The Top 69 Tasting Menus Near Katz's Delicatessen
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Rank 1. Kabawa
Caribbean
A dark green dining room holds Chef Paul Carmichael's Caribbean vision: roti with curried chickpeas, fried plantain crowned with salt cod, seared black bass in yellow curry alongside pineapple-glazed sweet potato. This is tropical cooking refined into ceremony, each course a deliberate statement rather than a casual gesture toward the islands.
- Esquire 2025 · Chef of the Year · Paul Carmichael
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Semifinalist · Best New Restaurant
- The New York Times 2025 · The Restaurant List
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Rank 2. 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 · Camari Mick
- Food & Wine 2024 · Best New Chefs · Mary Attea
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Restaurateur · Jennifer Vitagliano and Nicole Vitagliano - Elizabeth Street Hospitality
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Rank 3. Sixty Three Clinton
Contemporary
A spare dining room on Clinton Street where Chef Samuel Clonts executes a tasting menu of surgical precision—breakfast tacos arrive early, Hokkaido scallops showcase balance, soft scrambled eggs meet shio-koji butter with quiet confidence. This is cooking that trusts its ingredients and technique to do the talking, culminating in goat milk ice cream that becomes a meditation on texture.
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Rank 4. 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 5. Atera
Contemporary
Counter dining at chef Ronny Emborg's spare, uncluttered room in Tribeca unfolds with quiet precision—shigoku oysters paired with kiwi and cucumber, halibut suspended in buttery shrimp bisque—while a spirited playlist keeps the intimate experience from settling into reverence. The menu travels globally through numerous delicate courses that balance restraint and abundance with equal finesse.
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Rank 6. Torien
Yakitori Japanese
Behind blacked-out windows on Elizabeth Street, a curtain parts to reveal Chef Hideo An at the counter, working skewers over binchotan charcoal with surgical precision. Yakitori here means chicken in every form—nikomi, vegetables threaded between—but the real star is the smoke itself, which settles into the room like an essential ingredient. A Tokyo transplant that treats grilling as high craft.
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Rank 7. Yamada
Kaiseki Japanese
Chef Isao Yamada has distilled a lifetime of kaiseki into a sparse, intimate counter where each course unfolds a different technique: pristine sashimi, a clear broth studded with king crab, a rice course married to Maine lobster and foraged mushrooms. The room itself—pale wood, ikebana, a framed garden—recedes politely behind the food, letting the seasonality speak.
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
- The New York Times 2025 · Ajisai Wagashi · The 14 Best Restaurant Desserts We Ate Across the U.S.
- The New York Times 2026 · #2 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
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Rank 8. Jungsik
Modern Korean
A dining room of studied restraint—dark wood, spare angles, downtown cool—frames Chef Yim Jung Sik's tasting menu, where Korean tradition splinters into something altogether new. Raw fish arrives beside kimchi and bone broth; octopus crisps under gochujang; each course unfolds with such precision and invention that you find yourself nodding involuntarily at the plate.
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Rank 9. Kono
Yakitori Japanese
A narrow room glows with the heat of the grill, where Chef Atsushi Kono moves through yakitori omakase with choreographed ease, his focus unwavering on chicken's lesser-known parts. The progression—from clarifying broth through charred skin, liver, gizzard, and offal—transforms what arrives as pedestrian poultry into something you'll reconsider forever.
- 50 Best 2025 · #23 · North America's 50 Best Restaurants
- Bon Appétit 2023 · America's Best New Restaurants
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Nominee · Best Chef: New York State · Atsushi Kono
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Rank 10. HAGS
Contemporary
Chef Telly Justice's tiny East Village tasting room sources produce from queer farmers and publishes its recipes freely, rotating seasonal vegetables through nimble vegan and omnivore menus. Chewy corn ice cream with currant jam typifies the kitchen's unselfconscious inventiveness.
- Food & Wine 2025 · Telly Justice · Best New Chefs
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Semifinalist · Emerging Chef · Telly Justice
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Telly Justice
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Rank 11. César
Seafood
César Ramirez sustains a demanding precision night after night, refining raw ingredients—Danish hiramasa, North Sea turbot, California quail—into harmonious compositions at his minimal downtown seafood counter. The sauces are masterly, the service eager, and the open kitchen makes clear why this restrained space commands such focused attention.
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Rank 12. Dirt Candy
Vegetarian
Amanda Cohen's Lower East Side kitchen treats vegetables as a playground for form and flavor, reshaping carrots and squash into unfamiliar shapes across a single tasting menu that shifts with the seasons. Raw, pickled, and cooked preparations collide on each plate; desserts blur the line between savory and sweet with the same playful rigor. It's vegetable cooking that refuses to be earnest.
