The Top 100 Restaurants in New York
-
Rank 1. 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.
-
Rank 2. 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
-
Rank 2. Via Carota
Italian
A West Village trattoria where rustic Italian cooking—charred vegetables, silken pasta, snow of Parmigiano—arrives with such seeming ease that you simply sit back and savor the meal. The wait stretches hours, the tables fill nightly, yet the food's unpretentious grace justifies the hunger.
- AAA Four Diamonds
- 50 Best 2025 · #18 · North America's 50 Best Restaurants
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Restaurant
-
Rank 2. Café Boulud
Contemporary French
A corner room on the Upper East Side with Art Deco polish hosts classical French cooking refined through seasonal technique and global inflection. Black sea bass wrapped in potato, vegetables in delicate balance, a tarte Tatin that knows its purpose—Paumier's kitchen executes the fundamentals with quiet confidence.
-
Rank 5. Ai Fiori
Italian
Fifth Avenue views and a marble bar set the stage for polished Italian cooking—Hiramasa crudo with sunflower cream, handmade pasta with braised rabbit. Service and linens match the formal room's marble and leather restraint.
-
Rank 5. Tatiana by Kwame Onwuachi
Pan-African
At Lincoln Center, Tatiana commands a room of dark wood and deliberate glamour where the pre-theater crowd mingles with the curious; Chef Kwame Onwuachi's West African-inflected menu—egusi dumplings, a towering pot of braised oxtail—reads like an edible autobiography, grounded and generous.
- AAA Four Diamonds
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Semifinalist · Best New Restaurant
- The Infatuation Infatuation’s Highest-Rated Restaurants In America
-
Rank 5. La Tête d'Or by Daniel
French Steakhouse
A glamorous Flatiron temple where French technique meets steakhouse tradition under Daniel Boulud's direction. Leather-lined bar, soaring ceilings, and tableside Caesar salads precede dry-aged beef and roving trolleys of prime rib—the kind of room where the architecture itself suggests money changing hands.
- AAA Four Diamonds
- World's 101 Best #34 · World's Best Steak Restaurants
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
-
Rank 5. Cosme
Modern Mexican
Cosme's moody dining room and polished bar serve seasonally inventive Mexican cooking, from uni tostadas with bone marrow to duck carnitas. The corn husk meringue alone justifies the price.
- AAA Four Diamonds
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Hospitality
- World Culinary Awards 2025 · Nominee · United States' Best Restaurant
-
Rank 5. Rezdôra
Emilia-Romagna Italian
A Flatiron dining room devoted to the pasta traditions of Emilia-Romagna, where handmade anolini and gramigna arrive in their plainest, most persuasive forms. The cooking here trusts simplicity—fried gnocco with cured pork, ragù finished with Parmigiano—and asks nothing more of you than appetite and respect for the region's canon.
- 50 Top Italy 2025 · #5 · The Best Italian Restaurants In The World
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Stefano Secchi
-
Rank 10. 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
-
Rank 10. 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
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Nominee · Best Chef: New York State · Fidel Caballero
-
Rank 10. 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
-
Rank 10. 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
-
Rank 14. MAMA'S TOO!
Sicilian Pizza
- Time Out The Cacio e Pepe · The 18 best pizzas in the world right now
- 50 Top Pizza 2025 · #4 · 50 Top Pizza Slice USA
- Time Out 2026 · The 45 best restaurants in NYC right now
-
Rank 14. Bar Madonna
Italian-American
- 50 Best 2026 · #36 · North America's 50 Best Bars
- Spirited Awards 2026 · Top 10 Nominee · Best U.S. Restaurant Bar
- Spirited Awards 2026 · Regional Top 10 Honoree · Best U.S. Bar Team – U.S. East
-
Rank 14. 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
-
Rank 14. Lilia Ristorante
Italian
At Lilia, pasta commands attention, but the opening moves—fried dough with cacio e pepe spice, blowfish in Sicilian lemon, charred focaccia with green garlic butter—arrive with equal ambition. These early dishes establish the restaurant's gift for marrying rustic Italian foundations with precise, burnished technique.
- AAA Four Diamonds
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Chef · Missy Robbins
- The New York Times 2026 · #36 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
-
Rank 14. Mama's Too
Sicilian Pizza
- Time Out The Cacio e Pepe · The 18 best pizzas in the world right now
- 50 Top Pizza 2025 · #4 · 50 Top Pizza Slice USA
- Time Out 2026 · The 45 best restaurants in NYC right now
-
Rank 14. Marea
Seafood Italian
Central Park South's power crowd gathers in an airy rosewood dining room where the scene matches the ambition. Marea's seafood-focused Italian menu builds from raw fish—branzino scattered with pistachio and crispy garlic—through handmade pastas and delicate desserts that justify the elegance around you.
-
Rank 14. Family Meal at Blue Hill
New American
An intimate dining room where Dan Barber lets vegetables—sourced from his Stone Barns farm upstate—speak for themselves with minimal intervention. The single seasonal menu arrives family-style, grains and occasional proteins orbiting the produce, each plate marked by restraint and confidence in its raw material. Eating here feels like witnessing a cook who trusts what he grows enough to step back.
-
Rank 14. 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.
-
Rank 14. Keens Steakhouse
Steakhouse
Dark paneled rooms and bow-tied waiters define this 1905 steakhouse where the mutton chop and porterhouse arrive with the weight of old New York still clinging to them. The wedge salad alone—blue cheese funk meeting fresh crunch and lardons—suggests a kitchen that understands restraint and satisfaction in equal measure.
- World's 101 Best #68 · World's Best Steak Restaurants
- Spirited Awards 2025 · Winner · Timeless U.S. Award
- Eater 2026 · The Best Classic Restaurants in NYC
-
Rank 14. Café Carmellini
Italian
Andrew Carmellini's fine-dining return occupies the Fifth Avenue Hotel with sapphire velvet booths and an open kitchen turning out Mediterranean-leaning dishes. A crab mille-feuille of delicate wafers and sweet meat in Meyer lemon sauce, or scallops in coconut-turmeric broth, suggest a chef working in layers of restraint and indulgence at once.
- Forbes Travel Guide Forbes Recommended
- 50 Best 2025 · #39 · North America's 50 Best Restaurants
- Esquire 2023 · The Best New Restaurants in America
-
Rank 14. 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
- Wine Enthusiast 2024 · Forward 50 Restaurants
-
Rank 25. 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
-
Rank 25. 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
-
Rank 25. Pitt's
Southern
- Food & Wine 2025 · Pancake Soufflé · Best Dishes Our Editors Ate This Year
- Punch 2025 · Rosie Martini · Our Favorite Cocktails
- Punch 2025 · Best New Bartenders · Ben Hopkins
-
Rank 25. 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 2026 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Restaurateur · Simon Kim - Gracious Hospitality
- James Beard Awards 2025 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Restaurateur · Simon Kim - Gracious Hospitality Management
-
-
Rank 25. Meju
Korean
Behind a fermented-foods shop in Long Island City, Chef Hooni Kim runs a counter where traditional Korean pantry staples—doenjang, gochujang, aged through his own decade-long practice—meet precise minimalism and Miyazaki beef. A final bowl of rice and kimchi, handmade ceramics throughout, and Kim's attentive presence transform an unassuming setting into something quietly unforgettable.
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Nominee · Best Chef: New York State · Hooni Kim
- James Beard Awards 2025 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Hooni Kim
-
Rank 31. The Grill
American
The dining room gleams with the burnished confidence of old money and new ambition. Crab cakes arrive topped with pan-fried potatoes; duck skin crackles under the knife, yielding to silky fat beneath. This is American comfort as theater—tableside ceremony, lemon chiffon cake—for those accustomed to getting what they want.
- AAA Four Diamonds
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- Eater 2026 · The Best Steakhouses in New York City
-
Rank 31. 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
-
Rank 31. 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
-
Rank 31. Gage & Tollner
Steakhouse
A Brooklyn steakhouse from 1892 glows with vintage mirrors and brass chandeliers, its no-nonsense cocktail list and amber-lit dining room instantly charming. The kitchen honors Edna Lewis's Southern legacy through seafood towers, crab cakes, and fried chicken that justify the historical setting with genuine substance.
- World's 101 Best #84 · World's Best Steak Restaurants
- Esquire 2023 · Turf Club · The Best Martinis in America
- Spirited Awards 2026 · Regional Top 10 Honoree · Best U.S. Restaurant Bar – U.S. East
-
-
Rank 31. 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
-
Rank 31. 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
-
-
Rank 38. BONDST
Japanese-Inspired
-
Rank 38. Gallaghers
Steakhouse
A Midtown steakhouse since the late 1920s, Gallaghers grilss USDA Prime beef over hickory while its wood-paneled room hums with the rhythms of New York theatre-goers and regulars. Bone-in ribeyes arrive tender and charred; the dry-aged meat locker gleams behind glass like an artifact of steakhouse faith.
- World's 101 Best #87 · World's Best Steak Restaurants
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- Eater 2026 · The Best Steakhouses in New York City
-
- 50 Top Pizza 2025 · #12 · 50 Top Pizza USA
- NJ.com 2025 · #5 · New Jersey’s 99 greatest restaurants, ranked
- James Beard Awards 2025 · Nominee · Best Chef: Mid-Atlantic · Dan Richer
-
Rank 38. Lu Nello
Italian
-
Rank 38. hakubai
Japanese
-
Rank 38. Restaurant Serenade
French
-
Rank 38. BONDST
Japanese-Inspired
-
Rank 38. Scalini Fedeli
French/Italian
-
Rank 38. Elcielo
Colombian
Chef Juan Manuel Barrientos orchestrates a two-star tasting menu in the Virgin Hotel that channels tropical Colombia through dishes like shio koji duck with passion fruit sabayon. Floor-to-ceiling windows and theatrical touches—a bread tree, chocolate experience, coffee ceremony—transform the meal into something between fine dining and curated theater.
-
-
Rank 38. Semma
Indian
Vijay Kumar's south Indian cooking at Semma arrives without apology or accommodation: mulaikattiya thaniyam crackles with the intensity of childhood memory, gunpowder dosa achieves an almost austere perfection, and lamb curry unfolds in layers of warm spice. The heat here is architectural, never decorative, and the staff navigates you through unfamiliar terrain with genuine enthusiasm.
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
- James Beard Awards 2025 · Winner · Best Chef: New York State · Vijay Kumar
- The New York Times 2026 · #9 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
-
-
Rank 38. Nobu Downtown
Peruvian Japanese
-
Rank 38. Sofreh
Persian
In a serene Park Slope room of marble and black timber, chef-owner Nasim Alikhani cooks the Persian cuisine of her homeland with confident restraint. Roasted eggplant yielding to kashk and crispy onions, pomegranate-marinated ribeye kebab, lamb shank braised into submission—the colorful plates need no ornament here, only the clean walls to frame them.
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Hospitality
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Nominee · Best Chef: New York State · Nasim Alikhani
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Nominee · Best Chef: New York State · Nasim Alikhani
-
Rank 38. 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
-
Rank 38. Majorelle
French
-
Rank 38. Hutong
Chinese
-
-
Rank 38. Sushi Yasuda
Sushi
At Sushi Yasuda, honey-toned wood and bamboo offer the only warmth in a deliberately austere room where punctuality is non-negotiable. The itamae controls your meal from behind the counter, assembling classical nigiri—bluefin, uni, sayori with shiso—with deliberate care that lets each piece's robust flavor speak. The place ignores fashion and rewards those willing to submit to its rhythms.
-
Rank 38. Aretsky's Patroon
New American
-
Rank 38. Oceana
Modern Seafood
-
Rank 38. The Leopard at des Artistes
Traditional Italian
-
Rank 38. Bong
Cambodian
A cramped Cambodian counter in Crown Heights where the energy matches the spice. Plea satch ko arrives as gossamer beef in a funky, incendiary sauce; a whole fish, bronzed and crackling, comes with green mango and the apparatus for lettuce wraps. It's the kind of place that works best in a crowd, shouting over the din.
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Semifinalist · Best New Restaurant
- Eater 2025 · The Best New Restaurants in America
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
-
Rank 38. 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!)
-
-
Rank 38. Cove
Contemporary
Flynn McGarry's Hudson Square dining room rises with soaring wood ceilings and an open kitchen in constant flux. Seasonal cooking drawn from the team's Long Island farm—grilled black cod with mushroom rice, pumpkin schnitzel, huckleberry semifreddo—strikes a balance between playful invention and genuine restraint, flavors always in service to the plate rather than the other way around.
-
Rank 38. Le Chêne
French
In a cramped West Village room where every plate draws eyes, the Duchênes execute classical French cooking with precision and weight—their pithivier a study in bronze-skinned architecture, their sauces (vin jaune, foie gras terrines) built on substance rather than whimsy. A curved bar absorbs walk-ins while a serious, deep wine list rewards those who linger.
-
Rank 38. 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 · 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
-
Rank 38. 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
-
-
Rank 38. The Gallery
Japanese
-
-
-
Rank 72. Crown Shy
Contemporary
In the soaring Art Deco lobby of 70 Pine Street, Crown Shy harnesses the grandeur of its setting—marble floors, long bar, upbeat energy—without pretension. The kitchen executes with precision: Gruyère fritters, tomatoes and peaches with anchovy and peanuts, short rib with potato espuma. A place where technical skill serves straightforward pleasure.
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
- Spirited Awards 2026 · Regional Top 10 Honoree · Best U.S. Restaurant Bar – U.S. East
- Spirited Awards 2024 · Top 10 Nominee · Best U.S. Restaurant Bar
-
Rank 72. 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
-
Rank 72. Il Capriccio Ristorante
Italian
-
Rank 72. L'industrie Pizzeria
New York-style Pizza
- 50 Top Pizza 2025 · #1 · 50 Top Pizza Slice USA
- The Infatuation #19 · The 25 Best Restaurants In NYC
- Eater 2026 · The 38 Best Restaurants in New York City
-
Rank 72. 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
-
Rank 72. 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
-
Rank 72. Osteria 57
Seafood Italian
-
Rank 72. 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
- Wine Enthusiast 2023 · Forward 50 Restaurants
- Esquire 2023 · The Best New Restaurants in America
-
Rank 72. La Devozione
Pasta Italian
Inside Chelsea Market, a century-old Italian pasta maker has opened a counter restaurant where thirty diners at a time face an avalanche of shapes and sizes—manicotti packed with sole and brown butter, penne tangled with rabbit, each plate arriving without restraint or pretense. It's a tasting menu built on the premise that pasta, made well and served generously, needs no apology.
- 50 Top Italy 2025 · #16 · The Best Italian Restaurants In The World
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
-
Rank 72. Maison Premiere
New Orleans-Style Cocktail Bar
- 50 Best 2026 · #40 · North America's 50 Best Bars
- Time Out #7 · The 30 best bars in NYC right now
- The Infatuation The Best Cocktail Bars in NYC
-
The Eighty Six occupies a former speakeasy on Bedford Street, where heritage and precision converge around beef sourced from small producers and heritage breeds rarely found in America. Dry-aged in a salt-lined room below the bar, each steak is cooked by method—broiler, plancha, or binchōtan—chosen to honor the animal's character rather than convenience.
- World's 101 Best #12 · World's Best Steak Restaurants
- Eater 2026 · The Best Steakhouses in New York City
-
Rank 72. Kiko
Mexican
- Esquire 2025 · The Best New Restaurants in America
- Punch 2025 · Nashi Highball · Our Favorite Cocktails
-
Rank 72. L’industrie Pizzeria
NY-Style Pizza
- 50 Top Pizza 2025 · #1 · 50 Top Pizza Slice USA
- Roadbook The Best Restaurants in New York City
- Time Out 2026 · The 45 best restaurants in NYC right now
-
Rank 72. 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
-
Rank 72. 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
- Eater The All-Time Eater 38
- The New York Times 2023 · The Restaurant List
-
Rank 72. Red Hook Tavern
American
The Red Hook Tavern welcomes you with brass rail and vintage fixtures—exposed brick, frosted glass, floral wallpaper—arranged around an intimate bar. A dry-aged burger crowned with American cheese arrives alongside cottage fries; French onion soup comes properly bronzed and bubbling. It's comfort food and cocktails executed with the understated competence you'd expect from the Hometown BBQ team.
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Hospitality
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- The Infatuation #22 · The 25 Best Restaurants In NYC
-
Rank 72. Antica Pesa
Roman Italian
-
Rank 72. Le Rock
Brasserie French
Dim Art Deco glamour at street level in Rockefeller Center, where the Frenchette team serves a brasserie menu of seafood platters, duck confit with lentils, and profiteroles glossed in buckwheat honey fudge with genuine French technique and tableside theatricality. The bar moves at a clip; the crowds haven't stopped.
- James Beard Awards 2025 · Winner · Outstanding Restaurateur · Lee Hanson and Riad Nasr
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- Eater 2026 · The Best Restaurants in Midtown
-
Rank 90. Cho Dang Gol
Homestyle Korean
In Koreatown's barbecue-heavy corridor, Cho Dang Gol pivots toward the rustic and comforting: silken tofu in bubbling stews, cod roe omelets, and a sautéed tofu trio that braids pork belly with sweet potato noodles and kimchi in a bright red pepper sauce. The wood tables are close and the room unadorned, built for eating, not posing.
- Michelin Guide Bib Gourmand
- The Infatuation #8 · The 25 Best Restaurants In NYC
- Roadbook The Best Restaurants in New York City
-
- World Culinary Awards 2025 · Nominee · North America's Best New Hotel Restaurant
- NJ.com 2025 · #10 · New Jersey’s 99 greatest restaurants, ranked
-
Rank 90. 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
-
Rank 90. 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
-
Rank 90. Tán
Mexican
- World Culinary Awards 2025 · Nominee · World's Best Brunch Venue
- World Culinary Awards 2025 · Winner · North America's Best Brunch Venue
- World Culinary Awards 2025 · Nominee · United States' Best Restaurant
-
Rank 90. 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
-
Rank 90. 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
-
Rank 90. Hawksmoor
British
- Esquire 2023 · Ultimate Vodka Martini · The Best Martinis in America
- James Beard Awards 2025 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Wine and Other Beverages Program
- Spirited Awards 2024 · Regional Honoree · Best U.S. Bar Team – U.S. East
-
Rank 90. Melba's
Southern
Melba Wilson's Harlem dining room glows with the ease of a neighborhood gathering place, where Southern cooking feels both rooted and inventive. The fried chicken arrives darkly bronzed alongside eggnog waffles; mini-burgers swim in smoky-sweet sauce; spring rolls cradle black-eyed peas and collards. A fruit cobbler closes the meal with unironic comfort.
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Nominee · Outsdanding Hospitality
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Hospitality
- James Beard Awards 2025 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Hospitality
-
Rank 90. The Lambs Club
Steakhouse
A limestone fireplace anchors black walls and scarlet booths in this Midtown steakhouse where power brokers gather before the theater district lights up. Dry-aged beef arrives with an arsenal of sauces, but the kitchen also excels at seared scallops in clam chowder broth and lamb saddle with chanterelles. Chrome and red leather conspire to make excess feel inevitable, even necessary.
