slice USA
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Scarr Pimentel
- Roadbook The Best Restaurants in New York City
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Rank 6. Cervo's
Iberian Seafood
A mosaic-tiled galley on Canal Street where Spanish and Portuguese seafood traditions collide at high volume. The kitchen doesn't shy from flavor: a pea shoot salad spiked with hazelnuts and cracked pepper, seabream with crisp skin and sweet peppers. Everyone sits close, nobody minds.
- Michelin Guide Bib Gourmand
- The Infatuation #24 · The 25 Best Restaurants In NYC
- Grub Street 2025 · The 43 Best Restaurants in New York
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Rank 7. Ha's Snack Bar
Wine Bar
At Ha's, a sliver of a room on Broome Street where stools outnumber tables, the menu pivots nightly between French toast and Vietnamese gestures, untethered to anything but appetite. The eggs mayo—spiked with Maggi, studded with trout roe—suggests the kitchen knows something about restraint and flavor that most restaurants have forgotten.
- Bon Appétit 2025 · America's Best New Restaurants
- The New York Times 2025 · The Restaurant List
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Sadie Mae Burns and Anthony Ha
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Rank 8. Tolo
Chinese
Ron Yan's Chinatown spot pairs refined Chinese cooking—tender beef shank with herb salad, salt-and-pepper tofu, branzino in sweet-and-sour sauce—with an unexpectedly serious wine program and proper glassware. Tables overflow quickly in the modest room, but the energy feels earned.
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Rank 9. Dhamaka
Indian
A rousing Indian restaurant tucked into Essex Market that embraces heat, offal, and rustic preparation without apology—goat belly smoked in cedar, mutton stewed in clay with charred garlic and chili oil, crab butter-fried and spooned over rice. Small tables demand you share, which is precisely the point.
- Michelin Guide Bib Gourmand
- The New York Times 2026 · #66 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
- Eater The Best Lower East Side Restaurants
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Rank 10. Bridges
New American
Sam Lawrence's spare, ambitious kitchen in a warm Chinatown room defies easy categorization, moving fluidly between cured fish, custard tarts, and savory cheesecake. The execution is precise, the service unhurried, and the whole enterprise carries the ease of a bistro with the rigor of a destination.
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
- Esquire 2025 · The Best New Restaurants in America
- The Infatuation #21 · The 25 Best Restaurants In NYC
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Rank 11. Le Coucou
French
A jewel-box dining room where Chef Daniel Rose interprets French classics with theatrical flair: pike mousse quenelles swim in lobster sauce, lamb arrives blushing pink with braised neck and spring carrots, and Chartreuse-spiked crème brûlée proves desserts need not whisper. The open kitchen glows at the center; the crowd, impeccably turned out, provides its own entertainment.
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- Eater The Best Breakfasts in New York
- Grub Street 2026 · The 40 Best Restaurants for Kids (and Parents!)
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Rank 13. Lei
Wine Bar
On a narrow Chinatown street, Annie Shi has packed a wine bar so thoroughly that bottles climb the walls and diners spill into the alley. The kitchen, squeezed into every remaining crevice, sends out precise modern Chinese cooking—chilled celtuce with shallots, scallops with lily buds, hand-rolled noodles with braised lamb—that matches the ambition of a wine list that refuses to play it safe.
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Nominee · Best New Restaurant
- Esquire 2025 · The Best New Restaurants in America
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
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Rank 14. Russ & Daughters
American
The counter gleams beneath white-jacketed servers at this Lower East Side institution, where appetizing traditions meet contemporary technique. Scottish smoked salmon arrives with everything-bagel chips; babka French toast balances chocolate and fruit with textural precision. A place that honors its heritage while refusing nostalgia.
