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New York Restaurant and Dining

NYC.com features detailed reviews of hundreds of top New York restaurants written by our editors and visitors, as well as reviews of every type of cuisine and recommendations of great places to eat in all five boroughs. Also check out our gourmet guide, our guide to dining on a budget, and our all-new Best of New York Restaurants guide!

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New York Restaurants

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Cowgirl Hall Of Fame

West Village

Keeping the country in the city, The Cow Girl Hall of Fame has been bringing Southern charm and cooking to New York since 1989. It's frontier decor, rowdy atmosphere and jukebox full of country favorites, a fun filled meal is assured. The name of the establishment is a promise that's kept, with BBQ ribs, fried chicken, and a jukebox full of country favorites. Keep an eye out for Country Western recording artists who favor the joint when in town.

Toloache Bistro Mexicano

Theater District

Toloache's festive, two-story space features a guacamole and ceviche bar, a wood-burning oven, and an exceptional tequila list, along with elegant decorative elements imported from Mexico.

Hershey's Times Square Store

Arguably the world's most influential maker of chocolates and candies—and certainly one of the juggernauts of the industry—Hershey's has pulled no stops in their Times Square store. Every imaginable candy is houses inside, from Reese's to Twizzlers and PayDays, and the store even includes such Wonka-esque oddities as the "Original And Automatic Gravitational Chocolate Machine" which lets you create a custom candy creation.

Financier Patisserie – Stone Street

Financial District

While the sandwiches are delectable, it's the excellent range of patisserie that makes Financier worth a special visit.

Westville

West Village

Popular neighborhood restaurant serving an eclectic American cuisine in a casual laid-back atmosphere. Multiple locations around the city and Brooklyn.

Merilu Pizza Al Metro

Hell's Kitchen

Board Pizzas using fresh, locally sourced ingredients. Small joint, so each dish is cooked with care. Well worth a visit!

Agave

West Village

With a cozy, intimate setting on a busy stretch of Seventh Ave South, Agave seeks to carve a niche for itself by offering updated Southwestern cuisine. New Yorkers have increasingly discriminating palates when it comes to southwestern American and northern Mexican cuisine, and Agave offers a nice lengthy menu to please both the novices and the experts. Although you'll find crepas, chilaquiles, and squash blossom tacos, much of the menu seems familiar to even the uninitiated, who will find steak, chicken and salads to their liking.

La Esquina a/k/a The Corner

NoLIta

A dumpy old corner deli transformed into what looks like a roadside tacqueria, La Esquina ("The Corner") features perhaps New York's most secretive restaurant (with a semi-unlisted phone number), hidden downstairs behind a door marked "employees only". While the tacqueria does have great tortas, tacos and enchiladas as well as fresh juices, it's a reservation at the lower level restaurant you want to score. How did this dumpy former Corner Deli manage to become a hidden underground haunt? By placing the 50-seat dining room behind a maze-like warren, in which you first pass through the kitchen, then a sort of locker room, then a few more twists and turns. Sounds exclusive, right? Now that we gave it away, maybe it seems less mysterious. Co-owned by Serge Becker and his triumvirate, these are the same chaps who made M.K., Bowery Bar, and Joe's Pub fixtures on the downtown scene. If you can't handle the exclusivity of a downstairs speakeasy, just head around the corner from The Corner to the café, which serves a fusion of the tacqueria and restaurant menu. Less attitude, modest prices and no need to reserve here. The atmosphere is warm and convivial, making these three venues score a triple crown.

Perry St.

West Village

A 60-seat restaurant amidst the three gleaming Richard Meier glass towers along rapidly-developing West Street, celebrity chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten pares it down with his latest offering. Rather than the over-the-top attributes that characterized 66, Spice Market and V Steakhouse, his intent at Perry St. is to present a reworked and simplified menu, similar to that at Jean-Georges. Interestingly, one of Meier's tribe, Thomas Juul-Hansen, designed the clever u-shaped dining room, which can only be described as minimalist, yet seems highly appropriate for this location across from the Hudson River Park. Fortunately the windows feature mesh screens, because the late afternoon and summertime evening sunsets can feature exceedingly harsh but beautiful light. Vongerichten made a wise decision to open here, because with the profusion of restaurants in the nearby Meatpacking District as well as newcomers to the High Line Park vicinity, he has a large crowd to draw on—and to please. Apparently Vongerichten has returned to his senses and his original magic mix, because Frank Bruni of the New York Times awarded Perry St. three stars in September 2005, just weeks after the restaurant opened. But barely a year later, the service issues that plagued his aging restaurants seem to have appeared at Perry St. Service at times seems lackluster, when not indifferent. Some staff seem to not have a good enough command of English to do their jobs, frustrating diners who strain to understand them. Timing can be off, with appetizers appearing minutes after they are ordered, yet no server to be found when one is needed (a frequent New York complaint, we do note). The servers are quite aggressive in pushing certain entrees as well as bottled water. During a recent dining experience, we were asked by no fewer than three servers in a span of five minutes (yes, we checked the wristwatch) whether we would require another bottle of San Pellegrino, although our existing bottle was not yet empty. Considering our four entrees alone were $150, this seems rather churlish. Service issues aside, the dishes are superb. Asian-themed fish appetizers are attractive and delightful, and the meat entrees are delicious. When possible, opt for the excellent lamb or rabbit entrees, and the tenderloin is also fantastic. Although Vongerichten intends to change the menu from time to time, nothing here seems outrageous, too bold or brash. Fish dishes are particularly enjoyable, especially when you are gazing westward towards the Hudson River, dreaming of being in a faraway place by the sea. Final note: we know of no other high-end restaurant with so much obvious video surveillance this side of Las Vegas.