- Forbes Travel Guide Forbes Recommended
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- Eater 2026 · The Best Restaurants Around Times Square
-
Rank 90. 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.
-
Rank 90. Caviar Russe
Contemporary French
A marble staircase ascends to this Madison Avenue perch where caviar—from modest Pacific Sturgeon to thousand-dollar Osetra tins—anchors a French-inflected menu of classical refinement. Agnolotti stuffed with chestnuts yields to truffle foam; Dover sole arrives delicately mousse-filled and dressed in curry cream. The experience traffics entirely in luxe.
-
Rank 90. 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
- Eater 2026 · Where to Eat Brunch in New York City
-
Rank 90. Le Jardinier
French
Chef Alain Verzeroli's dining room glows with olive velvet and trailing plants, a verdant setting that mirrors his vegetables-first approach to the plate. Grilled octopus arrives with green olives and romesco; salmon is coaxed with smoked chili and pak choi; the lemon tart carries a whisper of tarragon.
-
Rank 90. American Cut
Modern American Steakhouse
In a Tribeca dining room lit like a film noir, American Cut stages the steakhouse as contemporary theater without sacrificing the seriousness of meat—dry-aged beef and Japanese Wagyu cooked over high heat with enough discipline to deliver crust and clarity. The kitchen's conviction about its craft sustains the glamour, though the service sometimes falters beneath the ambition.
-
-
Rank 90. Oxomoco
Mexican
A lively Greenpoint room where casual surfaces hide serious ambition: tacos arrive loaded with chanterelle or the day's catch, but the kitchen roams Mexico's regions with equal conviction, from tropical hamachi agua chile to smoky tlayuda to brined and smoked chicken. Vibrant, balanced, never showy.
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
- Time Out 2026 · The 45 best restaurants in NYC right now
- Roadbook The best restaurants in Greenpoint, New York
-
Rank 90. Hav & Mar
Ethiopian
At a spare corner on Eleventh Avenue, Chefs Marcus Samuelsson and Fariyal Abdullahi honor Ethiopian and Swedish ancestry through restrained plating and cross-cultural ingredient work. The Swediopian—berbere-cured salmon layered with apple, mustard seed caviar, and injera chips—distills their approach into a single, assured dish.
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Nominee · Emerging Chef · Fariyal Abdullahi
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Fariyal Abdullahi
- James Beard Awards 2025 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Fariyal Abdullahi
-
Rank 90. Maison Passerelle
Caribbean-inflected French
Gregory Gourdet's tightly curated menu inside Printemps remaps French cuisine through Caribbean and Vietnamese influences, each dish precise and layered. Striking tilework and an open kitchen frame dishes like duck glazed in cane syrup with tamarind jus—subversive rather than deferential.
- Esquire 2025 · The Best New Restaurants in America
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- The New York Times 2026 · #75 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
-
Basque fire and Manhattan pace collide in this High Line steakhouse, where an imported Spanish oven and charcoal grill handle American beef and Iberian pork with disciplined precision. The 60-day aged Txuleton and confident sommelier-guided wine list reflect a kitchen that trusts its ingredients to speak plainly.
-
Rank 90. Rolo's
Wood-fired Steakhouse
A wood-fire grill commands the dining room at this Ridgewood corner, its amber light catching the faces of newcomers and lifers alike. The polenta bread arrives fluffy and smoke-touched, ready for Calabrian chili butter or wild oregano; the dry-aged steaks demand green garlic. A bar up front makes cocktails with quiet competence, and the servers move through it all with genuine ease.
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Rafiq Salim
- Michelin Guide Bib Gourmand
- Eater 2026 · The 38 Best Restaurants in New York City
-
Rank 90. Bazaar Meat by José Andrés
Steakhouse
Fire and theater collide at this steakhouse where the grill becomes performance and meat is both reverence and provocation. Dry-aged beef emerges from charcoal-fired ovens with smoke and precision, a menu that questions the cut as much as it honors it.
-
Rank 90. Don Antonio
Neapolitan Pizza
A wood-fired outpost of a Neapolitan institution, Don Antonio channels four generations of pizza-making into dishes like the Montanara Starita—fried dough topped with house tomato sauce, smoked mozzarella, and basil—and frittatine, where fried spaghetti scraps meet ham and Buffalo mozzarella. The kitchen's lineage shows in every char and fold.
- 50 Top Pizza 2025 · #7 · 50 Top Pizza USA
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- Eater 2026 · The Best Restaurants Around Times Square
-
- VinePair 2023 · Industry Icon of the Year · The Next Wave Awards
- Spirited Awards 2026 · Regional Top 10 Honoree · Best U.S. Bar Team – U.S. East
- Time Out #11 · The 30 best bars in NYC right now
-
Rank 90. Upland
California Mediterranean
Stephen Starr and Roman and Williams craft a bright, wood-floored brasserie where California cooking meets Mediterranean ingredients in understated elegance. Hand-cut beef tartare and roasted King salmon arrive with the precision of a chef who knows restraint.
-
Rank 90. Junoon
Indian
Pendant lights and white marble set a refined stage where contemporary Indian cooking meets restless ambition, each plate a small argument for why tradition needn't mean stillness. Tuna puchka arrives jeweled with caviar; the Assamese tile fish curry hums with cilantro and restraint.
-
Rank 90. Chalong
Southern Thai
A narrow Hell's Kitchen counter lined with dark wood and rattan fixtures draws the pre-show crowd for Southern Thai shared plates. The kitchen moves confidently through curries and noodles, but the real argument is between the coconut-crusted shrimp and the garlic-braised ribs—both best followed by mango sticky rice with coconut ice cream, a dessert that justifies skipping the appetizers.
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Nate Limwong
- Michelin Guide Bib Gourmand
- Eater 2026 · The Best Restaurants Around Times Square
-
Rank 90. Tamarind
Indian
The marble bar catches light like a jewel in this Tribeca dining room, where soaring ceilings and classical proportions announce themselves without apology. Tandoori prawns arrive with char and smoke, while chana pindi and malai naan demonstrate how refinement needn't abandon warmth. A restaurant that treats Indian cooking as occasion worthy of grandeur.
-
Rank 118. 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
- The New York Times 2026 · #26 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
-
Rank 118. Pasta Shop
Italian
- USA Today 2026 · Restaurants of the Year
- NJ.com 2025 · #17 · New Jersey’s 99 greatest restaurants, ranked
-
Rank 118. Anjelica’s
Refined Italian
- USA Today 2026 · Restaurants of the Year
- NJ.com 2025 · #11 · New Jersey’s 99 greatest restaurants, ranked
-
Rank 118. Aarzu Modern Indian Bistro
Modern Indian
- USA Today 2025 · Restaurants of the Year
- NJ.com 2025 · #13 · New Jersey’s 99 greatest restaurants, ranked
-
Rank 118. L’abeille
French
A velvet-lined corner in TriBeCa where Chef Mitsunobu Nagae reconciles French technique with Japanese restraint—Dover sole in seaweed butter, langoustine with orange blossom foam, each plate composed with austere elegance. The marble bar and Christofle silver catch the light while servers in fitted suits move with balletic precision through the intimate room.
-
Rank 118. Cocina Consuelo
Mexican
In a snug dining room that feels like a well-kept secret, Karina Garcia and her husband Eduardo Rodriguez serve food with the intimacy of their original Harlem supper club. The coarse corn tortillas and birria built around a prehistoric marrow bone suggest a kitchen comfortable with bold, unpretentious gestures.
- The Infatuation #9 · The 25 Best Restaurants In NYC
- Eater 2026 · Where to Eat Brunch in New York City
- Eater The Best Breakfasts in New York
-
Rank 118. Korai Kitchen
Bangladeshi Indian
- The New York Times 2025 · Lau Chingri · The Best Restaurant Dishes We Ate Across the U.S.
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: Mid-Atlantic · Nur-E Gulshan Rahman
- NJ.com 2025 · #1 · New Jersey’s 99 greatest restaurants, ranked
-
Rank 118. Ci Siamo
Wood-fired Italian
A busy, efficient Italian kitchen tucked into Manhattan West glows with the confidence of Union Square Hospitality Group—handsome bar, open fire, large windows—and chef Hillary Sterling's caramelized onion torta alone justifies the trip. Generously rich pastas and a closing lemon torta with mascarpone suggest a restaurant built for sharing and return visits.
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Hillary Sterling
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Hillary Sterling
- James Beard Awards 2025 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Hillary Sterling
-
Rank 118. Crane Club Restaurant
Steakhouse
The soaring scarlet curtains and banquette-lined room announce ambition before you sit. Chef Melissa Rodriguez's steaks emerge charred from a custom grill; the squash tortellini and vegetable sides compete for attention. Desserts—banana farro cake with guava jam, apple croissant crumble with malted oat gelato—elevate what steakhouse sweets typically achieve.
- Wine Enthusiast 2025 · Top 50 New Restaurants
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- Time Out 2026 · The 45 best restaurants in NYC right now
-
Rank 118. Agi’s Counter
Creative
Pink walls and the ghost of a Hungarian grandmother preside over Crown Heights, where Jeremy Salamon's diner specializes in bread that demands second visits. A grilled potato pullman arrives under whipped chicken liver mousse and sour cherry caramel; nokdeli float in restorative chicken broth. Casual and fine-tuned at once, often leaving you wondering if you have room for one more.
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Nominee · Best Chef: New York State · Jeremy Salamon
- Punch 2025 · Best New Bartenders · Ben Hopkins
- Michelin Guide Bib Gourmand
-
Rank 118. 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
-
Rank 118. Crevette
Spanish-French Seafood
The dining room hums with purposeful energy, cream walls and white linens setting a composed stage for seafood that tastes like the Mediterranean got loud. Peekytoe crab agnolotti swims in tomato butter; whole Dover sole arrives burnished with bearnaise. This is coastal cooking stripped of pretense, built on good ingredients and the kind of brightness that makes you order another drink.
- Artful Living 2025 · The Top 5 Most Stylish Restaurants in America
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
-
Rank 118. Anixi
Vegan Mediterranean
-
Rank 118. Francie
Brasserie French
In a limestone-fronted South Williamsburg corner, exposed brick and widely spaced tables frame an open kitchen where the real theater unfolds. Conchiglie arrives glossy with clam sauce, bacon, and sesame breadcrumbs; roast duck is wheeled tableside whole before carving. This is brasserie cooking rendered with enough precision to justify the attention.
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
- James Beard Awards 2025 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Chris Cipollone
-
Rank 118. Bánh Anh Em
Vietnamese
People queue before this Third Avenue spot opens, drawn by Vietnamese cooking that repays the wait. The baguettes for bánh mì arrive warm and flaky; the pho layers brisket, tendon, tripe and steak over housemade noodles. Bánh cuốn and bánh xèo follow—dishes that taste like they've been perfected across decades, not invented last season.
- Michelin Guide Bib Gourmand
- The Infatuation #20 · The 25 Best Restaurants In NYC
- Grub Street 2025 · The 43 Best Restaurants in New York
-
Rank 118. HWARO
Korean
An unmarked counter on the second floor of a Midtown steakhouse, where Chef Sungchul Shim orchestrates a twenty-two-seat fusion of Korean flavor and French precision across a composed, unhurried evening. The brown butter miso opens into wild amberjack, abalone, and white soy custard with caviar, each plate a small study in restraint and technique.
-
Rank 118. Lungi
Sri Lankan Indian
At Lungi, chef Albin Vincent channels his grandmother's kitchen in Kanyakumari and Sri Lanka through dishes like pan-fried kingfish on banana leaf with fried makrut lime, and kothu roti—roti chopped and scrambled with meat and egg. The Upper East Side room hums with energy, and a carrot halwa spiked with warming spices closes the meal with grace.
- Michelin Guide Bib Gourmand
- Grub Street 2025 · The 43 Best Restaurants in New York
- The New York Times 2026 · #59 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
-
Rank 118. Sailor
Seafood
Lines snake around this Fort Greene corner for Bloomfield's seasonal cooking that makes simplicity look inevitable: eggs with celery salt and mayo, a Caesar salad, roast chicken. Lunch brings a spring onion and goat gouda quiche and fries that justify the wait. Light falls through the skylight onto a bistro settling into its role as neighborhood anchor.
- Esquire 2024 · The Best New Restaurants in America
- Eater 2024 · The Best New Restaurants in America
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
-
Rank 118. Zaab Zaab
Isan-style Thai
A candy-colored room in Elmhurst houses Isan cooking that doesn't soften its edges. Larb ped udon arrives blistered with fried duck skin and lime leaves; whole fish fry and seafood-driven curries follow the same uncompromising path, all fermented fish sauce and heat. Come hungry and with company.
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Restaurateur · Bryan Chunton and Pei Shan Wei
- Michelin Guide Bib Gourmand
- The New York Times 2026 · #38 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
-
Rank 118. Kanyakumari
Indian
A compact south Indian seafood kitchen with a bar-forward buzz, where bold regional cooking—fried chicken, tender beef short rib with curry leaves—delivers genuine depth. The fish curry and ghee rice show restraint and care alongside the kitchen's louder pleasures.
- Eater Sleeper Hit
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- Grub Street 2025 · The 43 Best Restaurants in New York
-
Rank 138. Xi'an Famous Foods
Xi'an-Style
-
Rank 138. Jeju Noodle Bar
Korean Noodles
At the counter of this Greenwich Street noodle bar, you watch the kitchen execute a brief menu of boldly flavored dishes—spicy plum-dressed cucumber kimchi, gochu ramyun perfumed with pork bone broth—at prices that feel like discovery. The toro ssam bap, with its fatty fish and tobiko nestled against scrambled egg, arrives as a small argument for restraint and clarity in cooking.
-
Rank 138. Xi'an Famous Foods
Xi'an-Style
-
Rank 138. 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.
-
Rank 138. Casa Tua
Italian
-
Rank 138. 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
-
Rank 138. Xi'an Famous Foods
Xi'an-Style
-
Rank 138. Raoul's
French
A SoHo fixture since the seventies, Raoul's occupies a bohemian time capsule where art-lined walls and classic cocktails set the scene for diners returning across decades. The kitchen's French American cooking—crab beignets with chili remoulade, duck with foie gras and lentils, tableside profiteroles—arrives with steady competence and occasional grace.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- Eater 2026 · The Best Classic Restaurants in NYC
- Eater 2026 · The Best Restaurants in Soho
-
Rank 138. Oiji Mi
Korean
Brian Kim's modern Korean kitchen operates with uncommon restraint, letting the quality of striped jack hwe and tender lobster ramyun speak for themselves across five courses. The sleek dining room hums with attentive service; cocktails and wine arrive with equal intelligence. A place where technique and subtlety have displaced bombast.
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
- Esquire 2023 · Martini Royale · The Best Martinis in America
- Esquire 2023 · The Best New Restaurants in America
-
Rank 138. Mari
Korean
Chef Sungchul Shim takes the handroll counter and reimagines it as tasting menu theater, where Scottish salmon, cured mackerel, and mushrooms nestle into rice and seaweed with Korean inflection. The kitchen is exposed on all sides, chefs moving with visible precision from one roll to the next. It's a narrow, high-wire act that pays off.
-
Rank 138. Theodora
Mediterranean Seafood
Wood smoke hangs thick in this Fort Greene dining room where Tomer Blechman applies Mediterranean sensibilities to seafood aged and charred over open flame. The dry-aged black cod arrives with miso beurre blanc and grilled vegetables; a pita comes topped with monkfish liver 'nduja. The restaurant hums with purpose, built entirely around what fire can do to fish.
- VinePair 2024 · Food & Beverage Program of the Year · The Next Wave Awards
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- Time Out 2026 · The 45 best restaurants in NYC right now
-
Rank 138. Shmoné
Neo-Levantine Mediterranean
A narrow Greenwich Village room where diners crowd the counter to watch Chef Eyal Shani work through seasonal Levantine cooking. Towering salads, hot Jerusalem bagels finished with olive oil, and bone-in beef short ribs with an almost austere tenderness define a menu built on vegetables and shareability rather than flourish.
-
Rank 138. Lechonera La Piraña
Puerto Rican Caribbean
- The Infatuation #23 · The 25 Best Restaurants In NYC
- Time Out 2026 · The 45 best restaurants in NYC right now
- Eater 2026 · The 38 Best Restaurants in New York City
-
Rank 138. Dar Lbahja
Moroccan
- The New York Times 2026 · #78 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
- The New York Times 2025 · Chicken Bastilla · Our New York Restaurant Critic Names Her Favorite Dishes This Year
- The Infatuation 2025 · #12 · NYC’s Best New Restaurants
-
-
Rank 138. Xi'an Famous Foods
Xi'an-Style
-
Rank 138. Xi'an Famous Foods
Xi'an-Style
-
Rank 138. Russ & Daughters
Jewish
- BagelUp #4 · The Definitive 30 Best Bagel Shops in New York City
- Eater The Best Breakfasts in New York
- The New York Times The 16 Best Bagels in New York City Right Now
-
Rank 138. Win Son Bakery
Taiwanese-American Bakery
-
Rank 138. Hometown Bar-B-Que
Barbecue
Wood smoke announces Hometown's Red Hook warehouse before you see it. The counter-service brisket arrives with a deep smoke ring and yielding pull; the jalapeño sausage, studded with melted cheese, reminds you why the trek from Manhattan matters. Collards and potato salad round out a meal that trades ambition for the clarity of meat cooked right.
-
Rank 138. Xi'an Famous Foods
Xi'an-Style
-
Rank 138. Cafe Mado
American Contemporary
Café Mado unfolds from casual coffee counter to skylit dining room, where house-baked bread and handmade pasta anchor a menu that shifts seamlessly between breakfast and refined dinner. Pissaladière with anchovies and caramelized onions gives way to pici with pesto, each dish marked by restraint and precision.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- Grub Street 2025 · The 43 Best Restaurants in New York
- The New York Times 2025 · The Best New Restaurants in New York
-
Rank 138. Augustine's Salumeria
Modern Italian
Marc Taxiera's restaurant trades in the immediate bounty of Westchester—grass-fed beef stewed into mafalda, a grilled pork chop dusted with pecan ash—in a comfortable, unfussy space that doubles as a charcuterie counter. The Italian-leaning menu pivots on what's fresh, though the kitchen's nightly specials are where real choice becomes a problem.
-
Rank 138. Xi'an Famous Foods
Xi'an-Style
-
Rank 138. Taqueria Ramirez
Mexican
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Giovanni Cervantes
- Roadbook The Best Restaurants in New York City
- Grub Street 2025 · The 43 Best Restaurants in New York
-
Rank 138. Hyderabadi Zaiqa
Hyderabadi Indian
A sliver of a dining room in the Theater District where Mohammad Tarique Khan and Jayesh Naik execute Hyderabadi cooking with understated precision—samosas arrive golden and crisp, their potato filling properly spiced, while the goat fry biryani builds layers of fragrance across bone-in meat and long-grain rice. Service moves with rare grace through the tight quarters; arrive solo or in pairs.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- Time Out 2026 · The 45 best restaurants in NYC right now
- Eater 2026 · The 38 Best Restaurants in New York City
-
Rank 138. JUA
Modern Korean
Chef Hoyoung Kim orchestrates a modern Korean tasting menu in a sleek, high-ceilinged room near the Flatiron, where raw fluke from Jeju arrives in chilled spicy broth, branzino emerges with shattered skin, and wood-fired lamb speaks to exacting technique. Each course moves with purpose toward a glazed Korean donut and silky ice cream, the whole experience calibrated and unrushed.