- Michelin Guide Bib Gourmand
- BagelUp #4 · The Definitive 30 Best Bagel Shops in New York City
- Eater 2026 · The Best Classic Restaurants in NYC
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Rank 15. Una Pizza Napoletana
Neapolitan Pizza
Anthony Mangieri tends his wood-burning oven with monastic focus, yielding pies whose charred, papery crusts justify the reservation scramble. Nothing else matters here—no appetizers, no elaborate toppings, just Neapolitan geometry and restraint.
- 50 Top Pizza 2025 · #1 · 50 Top Pizza USA
- Michelin Guide Bib Gourmand
- Eater 2026 · The 38 Best Restaurants in New York City
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Rank 16. Mắm
Vietnamese
On Forsyth Street, diners spill across sidewalk plastic tables into the street, the crush and clatter matching an unflinching kitchen that ferments shrimp paste dark as soil and grills offal with casual precision. Stuffed snails, frog sausage studded with crushed bone, quail eggs—this is Vietnamese food stripped of refinement, tasting exactly as it should.
- The Infatuation #5 · The 25 Best Restaurants In NYC
- Roadbook The Best Restaurants in New York City
- Eater 2026 · The 38 Best Restaurants in New York City
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Rank 17. Carnitas Ramirez
Mexican
At Carnitas Ramirez, a taqueria on East Third Street, you sit on buckets and confront the entire pig—snout to tail—in tacos that demand you reckon with what you're eating. Tongue, brain, skin, cartilage: each texture arrives in fried tortillas, a lesson in anatomy that never lets you forget the animal's former life.
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Nominee · Best Chef: New York State · Giovanni Cervantes
- James Beard Awards 2025 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Giovanni Cervantes
- Eater Best Counter-Service Spot
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Rank 18. The Musket Room
Contemporary
Beyond the glass doors on a crowded street, a cozy dining room with Danish chairs and wood tables opens onto a menu that shifts with the seasons. Chef Mary Attea's cooking moves between precision and comfort—razor clam chowder with leeks, mackerel suspended in tomato water, pork jowl in red eye gravy. The service knows what it's doing without announcing itself.
- Food & Wine 2024 · Best New Chefs · Mary Attea
- Food & Wine 2024 · Best New Chefs · Camari Mick
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Restaurateur · Jennifer Vitagliano and Nicole Vitagliano - Elizabeth Street Hospitality
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Rank 19. Golden Diner
Asian American, Diner
Golden Diner commits to the diner form—chrome, Formica, pancakes until close—but chef Sam Yoo treats the genre as a playground, folding a Reuben into a quesadilla and layering yuba into the Italian hero. The result is kitsch that works because it tastes good.
- Eater The Best Breakfasts in New York
- Eater 2026 · The 38 Best Restaurants in New York City
- The New York Times 2026 · #39 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
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A brick-walled room with modernistic fixtures faces a quiet park corner of the Lower East Side, removed from the neighborhood's noise and perfect for two. Chef Ryan Bartlow's Basque and regional Spanish cooking pairs with wines that justify the adjacent wine bar the team opened.
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Rank 21. Sami & Susu
Mediterranean Wine Bar
A sliver of a room on Orchard Street where a kitchen without a proper gas stove produces seasonal Middle Eastern cooking of remarkable clarity. Half-roasted harissa over tzatziki and lamb ragu with house-made spätzle demonstrate an elegant restraint, while the natural wine list and irreverent staff encourage the kind of uninhibited eating that feels increasingly rare.
- World Culinary Awards 2025 · Nominee · North America's Best Mediterranean Cuisine Restaurant
- Michelin Guide Bib Gourmand
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Rank 22. Estela
Modern New American
Ignacio Mattos builds restive dishes from unexpected ingredients—endive hiding walnuts and aged cheese, arroz negro studded with squid—that feel both natural and precise. A lively downtown room where ingredient-driven cooking sustains its rebel energy after more than a decade.