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Nominee · Best Chef: New York State · Amanda Cohen
- Eater The Best Lower East Side Restaurants
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Rank 13. Gramercy Tavern
Contemporary New American
A mahogany-lined institution where the bar seats are fought over at lunch and the dining room glows at night. The seasonal American cooking—pappardelle, impeccable proteins—speaks plainly but with confidence, matched to wood-paneled surroundings and service that knows when to hover and when to recede. A place equally at home with a first date or a closed business deal.
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Rank 14. Tsukimi
Japanese
Tsukimi channels moon-viewing festivals through illuminated ceramics and mirrored surfaces, a luminous frame for seasonal kaiseki that moves from chilled caviar with warm scrambled eggs to chopped scallop beneath sea buckthorn and nori. The cooking is whimsical without affectation, the service invisible, the sake list a reason to order à la carte rather than follow the pairing.
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Rank 15. Eleven Madison Park
Contemporary
Eleven Madison Park is a temple of control where everything—the suits, the glassware, the vegan roll with its gossamer crust—bears the obsessive stamp of Daniel Humm's vision. A tonburi quenelle mimics caviar; a radish tostada gleams with pumpkin seed butter. The kitchen's plant-based luxury is audacious and complete, though animal proteins remain available for those who ask.
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Rank 16. Secchu Yokota
Tempura Japanese
At a modest East Third Street counter, Chef Yokota orchestrates tempura with surgical precision—gossamer-light batters around plump shrimp and anago, Japanese eggplant at its peak. The omakase format, bracketed by French-inflected dishes, treats each diner as the only one in the room, a quietness that suits those who understand tempura as an art requiring silence.
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Rank 17. Sushi Nakazawa
Sushi
At a ten-seat counter in Commerce Street, Chef Daisuke Nakazawa orchestrates omakase with restraint: tender fish, precisely seasoned rice, a whisper of wasabi and nikiri. The progression moves from Hokkaido salmon through live scallop to uni and a final fatty tuna handroll so finely chopped it dissolves on the tongue.
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Rank 19. COTE
Korean
Simon Kim's steakhouse fuses Korean beef reverence with American steakhouse grandeur, its dark, moody dining room anchored by a visible aging room downstairs. Meats arrive raw for inspection before tableside grilling, their umami deepened by kimchi and ssamjang in a ritual that feels both ceremonial and convivial.
- World's 101 Best #21 · World's Best Steak Restaurants
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Nominee · Outstanding Wine and Other Beverages Program
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Rank 20. COQODAQ
Korean
A buzzy Korean fried chicken den where reservations vanish fast, rewarded with a theatrical bucket feast that unfolds through crisp rounds and finishes with frozen yogurt. The gluten-free bird stays clean and light despite its indulgent choreography, paired with an ambitious champagne list.
- Condé Nast Traveler 2024 · The best new restaurants in the world
- James Beard Awards 2025 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Restaurateur · Simon Kim - Gracious Hospitality Management
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Restaurateur · Simon Kim - Gracious Hospitality
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Rank 21. Atomix
Elevated Korean
Chef Junghyun Park's tasting menu unfolds in a subterranean counter as a series of meditations, each plate accompanied by written reflection on beauty and anticipation. Korean traditions meet refined technique in dishes like black banana with monkfish liver, in a room as warm as its servers.
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Rank 22. Sushi Ikumi
Sushi
An L-shaped bar with soft light and exposed brick frames the sushi chef's work at this modest Sullivan Street omakase. Each course pivots unexpectedly—a silken chawanmushi studded with lobster and ikura, miso-glazed cod, grouper with wasabi—arriving at prices that feel gracious for the caliber of fish and technique on display.
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Rank 23. Shota Omakase
Omakase Sushi
Chef Cheng Lin guides diners through impeccably sourced nigiri and seared fish with the ease of a friend, refreshing rice between each piece. His transparency about Japanese sourcing and technique elevates what could be rote into something genuinely intentional.
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Cheng Lin
- Time Out 2026 · The 45 best restaurants in NYC right now
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Rank 24. HUSO
Contemporary
Chef Buddha Lo's TriBeCa tasting room sits concealed behind a caviar shop, its dining space defined by flowing white drapes and disciplined spacing. Dishes arrive precisely calibrated—caviar deployed with restraint, sauces in service of composition rather than spectacle, technique and seasonality in constant conversation. A kitchen that understands luxury as restraint.