-
Rank 138. 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
-
-
Rank 138. Tempura Matsui
Tempura Japanese
A counter-only tempura specialist where the chef's restrained batter and mixed-oil technique elevate humble ingredients into delicate, seasonal revelations. The progression from shrimp legs through tender squid and scallop to mellow tencha broth unfolds with the precision of ritual.
-
Rank 138. Sylvia’s
Southern
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Winner · America's Classics: New York State
- Eater 2026 · The Best Classic Restaurants in NYC
- Time Out 2026 · The 45 best restaurants in NYC right now
-
Rank 138. Taglio Pizza
Roman-Style Pizza
-
Rank 138. Da Nico Ristorante
Classic Italian
-
Rank 138. Joe Allen
American
- Eater 2026 · The Best Classic Restaurants in NYC
- Grub Street 2026 · The 40 Best Restaurants for Kids (and Parents!)
- Eater 2026 · The Best Restaurants Around Times Square
-
Rank 138. Xi'an Famous Foods
Xi'an-Style
-
Rank 138. Pastis
French
-
Rank 138. Brooklyn DOP Pizza
NY-Style Pizza
-
Rank 138. Muku
Japanese
Chef Manabu Asanuma's intimate kaiseki counter cycles through the seasons with buckwheat soba from his hometown and pristine Japanese seafood, each course precise and unhurried. The sake program ranks among the city's finest, curated for collectors and novices alike.
-
-
Rank 138. 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
-
Rank 138. Carbone
American Italian
A cavernous room of plush banquettes and glittering chandeliers where servers move with practiced charm, channeling mid-century Italian-American nostalgia at full throttle. The rigatoni alla vodka and meatballs arrive reliably satisfying, though the real spectacle is less about what's on the plate than the sense of being seen in a room where everyone else wants to be.
-
Rank 138. Don Angie
Creative Italian
Moody banquettes and brass accents frame a room where Angie Rito and Scott Tacinelli orchestrate playful collisions: spicy pepperoni fried rice meets grilled calamari, paprika pasta wraps smoked mussels, mezcal braised chicken sits atop 'nduja. The cooking moves fluidly between Italian foundations and Asian detours, never settling into a single accent, which is precisely the point.
- James Beard Awards 2025 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Restaurant
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- James Beard Awards 2022 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Chef · Angie Rito and Scott Tacinelli
-
- Eater 2026 · The Best Classic Restaurants in NYC
- Eater 2026 · The 38 Best Restaurants in New York City
- Eater 2026 · The Best Restaurants in Midtown
-
-
Rank 138. Al Badawi
Palestinian Middle Eastern
Plastic flowers cascade across the front and interior of this Palestinian spot on Atlantic Avenue, a visual announcement of the bold, abundant cooking within. Enormous mezze platters arrive with hot saj bread from the domed oven by the door, though the kitchen's finest moment may be its plainest: thin flatbread topped with melted cheese and ground pistachios.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- Grub Street 2025 · The 43 Best Restaurants in New York
- Eater 2026 · The 38 Best Restaurants in New York City
-
Rank 138. Ramen by Ra
Noodles
-
Rank 138. Four Twenty Five
Contemporary
Benno and Vongerichten's Park Avenue dining room floods with daylight and restraint, a glamorous stage for cooking that roams Italy, France, and Asia without apology. A foie gras arrives with blood orange and warm spiced madeleines; even asparagus reads as a statement, while the chocolate tart at meal's end—layered with black cardamom and tonka—justifies its prominence.
- Esquire 2024 · The Best New Restaurants in America
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- Grub Street 2025 · The 43 Best Restaurants in New York
-
Rank 138. Ribalta
Neapolitan Pizza
-
Rank 138. Xi'an Famous Foods
Xi'an-Style
-
Rank 138. AbuQir
Egyptian Seafood
At this Astoria seafood counter, fish arrive so fresh they stare back before the griddle claims them in smoke and wheat bran crust. The tagine swells with shrimp the size of blossoms, the pita exhales steam, and even the rice glows with seafood stock.
- The New York Times 2026 · #17 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
- Grub Street 2026 · The 40 Best Restaurants for Kids (and Parents!)
- Eater 2026 · The 38 Best Restaurants in New York City
-
Rank 138. Épicerie Boulud
French
- International Baking Industry Expo 2025 · Winner: Baguette · World Bread Awards USA · Jeremy Canut
- Eater The Best Croissants in NYC
-
Rank 138. 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
-
Rank 138. Xi'an Famous Foods
Xi'an-Style
-
-
Rank 138. Xi'an Famous Foods
Xi'an-Style
-
Rank 138. Eyval
Modern Persian
Ali Saboor's Bushwick restaurant wields the Persian pantry with painterly precision—barberries, fenugreek, saffron, black lime—in modern arrangements that feel both reverent and playful. The yogurt alone, voluptuous and tangy, suggests a chef thinking in flavors rather than categories.
- Roadbook The Best Restaurants in New York City
- Grub Street 2025 · The 43 Best Restaurants in New York
- The New York Times 2026 · #57 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
-
Rank 138. Xi'an Famous Foods
Xi'an-Style
-
Rank 138. Shaw-Naé’s House
Southern
Shaw-naé Dixon emerges from her kitchen to embrace each of the six diners at her Staten Island table, and the meal becomes an act of devotion. Collards arrive with defiant tenderness, mac and cheese pools with chewy scraps, and whole fish emerge double-fried and loved into glory.
- The New York Times 2024 · The Restaurant List
- The Infatuation #16 · The 25 Best Restaurants In NYC
- The New York Times 2026 · #81 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
-
Rank 138. 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
-
Rank 138. Armani/Ristorante
Italian
-
- Time Out #9 · The 21 very best coffee shops in NYC
- Eater The Best Croissants in NYC
- The Infatuation The Best Croissants In NYC
-
Rank 138. Thyme
Cocktail Bar
-
Rank 138. 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
-
Rank 138. Bartolo
Spanish
A West Village room of low beams and amber light draws you into its sense of intimate theater. Bartolo builds its kitchen around generous Spanish cooking meant for the table: grilled Iberian pork, braised oxtail, cristal bread with anchovies, ajo blanco touched with honeydew sorbet. The operation moves with the precision of a room that understands how to sustain a mood.
-
Rank 138. 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
-
Rank 138. Casa Mono
Spanish
At Casa Mono, a small room on Irving Place, the kitchen breaks down whole animals and sends out tapas in a considered rhythm—scrambled eggs with uni, silky confit goat—that prioritizes the diner's experience over operational efficiency. The cooking reaches beyond its nominal Costa Brava roots with a refinement that suggests someone genuinely understands what good food is supposed to do.
-
Rank 204. Salsa
Neapolitan Pizza
-
Rank 204. Audace
Italian
-
Rank 204. L&B Spumoni Gardens
Old-School Pizza
- The New York Times The 25 Best Pizza Places in New York Right Now
- The Infatuation Square Slice · 25 Iconic Dishes That Define New York
- Vogue 2026 · The 25 Best Restaurants in Brooklyn, According to Vogue Staff
-
Rank 204. Lord's
British
A London bistro transplanted to Greenwich Village, where Chef Ed Szymanski and Patricia Howard apply nose-to-tail restraint to English comfort food—curried lamb scotch eggs, duck-stuffed cabbage the size of a small animal. The apple and calvados trifle arrives like an apology for your own excess, and the bar still finds room for walk-ins even when the banquettes overflow.
- Food & Wine 2023 · Best New Chefs · Ed Szymanski
- Eater 2023 · The Best New Restaurants in America
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Ed Szymanski
-
Rank 204. Stretch Pizza
NY-Style Pizza
-
Rank 204. Bonnie's
Cantonese Chinese
A nondescript corner spot in Williamsburg channels retro Hong Kong diner aesthetics while Chef Calvin Eng interprets Cantonese regional cuisine with modern precision. Crispy yeung yu sang choi bao stuffed with shrimp and mustard greens, salt-and-pepper shrimp lacquered with melted onions, and cheung fun dressed in X.O. sauce reveal a kitchen unafraid of both tradition and invention.
- Esquire 2023 · MSG Martini · The Best Martinis in America
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Calvin Eng
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Calvin Eng
-
Rank 204. Lingo
Japanese-influenced New American
In a Greenpoint corner, chawanmushi meets rock shrimp and sea grapes; bone marrow steak tartare gets dressed in black sesame cream. The beef pie—Hokkaido curry inside a golden pastry shell—is where Lingo's casual American template and Japanese sensibility stop negotiating and start singing together.
- James Beard Awards 2025 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Emily Yuen
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
-
Rank 204. Salsa Pizza Napoletana & Street Food
Neapolitan Pizza
-
Rank 204. Pizza Secret
Neapolitan Pizza
-
Rank 204. LenLen
Thai
-
Rank 204. Hellbender
Mexican
A neon jaguar presides over Chef Yara Herrera's cooking, which channels her Mexican American upbringing through charred Yucatecan dips, assertive cilantro, and chile crisp so dark it borders on feral. The precision beneath that wildness is what keeps you coming back.
- Esquire 2024 · The Best New Restaurants in America
- The New York Times 2026 · #58 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
- The New York Times 2025 · The Best New Restaurants in New York
-
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Yvan Lemoine
- Eater 2026 · The Best New Restaurants in Queens Right Now
-
Rank 204. Bangkok Supper Club
Contemporary Thai
Chef Max Wittawat's contemporary Thai kitchen draws from family recipes with exacting technique, turning simple ingredients into dramatic contrasts—the fiery scallop ceviche with watermelon chili granita, deep-fried pork cheeks over garlic rice—while the cocktail program receives equal care. A chic room for a refined evening built on impeccable execution.
- Spirited Awards 2025 · Regional Top 10 Honoree · Best U.S. Restaurant Bar – U.S. East
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
-
Rank 204. The American Hotel
French New American
-
Rank 204. Restaurant Yuu
Contemporary French
The kitchen emerges from darkness like a stage reveal, all whites and precision, as Chef Yuu Shimano orchestrates a tasting built on French discipline and Japanese refinement—smoked clam against celeriac, abalone risotto dusted with nori. Each plate moves between restraint and indulgence, anchored by the duck and foie pastry that tastes like a relic, punctuated by the mojito that tastes like now.
-
Rank 204. Koloman
Austrian/French
- James Beard Awards 2025 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Markus Glocker
- Roadbook The Best Restaurants in New York City
- Esquire 2022 · Pastry Chef of the Year · Emiko Chisholm
-
- Eater 2026 · The 38 Best Restaurants in New York City
- Grub Street 2026 · The 40 Best Restaurants for Kids (and Parents!)
- The New York Times 2024 · New York’s 14 Best New Restaurants
-
Rank 204. Mano’s Pizzeria
NY-Style Pizza
- 50 Top Pizza 2025 · #8 · 50 Top Pizza Slice USA
- The New York Times The 25 Best Pizza Places in New York Right Now
-
Rank 204. Kesté Pizza&Vino
Italian
-
Rank 204. Pasquale Jones
Neo-NY Pizza
-
Rank 204. The View
American
- Grub Street 2026 · The 40 Best Restaurants for Kids (and Parents!)
- The New York Times 2025 · Chocolate Cake · Our New York Restaurant Critic Names Her Favorite Dishes This Year
- Eater 2026 · The Best Restaurants in Midtown
-
Rank 204. Ops
Neapolitan Pizza
-
Rank 204. La Marchande
Modern French
-
The bartenders behind Zero Bond have opened a sceney West Village cocktail bar where martinis arrive doctored with feta and tomato-herb vodka, their savory inclinations matched by shaved prime rib sandwiches. Dandelion trades restraint for flavor—a place that commits fully to its seasoned vision.
-
Rank 227. I Sodi
Italian
Rita Sodi's trattoria on Bleecker Street moves with the seasons—grilled tomato and burrata one day, layered lasagna the next—while a practiced bar keeps the room humming with Negronis and neighborhood energy. The pappardelle al limon cuts through richness with citrus clarity, a small gesture that hints at the kitchen's larger restraint.
-
Inside the Park South Hotel, Stone & Soil applies Japanese hospitality and zero-waste principles to cocktails, where a mezcal drink built on fermented pineapple—skin and all—tastes like restraint has never tasted so good.
-
Rank 227. Roberta's
Pizza
A red door opens onto industrial brick and a bohemian fervor that has only intensified over the years. Grilled bread arrives heaped with gigante beans and dandelion greens, crowned with a soft egg; the house bucatini swims in bright sungold tomato. The signature pizza remains the thing to eat here, though a porchetta sandwich to go works when the wait grows unbearable.
-
A Chelsea bar where Spanish and Portuguese sensibilities meet in a glass: conservas and cocktails designed around unexpected ingredients like lemongrass liqueur and cava. The Seirēn Song Spritz arrives with tinned fish and tapas, a model of casual sophistication that doesn't announce itself.
-
A rum-focused cocktail bar in Williamsburg where daiquiris anchor a menu that pivots between spirit-forward drinks and seafood snacks like oysters with tepache mignonette. The operators, both seasoned in craft cocktail culture, have furnished the space with intention—everyday pricing, basement rum bar included—suggesting they built this for regulars, not tourists.
-
Rank 227. Asian Jewels
Dim Sum Chinese
A Flushing institution where carts of shumai, spareribs, and chicken yuba arrive before you sit, chandeliers glinting above round tables in controlled chaos. Weekends dissolve into a blur of lifted lids and overlapping orders; come early or risk standing.
-
Rank 227. Kellogg's Diner
Retro American
- Eater 2026 · Where to Eat Brunch in New York City
- Eater The Best Breakfasts in New York
- The New York Times 2024 · Passion Fruit Tajín Icebox Pie · Here Are Our Top New York Dishes
-
Rank 227. Le B.
French
Angie Mar's Greenwich Village salon wraps diners in sapphire velvet and white linen for a French kitchen inflected with her Chinese sensibility. Terrines glistening with pistachio and kumquat, foie gras, seafood Wellington dressed in Sauternes cream—the sauces are rich and considered, the whole affair pitched toward occasion and intimacy.
- Esquire 2023 · Bemelman at the Ritz · The Best Martinis in America
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Angie Mar
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
-
Rank 227. Roman's
Italian
At Roman's, bare wood tables catch the light of low candles while the marble bar behind becomes a shrine to aperitif knowledge and seasonal Italian cooking. The menu shifts with the calendar, but each dish arrives as though it were the only thing you came for.
- Roadbook The Best Restaurants in New York City
- The New York Times 2026 · #53 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
-
Rank 227. abcV
Vegetarian
Nestled within ABC Carpet & Home, this vegetarian restaurant pairs minimalist design—mismatched chandeliers, bright pops of color—with menus that blur the line between nourishment and refinement. An egg and cheese dosa arrives beside bergamot-scented spaghetti with rainbow chard, dishes that prove vegetables need no apology.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- The New York Times 2026 · #48 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
-
Rank 227. Mission Chinese Food
Chinese
-
A Park Slope cocktail bar where Indian spice logic governs the program: draft Negronis tinged with toasted coconut, a Mangalorean built around mango powder and curried coconut cream. Jay Kumar, who runs the Indian restaurant Lore nearby, approaches mixing with the same restless seasoning hand that defines his kitchen.
-
Rank 227. Miss Ada
Middle Eastern
A Fort Greene mainstay where whipped ricotta with brown butter and lamb-topped hummus emerge from a shockingly small kitchen. The backyard garden fills nightly despite scarce reservations, though the bar welcomes walk-ins for charred skewers and market salads meant for sharing.
- Michelin Guide Bib Gourmand
- Vogue 2026 · The 25 Best Restaurants in Brooklyn, According to Vogue Staff
-
Rank 227. Kappo Sono
Kaiseki Japanese
Chef Chikara Sono works a few feet from your seat, presenting each course as it emerges, asking nothing but your presence and appetite. The restraint of kaiseki—seasonal precision, ingredient clarity, flavors that murmur rather than announce—becomes almost conversational at this sixth-floor counter.
- The New York Times 2026 · #24 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
- The New York Times 2025 · The Best New Restaurants in New York
-
Rank 227. Shukette
Middle Eastern
At Shukette, the dips and breads arrive in a shock of color—bubbled frena, balloon-puffed pita, a table groaning with vegetables and fiery sauces—and you're sated before the mains appear. It is a place where everything tastes slicked, garlicked, alive.
- James Beard Awards 2026 · Nominee · Best Chef: New York State · Ayesha Nurdjaja
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Ayesha Nurdjaja
- The New York Times 2026 · #69 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
-
Rank 227. Txikito
Basque Spanish
- Roadbook The Best Restaurants in New York City
- The New York Times 2026 · #64 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
-
Rank 227. Cafe Commerce
Contemporary New American
A revived neighborhood classic transplanted to the Upper East Side, where Harold Moore plates contemporary American cooking with French and Italian traces—sea scallops, beef carpaccio, steak Diane alongside returning signatures like sweet potato tortellini. The room carries an easy glamour suited to weeknight dining, and the four-layer coconut cake alone justifies the trip.
-
Rank 227. Beyond Sushi
Vegan Sushi
-
- Eater 2026 · The Best Steakhouses in New York City
- Time Out 2026 · The 45 best restaurants in NYC right now
-
Rank 227. LORE
American-infused Indian
A corner storefront in Park Slope where chef Jay Kumar fuses Indian spice with American ingredients in dishes like roasted squash over babaghanoush and duck confit with tamarind sauce. The warm service and poetic cocktail list elevate what might feel like a neighborhood spot into something more deliberately refined.
- Michelin Guide Bib Gourmand
- Vogue 2026 · The 25 Best Restaurants in Brooklyn, According to Vogue Staff
-
In the basement of a West Village townhouse, Kees pours classical cocktails—martinis, Collins, sours—with the restraint of someone who learned that elegance requires no embellishment. The space feels like a private study, all dark wood and low light, where a Comté spinach dip arrives as quietly as the next perfect drink.
-
Rank 227. Cafe Sabarsky
Austrian Bakery
A Vienna transplant tucked into a Beaux Arts mansion on Museum Mile, all dark wood paneling and Otto Wagner textiles. The wiener schnitzel and Hungarian beef goulash anchor the menu, but the pastries—Linzer torte, Sachertorte, a layered feuilletine—are what justify the pilgrimage.
-
- Eater The Best Breakfasts in New York
- Grub Street 2026 · The 40 Best Restaurants for Kids (and Parents!)
-
- The Infatuation The 21 Best New Restaurants In NYC
- The Infatuation #15 · The 25 Best Restaurants In NYC
-
Rank 227. Pizzeria La Rosa
NY-Style
-
Rank 227. 4 Charles Prime Rib
Steakhouse
A Chicago steakhouse improbably tucked into a Village townhouse, where the prime rib arrives three ways and the sides—creamed spinach, roasted garlic, buttered potatoes—arrive as they should. The staff trades in genuine warmth, and the wine list extends beyond meat; dessert is dark chocolate pie in an Oreo crust. Sodikoff's restraint is the point.