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
- World Culinary Awards 2025 · Nominee · United States' Best Restaurant
- The New York Times 2026 · #34 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
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Rank 23. Kisa
Korean
At this deliberately unglamorous Korean diner styled after a Seoul cabby's canteen, the set meals arrive in a precarious stack of small bowls and plates, each main course bluntly satisfying in its restraint. The menu offers little choice, but the giddy abundance—and occasional mediocrity—of the banchan feels like part of the point.
- Eater 2024 · The Best New Restaurants in America
- James Beard Awards 2025 · Semifinalist · Best New Restaurant
- Eater Best New Restaurant
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Rank 24. Raf's
Modern French
A narrow Elizabeth Street bistro where Chef Mary Attea layers Italian and French traditions with unhurried precision: mafaldine tossed with shredded rabbit and spring fava in lemon pesto, cast-iron Sicilian pizza meant for sharing, white chocolate budino that tastes like restraint perfected. The bar accommodates walk-ins; the kitchen rewards patience.
- Food & Wine 2024 · Best New Chefs · Mary Attea
- Food & Wine 2024 · Best New Chefs · Camari Mick
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Restaurateur · Jennifer Vitagliano and Nicole Vitagliano - Elizabeth Street Hospitality
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Rank 25. Thai Diner
Thai
A corrugated-metal diner on Mott Street where Thai cooking meets American comfort: fried chicken laab with actual depth, cabbage rolls in fragrant broth, Thai tea French toast at any hour. The kitchen executes with discipline what the woven-bamboo dining room merely suggests, favoring flavors that taste fully realized rather than tamed for mass appeal.
- Michelin Guide Bib Gourmand
- The Infatuation #2 · The 25 Best Restaurants In NYC
- Roadbook The Best Restaurants in New York City
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Rank 26. The Little One NYC
Japanese Dessert
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Rank 27. Eel Bar
Basque Spanish
A narrow room of dark wood and low light from the Cervo's team, where the line between bar and dining blurs into something more intimate. The tapas arrive small and bright—potato salad jeweled with roe, shrimp skewers, fried mussels—anchoring long hours of drinking.
- Esquire 2024 · Wet Martini · The Best Martinis in America
- The New York Times 2024 · Potato Salad With Trout Roe · Here Are Our Top New York Dishes
- Eater The Best Lower East Side Restaurants
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A narrow Austrian storefront on Orchard Street spills onto the sidewalk, where regulars cradle glasses of Bavarian beer and watch the Lower East Side pass by. The schnitzel and goulash arrive without ceremony, honest and sufficient, the kind of food that asks nothing of you but hunger.
- Grub Street 2026 · The 40 Best Restaurants for Kids (and Parents!)
- Eater The Best Lower East Side Restaurants
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Rank 29. Shu Jiao Fu Zhou
Fujianese Chinese
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Rank 30. Smithereens
New England Seafood
Down a flight of stairs in the East Village, Smithereens channels a New England seafood shack with a downtown edge. Chef Nick Tamburo works the grill—amberjack belly over binchotan, mackerel sharpened with seaweed and ginger—while sommelier Nikita Malhotra's mostly white list mirrors the cooking's brightness. The celery root float alone justifies the descent.
- The New York Times 2025 · The Restaurant List
- VinePair 2025 · Sommelier of the Year · The Next Wave Awards · Nikita Malhotra
- The Infatuation 2025 · #7 · The Top-Rated New Restaurants
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Rank 31. Frenchette
French
- AAA Four Diamonds
- James Beard Awards 2025 · Winner · Outstanding Restaurateur · Lee Hanson and Riad Nasr
- Roadbook The Best Restaurants in New York City
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Rank 32. Xi'an Famous Foods
Xi'an-Style
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Rank 34. Torrisi
Italian
The dining room gleams with pressed linens and dinner jackets, but Torrisi's warmth comes from its confident imagination, where tuna meets pickled caponata and Dover sole gets a Francese turn. Each dish feels both familiar and revamped, served in the landmark Puck Building to diners clearly in on the pleasure.