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Buddha Lo
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Rank 25. Icca
Omakase Sushi
Chef Kazushige Suzuki works behind a counter tucked past the cocktail bar, sourcing fish entirely from Japan and keeping his nigiri spare and classical. The meal pivots between restraint and invention—koji-marinated snow trout and Hokkaido crab with capellini giving way to apple sorbet topped with whisky—a trajectory that feels both deliberate and surprising.
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Rank 26. Odo
Kaiseki Japanese
Behind a cocktail bar lies a hushed counter where Chef Hiroki Odo conducts kaiseki with precision and invention—a broth of tilefish brightened with yuzu, house-made soba studded with salmon roe. The service dissolves into the background, leaving only the clarity of carefully sourced ingredients and the subtle force of tradition meeting personal vision.
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Rank 27. Saga
New American
A dining room suspended above the city, wrapped in peach velvet and green marble, opens onto a terrace for aperitifs before the meal proper. Hokkaido scallops arrive with shaved fennel and vadouvan butter; Australian lamb carries spiced jus and frothed herbs. The closing ritual—a Moroccan tea service with small sweets—feels less like dessert than benediction.
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Rank 28. Mitsuru
Japanese
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Rank 29. bōm
Korean
Behind its sister restaurant, bōm presents Korean wagyu in a marble-countered room where grills work quietly at the bar, searing premium beef kept visible in a dry-aging chamber. The kitchen layers luxury ingredients—uni, caviar, truffle, crab—with equal ambition across savory and broth-based courses, a place where comfort and refinement coexist without apology.
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Rank 30. One White Street
Contemporary
A 19th-century townhouse with marble walls and wood paneling hosts a kitchen that sources from its own upstate farm, marrying bold flavors with restraint. Grilled monkfish arrives glazed in whey miso over lemon verbena butter; a single scoop of husk cherry sorbet closes the meal with quiet finesse.
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Rank 31. Frevo
Contemporary
A speakeasy door opens onto an intimate counter where Chef Franco Sampogna stages a tasting menu that ricochets across continents with playful precision—butternut squash doughnut, scallop with rice and pepper cream—each plate balanced between refinement and pleasure. The Comté and honey ice cream finale seals the contract between savory and sweet.
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Franco Sampogna
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Rank 32. noda
Sushi
Behind the speakeasy bar sits an eight-seat counter where Chef Tsunoda composes his omakase with measured precision, each piece of nigiri a study in knife work and rice temperature. The dark room and thoughtful sake program suggest this is sushi designed less for spectacle than for the particular pleasure of restraint.
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Rank 33. KOSAKA
Omakase Sushi
A twelve-seat counter in a hushed room where Chef Masatomo Soma works with unhurried precision, letting each piece of fish—rosy seabass, golden-eyed snapper from Chiba—speak for itself, though never without a quiet flourish: shiso leaf, yuzu koshō, the kind of restraint that reads as generosity.
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Rank 34. Le Bernardin
Seafood
A Midtown room where diamond necklaces catch the light and Eric Ripert's kitchen moves with quiet confidence through pristine seafood—yellowfin tuna pounded thin over foie gras toast, salmon with horseradish emulsion—finished by a dark chocolate tart that tastes like technique perfected. French classicism with global reach, no tasting menu required.
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Rank 35. Gabriel Kreuther
Alsatian French
Chef Gabriel Kreuther's cavernous showroom near Bryant Park serves Alsatian cooking with French precision and global reach, from warm kugelhopf to smoked sturgeon tart. Cream banquettes, a roving cheese trolley and an armada of servers evoke old-world fine dining.
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Rank 36. Per Se
Contemporary French
Thomas Keller's tasting menu unfolds with unhurried elegance in a soaring room overlooking Central Park, each course a precise study in seasonal restraint. The kitchen's confidence—evident in signatures like Oysters and Pearls—never overwhelms; service orchestrates the meal with quiet grace.
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Rank 37. Saint Urban
European
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Rank 38. Jean‑Georges
French
Vongerichten's flagship overlooks Central Park with the confidence of a chef who has earned it. The egg toast with caviar arrives as prologue to a menu that pivots between French discipline and global improvisation—tomatillo with lemon verbena, black truffle with za'atar—each plate proposing a conversation between technique and audacity. This is cooking that knows what it is.
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Rank 39. Daniel
French
Daniel Boulud's Upper East Side temple to French refinement has softened its formality with a welcoming red-carpet entrance and art-lined dining room. The kitchen's rigorously composed dishes and decades-loyal service staff remain uncompromising in their precision.
