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Cheap Ways to eat In NYC
We certainly want people to continue to visit NYC. Many are frightened by the cost of food. The following are methods and places to keep the cost down and enjoy the insane variety of food available.
Cheap Ways to Eat in NYC Breakfast Every, and I do mean every, neighborhood in Manhattan have what are euphemistically called delis. Almost all have some sort of breakfast specials that usually includes eggs, potatoes, toast and coffee. If you are not hungry or are cholesterol adverse, they also usually sell sliced fruit and yogurt. Of course there are bagels and pastries. NEVER EVER order room service. There are many places that make their bagels. NOT DUNKIN DONUS. Some of the better one’s include Ess-a-Bagel, H &H. Murray’s Tal’s, David’s. Avoid the bagel place in Chelsea Market and the one on Carmine Street, . Lunch Part of the NY experience is to avoid chain restaurants. There are an incredible variety of inexpensive foods, among them Chinese and Indian. Quality varies substantially. If you are in or near Chinatown, there are many places including Big Wong’s. If you are near the East Village East 6th Street has literally 14 Indian restaurants to choose from. There are also excellent Indian restaurants on Lexington Avenue in the high 20’s. If you are in the East Village you can also have inexpensive Eastern European cooking at Veselka, Filipino at Elvie’s, comfort food at Mama’s. Every NY’er cannot resist a frank at Gray’s Papaya. Papaya refers to one of the drinks available. Nathan’s are also very good but they are more expensive. Pizza is a long lunch standby-do not go to ANY chain, the cheese is older than the kids who make it. Look for by the slice places and try a calzone as well, you will not eat for two days. Sidewalk hot dog venders are always cheap, avoid the guys around Rock Center, you pay a premium. There are those who wonder about the hygiene, the dogs are boiled and the knishes grilled for forever. Free samples are available at Dean & Deluca, Sarabeth’s, and Gourmet Garage. It is the rare independent bakery in NYC that does not have at least bread or pastry that is enticing. With the terrible economy many restaurants are offering Recession specials, so keep your eye out. The following are inexpensive meals and desserts: Indian-Brick Lane-Banjara, Mitali, Brick Lane Inexpensive Italian- La Marca (3rd Ave. and 22 Street, only opened noon-10 PM, Mon-Fri) Inexpensive Eastern European- Veselka Very Inexpensive Filipino-Elvie's French Bistro-Cafe Deville $14.95 daily multi-course pre-fixe Tapas-Xunta. Bar Carrera, Dessert-Veniero's, DeRobertis for the frozen lemon thing and cannoli , Fat Witch Bakery (brownies only) Chelsea Market Brunches-Five Points, Zoe's, Blue Ribbon Bakery ,Turkish Kitchen , City Bakery (18th off 5th), Cafecito (Ave C), Clinton Street Bakery , Pizza-Lombardi's Totonno’s (2nd and 26th.) Pizza Fresca, Luzzo’s Hole in the wall-Stage (next to Stomp) great cheap home made soups French fires-Pomme Frites Inexpensive American-Mama’s Ice Cream-Cones on Bleecker, Australia, Il Laboratorio de Gelato, Chinatown Ice Cream Factory, Cones and Sundae (East 10th off Third) Ronnybrook at the Chelsea market Chinatown-Big Wong. Joe’s Ginger, NY Noodletown Dim Sum-Jing Fung, Golden Unicorn Dinner When we travel we often buy different foods as we walk around the city and put them in our backpacks and have dinner in the hotel room. In NYC you will probably see foods that are unfamiliar. Bring a knife, forks, and a corkscrew. Here are our favorites: These are most of my favorite food stores. This is as highly subjective and geographically limited list you will find. The majority of stores are below 14th Street. Stars indicate that either I went there at night or they are better than the others on the list. There are scores of excellent places that are not on the list, so exclusion is not necessarily condemnation but it could be. Tourists can use this to put together their own food tour, buy stuff during the day for a feast in your hotel room at night or for gifts. One time we were flying back from Milan and we purchased a cake there and shared it with family when we landed. Bagels and Bialys Just because it is round, does not make it a bagel. There is a lot of crap being sold. A bagel must be boiled before it is baked. The ones with pimples on the bottom, like those you get at the sidewalk carts, are steamed. The ones you get at Dunkin Donuts are white bread in a circle, Rachel Ray. *Ess-A-Bagel Various Locations My personal favorite. There are Ess-a-bagel people and the H & H people. Ess-a