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
- The New York Times 2023 · The Restaurant List
- Esquire 2023 · The Best New Restaurants in America
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Rank 35. Aska
Scandinavian, Tasting
In a dark South Williamsburg room, Fredrik Berselius executes Nordic cooking with precision and intimacy—dry-aged quail with morels and truffle jus, langoustine with gooseberry, hake crowned in beluga and beer cream. The kitchen presents each course, the chef himself circulating, all of it built on local, seasonal sourcing that feels deliberate rather than decorative.
- Michelin Guide 2 Stars
- 50 Best 2025 · #24 · North America's 50 Best Restaurants
- The New York Times 2026 · #16 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
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Rank 37. Balthazar
Classic French
- World Culinary Awards 2025 · Nominee · North America's Best Brunch Venue
- Eater 2026 · The Best Classic Restaurants in NYC
- Eater 2026 · The 38 Best Restaurants in New York City
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Rank 38. Russ & Daughters
Jewish
- BagelUp #4 · The Definitive 30 Best Bagel Shops in New York City
- Time Out The 18 best bagels in NYC
- The New York Times The 16 Best Bagels in New York City Right Now
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Rank 39. Shabushabu Mayumon
Japanese
Ten seats, boiling broth, and an unhurried procession of prime pork belly and A5 wagyu swished through ponzu and miso at this Lower East Side counter. The kitchen moves with the tempo you set, weaving in lighter vegetables and occasional European inflections without losing its moorings in classical shabu shabu technique. A study in restraint and precision.
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Rank 40. Superiority Burger
Vegetarian
A vintage diner wedged into the East Village serves vegetarian cooking that doesn't apologize for what it isn't. Brooks Headley's menu—quinoa-and-chickpea burgers, beans with escarole and provolone—prizes bold seasoning and textural contrast over imitation, while desserts drawn from his pastry training elevate the experience beyond counter food.
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Semifinalist · Outsdanding Restaurant
- The New York Times 2023 · The Restaurant List
- Eater The All-Time Eater 38
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Rank 41. China North Dumpling
Chinese
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Rank 42. The River Café
Contemporary
Beneath the Brooklyn Bridge's shadow, this landmark trades intimacy for theater—jacket required, tables angled toward the Manhattan skyline. The prix fixe menu moves through precisely executed dishes: blue shrimp atop corn hominy, Dover sole in Burgundy truffle sauce, a soufflé that arrives warm and quivering. Formal service that doesn't feel starch, old money without the stuffiness.
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Rank 43. Da Nico Ristorante
Classic Italian
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Rank 44. Ramen by Ra
Noodles
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Rank 45. Ivan Ramen
Japanese Noodles
Ivan Orkin's Lower East Side counter serves ramen built on meticulous technique and playful New York inflections: pastrami buns stuffed with cured beef, tsukemen where thick noodles meet rich pork broth and sardine vinegar. The room hums with casual energy, the menu rewards curiosity, and every bowl reflects a chef who understands both tradition and where he is.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- Grub Street 2026 · The 40 Best Restaurants for Kids (and Parents!)
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Rank 46. BONDST
Japanese-Inspired
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Rank 47. Spicy Village
Henan
A narrow Henan outpost across from Sara Roosevelt Park where hand-stretched noodles arrive dressed in stewed brisket and the garlicky cucumbers of northern China. The real draw is the big tray chicken from Xinjiang—a wok of bird parts and Sichuan peppercorns that leaves your mouth electric and slightly numb.
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Rank 48. Tuome
Fusion
Chef Thomas Chen orchestrates an Asian-inflected menu where classical technique meets ingredient surprise—seared octopus crowned with pork XO sauce, lamb chops medium-rare beneath shishito chimichurri and onion soubise. The intimate room glows softly around a backlit bar; service moves with easy knowledge. A meal here feels like conversation between a skilled hand and your palate.