-
Rank 227. Border Town
Mexican
- The Infatuation The 21 Best New Restaurants In NYC
- Eater 2026 · The Best New Restaurants in Brooklyn Right Now
-
Rank 227. Cuerno
Mexican
- Eater 2026 · The Best Steakhouses in New York City
- The New York Times 2025 · Taco Richi · Our New York Restaurant Critic Names Her Favorite Dishes This Year
-
Rank 227. Golden Unicorn
Cantonese Chinese
- Eater 2026 · The Best Classic Restaurants in NYC
- Grub Street 2026 · The 40 Best Restaurants for Kids (and Parents!)
-
Rank 227. Ánimo!
Mexican
-
Rank 227. Atoboy
Korean
Chef Junghyun Park's Gramercy dining room is spare and bright, with an open kitchen where Korean cooking gets a creative push without losing its spine. Red shrimp in kimchi beurre blanc, fried chicken brined in pineapple and finished with ginger-peanut butter—the menu reads as both adventurous and fundamentally welcoming. It is a place that loves what it cooks.
-
-
Rank 227. Café Kestrel
Pan-European French
In a narrow Red Hook storefront, Café Kestrel balances casual ease with refined technique, its French-leaning menu moving gracefully from fried halloumi with sage and honey to duck leg confit nestled against rutabaga purée and candied kumquats. Service arrives unhurried and attentive, desserts—particularly an apricot cake with caramel—feel like the point of the meal rather than an afterthought.
- Eater Restaurant We'd Most Want to Be Regulars
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- The New York Times 2024 · Fried Halloumi · Here Are Our Top New York Dishes
-
The narrow dining room glows with incense and dark wood, a cozy refuge where the kitchen executes a sprawling menu of curries and stir-fries with unusual care. Yum pla duk—crispy catfish draped in tart mango salad—and miang kha-na's brilliant tangle of lime, pork, and peanuts suggest a kitchen that understands Thai food's full range.
- Michelin Guide Bib Gourmand
- The New York Times 2026 · #60 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
-
Rank 227. 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
-
Rank 227. 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.
-
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.
-
Rank 227. Lola's
Asian, Southern
Suzanne Cupps coaxes vegetables into unexpected eloquence across a menu that moves from naan to gumbo without apology or design—the confident cooking of someone equally at home in three culinary worlds. Her plates feel less like fusion than like the natural inheritance of a chef raised between the Philippines, Pennsylvania, and the American South.
- James Beard Awards 2025 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Suzanne Cupps
- The New York Times 2026 · #71 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
- The New York Times 2024 · New York’s 14 Best New Restaurants
-
Rank 227. Tanoreen
Middle Eastern
In a narrow Bay Ridge storefront, Rawia Bishara and her daughter compose a warm Middle Eastern kitchen where meals unfold across dozens of small plates—harissa-bright tomato spreads, grape leaves, braised lamb suspended in yogurt cream. The portions are generous, the flavors vivid, the olive oil excellent: a place that feeds you as if you were family.
-
Rank 227. Lakruwana
Sri Lankan
The walls of this Sri Lankan storefront shimmer with murals and sculptures, a visual carnival that matches the owner's infectious presence working the room. Kottu roti arrives as a sizzling heap of shredded flatbread and chicken; hoppers—crispy bowl-shaped crepes—cradle bright yellow fish curry. The energy is genuine, the street food uncompromising.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- The New York Times 2026 · #93 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
-
Rank 227. il Gigante
Italian
In a modest Ridgewood corner, il Gigante serves the Italian essentials with quiet confidence: silky lasagna Bolognese arrives with its own vessel of grated Parmigiano, while cacio e pepe and branzino demonstrate a kitchen that knows what it's doing without needing to announce it. The room is intimate and unhurried, the sort of place where neighborhood regulars outnumber tourists.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- Grub Street 2026 · The 40 Best Restaurants for Kids (and Parents!)
-
Rank 227. Mario's Restaurant
Historic Italian
- Eater 2026 · The Best Classic Restaurants in NYC
- Grub Street 2026 · The 40 Best Restaurants for Kids (and Parents!)
-
Rank 227. Beyond Sushi
Vegan Sushi
-
Rank 227. King
Mediterranean
At night, King glows amber in SoHo, serving rustic European cooking that lets each season's harvest speak for itself. The kitchen's deft restraint—panisse, house-made ravioli, grilled bass—suggests that three chef-owners learned something essential at River Café about making difficulty vanish.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- The New York Times 2026 · #50 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
-
Rank 227. Tobalá
Oaxacan Mexican
A dimly lit room in Riverdale lined with Oaxacan pottery and clay masks sets the stage for cooking that respects tradition without performing it. House-made corn tortillas arrive with salsa verde and chile de árbol; the barbacoa tacos showcase lamb in its plainest form, while duck enmoladas swim in a dark mole negro layered with fruit and chiles. A focused mezcal program anchors the drinks.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- Grub Street 2026 · The 40 Best Restaurants for Kids (and Parents!)
-
- Eater 2026 · Where to Eat Brunch in New York City
- Grub Street 2026 · The 40 Best Restaurants for Kids (and Parents!)
-
Rank 227. Chatpati Delhi
North Indian
-
Rank 227. 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!)
-
The open kitchen at this Astoria taverna crackles with the rhythm of a neighborhood institution. Spinach pie arrives in flaky, sesame-studded sheets; whole branzino glistens under olive oil and herbs. It's the kind of place where servers slip into Greek if you seem to belong, where the food tastes like it knows exactly what it's doing and nothing more.
-
Rank 227. Çka Ka Qëllue
Albanian
Ramiz Kukaj's rustic Albanian dining room, decorated with folk photographs and traditional garb, serves fortifying meat and dairy dishes in the spirit of village hospitality. Burek and sarma arrive simple and comforting, built on bread, cheese, and the promise implied by the restaurant's name: whatever we have, we share.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- The New York Times 2026 · #96 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
-
Rank 227. Yemenat
Yemeni Middle Eastern
In Bay Ridge's thriving Middle Eastern enclave, Yemenat serves Yemeni home cooking at a family table: lamb haneeth arrives as a glossy braise over hadrami rice, while sides like spiced tomato paste and rashoosh bread are portioned for sharing. The cooking is straightforward and generous, each dish calibrated not for refinement but for sustenance and togetherness.
- Michelin Guide Bib Gourmand
- The New York Times 2026 · #31 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
- The New York Times 2024 · Beef Fahsa · Here Are Our Top New York Dishes
-
Rank 279. Grand Brasserie
French
-
Tucked into a subway station, See No Evil serves pizza with the casual irreverence of a place that shouldn't exist. The Hell pie—thin crust charred and topped with spicy meat—arrives alongside sardine toast and seasonal beans in walnut sauce, while black-and-white checkered floors and 80s soundtracks anchor the scene. It's the kind of New York anomaly where the commute becomes an excuse to linger.
-
Rank 279. Chez Ma Tante
Canadian French
Aidan O'Neal and Jake Leiber run a compact French-Canadian kitchen where pork preparations and offal terrine anchor a menu that refuses apology. Fennel sausage over beans and bacon, gnocchi with blue cheese, maple crème brûlée—the cooking is forceful, richly flavored, and worth the weekend crowds.
-
Weekend chaos rules at this dim sum palace, where crowds surge through the doors and an announcer bellows reservation numbers like bingo calls. Carts laden with siu mai, shrimp-and-rice-noodle bundles in sweet soy, and tea leaf–wrapped zongzi roll past tables in the gold-trimmed room with assembly-line precision. Weekdays offer the same kitchen without the theatrical crush.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- Vogue 2026 · The 25 Best Restaurants in Brooklyn, According to Vogue Staff
-
Rank 279. John's of Bleecker Street
Coal-Oven Pizza
- Eater 2026 · The Best Classic Restaurants in NYC
- The New York Times The 25 Best Pizza Places in New York Right Now
-
Rank 279. I Cavallini
Regional Italian
Chef Nick Curtola works in clean, unadorned lines at this neighborhood trattoria—braised beef tendons shaved thin with acidic onions, handmade pastas balanced with restraint, a tiramisu so light it seems to dissolve. The room invites lingering, and the cooking, rooted in regional tradition, knows the difference between simplicity and emptiness.
-
Rank 279. Ciao, Gloria
Italian
- Time Out #20 · The 21 very best coffee shops in NYC
- Sprudge The Sprudge Guide to Coffee In South Brooklyn
-
At Renee's Kitchenette, a Filipino stalwart in Woodside since 1992, whole eggplants disappear into omelets studded with pork, and ginger-streaked chicken soup arrives in modest bowls without ceremony. The cooking trades presentation for flavor—brown and unstudied, the food speaks for itself.
- The New York Times 2026 · #68 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
- The Infatuation Chicken Adobo · 25 Iconic Dishes That Define New York
-
Rank 279. Loring Place
Californian New American
At Loring Place, Dan Kluger applies his restless intelligence to California-inflected cooking that pivots on vegetables—wood-grilled broccoli arrives with orange and pistachios, pizzas emerge from the wood oven built from house-milled flour. The dining room, all mid-century geometry and bold stripes, feels like a deliberate rejection of downtown's usual theatrical clutter.
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Chef · Dan Kluger
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
-
Rank 279. Hart's
Mediterranean
Beneath the Franklin Avenue subway stairs sits a slate-blue sliver where Nick Perkins commands a marble counter kitchen like a conductor in a phone booth. Heirloom tomatoes swim in olive oil and chili; hake arrives with anchovies and bitter greens; pork Milanese arrives bronzed and playful. The space is whitewashed brick and blonde wood, but the real economy is in every plate.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- Vogue 2026 · The 25 Best Restaurants in Brooklyn, According to Vogue Staff
-
-
Rank 279. Chrissy's Pizza
NY-Style Pizza
- The Infatuation 2025 · #5 · NYC’s Best New Restaurants
- The New York Times The 25 Best Pizza Places in New York Right Now
-
Rank 279. Trinciti Roti Shop
Trinidadian Caribbean
The A train's delays fade the moment you reach this cramped counter in South Ozone Park, where the buss up shut—a butter-layered roti fried to gossamer thinness—arrives with the flaky richness of a well-made biscuit. Each bite reveals another fold, each fold another reason the wait was worth it.
- The Infatuation #13 · The 25 Best Restaurants In NYC
- The New York Times 2026 · #88 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
- The New York Times 2024 · Bake and Shark · Here Are Our Top New York Dishes
-
- Grub Street 2026 · The 40 Best Restaurants for Kids (and Parents!)
- Vogue 2026 · The 25 Best Restaurants in Brooklyn, According to Vogue Staff
-
Rank 279. 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
-
Rank 279. Los Tacos No. 1
Tijuana-Style
-
Rank 279. Gui Steakhouse
Korean Steakhouse
- Eater 2026 · The Best Steakhouses in New York City
- Eater 2026 · The Best Restaurants Around Times Square
-
Rank 279. 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.
-
Rank 279. Napali Bhanchha Ghar
Nepalese
In a Jackson Heights storefront, momos arrive wrinkled and substantial, swimming in a soupy chutney of chicken broth and chiles that clings to dough in equal measure. The Nepali kitchen treats the dumpling as a two-part experience—one you eat and sip simultaneously.
- Eater 2026 · The 38 Best Restaurants in New York City
- The New York Times 2026 · #67 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
-
Rank 279. Russ & Daughters
Jewish
- BagelUp #4 · The Definitive 30 Best Bagel Shops in New York City
- The New York Times The 16 Best Bagels in New York City Right Now
-
Rank 279. Frijoleros
Mexican
-
-
Rank 279. JG Melon
American
A corner saloon in a 1920s building draws crowds for its burger, though the kitchen acquits itself across the board—the chili cup arrives heaped with meat and cheese, the turkey club holds its own. Green-and-white checked cloths, a dark wood bar, and staff who seem genuinely glad you're here create the kind of timeless comfort that makes institutions.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- The Infatuation Cheeseburger · 25 Iconic Dishes That Define New York
-
Rank 279. Hamido Seafood
Egyptian Seafood
-
Rank 279. Zaab Zaab
Isan Thai
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Restaurateur · Bryan Chunton and Pei Shan Wei
- The New York Times 2026 · #38 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
-
Rank 279. Kanoyama
Sushi
Chef Nobuyuki Shikanai's corner counter in the East Village draws serious sushi devotees for omakase sessions where each piece arrives with deliberate precision. The intimate bar commands a steep price, though the sake selection—guests choose their own vessels—rewards the investment. A brighter dining room offers à la carte alternatives for those seeking less ceremony.
-
Rank 279. F&F Pizzeria
Pizza
- Grub Street 2025 · The 43 Best Restaurants in New York
- The New York Times The 25 Best Pizza Places in New York Right Now
-
-
Rank 279. Al-Basha
Palestinian Middle Eastern
- USA Today 2024 · Restaurants of the Year
- NJ.com 2025 · #4 · New Jersey’s 99 greatest restaurants, ranked
-
Rank 279. Sadelle's
Bakery
-
- Eater 2026 · The Best Steakhouses in New York City
- Eater 2026 · The Best Restaurants Around Times Square
-
Rank 279. Peter Luger Steak House
Steakhouse
Wood-paneled rooms fill with generations of regulars and newcomers ordering the Porterhouse, dry-aged and broiled until it sizzles, then finished with butter. Peter Luger trades in uncomplicated pleasures: bratwurst, creamed spinach, cheesecake with schlag—and the particular ease of a room where the servers know the rhythm. A steakhouse that feels less like a destination than a birthright.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- Vogue 2026 · The 25 Best Restaurants in Brooklyn, According to Vogue Staff
-
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.
-
Rank 279. Chang Lai Fishballs & Noodles
Cantonese Street Food
-
Rank 279. Uncle Ray's
Singaporean Chinese
A narrow storefront on Ninth Avenue serves chicken rice descended from a Singapore original, where the bird yields to the knife and proper gelatin sheathes the skin. The rice, bloated with broth and ginger, is the real draw—a side dish so composed it needs no company.
- The New York Times 2026 · #85 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
- The New York Times 2025 · Poached Chicken Rice · Our New York Restaurant Critic Names Her Favorite Dishes This Year
-
Rank 279. Shu Jiao Fu Zhou
Fujianese Chinese
-
Rank 279. House of Joy
Cantonese
-
Rank 279. Demo
European
-
Rank 279. Buvette
French
-
Rank 279. Zimmi's
Southern French
- Grub Street 2025 · The 43 Best Restaurants in New York
- The New York Times 2025 · Madeleines · Our New York Restaurant Critic Names Her Favorite Dishes This Year
-
- Eater 2026 · The Best Classic Restaurants in NYC
- Vogue 2026 · The 25 Best Restaurants in Brooklyn, According to Vogue Staff
-
Rank 279. Uzuki
Noodles
Chef Shuichi Kotani's soba shop occupies a raw Greenpoint warehouse, where hand-cut noodles arrive in ceramic vessels he has thrown himself. The buckwheat preparations are spare and exacting, though prices run high for what amounts to disciplined simplicity.
-
Rank 321. Atrio Wine Bar & Restaurant
Mediterranean Wine Bar
-
Rank 321. Sky Pavilion
Sichuan Chinese
- Eater 2026 · The 38 Best Restaurants in New York City
- Eater 2026 · The Best Restaurants Around Times Square
-
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
-
Rank 321. Dante
Italian
- 50 Best 2026 · #58 · North America's 50 Best Bars
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Bar
- Esquire 2023 · Dante Mini Martini · The Best Martinis in America
-
Rank 321. 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.
-
Rank 321. 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.
-
Michael Schulson's sprawling izakaya across from Rockefeller Center manages the difficult feat of serving 350 people without sacrificing the counter's immediacy. Sushi, robatayaki, wagyu, and broiled bass move with equal authority across the bi-level room, each done with the confidence of a place that has earned its size.
-
- The New York Times The 25 Best Pizza Places in New York Right Now
- The Infatuation Plain or Pepperoni Slice · 25 Iconic Dishes That Define New York
-
Rank 321. Maxi’s Noodle 3
Hong Kong-Style
-
Rank 321. Rocco's of Roc Beach
Italian
- The New York Times The 25 Best Pizza Places in New York Right Now
- The New York Times The 25 Best Pizza Places in New York Right Now
-
Rank 321. 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
-
- The New York Times The 25 Best Pizza Places in New York Right Now
- The New York Times The 25 Best Pizza Places in New York Right Now
-
-
Rank 334. Speedy Romeo
Wood-Fired Pizza
A former garage turned tavern where the wood-fired oven turns out pizza that breaks Italian rules without apology—St. Louis style with Provel cheese and pickled peppers sits alongside stuffed peppers studded with salami. The owner's Jean-Georges training shows in the smart, whimsical touches that elevate a kitschy space into something genuinely appealing.
-
Rank 334. Caleta 111
Peruvian
Beneath the Jamaica Avenue overpass near JFK, this cevicheria serves leche de tigre in a giant martini glass—octopus, scallops, and shrimp swimming in lime and ginger—that justifies the pilgrimage alone. A pork tamal steamed in bamboo proves the kitchen's range, its masa yielding and ethereal.
-
Rank 334. Tonchin
Tonkotsu Noodles
The tonkotsu broth here carries the weight of slow-cooked pork without the heaviness—clean, deeply flavored, and braced by house-made noodles with genuine spring. Gyoza arrive blistered and crackling; steamed buns hold juicy pork and chicken beneath bright vegetable crunch. A Tokyo chain that executes the fundamentals with precision.
-
Rank 334. Café Mars
Contemporary
Chef Paul D'Avino's Third Avenue spot treats the familiar with gleeful irreverence—negroni Jell-O with olive, garlic knot monkey bread, muffaletta dim sum—each dish a small provocation. It's a restaurant that announces itself through whimsy, yet the execution and generosity of spirit suggest a kitchen genuinely interested in pleasure.
-
Rank 334. Sobre Masa Tortilleria
Mexican
At Sobre Masa, a husband-and-wife team nixtamalizes heritage corn daily, rolling out tortillas that anchor everything from carnitas to wagyu tongue empanadas with equal grace. The salsas alone—avocado-lime, garlic tuom, chile morita—reveal a kitchen that treats condiment as seriously as main course.
-
Rank 334. Win Son
Taiwanese Chinese
A light-filled room of blonde wood and exposed brick channels bodega warmth through a modern lens, serving Taiwanese dishes with unfussy confidence. The briny clams in Shaoxing wine, the pillowy bao, the chewy zha jiang mian with lamb and Sichuan heat—each arrives without pretense, meant to be eaten.
-
Rank 334. Untable
Thai
Chef Rachanon Kampimarn's cozy Cobble Hill kitchen pulls from northern Thailand with confident flair, turning curry and heat into something far more interesting than mere provocation. The soupless khao soi and grilled chicken thigh in green curry reveal his gift for balancing boldness with restraint, though the specials board—fried branzino with chili and garlic—often steals the show.