bagels are yeasty while H & H are sweet because they add sugar. Ess-a Bagel is a bit of a play on words and means eat in Yiddish. The stores are crazy busy and there is a wide variety of spreads. Once mammoth, the bagels are smaller recently. H & H Bagels Various locations but the one Second Avenue is not related and is plain awful As discussed above with long lines. An Upper West Side institution. *Kossar’s Bialys (Established 1935) 367 Grand Street What is a bialy? Originally from Bailystok, Poland and called Bialystoker Kuchen (cake). And yes, Mel Brooks stole the name for Max Bialystock. It is most and doughy, much like the perfect pizza crust but with an indentation in the middle for either bits of garlic or onion. Try their bulkas which are bialy dough in the shape of a hero or an onion wheel also called a pletzel. An onion wheel is round and thin covered with duh onions, or the other version poppy seeds. Toast it, butter it, and keel over dead. *Murray’s Various Locations Murray’s knows how to make bagels, chewy and large. The lines usually move quickly. Bakeries Amy’s Bread Various Locations The breads are well prepared and my favorite is the black sesame. I have never seen the same kid behind the counter twice, thus the staff is not knowledgeable and some seem confused by an order. *Balthazar 80 Spring Street I guess they could have made the space smaller, but then only your hand would fit through the door. Unlike the restaurant, the bakery deserves the praise for their baguettes and croissants. Birdbath 223 First Avenue Yes, it is a stupid name and the place has all the charm of a company store at a gulag but it is a sister to City Bakery. They make fabulous almost everything including a pretzel croissant. They only offer about 10% of what can be had at the City Bakery and there is no place to sit and eat. Stay away from a new creation a vegan banana sesame thing with agave. Besides having no taste, it dryly crumbs in your mouth. A rare mistake for Maury Rubin. The staff here and at City Bakery has not been told that space program was discontinued. Blackhound 170 Second Ave Very expensive but good as a dessert gift. The cookies are delicious and everything looks tempting some things are not as good as they look. *Blue Ribbon Market 14 Bedford Street There is not a bad bread in the house. They are made across the street at Blue Ribbon Bakery, where you can see the ovens on the basement. (They also have a interesting bathroom.) Pick anything. *Bouley Bakery 130 W. Broadway Every time I go there I try something different. My current favorite is the saffron bread. It is so delicate you can taste the saffron. Everything is outrageously expensive you can either pay your student loan or buy a slice of cake. *Clinton Street Bakery 4 Clinton Street Not only is this bakery but a great place for brunch which is impossible to enter on weekends. They may make the best biscuits in town followed closely by their scones. *City Bakery 3 West 18th Street Try the hot chocolate melted from chocolate bars or the pretzel croissants or the baker’s muffins or anything laid out on the counter. Extremely crowded at breakfast and lunch. Celebrities have been spotted but unless they are disguised as spoon I have not seen any. DeRobertis (Established 1904) 176 First Avenue It has the original tin ceiling and tiled walls and floors. Be selective in what you order, order nothing chocolate but the lobster tails, cannoli, and pignoli cookies are good and they are known for their lemon and orange things. (I am sure it has a real name) They hollow out the fruit, then fill it with a sorbet and freeze the whole thing including a peel lid. *Donut Plant 379 Grand Street I do not know what they do but the donuts taste so much better than just about any other place. He also makes excellent churros. The valrhona chocolate is a monument to gluttony. Small storefront with bakery in back. Eileen’s Cheesecake 17 Cleveland Place That’s all she makes so she better make them well. Not the best but very good. *Falai Paneterria 79 Clinton Street Former pastry chef turns out the most delectable and eclectic breads such as pumpkin or fennel. The croissants are excellent. I guess his mother told him not to waste his education so he also makes fabulous pastries. Never leave without a bombolini, an Italian donut/fritter filled with either jelly or crème. Fat Witch Brownies Chelsea Market They make the fudgy type and they have a few variations. Staff is pleasant but sloooow. They have tourist buses that stop at Chelsea Market, so the lines may be long at times. *Financier Various locations In the food wasteland