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Rank 49. Golden Unicorn
Cantonese Chinese
- Eater 2026 · The Best Classic Restaurants in NYC
- Grub Street 2026 · The 40 Best Restaurants for Kids (and Parents!)
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Rank 50. Yoshino
Sushi
Chef Tadashi Yoshida works behind a hinoki counter sourced from a 300-year-old tree, each gesture precise and deliberate. His omakase balances pristine nigiri with cooked preparations—notably a saba maki that arrives with theatrical sizzle—while handmade chairs and knives from master craftsmen signal an obsession with materials that borders on architectural. The meal demands your full attention.
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
- Vogue 2026 · A Definitive Guide to the Best Omakase in New York City
- Eater The Best Sushi Restaurants in Manhattan
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Rank 52. Katz's Delicatessen
Eastern European
A sprawling, unruly institution where the chaos is half the charm: order a ticket at the door, claim your pastrami sandwich and matzo ball soup at the counter, and navigate the crowded tables alongside tourists, locals, and the occasional film crew. Nothing has been updated since the mid-century, and nothing needs to be—the food tastes like the idea of New York itself.
- Michelin Guide Bib Gourmand
- The Infatuation Pastrami Sandwich · 25 Iconic Dishes That Define New York
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Rank 53. YongChuan
Ningbo/Szechuan
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Rank 54. Pasquale Jones
Neo-NY Pizza
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The dining room arrives already half-full of vodka and theater, staff performing the old choreography of tableside chopped liver and kreplach with the ease of people who've done this for decades. Sammy's resumed where it left off: a Romanian-Jewish steakhouse that treats dinner as an occasion, not a meal.
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A modest Greek taverna on Division Street where modest prices and generous portions invite lingering over wine carafes and shared plates of fried zucchini and octopus. The room stays unpretentious despite its neighborhood pull, which is precisely why it works.
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Rank 57. Mission Chinese Food
Chinese
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The bartenders at this East Village cocktail bar build drinks around smoke and spice—charred pears, banana-infused vodka, saffron-touched cold brew—with small plates anchoring the experience. It's the kind of place where technique and ingredient play feels earned rather than performed.
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Rank 60. Chang Lai Fishballs & Noodles
Cantonese Street Food
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Rank 62. House of Joy
Cantonese
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Rank 63. Che Li
Shanghainese Chinese
The narrow dining room at Che Li glows with red lanterns and imperial detail, perpetually crowded with diners working through a Shanghainese menu of chicken in Shaoxing wine and stir-fried rice cakes. The house fish stew—a Sichuan-inflected departure—arrives as a bracing, peppercorn-laden argument for asking your server what's worth eating.
- World Culinary Awards 2025 · Nominee · North America's Best Chinese Cuisine Restaurant
- Michelin Guide Bib Gourmand
- Grub Street 2026 · The 40 Best Restaurants for Kids (and Parents!)
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Rank 64. Adda
Indian
A hallway lined with newsprint sets the stage for this East Village canteen, where dishes arrive in handled Dutch ovens and bold spicing cuts through rich presentations—roasted bone marrow with peppercorn sauce, seabass in coconut curry—demanding rice and crispy parathas as ballast for the full force of the kitchen's hand.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- Time Out 2026 · The 45 best restaurants in NYC right now
- Eater 2026 · Eater NY’s Best Comeback in the 2025 Eater Awards · The 38 Best Restaurants in New York City
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Rank 65. Penny
Seafood
Marble counters run the length of the space, stacked with Champagne and white wine on ice. The kitchen celebrates pristine seafood—razor clams with giardiniera, stuffed squid with harissa, Dover sole in bordelaise—each dish dressed with restraint and precision. Arrive early; most seats hold walk-ins.