-
-
Rank 334. Alta Calidad
Mexican
Light floods through the windows at this modern Mexican restaurant where a communal table and convivial bar create easy fellowship. The kitchen riffs on tradition with crispy tempura shrimp on tortilla with cabbage remoulade and paper-thin carne asada charred with Chihuahua cheese until the edges crisp and caramelize. It's cooking that respects its foundations while testing their limits.
-
Rank 334. Yellow Rose
Tex-Mex Mexican
A striped awning and bright green sign mark this East Village Tex-Mex spot, where weathered wood and stained-glass fixtures set a deliberately vintage scene. House-made flour tortillas anchor tacos of shredded chicken verde and barbacoa alongside skirt steak quesadillas, while a Texas sheet cake with candied pecans delivers nostalgic finish. The drinks match the food's unpretentious confidence.
-
Rank 334. Peppercorn Station
Sichuan Chinese
Bright and efficient Sichuan spot along Bryant Park where the kitchen calibrates heat with precision rather than aggression. Fish fillet in numbing broth and mapo tofu spiked with fermented black beans arrive golden and balanced, built for sharing among friends nursing tingling lips and satisfied grins.
-
Rank 334. Málà Project
Sichuan Chinese
Málà Project's East Village flagship offers customizable dry pot alongside polished Sichuan classics like numbing dan dan noodles and delicate white fish with pickled vegetables. The cavernous space with communal seating rewards diners willing to navigate heat levels and ingredient choices.
-
Rank 334. Legend of Taste
Sichuan Chinese
A strip mall in Whitestone conceals a kitchen that trades in fermented heat and smoke. The smoked pork with garlic leaf tastes like bacon gone through tea smoke, while crispy eggplant arrives with a glass-like shell and creamy interior—the kind of specificity that separates real Sichuan cooking from its Americanized cousins.
-
Rank 334. Oso
Mexican
A brick storefront near City College turns out Mexico City street food with real conviction—al pastor tacos with proper char, enchiladas verde blanketed in Oaxaca cheese, tortillas pressed fresh and tender behind an open kitchen. The menu is short and focused; the churros with chocolate and cinnamon caramel are reason enough to return.
-
Rank 334. Nami Nori
Sushi
At this spare, warmly lit temaki bar on Carmine Street, hand rolls arrive at the counter still glistening—tuna poke crowned with crispy shallots, XO scallop cut with lemon, coconut shrimp cradling green curry. The open-handed generosity of the chef's set and the equal care given to plant-based rolls suggest a place thinking beyond the obvious.
-
Rank 334. Sobaya
Soba Noodles
On a block thick with Japanese restaurants, Sobaya has quietly persisted since 1996, turning out handmade buckwheat noodles in both hot and cold broths that shift with the season. The counter looks onto the kitchen; the rice bowls arrive loaded with tempura vegetables or shrimp. A neighborhood institution that still takes walk-ins.
-
Rank 334. Chutney Masala
Indian
Mustard walls and hand-blown glass fixtures warm the bright Main Street room where Chef Navjot Arora's boldly spiced cooking—bhindi masala with tangy amchoor, chana masala with Peshawari naan, lamb keema pao—mines local produce for complex flavor. The mango chutney alone justifies a visit.
-
Rank 334. Taqueria El Chato
Mexican
A narrow storefront with a few stools and a counter, where handmade tortillas cradle tender al pastor, chorizo, and melted cheese beneath salsa verde and raw onion. The vampiro—a fried tortilla shell loaded with cheese and toppings—justifies the cramped quarters and absence of pretense.
-
Rank 334. Jiang Nan
Chinese
A sleek room of lacquered wood and stone channels imperial grandeur—the setting befits an ambitious menu that roams across China's cuisines rather than fastening to one. Peking duck arrives theatrically on silver, sliced beef swims in a golden pepper sauce with real heat, and mapo tofu arrives in portions engineered for sharing. This is dining designed for occasions.
-
-
Rank 334. Gordo's Cantina
Mexican
In Bushwick, Gordo's Cantina anchors the neighborhood with generous portions and unfussy hospitality. Chef Reyna Morales, trained in Mexico City, treats familiar dishes with care—chorizo tacos carry a mild warmth, chile rellenos hold creamy queso fresco and beans, and the mole sauce wrapping chicken enchiladas deepens with time and attention. A place that feels like home.
-
Rank 334. Olmo
Mexico City Mexican
At Olmo, communal tables and pale wood create an unhurried cantina where Mexico City flavors feel lived-in rather than curated. Grilled branzino sits atop stewed beans ringed with morita salsa; carne asada arrives with a smoky chipotle bearnaise that outshines the verdolaga and fennel. The flan paleta, caramel-draped, closes the meal with restraint.
-
Rank 334. Chavela's
Mexican
Chef Arturo Leonar's guacamole arrives laced with smoked trout and morita chile, a provocation wrapped in tradition; his crabmeat taquitos and Oaxacan tamales show equal ingenuity without abandoning the fundamentals. The dining room explodes with color—Mexican tile, ceramic butterflies, wrought iron—matching the kitchen's restless intelligence.
-
Rank 334. Haenyeo
Korean
At this narrow Fifth Avenue corner, Korean fundamentals meet playful cross-cultural improvisation: tteokbokki crowned with Oaxacan cheese, daegu jorim braised into silken submission. The kitchen's gift is knowing when to honor tradition and when to surprise, all delivered with the ease of a neighborhood place that has earned its reputation.
-
Rank 334. Pierozek
Polish Eastern European
In a Greenpoint storefront adorned with hand-painted Polish pottery, Alexandra Siwiec and Radek Kucharski turn out delicate pierogi—jalapeño and potato, raspberry and cheese—alongside borscht, golabki, and kielbasa that tastes as though it knows its own purpose. The casual room feels less like a restaurant than a kitchen that happens to sell what it makes, which is precisely the point.
-
Rank 334. Shalom Japan
Jewish fusion Japanese
A narrow South Williamsburg kitchen steers between Japanese and Ashkenazi traditions with casual precision, marrying matzoh ball ramen and lox bowls studded with avocado and pickles. Wagyu pastrami on caraway shokupan and toro tartare over sake-kasu challah suggest a chef thinking in flavors rather than categories.
-
Rank 334. 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.
-
Rank 334. 15 Fox Place
Italian
-
-
-
Rank 334. Laliko
Georgian Eastern European
At a West Village corner, Georgian pride radiates through vibrant salads and cheese-filled khachapuri, while a long communal table and Georgian wine list complete the scene. Servers guide you through plump khinkali dumplings brimming with hot broth and lamb or beef, making the handsome, mural-lined room feel like an extended table of friends.
-
Rank 334. Covacha
Mexican
Cristina Castañeda's dining room thrums with family celebrations and the warmth of Jalisco's ranchos filtered through New York ambition. Crisp chicken quesabirrias dunked in birria broth, slow-roasted barbacoa meant for messy, generous build-your-own tacos—the cooking knows what it is.
-
Rank 334. Alley 41
Sichuan Chinese
Down an alley off Flushing's Main Street sits a Sichuan restaurant with an unexpectedly refined interior of curved wood and concrete. Chicken dumplings swimming in chili oil and pork belly with sesame noodles arrive quickly, followed by mapo tofu and braised beef that crackle with roasted chilies—heat deployed not for shock value but for genuine flavor.
-
Rank 334. Momofuku
Noodles
Wood counters and an open kitchen frame David Chang's temple to Asian street food, where brisk service belies the care lavished on each dish. The steamed buns with pork and Hollandaise, the springy noodles in ginger-scallion sauce—these are the work of a kitchen that treats comfort as a discipline.
-
A bright, no-nonsense dining room in Flushing where tabletop grills define the meal: beef short ribs glazed in traditional soy marinade arrive alongside lettuce for wrapping, while fried rice crisps and softens simultaneously on the hot surface. The banchan—pickled turnips, fermented bean paste soup, house kimchi funky with garlic—set the tone before the fire begins.
-
Rank 334. HanGawi
vegetarian Korean
Beyond a modest storefront on 32nd Street, a shoes-off sanctuary of low tables and meditative quiet. The vegetarian ssam bap arrives as a long platter—sesame leaves, avocado, bean sprouts, pickled vegetables, three rice options—each wrap a textured conversation between you and the food. HanGawi operates less as restaurant than as deliberate pause.
-
Rank 334. La Dong
Vietnamese
A Colonial-inflected dining room of wooden arches and lotus lamps sets the stage for Vietnamese cooking that moves beyond the usual suspects. The turmeric crepe arrives clever and plump with shrimp; the pho, enriched with Miyazaki wagyu and poured tableside, justifies the pilgrimage to Union Square.
-
Rank 334. 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.
-
Rank 334. Little Alley
Shanghai Chinese
Chef Yuchun Cheung's Shanghai cooking arrives unadorned at a narrow Murray Hill spot with dark wood and a front bar. Crispy eel offers impossible-to-resist sweetness and crunch; mapo tofu achieves a silken, custardy texture beneath its spice; stir-fried cauliflower snaps with numbing heat. Serious regional cooking that satisfies on appetizers alone.
-
Rank 334. Phayul
Tibetan
Momos arrive fat and pleated at this Tibetan restaurant on Roosevelt Avenue, their beef filling brightened with scallions and meant for dipping in the ferocious house hot sauce. The stir-fried noodles pull just as hard—chewy strands and tender meat against crisp vegetables in a savory gloss. Generous portions, lively flavors, and the kind of place where you could order anything and land well.
-
Rank 334. Pinch Chinese
Chinese
The lantern-lit dining room opens onto a kitchen where soup dumplings emerge with gossamer skin and concentrated broth, the crab version particularly fine. Spicy wontons swim in house chili oil with genuine teeth, while silken tofu hot pot absorbs the umami of maitake and truffle. SoHo glamour meets Flushing technique in a place that feels both inevitable and hard-won.
-
Rank 334. Burrata
Wood-fired Pizza
Chef Chas Anderson's wood-fired pizzeria hums with the energy of a place that executes without strain, its open room and abundant light a counterpoint to the serious work happening in back. The signature burrata pizza arrives fragrant and forgiving, while housemade pastas—veal polpettine, duck ragù rigatoni—propose a modern reckoning with red-sauce tradition.
-
Rank 334. Bayon
Cambodian
Minh and Mandy Truong's Upper East Side kitchen unfolds traditional Cambodian cooking with quiet sophistication: chive dumplings arrive golden and sharp with ginger soy, while thick rice noodles swim in red curry built on ground fish and fresh vegetables. The banh chao crepe—crisp, half-moon, studded with shrimp and chicken—begs to be wrapped in lettuce leaf by leaf.
-
Rank 334. The Cookery
Italian
A modest storefront in Dobbs Ferry where unconventional cooking draws steady crowds of couples and families. Duck liver cannoli arrives shatteringly crisp, its mousse luxuriant; house-made radiatore meets a slick lamb Bolognese. The kitchen elevates market vegetables and rotating specials with the care of a place that has already earned its regulars.
-
Rank 334. Ishq
Modern Indian
This Avenue A restaurant resists modern Indian clichés with spiced depth and textural play, anchored by a salmon-pink quartz bar. Butter chicken and lamb biryani arrive complex and generously spiced, meant for sharing among tables set with deliberate space.
-
Rank 334. The Phraya
Contemporary Thai
Red lanterns cast the Upper East Side in Bangkok light at Tha Phraya, where regional Thai cooking moves beyond green curry into Northern sausage spring rolls and khao soi, Southern Phuket curries, and zabb hang—rice noodles tangled with pork and meatballs in house-made brown sauce. Cocktails named for temple festival games complete the immersion.
-
Rank 334. 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.
-
Rank 334. 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.
-
Rank 334. 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.
-
Rank 334. Pranakhon
Thai
A two-story Thai restaurant in constant motion, where a long bar anchors the chaos and tables fill faster than reservations open. Yum kai salad arrives bright and herbaceous; mussels stuffed with curry paste custard and pork jowls in chili-lime dressing show a kitchen working both tradition and refinement. It's the kind of place where heat and precision matter equally.
-
Rank 334. Cardamom
Indian
On a quiet Sunnyside block, Cardamom deploys a pan-Indian menu anchored by vivid curries and a working tandoor, with the chef's Goan heritage shining through vinegar-bright lamb vindaloo and restrained vegetable dishes. The kitchen's deliberateness pays off: breads arrive warm enough to trap sauce, and every plate tastes considered rather than rushed.
-
Rank 334. Noreetuh
Fusion
A decade-old East Village mainstay serves Hawaiian comfort food—spicy spam musubi, glazed ribs, mochiko fried chicken—in a dim room papered with Polaroids. The wine list pivots unexpectedly to German riesling, held by staff who move the meal along with genuine warmth.
-
Rank 334. Chuan Tian Xia
Sichuan Chinese
The dining room at this Sunset Park Sichuan spot runs spare—wooden tables, backless stools—but the earpiece-wearing staff moves with balletic precision, guiding newcomers through a menu that prioritizes layered flavor over numbing heat. Whole fish comes swaddled in sweet peppers; slivered pork swims in vinegary garlic. The chefs understand restraint.
-
Rank 334. Sal Tang’s
Cantonese American Chinese
Sal Tang's marries red-lantern nostalgia with refined Cantonese-American cooking, its crispy egg rolls and silken wonton soup anchored in dark wood and cherry blossom wallpaper. A weeknight refuge where classics like beef and broccoli meet blood orange sorbet finales.
-
Rank 334. Hupo
Sichuan Chinese
Wok heat drifts through this understated Long Island City room where Sichuan cooking favors aroma and balance over spectacle. House-made tofu and ma-la wontons arrive with clarity and restraint, pitched for everyday appetite rather than thrill-seeking.
-
Rank 334. Kung Fu Little Steamed Buns Ramen
Chinese Noodles
The neon-lit Theater District steams with hand-pulled noodles and soup dumplings that rival anything in Flushing. Wonton broth arrives herbaceous and rich; pan-fried Peking duck bundles and mushroom buns follow with equal precision. A packed noodle house where the cooking never wavers.
-
Rank 334. NORMA Gastronomia Siciliana
Sicilian Italian
The arancini here—golden-crusted spheres of ragù, mozzarella, and chicken-stock rice—arrive in tomato sauce as a corrective to every flattened version you've eaten elsewhere. Rustic crackle-glazed platters line the walls, the menu unfolds with Sicilian authenticity, and a small retail section tempts you toward specialty ingredients on your way out.
-
Rank 334. Charles Pan-Fried Chicken
Southern
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Charles Gabriel
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Charles Gabriel
- Eater 2026 · The 38 Best Restaurants in New York City
-
Rank 392. Beyond Pita
Middle Eastern
-
-
-
-
Rank 392. Shan Shan Noodles
Hand-Pulled Noodles
-
-
-
-
Rank 392. Ada's Gojjo
Fusion
-
Rank 392. Ramen Nagomi
Noodles
-
Rank 392. Cheng Du 23
Szechuan Chinese
-
Rank 392. Verana
Contemporary Italian
-
Rank 392. La Lupa
Roman Italian
-
Rank 392. Ramen Nagomi
Noodles
-
Rank 392. Clemmy’s
Seasonal New American
-
Rank 392. Wooga
BBQ Korean
-
Rank 392. 2nd Jetty Seafood
Seafood
-
-
Rank 392. Pascal & Sabine
French
-
-
-
Rank 392. Varka Estiatorio
Mediterranean Seafood
-
-
Rank 392. The Star Tavern
Italian-American Pizza
-
-
-
-
Rank 418. Rosella
Sushi
A sushi counter painted in shades of cerulean and built by hand, where the chef sources local, responsibly harvested fish and treats it with curiosity rather than canon. Smoked preparations, pickled finishes, and a dish of XO grits signal a kitchen uninterested in tradition for its own sake. The wine list stays domestic and precise.
-
Rank 418. Bamboo Grill
Filipino
-
-
Rank 418. Tlacualli Breakfast
Mexican
-
Rank 418. pastaRAMEN
Italian Noodles
-
-
-
Rank 418. Il Fiorista
Contemporary Italian
Alessandra and Mario De Benedetti's flower shop doubles as a dining room where nasturtium and hibiscus edge into both cocktails and plates—lotus root crisped with pine pollen, campanelle in white Bolognese, broiled salmon over fennel and cauliflower. The décor is vivid and springlike, but the cooking is what blooms.
-
Rank 418. Accra Express Restaurant
West African, Ghanaian
A modest steam-table spot on 125th Street celebrates jollof rice with uncompromising fervor, the grains smoking and insistent alongside iron-red stew that refuses restraint. The portions suggest abundance over refinement, a philosophy that feels honest in its directness.
-
Rank 418. Tamales Lupita
Mexican
The narrow storefront on East 112th operates on the principle of arrival and luck: come early or settle for what remains of the day's tamales. Mole-streaked masa and lard-rich Oaxaqueño varieties emerge from their wrappings with the texture of custard, each one a small argument for restraint in seasoning.
-
Rank 418. 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.
-
Rank 418. Fausto
Italian
Chef Erin Shambura's Italian-inflected kitchen at this Flatbush corner catches light from an open hearth, creating the kind of dim warmth that suggests both intimacy and occasion. Pasta sings—a tagliatelle with lamb ragu and saffron sets the tone—but it's the composed restraint across each plate, from roasted cauliflower to braised pork shank, that lingers.
-
Rank 418. Warung Selasa at Indo Java
Indonesian
In a corner of an Elmhurst grocery store, chef Anastasia Dewi Tjahjadi cooks one day a week, folding beef or chicken with vegetables, noodles, and sambal into banana leaves for a dozen diners. The fifteen-dollar banquet—a study in restraint and abundance—tastes like it shouldn't exist in such a cramped, ordinary space.
-
Rank 418. Bivio Pizza Napoletana
Neapolitan Pizza
-
Rank 418. Khao Kang
Thai
At this Elmhurst steam-table operation, Chef Sopon Kosalanan builds heat with the precision of a composer—some dishes smolder, others ignite and retreat, a few arrive with a ragged pulse that catches you unguarded. Thai cooking stripped of caution tastes like this: direct, uncompromising, alive.
-
Rank 418. San Sabino
Italian-influenced Seafood
-
Rank 418. OKO
Asian
The chef interprets Japanese cuisine through his own lens in a light-filled room where locals gather at a welcoming bar beneath soaring ceilings. An open kitchen sends out creative takes on nigiri, tempura, and hot dishes—miso black cod and crab-pork dumplings anchor a menu that rewards improvisation.
-
Rank 418. Daphne's
Contemporary Italian
A corner storefront in Bed-Stuy glimmers behind silver beads, signaling the refined calm within—a tightly edited Italian-American kitchen that moves between shareable plates and house-made pasta with quiet confidence. The focaccia arrives golden and anchovy-bright; the grilled pork chop, ringed with slow-cooked greens and beans, tastes like restraint and precision working in concert.
-
-
Rank 418. Fornos of Spain
Spanish Steakhouse
-
Rank 418. Crabbae
Cajun & Creole
-
-
Rank 418. Valenca Restaurant
Portuguese Steakhouse
-
Rank 418. Cas
Jamaican, Caribbean
-
Rank 418. Raku
Japanese Noodles
-
Rank 418. Veganized
Vegetarian
-
Rank 418. Kabab King
Pakistani, Indian
A proudly scruffy Jackson Heights counter where the kebabs arrive tender and the service maintains a beautiful indifference to your presence. The biryani here has outlasted trends and inspires the kind of loyalty that transcends the brusque efficiency of the room.