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Rank 40. Le Pavillon
French
A soaring glass dining room in a gleaming new tower, all warm light and architectural confidence, where the bar itself becomes theater under a blown-glass chandelier. Boulud and Nacev's carte pivots on seafood and vegetables rendered with global inflection—spaghetti alla chitarra gilded with caviar, cauliflower sharpened by Aleppo pepper and local beans.
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Rank 41. The Bar Room at the Modern
New American
The dining room floats within MoMA's architectural clarity, all clean lines and sculptural views. Here the kitchen constructs dishes of deliberate restraint—a seed cracker gilded with aged cheddar and butternut squash butter, turbot roasted on the bone in parmesan cream—each component audible in conversation. It is a place that understands that luxury, at its best, whispers.
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Rank 42. Chef's Table at Brooklyn Fare
Contemporary
A grocery store conceals this intimate counter where Natmessnig and Prins orchestrate a rapid succession of refined small plates—delicate tarts, a scallop crowned with caviar in vin jaune, oysters in aguachile—from behind spotlit glass. The walnut bar leaves no room for kitchen theatrics to falter, only for precision to land.
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Rank 43. Masa
Sushi
The roar of Columbus Circle dissolves into silence at a hinoki counter where Masa Takayama orchestrates omakase with balletic precision. Truffles and caviar accent each piece—foie gras nigiri, abalone so tender it dissolves—gestures that walk the edge between refinement and indulgence. It's an experience that feels less like dinner than ceremony.
- Forbes Travel Guide Forbes Five Star
- Michelin Guide 2 Stars
- World Culinary Awards 2025 · Nominee · North America's Best Japanese Cuisine Restaurant
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Rank 44. Aquavit
Swedish, Scandinavian, Tasting
Emma Bengtsson orchestrates a lean, contemporary vision of Nordic cooking in a sleek dining room where every detail—from the slate platters to the torched North Sea cod with mussel foam—reads as deliberate. Duck breast and compressed leg meat arrive tableside with beet jus; dessert might pivot to green apple and fennel with smoked crème fraîche. Precision and restraint feel like the point.
- AAA Five Diamonds
- Michelin Guide 2 Stars
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Chef · Emma Bengtsson
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Rank 45. YingTao
Chinese
In a modest Hell's Kitchen corner, Chef Emily Yuen executes Chinese cuisine with both precision and playfulness. Wontons swim in broth, black cod rests on silken tofu with mala heat, and playful riffs on fried chicken offset delicate finales like coconut nian gao. The curved counter frames an open kitchen where ambition and restraint move in careful balance.
- AAA Four Diamonds
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
- World Culinary Awards 2025 · Nominee · North America's Best Chinese Cuisine Restaurant
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Rank 46. Sushi Sho
Omakase Sushi
Beneath the Public Library's shadow, Chef Keiji Nakazawa orchestrates omakase with rare precision—a progression of fish, shellfish, and fermented vegetables that moves like a composed piece, reverent yet willing to bend. The Hinoki counter anchors a room where kitchen and service operate in silent synchrony, each gesture considered. Here, mastery doesn't announce itself; it accumulates.
- Michelin Guide 3 Stars
- Vogue 2026 · A Definitive Guide to the Best Omakase in New York City
- The New York Times 2026 · #11 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
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Rank 47. Noz 17
Omakase Sushi
A seven-seat cypress counter glows softly in a serene downtown room where Chef Junichi Matsuzaki orchestrates omakase with disciplined restraint. Each nigiri arrives carefully composed to let pristine fish and rice speak equally, the intricately scored cuttlefish a standout that dissolves on the tongue. The sequence unfolds with the quiet confidence of someone who trusts his ingredients.
- 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 48. hakubai
Japanese
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Rank 49. Le Veau d'Or
Classic French
Dark wood and red banquettes create a jewel-box intimacy where waiters glide between closely set tables as if conducting a ritual from 1937. Lee Hanson and Riad Nasr have restored this classic French bistro to its essentials—pâté en croûte, buttery poulet à l'estragon, warm chocolate gratin—with the confidence of men who know exactly what they're reviving.
- 50 Best 2025 · #10 · North America's 50 Best Restaurants
- Condé Nast Traveler 2024 · The best new restaurants in the world
- James Beard Awards 2025 · Winner · Outstanding Restaurateur · Lee Hanson and Riad Nasr
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Rank 50. ILIS
Scandinavian
In a moody warehouse, Chef Mads Refslund cooks a sustainable Nordic menu that lets pristine ingredients speak for themselves, whether grilled mushroom or Spanish mackerel. The four- and seven-course tasting formats demand surrender to his philosophy of elegant restraint.