- 50 Best 2025 · #40 · North America's 50 Best Restaurants
- Food & Wine 2025 · The Top 15 US Restaurants
- The New York Times 2024 · The Restaurant List
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Rank 66. S Wan Cafe Inc
Cantonese
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Rank 67. Le French Diner
French
A narrow counter where cooks move with the precision of surgeons, Le French Diner trades bistro polish for the controlled chaos of a place that feeds its own. The steak tartare arrives as a small ceremony of salt, acid, and intention in a room that hums with professional hunger.
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Rank 68. Maxi’s Noodle 3
Hong Kong-Style
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Rank 69. Potluck Club
Cantonese Chinese
A Hong Kong cinema palace on Chrystie Street where Cantonese cooking arrives with top ingredients and unabashed generosity—pan-seared pot stickers, fried tiger shrimp with Calabrian chili, XO fried rice that announces itself as a heap of umami. The salt and pepper fried chicken, paired with scallion biscuits and chili-plum jam, suggests a kitchen that understands pleasure before restraint.
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Rank 71. Okiboru
Noodles
At this spare noodle counter, you order via QR code and eat in near-silence, but the tsukemen arrives—chewy strands engineered to drink in every molecule of its half-broth, half-gravy reduction—and solitude becomes irrelevant. The dipping sauce tastes like the fond of something grand reduced to its essence.
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Rank 72. 8282
Modern Korean
A reckless kitchen on Stanton Street builds from Korean anchors into improbable pairings—burrata with gochujang chicken, Parmesan dusted over honey vanilla cream—that somehow cohere. Littleneck clams in buttered broth and grilled Iberico galbi suggest they know when to show restraint.
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Rank 73. Chambers
Wine Bar
A Tribeca wine bar where Master Sommelier Pascaline Lepeltier's program prizes discovery and value alongside serious bottles. The kitchen matches that philosophy with seasonal small plates—charred Long Island fluke with preserved lemon and shelling beans, agnolotti tender with honeynut squash—that feel both refined and unfussy. Casual elegance without the strain.
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Nominee · Outstanding Wine and Other Beverages Program
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- Grub Street 2025 · The 43 Best Restaurants in New York
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Rank 74. Dim Sum Go Go
Cantonese Chinese
The carts have mostly given way to ordering from a sprawling photo menu, but the made-to-order dim sum still arrives hot and precise at this Chinatown institution, where roast duck rice rolls and crisp-bottomed pork dumplings justify both the crowds and the slightly elevated prices. Chaos is part of the bargain, especially on weekends.
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Rank 75. Little Myanmar
Burmese
A family-run counter in the East Village where Burmese hospitality unfolds in miniature. The kitchen moves deftly between crisp fried pancakes and silky roti, curries that don't whisper, noodle salads alive with chicken and spice. The portions invite the table to share, and nothing here feels small.
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Rank 76. Nyonya
Malaysian
Brick walls and worn wood tables set the stage for Malaysian cooking that moves with purpose and heat. The nasi lemak arrives as a study in contrasts—coconut rice anchored by pickled vegetables, crispy anchovies, and curried chicken—while prawn mee's sour broth cuts through the room like an argument worth having.
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Rank 77. Comal
Contemporary Mexican
Mexico City ease meets Lower East Side sophistication at this wood-and-tile room where Gaz Herbert's seasonally alert cooking—charred al pastor, mussel with corn custard, smoked half-chicken—feels both nostalgic and precisely executed. Soft-serve sends you off content.
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Rank 78. Lai Rai
Vietnamese Wine Bar
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Rank 79. La Mercerie
French
A Soho dining room of theatrical opulence, all sage-green tiles and delicate arrangements, where French cooking moves between restrained consommé and rich, steamed cod. The desserts—profiteroles, tarte tatin, crème brûlée—taste of careful nostalgia rather than innovation.
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Rank 80. Avant Garden
Vegetarian
A treehouse-like dining room on the second floor of an East Village walk-up, where the chef pursues vegan cooking with genuine craft. Crispy sushi rice topped with carrot and avocado, artichoke toast studded with truffled potato chips—each plate arrives composed and confident. The menu occasionally overreaches for global reference points, but the cooking itself earns its own voice.