Cascabel Taqueria — East

Upper East Side

Casual Mexican joint on the Upper East Side with a stunningly deep menu full of innovative-yet-authentic cuisine inspired by the markets of Mexico. Sample - carefully - the wide selection of tequilas and when the time comes to slow down switch to microbrews on tap.

Red Farm

West Village

Chinatown Brasserie's Joe Ng brings the dim sum-heavy Red Farm to Hudson Street. Serves innovative, inspired Chinese cuisine with greenmarket sensibility.

Roberto's

Belmont

Salerno native owner and chef Roberto Paciullo brings his home country's cuisine to the Bronx.

SpaHa Soul

East Harlem

Chef Artist Thornton cooks up Soul Food with love and laughter. Neighborhood fav, must haves include the collared greens, watermelon salad and fried chicken.

Sweetleaf

Long Island City

A top-notch coffee and espresso bar, with a laissez-faire attitude towards the nomadic freelancers of New York City.

Johnny Utah's

Midtown

Think John Travolta in Urban Cowboy transplanted to the Rockefeller Center Hotel, where the mechanical bull of Manhattan meets the swagger of Texas. Unlike in Texas, however, the mechanical bull immediately began inviting lawsuits from those thrown from the bull. No bull!

Speedy Romeo – Clinton Hill

Clinton Hill

Craft beers on tap and a menu of wood-fired pizzas and steaks set the tone at this Clinton-Hill joint. The space has some history, started 100 years ago as a bar. Turned liquor store, then auto parts shop, and now, a wood fired pizza joint! All their dishes are prepared in a hardwood fired Italian pizza oven, and on a wood grill from Mesquite, Texas. Chef and owner Justin Bazdarich toured Italy to learn the some secrets and serves Italian influenced seasonal American cooking by way of St. Louis MO! He churns out out perfectly charred pizzas, mouthwatering steaks, chops, whole fish and burgers.

Cafe Steinhof

South Slope

A descendant of the long-gone Max & Moritz, Cafe Steinhof is the best and only pure Austrian joint in the neighborhood. Viennese comfort food abounds inside the Cafe's European setting with a generous collection of German and Austrian wines.

Black Iris

Fort Greene

Charmingly accurate in its cuisine and decor, Black Iris is a perfect spot in Fort Greene for Middle Eastern fare.

Boulud Sud

Upper West Side

Boulud Sud is the latest eponymous effort of Daniel Boulud, serving a menu of vibrant Mediterranean cuisine that spans the entire region, offering flavors from France’s Côte d’Azur, Spain, Italy, Greece, North Africa and Turkey. There is an emphasis on grilled fish and lamb as well as an abundance of fresh vegetables on menu sections entitled “De La Mer”, “Du Jardin” and “De La Ferme”. The Mid-Century Modern interiors, including a spacious bar and lounge, are decorated in tones of sunflower yellow and slate grey. The light filled space is framed by floor to ceiling windows, vaulted ceilings, pear wood paneling and terrazzo floors, as well as works by famed artist Vik Muniz. The restaurant, with an entrance on West 64th Street, is just steps from Manhattan’s Lincoln Center and is adjacent to Bar Boulud and Épicerie Boulud, in an area we may all one day call Boulud Heights.

Littleneck

Gowanus

Billing itself as Brooklyn's first "New England-style beach side seafood shack," Littleneck harbors favorites like lobster rolls, steamers, burgers, and an excellent raw bar. Though no beach nearby patrons can stroll around the fetid beauty of the Gowanus canal to work up a thirst and appetite.

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