-
Rank 418. Peck Peck Korean Fried Chicken
Fried Chicken Korean
-
Rank 418. Ho Foods
Taiwanese Chinese
-
Rank 418. El Ranchero Taqueria
Mexican
-
Rank 418. Kingston Tropical
Jamaican, Caribbean
For more than fifty years, Kingston Tropical has supplied Wakefield with Jamaican patties that hold their shape without sacrificing flake, each one marigold-bright and thyme-scented. The chicken filling justifies the pilgrimage alone, best consumed on a concrete bench while the No. 2 train announces itself overhead.
-
Rank 418. Laser Wolf
Middle Eastern
A rooftop skewer house where Michael Solomonov and Steve Cook have engineered something genuinely convivial: salatim arrive first—babaghanoush, harissa beans, pickled vegetables—followed by lamb kofta and grilled vegetables that justify the kitchen's open-flame fervor. The room pulses with string lights and music, reservation-worthy precisely because it refuses to feel exclusive.
-
Rank 418. Szechuan Mountain House
Chinese, Sichuan
A narrow storefront in Flushing where red chiles arrive by the handful and numbing Sichuan peppercorns deliver their electric sting with each bite. Order with intention here; the kitchen pulls no punches, and you'll find yourself mopping your brow as though summer has arrived.
-
Rank 418. Amdo Momo
Tibetan
A former Tibetan monk operates this food truck in Jackson Heights with an almost monastic devotion to a single item: momos folded with visible care, their delicate skins yielding to beef that has surrendered completely to broth. Eight dumplings for eight dollars arrives as something between sustenance and sacrament, steam rising like an offering.
-
Rank 418. Asian Bowl
Burmese
The misnomer of the name conceals a rare Burmese kitchen where salads of mellowed ginger and tea leaves arrive with bracing clarity alongside curries that layer raw, fried, and fermented elements into precise textural arithmetics. What emerges is cooking of deliberate restraint and calculated nerve, each dish a small study in how crackle and sting compose a whole.
-
-
Rank 418. Ayat
Palestinian Middle Eastern
-
Rank 418. Leland Eating and Drinking House
Mediterranean
-
Rank 418. Mable's Smokehouse
Central Texas-Style Barbecue
-
Rank 418. Ajo y Oregano
Dominican, Caribbean
A dining room of pink shutters and palm-green walls dishes up Puerto Rican stews in metal pots, their richness settling into your bones with each spoonful. The cuerito crackles audibly, and mofongo arrives as a sculptural pile of plantains crowned with shrimp, garlic sauce pooling at its base.
-
Rank 418. Taco Mix
Mexican
At Taco Mix, a narrow Harlem counter serves meat-forward tacos that spill past their tortillas—cecina, suadero, barbacoa with caramelized edges, and al pastor carved from the spit with pineapple. You eat standing at a ledge, shedding cilantro, in a space that has refined nothing but the fundamentals.
-
Rank 418. Vato
Mexican
A counter-service tortilleria in Park Slope where house-made flour tortillas are the reason to come, watched being assembled before your eyes. The burnt ends burrito—pulled meat, eggs, cheddar—announces itself on the first bite, and the cinnamon rolls, salted and frosted, linger after you leave.
-
Rank 418. 53
Pan-Asian Chinese
A soaring dining room of burnished wood and sleek angles—designed to match the ambition of its MoMA neighbor—houses a Pan-Asian kitchen that executes soup dumplings with black truffle and clay-pot rice with the precision of haute technique. The housemade ice creams arrive as the final proof that this Altamarea Group venture understands New York polish down to its sweetest detail.
-
Rank 418. Quique Crudo
Mexican
-
Rank 418. Oceans
Seafood
A raw bar anchors the back of this Park Avenue seafood room while an inviting bar presides up front—a split personality that matches the cooking's range from ceviche and sushi to soy-glazed black cod with mushroom dashi. Toro tartare with caviar catches the light; buttermilk panna cotta with cranberry mousse closes gracefully.
-
Rank 418. Veerays
Indian
A 1920s speakeasy clad in burgundy velvet and dark wood houses a menu of contemporary Indian cooking, where cocktails named for bootleggers sit alongside rogan josh—braised lamb shanks glossed with Kashmiri heat—and silken daal makhani. The kitsch is deliberate, the food genuine.
-
Rank 418. Novitá
Italian
A golden room with low ceilings holds the comfortable rhythm of a neighborhood institution. Novitá trades novelty for clarity—warm calamari with lemony avocado, tagliolini Bolognese—and the kitchen's unhurried confidence mirrors the Italian warmth of service. It is the kind of place where the coziness feels earned.
-
Rank 418. Noz Market
Sushi
-
Rank 418. Maria Restaurant
Italian
The dining room at Maria balances midnight-blue leather and exposed brick with the easy chatter of regulars and visitors at the bar. The kitchen moves between Italian tradition—meatballs braised in marinara, served with ricotta and grilled bread—and contemporary interpretations, each dish calibrated to comfort without nostalgia.
-
Rank 418. Goosefeather
Hong Kong-style Chinese
A carriage house converted into dining room on a sprawling Tarrytown estate, all period details and contemporary comfort. Dale Talde's kitchen riffs on Hong Kong fundamentals—kung pao chicken wings with buttermilk-dill ranch, bao filled with crispy shrimp and cool daikon—each dish a seasonal reinterpretation of a form he knows by heart. The setting and food move in concert.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- James Beard Awards 2022 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Dale Talde
-
Rank 418. Mango Bay
Caribbean
A Fort Greene brownstone draped in island florals and anchored by leather banquettes serves Afro-Caribbean cooking that feels both ancestral and urgent—char-grilled octopus arrives over braised collards and burrata, oxtail braises alongside roasted carrots. The sides alone, mango chow and fried plantains, make you want to return with everyone you know.
-
Rank 418. il Buco
Mediterranean
-
Rank 418. Maxi’s Noodle 2
Hong Kong-Style
-
A narrow storefront on 110th Street devoted to unapologetic Southern indulgence: baked turkey wings, Louisiana catfish, and fried chicken arrive alongside candied yams and collard greens, while house-made peach cobbler and sweet potato pie suggest the kitchen understands that dessert is not optional here.
-
Rank 418. Sandro’s
Italian
-
Rank 418. Los Burritos Juárez
Mexican
A Fort Greene counter turns out burritos in the El Paso style, built on house-made flour tortillas cooked to order with lard—soft, chewy, and warm. The fillings are slow-cooked guisados: pork in red chiles, brisket in salsa verde, bound together with pinto beans. A regional tradition, executed with quiet competence and available at breakfast until the supply runs out.
-
Rank 418. Persepolis
Persian
Linen-draped tables and big windows set a composed stage for silky spreads, fragrant stews, and grilled meats that define Persian cooking in the city. The eggplant halim—a creamy roasted dip layered with lentils and yogurt—and saffron chicken kebab served over cherry-studded rice confirm the kitchen's command.
-
Rank 418. The Arepa Lady
Columbian
-
Rank 418. The Odeon
French
-
-
-
-
Rank 418. Taiwanese Restaurant Inc.
Taiwanese Chinese
The aunties work the room with brisk indifference, delivering plates of flies heads—fermented black beans, pork, garlic chives—that justify their reputation. An omelet studded with pickled radish and sweet sausage paired raw garlic show a kitchen that understands the pleasure of directness.
-
Rank 418. Gui
Steakhouse
A steakhouse in Times Square that justifies its location: wagyu and USDA Prime aged to a deep char, finished with nothing but salt, in a sleek room equally suited to pre-theater crowds and serious eaters. The menu ventures beyond beef into dan dan noodles and wagyu fried rice, small gestures toward Korean influence that never distract from what Gui does best.
-
Rank 418. Chama Mama
Georgian
-
Rank 418. Pastrami Queen
American
-
Rank 418. Café Alaia
Italian
At Café Alaia in Scarsdale, exposed beams and a double-height ceiling frame two long, narrow rooms that hum with easy conversation. House-made tortellini float in silken chicken broth; salmon arrives pan-seared with mustard sauce and market vegetables. It's the kind of Italian cooking that trades novelty for the comfort of things done well.
-
Rank 418. YongChuan
Ningbo/Szechuan
-
-
-
Rank 418. Runner & Stone
Bakery
A former Per Se baker channels the city's milling heritage through concrete-slab walls and house-ground flour, turning sandwiches into studied compositions. The tuna confit melt and broccoli fritter pita prove that a bakery counter need not apologize for its ambitions.
-
-
-
-
-
-
Rank 418. L'inizio
Italian
Scott and Heather Fratangelo's modest Italian room in Westchester speaks its warmth instantly: sunlit walls, bistro seating, the ease of a place that knows what it is. The cooking moves between seasons and continents without fuss—cantaloupe salad, cherry tomato bucatini, an ornate cookie board that justifies dessert on its own.
-
Rank 418. Trattoria Tra Di Noi
Italian
Crimson walls and red-checked cloth create the intimacy of a confidence shared; Chef Marco Coletta runs this Arthur Avenue trattoria with operatic precision, consulting the nightly blackboard for handmade spaghetti alla chitarra crowned with meatballs and pomodoro, ricotta cheesecake to close. A place that makes you feel like the secret is yours alone.
-
Rank 418. Raasa
Indian
At Raasa, the menu traces a path through India's regional cuisines with precision and brightness: a bhel puri arrives as a calibrated play of sweet, spicy, and tart, while lamb curry achieves balance through tomato, onion, and subtle ginger against the soft give of garlic naan and cooling raita. Kulfi falooda—threaded with vermicelli and rose—closes the meal with deliberate charm.
-
Rank 418. Badageoni
Central Asian
Mount Kisco locals crowd this Georgian kitchen for its rustic hospitality and the kind of food that feels both unfamiliar and instantly right. Khachapuri arrives as a cheese-laden boat with a raw yolk waiting to be stirred in; lamb kebabs follow wrapped in lavash, and the whole room glows warm under Edison bulbs and dark wood.
-
Rank 418. Tong
Thai
A Thai kitchen in a concrete warehouse that wields chilies with fearless precision, asking diners upfront how much heat they can handle. Small plates of fried banana blossoms and crispy rice with fermented pork sausage showcase sharp flavors and textural contrast.
-
Rank 418. 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.
-
-
-
Rank 418. Lobster Club
Japanese
The old Four Seasons room has become a mod Japanese brasserie with white onyx bar and hot-pink walls lined with art. Murakami's teppanyaki—scallops brushed with savory glaze and sesame, charred king oyster mushrooms—shares the menu with delicate black bass in yuzu sauce. The bar stocks over thirty Japanese whiskeys, each bottle a small argument about what elegance should taste like.
-
Rank 418. Maxi’s Noodle
Hong Kong-Style
-
Rank 418. Pylos
Greek
Terra-cotta pots hang from the ceiling of Christos Valtzoglou's whitewashed taverna, where pale-green wine glasses and stark crockery frame a menu of Greek home cooking. The keftedakia are light and pan-fried; the artichoke moussaka creamy and vegetarian; the whole enterprise glows with the clarity of the Aegean.
-
Rank 418. Santi
Contemporary Italian
Michael White's Mediterranean vision inhabits a Midtown space that somehow feels intimate despite its scale. Orecchiette with blue crab and sea urchin, pan-roasted veal chop with charred radicchio, and Delizie al Limone—a limoncello-soaked sponge cake—trace a line from the Amalfi Coast to your table. The cooking is assured, unhurried, made for lingering.
-
Rank 418. K'Far
Israeli Middle Eastern
-
Rank 418. Hyun
Korean
Hyun approaches Korean barbecue as an exercise in restraint and luxury, its dark-wood rooms hushed and devoted entirely to tableside-grilled Japanese A5 Wagyu butchered in-house. The twelve-piece tasting moves from beef to bulgogi, each slice balanced by house-made kimchi and crispy scallion, a study in unctuous pleasure tempered by vinegar and char.
-
Rank 418. Ulivo
Regional Italian
Emanuel Concas runs this trattoria like a masterclass in regional Italian cooking, where house-made pastas—cannelloni al forno layered with short rib ragú—sit beside wood-fired dishes that reveal his Sardinian heritage, notably bottarga shaved over pici and seadas, the cheese fritter finished with honey. A meal here reads as deliberate and rooted, each plate a statement rather than a flourish.
-
Rank 418. 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.
-
Rank 418. Southern Table
Southern
An open kitchen's controlled chaos echoes off polished concrete and whitewashed brick in this modern farmhouse space. Fried green tomatoes give way to crispy buttermilk chicken and shrimp jambalaya—Southern comfort rendered with care—while bourbon-glazed donuts finish the meal. A place built for groups and appetites alike.
-
Rank 418. COTE 550
Korean
-
Rank 418. Zoli
American
-
Rank 418. 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.
-
-
Rank 418. Cenadou
Modern French
A bright, plant-framed room lined with royal blue chairs and dark wood, where French bistro foundations meet Provençal sensibility. Poached vegetables arrive with warm aioli, lamb rack sits atop smoked eggplant purée, and the baba au rhum gets its theatrical finish tableside—traditions refined rather than abandoned.
-
Rank 418. Defonte's Sandwich Shop
Sandwiches
-
Rank 418. Massara
Southern Italian
The Flatiron outpost of Chef Stefano Secchi channels Campania through shared plates and house-made pasta, the true centerpiece here. Cold noodles arrive dressed in tomato purée and crowned with raw shrimp and uni; delicate raviolini cradle burrata imported from the region itself. Cooking this precise and playful suggests a kitchen confident in the pleasures of restraint.
-
Rank 418. Bamonte's
Red-Sauce Italian
-
Rank 418. Sunday in Brooklyn
American
A second-floor dining room of palms and whitewash sits above the rustic bar, where on-site baking and unhurried lingers define the rhythm. The signature skillet pancake—fluffy, topped with hazelnut-maple praline—arrives with brown butter and syrup; crusty sourdough with creamy beer butter follows naturally into the day.
-
Rank 418. Saint Julivert
Seafood
A narrow room on Clinton Street yields outsized kitchen talent: tempura delicata squash with black garlic labneh, fried hamachi boudin with Thai chili mayo, tamarind-glazed pork over coconut spinach. The wine list champions small producers in concert with seafood-forward cooking that refuses the space's modest footprint.
-
-
Rank 418. Cholita
Ecuadorian
-
Rank 418. Madre
Contemporary
In the vaulted lobby of a boutique hotel on Franklin Street, Madre serves contemporary cooking that moves between Mediterranean and Latin flavors with casual confidence. Jalapeño cornbread madeleines with whipped honey, octopus with romesco and nopales, and a dark chocolate pot de crème suggest a kitchen unafraid of specificity.
-
Rank 418. Casa Enrique
Mexican
Cosme Aguilar's Long Island City kitchen works from a stable repertoire of family recipes, but the restaurant truly announces itself through ambitious plates: branzino cooked "al pastor," braised lamb shank in a spiced broth, mole in every incarnation. The crowds gathering outside understand what the kitchen knows—that restraint and mastery of a few things matter more than constant reinvention.
-
Rank 418. Peak with Priceless
Contemporary
On the 101st floor of Hudson Yards, Peak trades on its vertiginous perch above the city, yet the kitchen resists mere view-riding with hiramasa and roasted chicken that justify their considerable cost. The dining room remains a tourist-and-banker stronghold, but the food earns its seat at the table.
-
Rank 418. Randazzo's Clam Bar
Seafood
Across from the glimmering bay, this century-old Randazzo outpost warns of lobster-lovers-only parking with deadpan humor, its wood-paneled rooms smelling of the sea. The fried calamari arrives buoyantly crisp, but the real inheritance is Elena Randazzo's tomato sauce, fine-tuned in the 1950s and offered hot or mild with each plate.
-
Rank 418. Mesiba
Levantine Middle Eastern
Chef Eli Buliskeria's Levantine cooking honors a sprawling regional cuisine with precision—crispy whole striped bass, charred-onion kreplach, properly executed falafel—in a sleek, minimalist dining room that channels Tel Aviv. The lively ground-floor space at the Moxy hotel crackles with the kind of appetite and noise that makes eating here feel like an event, not an obligation.
-
Simon Kim's three-station bar splits its ambitions neatly: wine, whiskey, martinis, each corner staked out with focused intent. The martini station feels like the declaration of purpose, where technique and clarity matter more than theater.
-
Rank 418. Café Spaghetti
Modern Italian
- Grub Street 2026 · The 40 Best Restaurants for Kids (and Parents!)
- Esquire 2022 · #18 · The Best New Restaurants in America
-
Rank 418. Ammazzacaffè
Italian
A spare, welcoming Italian trattoria where a handsome wood bar and garden patio set the stage for seasonal pastas and grilled fish. The ondine—shrimp in tomato sauce—and branzino with roasted grapes arrive with the precision of a kitchen that understands restraint.
-
Rank 418. Portale
Contemporary Italian
A former carriage house on a hidden Chelsea walkway holds Alfred Portale's refined Italian dining room, where whitewashed brick and wood floors frame contemporary Mediterranean cooking. The agnolotti—ricotta pockets swimming in lamb ragù—and the precisely arranged salmon with roasted vegetables and olive vinaigrette show a kitchen that treats restraint as ambition.
-
Rank 418. Osteria Padre Pio
Campanian Italian
Chef Andrea Ingenito's Campanian kitchen produces nearly everything from scratch—wooden boards arrive laden with house-made focaccia and caponatina, while the kitchen turns out silky pappardelle and baked corvina in generous portions. The dining room feels genuinely warm, the kind of place where locals return not for novelty but for the steady, unpretentious generosity of real regional cooking.
-
Rank 418. JoJo
Contemporary
Vongerichten's flagship townhouse pairs classical French technique with pristine seasonal ingredients in a refined Upper East Side setting. Roast chicken and seared fish anchor a menu of studied simplicity that rewards careful execution over innovation.
-
Rank 418. Seis Vecinos
Central American Mexican
A corner room in a classic Bronx building fills with afternoon light and the smell of charred corn. The kitchen moves between Central American traditions—papusas, baleadas, enchiladas topped with smoky red sauce—while guacamole is mashed tableside in a molcajete. The welcome is genuine, the cooking straightforward, the sense of place unforced.
-
Rank 418. Markette
European-influenced Caribbean
Mirrored walls and recessed lighting frame Chef India Doris's tightly edited menu at this Chelsea spot, where Caribbean and European sensibilities meet in salt cod fritters with habanero bite and braised oxtail topped with cheddar polenta—comfort elevated without pretense. A cocktail bar hums alongside.
-
Rank 418. 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.
-
Rank 418. KJUN
Korean
-
Rank 418. Bar Bruno
American
-
Rank 418. Maxi’s Noodle
Hong Kong-Style
-
Rank 418. arthur
American
-
Rank 418. B&H Dairy Kosher Restaurant
Eastern European Comfort Food
-
Rank 418. Minetta Tavern
Steakhouse
Dark wood and caricatures line this 1937 tavern on MacDougal Street, where nothing has changed and nothing should. The menu trades in gastropub classics—grilled oysters with pancetta and Fresno chili butter, beef filet with sauce au poivre, pommes aligot slicked with cheddar and garlic—each one a small argument for tradition.