that is Wall Street, Financier knows how to make cakes and croissants. They are often crowded but the staff doesn’t know ganache or panache. Junior’s Various locations Stick to the cheesecake and the rolls. *La Bergamonte 169 Ninth Avenue For many years this was in the middle of food nowhere. Now with the Chelsea Market and the fattening of the Meatpacking district is getting its due. Extremely fine croissants and pastries and a place to sit Le Pain Quotidien Various locations A chain from Belgian which makes it Belch. The baguettes are wonderful as are the brownies and raisin whole grain bread. This is probably the best food of any chain. The staff however, is laconic and unknowledgeable and very often there are out of many of the popular items. Nice brunches. *Little Pie Company Various locations Their sour cream apple walnut pie is akin to crack cocaine but only a little cheaper. The other pies are good but not in the same category. People start lining up for Thanksgiving on 4th of July, so order in advance. Patisserie Claude 187 West Fourth Street Patisserie Claude has been selling pastries to Pig Warren for a long time. We do not go often by when we do we are rewarded. *Payard’s Patisserie 1032 Lexington Ave Everything is well made and delectable, particularly the truffles. Never had a pastry that disappointed. They also have a dining area inhabited by ladies who lunch and seemingly never go home. *S & S Cheesecake 222 W 238 St, Bronx Could be the best cheesecake in the city, creamy but not dense, perfect, Steve’s Authentic Key Lime Pies 204-207 Van Dyke Street, Red Hook This is place is hard to find when you are standing in front it. Fortunately the silky pies can be found at Citarella and other self-defined fine stores. *Sullivan Street Bakery 533 W 47th Street You have probably eaten there breads many times and didn’t know it. It is offered in scores of restaurants and markets. You can identify many of the breads by sight. They are brown and crusty will the inside is light and airy. A paradigm for carbs. *Veniero’s 342 East 11th Street Established in 1894 some of those people are still waiting on line. I love this place, the best inexpensive tiramisu, addictive ricotta cheesecake, moist pignoli cookies, there are scores of offerings and no losers. The take out staff is never the same and the lines are long for the café. For Thanksgiving and Christmas, the café is turned to a waiting room for take out. They use an old fashioned machine to wrap the string around the box, while quaint, adds to the interminable line. You can also call in an order. N.B. You can take your cupcake fight outside. We have tried many but a winner has yet to be named. Candy and Chocolates *Economy Candy (Established 1934) 108 Rivington Street I am not sure they make anything on premises but they do have every candy still in production at very good prices. If you are a fan of candy stores, you will want to be buried here. Evelyn’s Hand Dipped Chocolates 4 John Street The best value for hand made chocolate in NY. It is clearly not the best, but most candy is made by hand and Evelyn can be seen slipping in and out from behind the counter. The cost is a fraction of the top notch candy stores. This is the type of place you find in a quaint town with quaint people. This 9/11 survivor should be supported. *Jacques Torres Chocolates Various Locations For some reason people know the Brooklyn location better than the one on Hudson Street. Their truffles are exquisite as are all the chocolates and the hot chocolate. The lines are extraordinary on Valentine’s Day. *Kee’s 80 Thompson Street Kee was a banker or a lawyer before she started making the best truffles in NYC. Some are Asian influenced each variety is better than the next. This is a must stop for chocolate cuckoos. *Teuscher Various locations Truffles are flown in from Switzerland. I once bought some for a chocolate loving friend who about to get married. While eating the truffles, this modest woman was made sounds that are usually reserved for her husband. Although she was completely embarrassed, I knew I bought the right gift. There are many chocolate stores in midtown that make exceptional products but I have not enough experience to add them to the list. These include Richart, Maison du Cholat, and Pierre Marcolini. Just turn your pockets inside out for a taste. Cheese Alleva Diary (Established 1892) 188 Grand Street Not as good as its neighbor DiPalo but extremely offers a fine selection of Italian cheeses. *DiPalo Dairy (Established 1925) 200 Grand Street One of NY’s great stores. Not only are the cheeses spectacular but sell perfect