- Condé Nast Traveler 2024 · The best new restaurants in the world
- Esquire 2023 · #1 · The Best New Restaurants in America
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Mads Refslund
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Rank 51. Sushi Noz
Sushi
Chef Nozomu Abe orchestrates an intimate omakase where every tool and gesture recalls a Japanese refuge, moving from silken cooked fish to jewel-like sushi with ceremonial precision. Booking requires patience for his limited dates, but the gratitude extended by kimono-dressed staff justifies the pilgrimage.
- AAA Four Diamonds
- Michelin Guide 2 Stars
- Vogue 2026 · A Definitive Guide to the Best Omakase in New York City
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Rank 52. Maison Sun
French/Asian
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Rank 53. Essential By Christophe
Contemporary French
Heavy iron doors open onto a sleek townhouse dining room where chef Christophe Bellanca marries French technique with Asian inflection—white asparagus with bergamot crème and herb vinaigrette, blue prawns with genmaicha tuille, black sea bass gilded in turmeric. The space hums with quiet confidence.
- AAA Four Diamonds
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Christophe Bellanca
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Rank 54. Enso Omakase
Omakase Sushi
In a sleek Williamsburg room, Chef Nick Wang's omakase unfolds with discipline and restraint. Cured mackerel from Chiba arrives perfectly seasoned; Hokkaido uni melts on the tongue with barely a whisper of salt. This is edomae sushi executed without flourish or apology.
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Rank 55. Joo Ok
Traditional Korean
A freight elevator ascends to this sixteenth-floor Korean tasting room, where minimalist dining overlooks Manhattan while Chef Chang-ho Shin balances tradition with refinement through dishes like pheasant mandu with foie gras and house-made perilla oil. The evening unfolds with composed precision, each course a study in restraint and technique, concluding with warm sunchoke tea.
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Rank 56. Kochi
Korean
At a open kitchen counter, Chef Sungchul Shim's young team moves quickly through grilled skewers and hand-eaten bites that honor his Korean heritage without pretension. A bowl of raw steelhead topped with tomato foam and Iberico pork three ways give way to blackberry-lime sorbet with mezcal, the whole meal brisk and playful rather than baroque.
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Rank 57. Nōksu
Contemporary
Behind a code-locked door in Koreatown, a black marble counter gleams in this subway-level space where tweezers guide each seafood-forward dish with fastidious precision. The kitchen moves between continents—mackerel with lemongrass, uni beignets, soymilk ice cream—while a sharp playlist and attentive service sustain the singular momentum.
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Rank 58. Al Coro
Italian
- World Culinary Awards 2025 · Nominee · North America's Best Italian Cuisine Restaurant
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Semifinalist · Best New Restaurant
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Rank 59. Dept of Culture
Nigerian (North-Central)
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Nominee · Best New Restaurant
- Eater 2022 · The Best New Restaurants in America
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Ayo Balogun
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Rank 60. Sushi By Bou
Sushi
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Rank 61. Sushi By Bou
Sushi
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Rank 62. Runner Up
New American
A sliver of a room flooded with daylight, where the kitchen marshals seasonal vegetables and savory technique into small revelations: citrus salad brightened by aged gouda, daikon radish folded like tortellini around chicharrón, chaquicán layered between crackers. The cooking is direct and purposeful, built on fresh ingredients rather than flourish.
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Rank 63. Sushi Akira
Omakase Sushi
Chef Nikki Zheng, trained at Masa and Sushi Nakazawa, commands a twelve-seat counter on the Upper East Side with unhurried precision. Her 18-course omakase moves from chilled appetizers through impeccable nigiri—minced squid with shiso, marinated bluefin—to a closing slice of Japanese melon.
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- The New York Times 2024 · The Restaurant List
- The New York Times 2024 · Dungeness Crab Empanada · Here Are Our Top New York Dishes
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Rank 65. Ram & Rooster
Chinese-American
- USA Today 2026 · Restaurants of the Year
- NJ.com 2025 · #18 · New Jersey’s 99 greatest restaurants, ranked
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Rank 66. Lita
Spanish
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Semifinalist · Best New Restaurant
- Esquire 2023 · The Best New Restaurants in America
- Punch 2025 · Best New Bartenders · Ricardo Rodriguez
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Rank 67. Blue Hill
New American
Dan Barber's tasting menu unfolds as a philosophical argument about sustainable agriculture, each plate showcasing vegetables and dairy from his own farm with austere elegance. The meal moves from raw radishes to roasted heritage breeds to a finale of milk transformed into crumbs and jam, honoring the land's logic.
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- James Beard Awards 2025 · Nominee · Best Chef: Northeast · Brian Lewis
- James Beard Awards 2022 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: Northeast · Brian Lewis