-
Rank 418. Sushi 35 West
Sushi
-
Rank 418. Fette Sau
Central Texas Barbecue
-
-
-
Rank 418. Wenwen
Taiwanese Chinese
Floor-to-ceiling windows frame the clean, airy dining room at this Greenpoint Taiwanese restaurant, where Chef Eric Sze applies precision to bold flavors: sacha hot honey popcorn chicken dusted with a sugar-spice powder, whole striped bass in black sugar and yuzu, a beef noodle soup built on sixteen hours of oxtail broth. The cooking is assured and unsentimental.
-
-
Rank 418. Masalawala & Sons
West Bengal Indian
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Rank 418. Izakaya Futago
Japanese
Lunch brings a crush of office workers chasing homemade soba in dashi, while dinner settles into a quieter rhythm of beer and sake with yakitori and spicy fried chicken. The soba totto gozen set and the various rice bowls—sea urchin, salmon roe, marinated tuna—justify the crowds either way.
-
-
Rank 418. Marcel
French
-
Rank 418. Coppelia
Latin
-
Rank 418. Angel
New American
-
Rank 418. 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.
-
Rank 418. Nudibranch
Contemporary
Matthew Lee and Jeff Kim's East Village restaurant marries Asian techniques with Spanish flourishes, serving dainty portions meant for sharing. Fried frog legs with galangal and lemongrass, crisp dry-aged branzino, and masala chai tres leches cake demonstrate their confident hand.
-
Rank 418. Laghman Express
Uyghur Noodles
The Gravesend location trades the original's paper-and-plastic brevity for bamboo booths and china, yet keeps faith with the same hand-pulled noodles and cumin-dark lamb. Gold-veined bread and dough pearls—some stretched long as harp strings, others chopped into dense coins—announce an emerging Uyghur chain worth following.
-
A white farmhouse on working farmland serves seafood anchored by ingredients grown, smoked, and cured steps away—seared scallops arrive with house-cured bacon and a fried egg, while pea martinis taste of the surrounding fields. The care extends to carrot bread and strawberry ice cream cake, each a small argument that prettiness and conviction need not be strangers.
-
-
-
-
-
-
Rank 418. Risbo
Rotisserie French
Boris Ginet's industrial-chic cafe anchors itself around a Parisian-style rotisserie, where a 72-hour-marinated roasted chicken emerges as the undisputed centerpiece. The menu spans bowls, seasonal vegetables, and house platters, all best enjoyed on the garden patio steps from Prospect Park.
-
Rank 418. Rose Marie
Southern New American
Rose Marie trades Yellow Rose's structured Tex-Mex for a looser, rustically charmed contemporary American menu with Southern edges. Saltine-crusted fish and a bacon-laden patty melt justify lingering over cocktails in this Williamsburg sibling's freeform groove.
-
Rank 418. Vert Frais
Japanese Noodles
A sunny Long Island City café where a former Kanoyama chef serves unfussy Japanese comfort food—clean shio ramen and silky cha-shu—with the ease of a neighborhood hangout. Tall soufflé pancakes arrive light and jiggly, designed for quick, satisfying consumption.
-
Rank 418. Gottscheer Hall
Classic German
-
-
Rank 418. R40
Argentinian
Smoke from a roaring grill perfumes this Argentine parilla, where shared plates of grilled meats and housemade pastas fill a dining room of exposed brick and dangling vines. Skirt steak with chimichurri and hearty empanadas justify the serious appetite required here.
-
Rank 418. 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.
-
-
A few steps from Fort Greene Park, this bistro wraps you in tropical warmth while its kitchen moves fluidly between northern and southern Thai traditions with ingredient-driven precision. The gui chai arrives crackling and golden; the braised short ribs, caramelized and yielding, taste like they've been waiting for you.
-
-
Rank 418. Szechuan Gourmet
Sichuan Chinese
A Midtown institution that survived fire and emerged sharper, Szechuan Gourmet delivers the numbing heat of Sichuan peppercorns and chili oil with undiminished precision. Scallion pancakes arrive crispy, fish braises in silken bean curd, and the remodeled dining room finally matches the kitchen's ambitions.
-
-
-
Rank 418. Odre
Korean
In this narrow East Village room, Hand Hospitality's set menu pivots between comfort and refinement—asparagus and lobster in pine nut sauce, snow crab in daikon, grilled duck with black garlic—each plate accompanied by warm rice and soup ladled from cauldrons at the bar. Korean flavors arrive portioned with care, closing on misugaru ice cream that tastes like an afterthought made essential.
- Michelin Guide Bib Gourmand
- The New York Times 2024 · Snow Crab Mandoo · Here Are Our Top New York Dishes
-
-
-
Rank 418. Nettie's
Red Sauce Italian
-
-
-
-
Rank 418. Orsay
Brasserie French
Art nouveau panels and brass fixtures transport you to a Paris of thirty years past—a brasserie where chicken liver mousse and artichokes vinaigrette arrive with unselfconscious mastery, the kitchen content to honor tradition rather than interrogate it. Service glides with the ease of a room that knows exactly what it is, which is comfort and competence, nothing more or less necessary.
-
Rank 418. The Inn at Pound Ridge
Contemporary New American
A Victorian inn set among manicured grounds draws the quietly affluent to Pound Ridge for contemporary cooking that leans on Jean-Georges signatures—tuna tartare sharpened with ginger and chili oil, salmon in corn-lime broth. The rustic setting belies a polished kitchen intent on refinement.
-
Rank 418. Carne Mare
Italian Steakhouse
Andrew Carmellini's Italian steakhouse at Pier 17 wraps diners in Tuscan leather and Venetian mirrors overlooking the East River, while a horseshoe bar commands the ground floor with theatrical energy. The kitchen executes with equal care—lemon-bright arancini, gorgonzola-aged Wagyu, tableside salads—refusing the genre's typical shortcuts.
-
Rank 418. Kubeh
Persian Middle Eastern
Melanie Shurka's spare, light-filled room showcases heirloom textiles while honoring the hand-rolled kubeh she learned to make from Kurdish, Iranian, and Syrian women in Israel. The dumplings arrive tender and purposeful—filled with meat or mushrooms—alongside kuku sabzi's earthy Persian herbs and a cardamom-spiked Turkish coffee ice cream that closes the meal with quiet confidence.
-
A Montreal deli wedged into Boerum Hill where cured beef brisket arrives in towering, mustard-slicked piles on rye, with poutine variations and latkes that justify the pilgrimage. The counter and communal tables fill quickly; takeout from the sidewalk window lets you eat the thing at home.
-
-
Rank 418. Patricia's
Italian
Exposed brick and high ceilings frame Patricia's spare take on Italian cooking, where a brick oven yields pizzas with properly charred crusts and the wine list surprises with obscure varietals. The seafood risotto arrives creamy and studded with mussels, clams, and squid—a dish that suggests ambition beyond the neighborhood trattoria.
-
-
Rank 418. Miss Lily's
Jamaican
Reggae pounds through a riot of color and Formica at Miss Lily's, where oxtail stew arrives tender and unctuous in savory gravy, and jerk chicken holds court alongside curried goat and callaloo. The jerk salt rim on a Pure Passion Margarita and a kale salad dressed in citrus-ginger vinaigrette stake the kitchen's claim to authentic Jamaican cooking.
-
-
Rank 418. Cleo
French
-
Rank 418. Moody Tongue
Sushi
A sushi counter where nigiri sets are deliberately paired with beers—ora king salmon with a watermelon saline, jumbo shrimp with an oak-aged Flanders Red. The careworn elegance and exclusive house lagers make this Chicago brewery's New York outpost feel like a deliberate detour.
-
Rank 418. Genesis House
Modern Korean
A glass pavilion overlooking the High Line serves modern Korean cooking with the same sleek precision as the luxury cars displayed on its ground floor. Amberjack crudo arrives in kimchi and asparagus brine; a 36-hour beef bone broth arrives boldly peppered and commanding. The dining room feels designed to match the food—cool, composed, unbothered by the city's noise.
-
Rank 418. The Dining Room at RH Guesthouse
Contemporary
The Dining Room at RH Guesthouse stages fine dining as an extension of the brand's design vision—a Meatpacking room dressed in handsome modernism, where you're meant to feel admitted to a private home. Caviar-studded starters and whole grilled branzino arrive with precision, their quality ingredients handled without pretense, though the bill announces you're somewhere expensive.
-
Rank 418. Al Badawi
Palestinian
-
-
-
-
Rank 418. Meadowsweet
Mediterranean
Meadowsweet sits in the shadow of the Williamsburg Bridge behind glass and whitewashed brick, where a steady crowd gathers for nimble, reasonably priced cooking. The kitchen moves from crispy baby artichokes to spiced duck with corn polenta with equal grace, served in a room that feels both urbane and welcoming.
-
Rank 418. Carlotto
Southern Italian
Carlotto settles into Gramercy with a warmly lit room of exposed brick and an open kitchen that commands attention. The beef carpaccio arrives gossamer-thin, crowned with smoky aioli and truffle; the risotto marries king crab and corn with restraint. A wine program reaches thoughtfully into Italian amari, vintage bottles that transform a simple affogato into something close to ceremony.
-
Rank 418. Jupiter
Italian
The team behind SoHo's King moves uptown to Rockefeller Center with a bright room of green lacquered chairs and open kitchen. Mozzarella arrives with crushed chickpeas and roasted radicchio; spaghetti alle vongole and paccheri verdi with pork, sage, and lemon follow with restrained precision. The kitchen understands that clarity and ingredient quality matter more than complexity.
-
Rank 418. Maya Congee Café
East Asian
-
Rank 418. Bunna Cafe
Vegetarian Ethiopian
-
Rank 418. Neta Shari
Sushi
A spare, cobalt-walled omakase counter in Bensonhurst where dry-aged fish and beef hang in the window like trophies. The chef's knife work yields precisely calibrated bites—Hokkaido scallop bright with lime, Arctic char sealed in crisp skin and yuzu miso, eel seared and glazed to buttery submission. Value and precision meet without pretense.
-
Rank 418. Mama Lee
Taiwanese
A narrow storefront in Bayside where Mei Lee cooks alone, the dining room spare and bright, existing solely in service to her Taiwanese food. The lion's head meatballs arrive in startling size, the beef noodle soup brimming with meat and broth, each dish a small rebuke to ambition itself.
-
Rank 418. The Office of Mr. Moto
Omakase Sushi
An omakase counter designed as a period spy's office, accessed via coded letter, where the theatrical mise-en-scène gives way to serious fish: black throat sea perch, red gurnard, pristine shima aji. The drinks library below extends the immersive conceit, though the real intrigue is what's on the board.
-
-
-
-
-
Rank 418. 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.
-
-
-
-
Rank 418. Altro Paradiso
Italian
Chef Ignacio Mattos's SoHo fixture glows with amber light and the patina of a room that has earned its crowd, where high ceilings and wine-lined walls frame a menu that pivots with the seasons. Fresh pastas rotate through the kitchen; salads built on bitter greens and citrus arrive dressed with precision; a roasted half chicken arrives as both comfort and conviction.
-
Rank 418. maman
French
-
Rank 418. TASHCA
Portuguese
-
-
Rank 418. Vic's Italian Restaurant Inc
Traditional Italian
-
-
Rank 418. Casa Ora
Venezuelan
Isbelis Diaz and her son cook Venezuelan food in a Williamsburg room lined with ceramics by a Caracas artisan, their tequenos crackling and their asado negro braised until it dissolves. The staff moves with genuine warmth, and a plate of sweet plantains with cheese and crema feels like a benediction.
-
-
Rank 418. Seoul Salon
Korean
A Koreatown warehouse done up like an adult playground—gunmetal grey, neon-lit—where Korean rice cakes meet stracciatella and shrimp arrive battered and golden alongside cheese. The mala pork belly is bewilderingly delicious, while the bar works peanut butter and passionfruit into something worth ordering twice. Playful without being precious.
-
Rank 418. Chola
Southern Indian
Chola's dining room—polished wood, cream walls, attentive service—frames southern Indian coastal cooking with particular grace. A Goan fish curry perfumed with coconut and tamarind, paired with Chettinad chicken and curry-leaf rice, reveals both restraint and confidence.
-
Rank 418. MP Taverna
Modern Greek
Michael Psilakis's taverna occupies an 18th-century riverside building where brass fixtures and mahogany panels frame his modern take on Greek cooking. Meze arrive with flourishes like fresh dill in tzatziki; main courses pivot between restraint—chicken with crackling skin—and boldness, as in sausage brightened with orange peel. This is a place built for the table to share.
-
-
Rank 418. O Mandarin
Chinese
Carved wooden panels and intimate booth lighting create warmth that belies O Mandarin's plain exterior, drawing multi-generational crowds. Soup dumplings and slow-cooked Beijing duck arrive with exacting technique and genuine flavor.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- James Beard Awards 2022 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Eric Gao
-
-
-
-
Rank 418. The Little One NYC
Japanese Dessert
-
-
At Yoon Haeundae Galbi, short ribs arrive with sinews slashed in long angles and sizzle over a convex table grill, the arched surface coaxing fat to render and edges to crisp. The heat spreads relentlessly across the meat, each bite a negotiation between char and tenderness.
-
-
Rank 418. Temple Canteen
Indian
A fluorescent-lit basement beneath a Hindu temple in Flushing dispenses devotional comfort to anyone willing to descend: bisi bele bath arrives steaming, dosas sprawl across plates in crispy sheets, and the ghee roast stands upright like an edible shrine. The cafeteria's spartan efficiency—plastic trays, communal tables, no frills—only sharpens the generosity of what lands in front of you.
-
-
Rank 418. Chez Fifi
French
Wood paneling and white tablecloths set the stage for classical French cooking at this intimate Upper East Side room. Escargots arrive swimming in garlic-parsley butter, lamb comes settled atop carrot puree and wine-dark lentils, and the baba au rhum—finished tableside with a dramatic pour—arrives as the evening's rightful climax. A restaurant content to execute tradition without apology.
-
Rank 418. Happy Salad
Hong Kong-Style
-
-
Rank 418. Ariari
Korean
Wood paneling and maritime prints evoke a Busan waterfront in this Korean shared-plates restaurant, where seafood dominates every section—try the scallop gimbap you assemble yourself, or uni-cream bibimbap. Corn crème brûlée with white chocolate shavings catches the kitchen's playful spirit.
-
Rank 418. Cocotazo
Puerto Rican
-
A waterfront perch with natural light and contemporary ease, Seppe trades predictable sweetness for savory cocktails—order the house spritz—before pivoting to crispy-bottomed pizzas like the Morty, layered with pistachio pesto, burrata, and mortadella. Baked wings with char and a properly dense cacio e pepe round out a menu built for sharing and lingering.
-
Rank 418. Entre Nous
French
A Clinton Hill wine bar that nails the French apéro formula: copper bar, cherry wood, and natural bottles lining the walls. The kitchen keeps its French small plates honest—chicken liver parfait, mushroom croquettes, Jonah crab salad—with the restraint of someone cooking for people who actually know wine.
-
-
Rank 418. White Bear
Chinese
A takeout window in Flushing dispenses wontons with gossamer skins and assertive pork filling, each one surrendered to a scarlet pool of chile oil and pickled vegetables that crackle with vinegar and heat. Item No. 6 is the argument for why this modest stall matters.
-
-
-
-
Rank 418. Dagon
Middle Eastern
Light floods through corner windows into a teal-tinged room where an off-center bar and long counter invite lingering. Middle Eastern flavors emerge across fresh breads, chicken liver mousse with date syrup, and lamb-filled cigars that taste best with tahini.
-
Rank 418. Sempre Oggi
Italian
The dining room sprawls across the Upper West Side like a gallery, all soaring ceilings and gilded sculpture. Sempre Oggi executes the Italian canon—house-made rigatoni with guanciale and roasted tomato, calamari brightened with herbs and crème fraîche—with enough precision to justify the grandeur, while a properly fluffy tiramisu closes things out with classical comfort.
-
-
Rank 418. Birria Landia
Mexican
The Moreno brothers' birria truck beneath the No. 7 train in Jackson Heights has spawned a small fleet, yet the original location still draws lines on frozen nights, its beef-fat-gilded tortillas justifying the wait. What began in 2019 as an unlikely Queens phenomenon now defines a particular hunger across the city.
-
Rank 418. Ballato
American Italian
A narrow family-run corner serving unadorned Italian-American classics like cacio e pepe and breaded chicken with lemon-caper sauce. The gold-trimmed storefront masks a genuine, gracious operation where even the cannoli feel authentic.
-
Rank 418. Moono
Korean
The modest storefront on the edge of Koreatown opens into a two-story dining room of honeyed wood and soaring ceilings, where Korean cooking balances refinement with ease. Twice-fried chicken, dry-aged branzino with crisp skin and soy mustard, and a jeweled bowl of uni over rice share the menu with bubbling hotpots and noodles. Start at the bar, where Korean spirits become sophisticated cocktails.
-
Rank 418. El Fish Marisquería
Seafood Mexican
A warm, modern marisquería on Amsterdam Avenue where the lively bar draws regulars for cocktails and a serious raw bar welcomes walk-ins. The Tostada Ensenada—crab, shrimp, octopus, and macha salsa piled on crisp toast—is bold and generous enough to eat with your hands.
-
Rank 418. Café Chelsea
French
-
-
Rank 418. Hill Country
Central Texas Barbecue
-
Rank 418. Okonomi YUJI Ramen
Japanese
-
Rank 418. John Brown BBQ
Kansas City-Style Barbecue
-
Rank 418. OCTO
Chinese Fusion Korean
At New York's oldest Korean barbecue house, Chef Segeun Song steers toward Korean-Chinese fusion: beef tangsuyuk, cumin pork ribs, and dumplings that justify their workshop status—particularly the pork and Thai chili soup dumplings crowned with caviar. The Jangs have kept the place alive through decades by refusing to stand still.
-
Rank 418. Manhatta
Contemporary
Sixty stories above Liberty Street, a dining room floats above Manhattan with the hushed glamour of a private cloud. The tasting menu moves through seasons with care—smoked burrata meets summer melon, wild mushroom ravioli swims in chamomile butter—while a composed staff glides through the room as if views this commanding were merely incidental to the cooking.
-
Rank 418. S Wan Cafe Inc
Cantonese
-
Rank 418. Soothr
Thai
A cramped East Village room outfitted with vintage wood and neon fills nightly with people chasing boldly spiced regional Thai dishes—roasted eggplant salad, grilled pork with lime and chili, pork blood soup—and a cocktail program that matches the kitchen's confidence in flavor.
-
Rank 418. Fasano
Northern Italian
The São Paulo hospitality group's Midtown outpost inhabits a serene, handsomely appointed room that hums with quiet luxury. Pasta arrives with the precision of a jeweler—cappellacci di granseola cradling King crab in squid-ink pockets, ossobuco falling from the bone—each plate a statement of northern Italian refinement executed without fanfare or pretense.