prosciutto. Their selections are impeccable. If at all possible avoid the weekend crowds, even though they have adults behind the counter. East Village Cheese 140 Third Avenue His cheese must fall off the truck to charge the lowest prices in the city. There is always some $2.99 per pound special. For that price you will not get the best, but at least you will be filled. The staff has become nicer over the years but not much. Cash only. *Formaggio Essex Essex Market on Essex Steet. That should be enough Essexes. This is a tiny outlet from a Boston company. The cheeses are excellent but they have to vats where you take a bottle and fill it with a vinegar sherry or olive oil and both are redolent and extremely flavorful. There is some rules about deposits but I am not good at rules. The Essex market is a poured concrete structure with many stalls selling veggies and Hispanic staples with a barber shop in the back. Do not be deterred that it looks like pig farm from the outside. *Joe’s Dairy (Established 1925) 156 Sullivan Street. If you do not like Joe’s you do not like New York. They have been making mozzarella for over 80 years and the smoked version is addictive. The store is tiny, tiny, tiny and the staff is family and know their stuff and the neighborhood. One time I bought my mother-in-law a smoked mozzarella here. The next time I saw her she said she cut off the outside because she thought the outside was burned. *Murray’s Cheeese 254 Bleecker Street and another in Grand Central Best in show. They carefully choose only the finest quality of every variety. The staff is cheesemongers, one is even a gossip monger. The ricotta cheese cake is worth going to jail. This is a must visit for anyone who has the slightest interest in cheese. *Russo’s Mozzarella (Established 1908) 344 East 11th Street Cleverly they make fresh and smoked mozzarella which are excellent but they also make pastas, sauces, and there own olive varieties. Cramped but the guys know what they are doing. Ice Cream *Cones 272 Bleecker Street In 1986 an Israeli newspaper sent a reporter to cover the NY Mets in the World Series because they heard there was a David Cone. He isn’t related to this place either. Sweet creamy, fresh ingredients with many varieties. Many tourists happen upon it when eating at John’s Pizzeria. *Australia Various Locations You will not believe this is a chain. The ice cream and truffles are rich and creamy and taste freshly made. Be sure to have the hot chocolate. The take their chocolate ice cream, add a little milk and then melt it by using the steam attachment on the cappuccino machine. Silky is the only word. *Chinatown Ice Cream Factory 65 Bayard Street Store made ice cream which for wimps offers vanilla and chocolate since they also serve flavors like green tea, lichee nut, and my favorite almond cookie. The kids behind the counter are always nice. There is no better way to end a meal in Chinatown. Inexpensive but cash only. *Il Laboratorio de Gelato 95 Orchard Street Everybody claims their gelati is the same as in Italy, blah, blah, blah. Their gelati is like Italy. It is the type you eat four times a day as you walk around Rome or Florence before you realize you have ruined your appetite for dinner. Expensive and cash only. Sundaes and Cones 95 East 10th Street They have nothing to do with just Cones and is a shade below, But if you are in the neighborhood, the store made ice cream is creamy and offer interesting flavors. Knishes Yonah Schimmel (Established 1890) 137 East Houston Street Yonah has been dead for a long time and they have not redecorated or cleaned the windows since. If they made great knishes the owners could be considered knish savants but they are not. The knishes you buy at sidewalk carts, however, are shaped like third base, taste worse, are fried and often a green patina inside. Yonah Schimmel’s, you always have to say both names when referring to the store, still makes the baked variety and may or may not have the all types on hand. Kitchen Supplies * Broadway Panhandler 65 East 8th Street They finally moved closer to Broadway. This is good for the semi-serious chef. There is an excellent selection of knives and pans but half the store is dedicated to stuff you use once or cutsey-poo crap. New York Cake and Baking Distributor 56 W 22 Has what every serious amateur and professional baker needs, flour, pans, cookie cutters, etc. The quarters are Spartan and the staff acts like they just found a cure for cancer. My favorite store Bridge Cookware has left NYC for the wilds of New Jersey. Food Markets Unless otherwise noted these places are expensive or