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Restaurateur · Ravi DeRossi - Overthrow Hospitality
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
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Rank 81. Kesté Pizza&Vino
Italian
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Rank 83. Pho Ga Vang
Vietnamese
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Rank 84. Veselka
Ukrainian Eastern European
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Restaurant
- Eater 2026 · The Best Classic Restaurants in NYC
- Eater The Best Breakfasts in New York
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A diner-like refuge on Rivington Street where Dominican sandwich culture still thrives, complete with paper flags and the kind of casualness that feels earned rather than staged. The fricasseed chicken and roasted pernil arrive in the spirit of a place that has endured by doing one thing—sustaining tradition—with quiet competence.
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Rank 86. Nobu Downtown
Peruvian Japanese
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Rank 87. Scalini Fedeli
French/Italian
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Rank 88. Claud
French-inflected New American
A few steps below street level, Claud glows with whitewashed brick and dark tile, its open kitchen framing an ingredient-focused menu of shared plates. Red shrimp sizzle in garlic oil, pork chops arrive with smoked onion jus, and a six-layer Devil's food cake demands a second spoon.
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Nominee · Best Chef: New York State · Joshua Pinsky
- Esquire 2023 · The Best New Restaurants in America
- Wine Enthusiast 2023 · Forward 50 Restaurants
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Rank 89. Hop Lee
Chinese
A Chinatown stalwart since 1975, Hop Lee opens with complimentary soybean soup and turns out briny razor clams, impeccably crisped chicken, and velveted lobster on lazy susans—the kind of place that feels permanent until it vanishes. Fortune cookies snap properly here, and the oranges at meal's end arrive impossibly fresh.
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Rank 90. TASHCA
Portuguese
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Rank 91. Cha Kee
Hong Kong Chinese
A Hong Kong bistro tucked into Chinatown's core, all bright angles and casual energy. Wonton soup, beef chow fun, dim sum—the menu sprawls across classics and variations, portions generous enough to feed a table. The setup encourages lingering: a tea bar up front for stragglers, banquettes and communal tables built for groups sharing plates.
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Rank 94. Forsythia
Italian
A narrow Lower East Side room where focaccia arrives warm and nearly everyone orders the fried cacio pepe suppli, a communion wafer of carbs and cheese. The agnolotti stuffed with short rib and the carbonara are the point—generous, unselfconscious, and executed without fuss or fanfare.
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Rank 95. Wayan
Indonesian
Cédric Vongerichten's SoHo Indonesian restaurant hums with energy across its teak-lined bar and close-packed dining room, where escargot rendang meets black-pepper lobster noodles and charred chicken lombok. The menu fuses Indonesian spice with French technique—satays and seafood plates give way to robust entrees that taste confident and lived-in rather than fussy.
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Rank 96. Ma•dé
South East Asian
A narrow room strung with thick rope evokes an Indonesian communal feast, where Chef Cedric Vongerichten delivers the whole meal at once: fluke sashimi in sambal hijau, sweetbreads in gulai curry, egg balado with Thai basil, alongside pickles and crisp tapioca. No choices, just the pleasure of moving between small bowls.
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Rank 97. MayRee
Southern Thai
Orawan Sawangphol's cozy corner on First Street tells the story of southern Thailand through fearless spice and compact, assertive cooking—park mor's sweetness against kua kling's roasted heat. Sek Saraboon's cocktails, named for the folktale's sisters, cool the fire with equal craft.
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At the bar of this narrow 65-seat room, wine and cocktails flow while chefs Quang Nguyen and Dina Fan work through an Asian-inflected bistro menu from the open kitchen. Littleneck clams arrive briny and alive; a bavette steak, properly charred, justifies the modest price and the modest space.
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Rank 100. Phoenix Palace
Cantonese