-
Rank 418. Tops Diner
Global-American
-
Rank 418. Dons Bogam
Korean
At Dons Bogam, table-side grills and attentive service create the illusion of indulgence without the smoke. Pork belly glazed in red wine arrives supremely tender; the beef platter pairs thinly sliced galbi with meaty king trumpet mushrooms. A vented room and cheerful bar make this Koreatown spot feel less like a casual barbecue joint and more like a deliberate occasion.
-
Rank 418. Mint Premium Foods
Mediterranean
A gourmet market bleeds into dining room along a deep Tarrytown storefront, where exposed brick and antique scatter set the stage for Mediterranean cooking that favors hearty seafood and seared beef. Grilled dates stuffed with goat cheese and prosciutto, ambitious burgers, and a sprawling beer list anchor a menu that prizes substance over pretense.
-
Rank 418. LyLy Vietnam Cookhouse
Vietnamese
A corner of cheer arrives on the Upper East Side: orange checkerboard floors, mustard booths, paper flowers dangling overhead. The kitchen treats its Vietnamese basics—crispy spring rolls, crepes with pork belly, a pho brewed for twenty hours—with the seriousness they deserve, turning what feels like a neighborhood refuge into something genuinely worth the trip.
-
-
-
Rank 418. Bark Barbecue
Central Texas-Style Barbecue
-
Rank 418. 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.
-
Rank 418. Le Gigot
Bistro French
A narrow room in Greenwich Village that conjures a Parisian bistro through genuine warmth rather than affectation. The petit bouillabaisse arrives as saffron-tinged broth with North African spice; the cassoulet, a Toulouse rendition, layers duck confit and pork into beans and herbs. Cooking that knows its lineage and executes it without pretense.
-
-
-
Rank 418. Zaab Zaab
Isan Thai
-
Rank 418. Taste Good
Malaysian
Taste Good hits you with fluorescent noise and a sprawling menu that somehow never disappoints, the roti canai arriving glossy enough to coat your hands and the beef rendang collapsed into caramelized submission. The char kway teow tastes like Kuala Lumpur street food, all wok-charred edges and intent.
-
Rank 418. Eléa
Greek
Whitewashed brick and weathered beams frame a bi-level dining room where Mediterranean ingredients speak plainly—creamy spreads, whole grilled fish, a stuffed tomato alive with raisins and pine nuts. The cooking respects simplicity while occasionally reaching higher, as in a moussaka that feels both classical and refined.
-
Rank 418. Bar Ferdinando
Italian
-
Rank 418. 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.
-
-
Rank 418. Afro Taco
Fusion
-
Rank 418. Semolina Restaurant
Italian
-
Rank 418. Red Paper Clip
Contemporary
A red paper clip marks the unmarked door on Christopher Street where Kevin Chen works with local farms to build a seasonal menu that threads his Taiwanese heritage and Queens childhood through refined technique—parsnip and celtuce dressed tableside with chilled cucumber broth, Hainanese chicken with pickled greens. The narrow room stays spare so nothing distracts from the plate.
-
Rank 418. Mark's Off Madison
Old-School Bakery
- BagelUp #15 · The Definitive 30 Best Bagel Shops in New York City
- Esquire 2021 · #35 · The Best New Restaurants in America
-
Rank 418. Enoteca Maria
Italian
A narrow room near the ferry terminal where Joe Scaravella rotates immigrant grandmothers through the kitchen each night, each bringing her own repertoire: Paraguayan vori vori, a soul-deep chicken soup studded with cheese and cornmeal dumplings; Japanese kombu with yuzu-ginger vinaigrette. The phone never stops ringing, the tables stay full, and the cooking tastes like it means something.
-
Rank 418. Chick Chick
Korean
Chef Jun Park's narrow Upper West Side corner showcases Korean fried chicken with crisp amber skin glazed in black pepper soy. Open kitchen views and wood-lined walls frame plates of fried rice studded with sausage, tobiko, and kimchi.
-
Rank 418. Dubrovnik
Croatian
A Michelin-selected Croatian restaurant where custom woodwork matches the kitchen's precision—branzino from the wood-fired grill arrives with smoky vegetables and broccoli rabe risotto. Live music some nights adds to the appeal of this New Rochelle find.
-
Rank 418. Papa San
Nikkei Japanese
A chef's whimsical take on Nikkei cuisine arrives on the West Side, where small plates and robataya grilled items share menu space with ceviches and donabe rice bowls that blur Tokyo and Lima without apology. The fluke ceviche, poached in avocado leche, and wagyu tri-tip seared and finished with yuzu béarnaise reveal a kitchen unafraid of playfulness in service of flavor.
-
Rank 418. Kyma
Greek
Kyma transports you to the Ionian Sea through whitewashed walls and candlelight, where a parade of warm spreads—feta, hummus, taramasalata—arrives before the meal proper begins. Calamari stuffed with four cheeses, whole lavraki, and halloumi fries dusted gold suggest a kitchen devoted to elemental Mediterranean cooking, each plate arriving with unhurried confidence.
-
Rank 418. Mission Ceviche
Peruvian
Chef José Luis Chávez's first sit-down restaurant brings the energy of his market stalls into a clean, modern space where Peruvian ceviche—both traditional and Nikkei-inflected—justifies a visit alone. The pulpo al olivo, its tender octopus dressed in olive-forward tiger's milk with avocado and fried capers, suggests a kitchen that understands restraint.
-
Rank 418. 6 Restaurant
European
The open kitchen anchors this intimate Carroll Gardens bistro, where exposed brick and leather booths create warmth for both dates and groups. Dishes like hamachi crudo in whey broth and duck confit gnocchi show a kitchen fluent in European and South American inflections.
-
Rank 418. Kebab aur Sharab
Indian
The dining room glows with sea-blue tilework and intricate woodwork—a transport to somewhere warmer. The baby goat kebab, minced and bound around a skewer, is unwound tableside into smoky, juicy strands; the tandoori prawns, finished with mango chutney and crispy curry leaves, justify the name.
-
Rank 418. Barney Greengrass
Deli, Appetizing, Breakfast
A venerable appetizing counter on the Upper West Side where smoked sturgeon—meaty yet buttery, cut with laser precision—is treated as the delicacy it has been for generations. The fish arrives the same way every time: a gesture of consistency that feels almost liturgical in a city that devours and discards.
-
Rank 418. Benoit
Bistro French
The dining room glows with red velvet and mirrors, oak panels holding decades of appetite; Alain Ducasse's bistro settles into cassoulet and pâté en croûte like an old argument finally resolved. The rum baba arrives fluffy and drenched, a dessert that tastes less like nostalgia than like proof that some pleasures need no reinvention.
-
-
Rank 418. Mitsuru
Japanese
-
-
Rank 715. Kru
Thai
A sleek dining room of exposed brick and polished concrete frames the contemporary take on Thai cooking by husband-and-wife chefs Ohm Suansilphong and Kiki Supap. Braised beef shank arrives in a broth balanced between sour and spice, while red curry branzino steams atop egg and cabbage on a banana leaf. The lesson here is tradition made urgent.
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Semifinalist · Best New Restaurant
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- Esquire 2022 · #37 · The Best New Restaurants in America
-
-
-
- Food & Wine 2023 · S&P Burger · Best Dishes Our Editors Ate This Year
- Eater The Best Breakfasts in New York
-
-
Rank 715. Joe & Pat's Pizzeria & Restaurant
Staten Island Pizza
-
-
-
Rank 715. The Commerce Inn
American
Rita Sodi and Jody Williams' Commerce Inn is a spare, wood-floored tavern serving potted shrimp and dry-aged ribeye buried in crispy onions with equal care. The cocktails and weekend brunch draw crowds to this quiet West Village corner.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- The New York Times 2024 · Patty Melt · Here Are Our Top New York Dishes
-
-
Rank 715. Louie & Ernie's Pizza
NY-Style Pizza
-
Rank 715. Joe's Pizza
NY-Style Pizza
-
-
-
-
Rank 715. Joe's Pizza
NY-Style Pizza
-
-
Rank 715. Fortunato Brothers
Italian Bakery
-
-
Rank 715. Amore Pizzeria
NY-Style Pizza
-
-
-
Rank 715. Santo Taco
Modern Mexican
-
Rank 715. Gray's Papaya
American
-
Rank 715. Joe's Pizza
NY-Style Pizza
-
Rank 715. Lafayette
Traditional French
-
-
Rank 715. Ali's Trinidad Roti Shop
Trinidadian Caribbean
-
-
-
-
Rank 715. Adel's Famous Halal Food
Middle Eastern
-
-
Rank 715. Andrew Bellucci's Pizzeria
Pizza Shop
-
Rank 715. Levant
Egyptian Middle Eastern
A Steinway Street storefront styled like Cairo's back streets holds a white-domed oven that turns out feteer—those impossible, gossamer-layered pastries folded around basturma or sweet clotted cream. The place has the stripped-down intensity of a pizzeria married to the sensory maximalism of North African street food.
- The New York Times 2026 · #25 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
- The New York Times 2024 · New York’s 14 Best New Restaurants
-
Rank 715. Ceres
NY-Style Pizza
-
On weekend nights, Cleotilde Juárez Ramírez commands a sidewalk station with a massive comal, frying corn tortillas into supple vessels for beef, onions, and dual salsas. Ten dollars buys the whole stack and a terra-cotta cup of cafe de olla—transactional simplicity that feels like an inheritance.
- The New York Times 2026 · #99 · The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City
- The New York Times 2024 · Chalupas · Here Are Our Top New York Dishes
-
-
-
Rank 715. Joe's Pizza
NY-Style Pizza
-
Rank 715. Sushi Ouji
Omakase Sushi
- Vogue 2026 · A Definitive Guide to the Best Omakase in New York City
- The New York Times 2024 · Suma Katsuo Sashimi · Here Are Our Top New York Dishes
-
Rank 715. La Dinastia
Chino Latino
-
-
Rank 715. Sawa
Middle Eastern
On a Brooklyn corner, siblings and their chef have opened a spirited spot where the line forms before service even begins. House-made pita arrives hot for labneh and hummus spiked with wagyu beef cheeks, while golden-fried rakkakat stuffed with akkawi cheese arrives with the confidence of a dish that knows what it is. It's Middle Eastern cooking that doesn't whisper.
-
Rank 715. Eulalie
French
Chip Smith and his wife Tina Vaughn run Eulalie like a speakeasy for French cooking: phone reservations only, handwritten menus, a buzzer at the door. The warmth inside belies the formality of arrival. A four-course prix fixe might unfold from duck liver terrine studded with pistachio through crispy flounder in green tomato beurre blanc, finishing with coconut cake if you're wise.
-
-
Rank 715. Dame
Seafood
White-walled, wood-trimmed seafood spot where a crispy hake fillet in gossamer batter and fleur de sel has become its own small religion. Patricia Howard and Ed Szymanski built something unassuming that somehow matters—the seasonal menu moves with discipline, desserts arrive tart and composed, and the wine list commits fully to its spy-movie conceit. Reservations essential.
-
-
-
-
-
Rank 715. Lai Rai
Vietnamese Wine Bar
-
-
Rank 715. Lechonera La Isla
Caribbean
-
Rank 715. Joe's Pizza
NY-Style Pizza
-
Rank 715. La Vara
Spanish
The dining room hums with the ease of a Madrid kitchen transplanted to the Lower East Side. Alex Raij's cocina casera elevates pantry staples—grilled beans in romesco, slow-roasted suckling pig with chimichurri—through ingredient intelligence and a refusal to overthink. It's cooking that knows exactly what it wants to be.
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Chef · Rachel Miller
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- James Beard Awards 2022 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Chef · Alex Raij and Eder Montero
-
-
Rank 715. Casa Della Mozzarella
Old-School Italian
-
Rank 715. Brennan and Carr
American
-
Rank 775. La Superior
Mexico City-Style Mexican
-
Rank 775. Lamonte
European
-
-
At SourAji's counter on Avenue B, chef Jake Weng moves through a spare omakase at pace, delivering twelve courses of sushi before an all-you-can-eat finale—the whole meal finished in ninety minutes for ninety-eight dollars. It's the kind of place that understands appetite as much as technique.
-
-
Rank 775. House
French/Japanese
-
Rank 775. LDV at the Maidstone Restaurant
Coastal Italian
-
-
Rank 775. Glasserie
Mediterranean
-
Rank 775. Bo Ky
Vietnamese
-
Rank 775. Le Crocodile
French
-
Rank 775. Uncle Lou
Cantonese Chinese
-
-
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.
-
Rank 775. Raku
Japanese Noodles
-
-
-
A rooftop sushi counter overlooking the city's lower west side, where the chef moves through nigiri with the precision of someone who has done it ten thousand times. The omakase unfolds at a measured pace, each piece arriving at the moment it reaches its ideal temperature.
-
Rank 775. Lise & Vito
Natural Wine Bar
-
-
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.
-
-
Rank 775. Bistro Ete
Coastal French
-
Rank 775. Sushi Kaito
Sushi
-
Rank 775. Seven Beach Lane
European-Inspired
-
Rank 775. Great N.Y. Noodletown
Chinese Noodles
-
Rank 775. The Restaurant at Baron’s Cove
Long Island
-
-
Rank 775. Joe's Shanghai
Shanghainese
-
-
-
-
-
A narrow West Village counter where Toshi Ueki's sushi program unfolds across twelve seats in purposeful, unhurried increments. The sake list sprawls with intention, and whether you order à la carte or commit to omakase, there's a deliberate quietness to how the kitchen moves.
-
Rank 775. Fulgurances Laundromat
Experimental French
-
Rank 775. China North Dumpling
Chinese
-
Rank 775. Amalfi Coastal Kitchen & Cocktails
Coastal Italian
-
-
Rank 775. Al-Andalus
Andalusian
-
-
-
Rank 775. Phoenix Palace
Cantonese
-
Rank 775. Calissa
Mediterranean
-
Rank 775. Pho Ga Vang
Vietnamese
-
-
Rank 775. Paulie Gee's
Neapolitan Pizza
-
Rank 775. Royal Seafood
Hong Kong-Style
-
-
Rank 775. Taiwan Pork Chop House
Tiawanese
-
-
Rank 775. Saigon Social
Vietnamese
Chef Helen Nguyen's Vietnamese kitchen on Orchard Street pivots seasonally, moving between crispy banh xeo and tiger prawns glossed in garlic noodles with the ease of someone still experimenting. A banh mi burger signals her willingness to remix tradition without abandoning its spine.
- Eater The Best Lower East Side Restaurants
- James Beard Awards 2022 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Helen Nguyen
-
Rank 775. Wo Hop
Chinese
-
Rank 775. Dopo Il Ponte
Italian
-
Rank 775. Di An Di
Vietnamese Noodles
-
Rank 775. Il Buco al Mare
Italian-Inspired Seafood
-
Rank 775. Sant Ambroeus
Milanese Italian
-
Chef Kunihide Nakajima serves traditional Edomae sushi at a ten-seat counter hidden behind a Chinatown hallway, accessible only by doorbell. The $365 omakase emphasizes Japanese seafood and minimalist restraint, a deliberate step up from his previous restaurant.
-
Rank 775. Yi Ji Shi Mo
Chinese
-
Masatoshi Sugio's omakase counter on the Upper West Side applies sauces and presentations that depart from convention, each piece arriving as a small argument for flavor over purity. You can order à la carte or surrender to the chef's direction; either way, the kitchen treats sushi as a canvas rather than a tradition.
-
-
Rank 775. El Verano
Upscale Mexican
-
-
-
Bright counters on the Upper East Side invite you to watch the sushi chef work through a seventeen-course progression, each piece arriving with the confidence of someone who trained at O Ya. The warmth of the room—its openness, its chatter—makes the meal feel less like ceremony and more like being let in on something.
-
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.
-
A spare corner room on Houston where a shuttered Turkish institution returned under a new name, now turning out doner kebabs in multiple breads alongside chopped salads and rice pudding with equal care. The place carries the muscle memory of its predecessor—late-night, unpretentious, indifferent to trends.
-
-
-
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.
-
Rank 775. Duryea's Orient Point
Waterfront Seafood
-
Rank 775. Centro 336
Italian
-
-
Rank 847. Naks
Filipino
-
Rank 847. Wildair
Wine Bar
A narrow wine bar on the Lower East Side where the kitchen moves with the precision of a small orchestra, each plate and glass arranged as a deliberate act. The desserts arrive like encores—small, intricate, worth the occasion alone.
- Wine Enthusiast 2023 · Forward 50 Restaurants
- Eater The Best Lower East Side Restaurants
- Eater 2016 · The Best New Restaurants in America
-
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Semifinalist · Best New Restaurant
- Esquire 2023 · The Best New Restaurants in America
-
Rank 847. Ensenada
Seafood Mexican
- Bon Appétit 2023 · America's Best New Restaurants
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Luis Herrera
-
Rank 847. Sushi by Sea
Sushi
-
Rank 847. Caviar Kaspia At The Mark
Russian French
-
Rank 847. Eli Zabar
Bakery
-
-
Rank 855. Charles Pan-Fried Chicken
Southern
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Charles Gabriel
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Charles Gabriel
-
Rank 855. Charles Pan-Fried Chicken
Southern
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Charles Gabriel
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Charles Gabriel
-
Rank 855. El Quijote
Spanish
-
Rank 855. FIELDTRIP Harlem
NY Comfort Food
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · JJ Johnson
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · JJ Johnson
- James Beard Awards 2022 · Nominee · Best Chef: New York State · JJ Johnson
-
Rank 855. Zou Zou's
Mediterranean
-
Rank 855. Fieldtrip
NY Comfort Food
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · JJ Johnson
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · JJ Johnson
- James Beard Awards 2022 · Nominee · Best Chef: New York State · JJ Johnson
-
Rank 855. FIELDTRIP Rockefeller Center
NY Comfort Food
- James Beard Awards 2024 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · JJ Johnson
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · JJ Johnson
- James Beard Awards 2022 · Nominee · Best Chef: New York State · JJ Johnson
-
Rank 862. Dante
Italian
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Semifinalist · Outstanding Bar
- Esquire 2023 · Dante Mini Martini · The Best Martinis in America
-
Rank 863. Spice Brothers
Eastern Mediterranean Middle Eastern
-
Rank 863. Sofreh Cafe
Persian
-
-
-
Rank 863. Javitri Indian Cuisine
Northern Indian
-
Rank 863. uluh
Chinese
-
Rank 869. NARO
Korean
-
Rank 870. Cadence
Vegan Southern
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Shenarri Freeman
- Esquire 2021 · Rising Star of the Year · Shenarri Freeman
- The New York Times 2021 · The Restaurant List
-
Rank 870. Karenderya
Filipino
-
Rank 870. Kanopi
Portuguese Mediterranean
-
Rank 870. Abyssinia Ethiopian Restaurant
Traditional Ethiopian
-
Rank 870. Ursula
New Mexican Bakery
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Eric See
- James Beard Awards 2022 · Nominee · Best New Restaurant
-
Rank 870. LittleMad
Korean
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Sol Han
- The New York Times 2022 · The Restaurant List