very expensive. Agatha and Valentina A large department features hard-core Italian cold cuts like soppressata and hot or sweet cappicola, while the cheese department sports a huge number of offerings and loads of free samples. The prepared foods section also has a thick Italian accent and is among the more interesting in the city. *Citarella Various Locations One of the best spots for fish from standard stuff with gills to razor clams. Knowledgeable fishmongers. Same is true for meats. Their prepared foods are universally good with outstanding soups. The collect bread and cakes from various but good places. Dean and Deluca Various Locations The original food museum. The fruit is laid out to be admired, as are the cheeses, breads, and cakes. The main location on Broadway always a line at the espresso bar. Prices are highrt than buying a stale bagel at the airport. *Eli’s *Eli’s Vinegar Factory Various locations Eli had a fight with his family at Zabar’s and opened up a much more expensive food market. When you look at the prices, you think you are in a foreign country and miscalculated the exchange rate. On the other hand, every thing here is outstanding. *Fairway Various locations Cheaper than the others The fruits and veggies are outstanding as are the meats, fish, and store made breads. They also carry reasonably priced groceries. The Brooklyn store has food counters with an outdoor eating area with a view of the Statue of Liberty. But the food choices are not for the huddled masses yearning to breathe free. Grace’s Marketplace She is the daughter of old man Balducci, who was such a difficult character, she opened her own place. Physically it resembles the long gone Balducci’s on 6th Ave, but retained the good qualities such as the prepared meats and excellent meat, fish, and produce selections. Manhattan Fruit Exchange Chelsea Market Best veggie value in town. Crowded, crowded, crowded. Cash only *Russ and Daughters (Established 1914) 179 East Houston Street A new generation has taken over with the same pride and dedication to smoked fish as their aunts, uncles, and grandparents. Sable, white fish, lox, gravlax, it does not matter they are all mouth watering. Try the chopped liver, it is full flavor. *Zabar’s (Established 1931) 2245 Broadway Another NY institution with a well deserved reputation. The prices are cheaper than almost those above but the quality is the same or better. Large cheese selection, fantastic prepared foods, the claim to sell more coffee than anyone in NYC, store made knishes, breads and cakes from the best purveyors, Zabar’s brand spices and olive oil (this is known as one of the best buys anywhere.). The lox slicers reportedly make $85,000 a year. And upstairs is a cookware section. The staff is wonderful but the clientele is often obnoxious and aggressive. Sharpen your elbows and fight for the tri-colored pate. Meats *East Village Meat Market 139 Second Avenue It helps if you speak Polish but you can get by in English. Old fashioned butcher shop where every thing is cut upon request. They also make great, great kielbasa and in many shapes and types and smoked hams. Relatively inexpensive. *Faicco’s (Established 1900) 260 Bleecker Street They make their flavorful sausage, rice balls, sauces. You get the old schmooze from the guys behind the counter as well. If you like old fashioned Italian butchers who know what they are doing, this is the joint. Pasta *Raffetto’s (Established 1906) 144 W. Houston Street They cut fresh pasta from sheets to your specification in front of you on a machine that looked obsolete 50 years ago. Not a gimmick just the freshest, tastiest pasta yet. They have many types including saffron. Cash only. Pickles *Gus’s 49 Essex Street The model for Crossing Delancy. They having produced perfect pickles and peppers for almost 100 years and have been on the same block as The Tenement Museum since 2002 A must for any food tour. And usually offer a free pickle. *The Pickle Guys 49 Essex Street Some employee defected from Gus’s, the pickles are perfect as is the spiel. They also offer a free pickle. There are barrels and barrels of sour, new, half sour, pickled peppers just calling your name. Spanish Provisions Despana 408 Broome Street (Original at 86-17 Northern Blvd. Queens) Excellent chorizos and morcilla. The are incredibly tasty and are found in many restaurant around town. Their cheeses are also top notch and offer a wide selection. They also offer Serrano ham which is many respects is sweeter and more delicate than porsciutto. |
Oh my gosh! What a great list. I will be there in 2 weeks, so your timing is perfect for me.
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I thought Gus's pickel barrels were on Orchard Street. No?
Love anything at Payard with chocolate and raspberries. I miss Zabar's. Once, one of the gay cashiers there told me I was a bitch! :) Thin |
You are correct Thin, Gus's is on Orchard Street.
We all collect memories in our own way. |
Thank you, thank you. Our trip isn't until September. Now I can hardly wait.
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You are welcome. Enjoy New York.
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As always, Aduchamp1, excellent information.
(This is my sneaky way of bookmarking!) |
Thanks! I'll be there Wednesday so this is a gift. Any thoughts you have for cheaper dinners on the UWS would be great.
And "Belch" is very funny. I'll be sharing that with the family at lunch. |
Sorry, I do not know the good cheap places on the UWS but I am confident there are others who do.
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That was very generous of you, aduchamp1
The sound you now hear is the Fodor editors quickly scribbling the info for their next book!!!:-) |
Thanks, it may be a good edition to the guide considering the economic climate.
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here are a few UWS suggestions-
Hummus Place (Amsterdam btwn 74th and 75th)- great food and inexpensive. Nanoosh (Bway btwn 70 and 69th)- mediterranean with very rich hummus. Fairway (74th and Broadway) has a cafe on the 2nd floor which is inexpensive and though I haven't eaten there, the food is supposed to be good. There is also a Jaques Torres on Amsterdam btwn 74 and 73rd- stop in for a hot chocolate if it's a cold day. Sinfully delicious. GrandDaisy Bakery has a location next the Grey's Papaya. Really good sandwiches, pizza slices, bread and pastries. There is some seating, but very limited. Gray's Papaya- the original location- 72nd and Bway. The ultimate cheap meal. Maoz Vegetarian- 71st and Bway. really good falafels and you add your own toppings- as much as you want. Caffe la Fenice- bway btwn 68 and 69 is a nice italian/mediteranean restaurant with decent prices (not as cheap as the other options but still very reasonable). |
Wow! Thanks for this! I'll be there at the end of the month.
Any suggestions near Columbia U.? |
Thanks LP!
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I hope Fodors gives you an editor credit in the NYC guidebook!
Fantastic list! |
Thanks for these great tips!
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Aduchamp1 - Thank you, thank you, thank you, for the incredible list of eating alternatives in NYC. My husband and I visit frequently, so I will be printing out your list for our next excursion.
We like to eat at Big Nick's Burger & Pizza Joint on the Upper West Side. It's located at 2175 Broadway, somewhere around 76-78th Streets. The walls are plastered with photos of celebrities who have eaten in this hole-in-the-wall diner. http://bignicksnyc.com/ If you're up by Columbia University, stop in at Tom's Restaurant at 2880 Broadway (at 112th). If you're a fan of <i>Seinfeld</i> you'll recognize the outside of the restaurant, which is really the only reason to eat there. The food is just okay - typical diner. Enjoy eating in NYC! Robyn :)>- |
Thanks Robyn - I was wondering where that diner was. We don't have diners where I live so even though the food is plain, it feels different to us.
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You are all welocme. Enjoy New York.
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Wow you actually written all of those? Props to you.
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