973 Best Restaurants in New York, USA
We've compiled the best of the best in New York - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.
Savoy
At this Italian restaurant you can enjoy an intimate meal or just sip cocktails at the bar and listen to live piano music. The walls are covered with photographs of celebrities who have visited since the place opened in 1908. The menu offers pasta and seafood dishes as well as traditional preparations like manicotti and chicken cacciatore. The fried meatballs (greasy and rich as they are) are a popular appetizer. The cocktails are imaginative and generally well mixed. Try the Savoy Manhattan for a smooth, refreshing twist on an upstate favorite. The bar, separate from the dining room, has intimate seating.
Selamat Pagi
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Semma
After the huge success of their other restaurants—Dhamaka on the Lower East Side and Adda in Long Island City—79-seat Semma is still the shiniest jewel in this restaurant group's crown. And nabbing a table at a prime hour is reflective of that. Southern Indian fare is the focus here. Semma's menu plucks obscure dishes and recipes that have not yet traveled outside of India and then presents them in a gorgeous, oh-so-edible way. The cocktail program is equally unforgettable, mixing various Indian spices and herbs into spirits to create concoctions that pair perfectly with the award-winning food here.
Shukette
This spin-off of Shuka in SoHo first fired up its burners in summer 2021 and was an instant hit, far exceeding in enthusiasm than the original. The focus of this stylish 80-seat eatery is modern Middle Eastern cuisine, with flavor-packed fare that spans the entire region. Chef Ayesha J. Nurdjaja takes traditional recipes and goes a step further with them, adding, for example, red onions and a sauce of chilies and garlic to the ultracreamy hummus or stewed lamb hiding inside the kibbeh. There's a delicious surprise on every plate.
\nSmorgasburg
Smorgasburg, the acclaimed open-air food market, is the portmanteau of smorgasbord and Williamsburg. Here, at its founding location at Marsha P. Johnson State Park, vetted food vendors serve delicious treats to foodies (and provide photogenic content for food influencers), from arepas to yakitori. Even with the Smorgasburg branded concept dispersing crowds of foodies across other locations across New York, Jersey City, LA, Miami, Toronto, and Sao Paolo, the original Williamsburg location still draws close to 30,000 people each Saturday in the summer, so get there before noon if you don't want to spend most of your time there in queues. The original Smorgasburg is open from April through October, but check the website for details of the other locations in Brooklyn Manhattan.
Soothr
The name of this standout Thai restaurant is pronounced \"sood,\" and translates to \"recipe\"—highlighting the fact that the menu is based on family recipes from around Thailand. This also means that, while familiar dishes like pad Thai are on offer, there are lots of items that might be unfamiliar and are definitely worth trying, like the koong karee (a creamy shrimp and egg curry), the flaky fried puff pastry stuffed with flavor-popping minced pork, and the caramelized duck noodles.
SriPraPhai
A long-beloved, cash-only Thai option, SriPraPhai (pronounced \"see-PRA-pie\") has a huge main menu as well as an equally expansive one for vegetarians. Although it's hard to go wrong, good bets include the crispy watercress salad, laab (ground pork salad with dry chili, mint, and lime juice), fried tamarind duck, kao-soy (curried egg noodles), or sautéed chicken with cashews and pineapple. If you go with a few people, order the delicately flavored whole steamed fish, but prepare your palate: your mouth might feel like a five-alarm fire by the time you're finished.
St. Jardim
Named for a neighborhood in Rio de Janeiro, there really isn't anything particularly Brazilian about this diminutive, all-day corner café. In the morning and afternoon, perch yourself at the bar for superlative coffee, excellent eggy dishes, sandwiches, and variations on the theme of toast. In the evening, the lights go down, the natural wine bottles get uncorked, and the kitchen churns out Mediterranean-leaning snacks to nibble on.
Stone Creek Inn
At this bright and airy restaurant the talented chef-owner utilizes the freshest local produce and seafood—and his considerable talent—to provide a memorable dining experience. Oven-roasted halibut, rack of lamb with Mediterranean spice, and braised Montauk lobster with baby vegetables are among the dishes on the French-leaning menu. Homemade desserts such as ricotta mousse and lemon tart may quite possibly induce a swoon. The dining spaces are elegantly spare, with polished hardwood floors, lots of windows, and white-clothed tables. A $30 prix-fixe is available Monday–Thursday.
Superfine
Friendly service and convivial, colorful crowds have transformed this bi-level, renovated warehouse into a quirky neighborhood institution with rotating art and music shows and frequent DJ sets. The kitchen's organic menu changes daily, plus there's a weekend brunch with live Americana music.
Sushi Noz
This unassuming spot at the corner of 3rd Avenue and 78th Street is a high-end sushi restaurant offering one of the city's best sushi experiences in a Sukiya-style interior of bamboo and cedar woods. With a seasonal omakase menu curated nightly by chef Nozomu Abe (known as \"Noz\"), including masterfully prepared Edomae sushi with fresh fish flown in from Japan, the two intimate nightly seatings at two counters (an eight-seat, 200-year-old, hinoki wood counter and a six-seat, rare tamo ash counter) are detail-perfect, memorable affairs with exceptional hospitality. Chef Noz presents at the hinoki counter weekdays. But the price, $495, is exorbitant. For a more reasonable yet still luxurious dining experience, diners can have a 16-course omakase meal next door at Cafe Noz for $155.
Sushi Thai Garden
A hostess dressed in a kimono is likely to greet you at this bright and airy restaurant with pale wood furnishings. A sushi bar serves a large selection of sushi and sashimi combinations; entrées include teriyaki, tempura, and kutsu dishes as well as Thai curries and noodles. Try the ika yaki (grilled squid in teriyaki sauce) or the fried soft-shell crab for a truly delicious indulgence.
Tacos Matamoros
Takumen
Just a short walk from the 7 train is an easy-to-miss, unsuspecting izakaya, Takumen. Serving up giant bowls of slurpy noodles in salty, umami-packed broths, Takumen does ramen near perfectly, but they offer plenty more delectable dishes, too. Go for a variety of obanzai (izakaya samplers), like the sesame tofu edamame salad and the kombu cauliflower-and-broccoli pop. While their ramen dishes are naturally more desirable in the wintertime, they also have a year-round ice-cream window, where they serve soft-serve in flavors like matcha and vanilla, along with anmitsu, a traditional Japanese dessert made with red bean paste and agar jelly.
Tanoreen
Taqueria de los Muertos
Tatiana by Kwame Onwuachi
David Geffen Hall was probably the last place most New Yorkers would think to go for a chopped cheese sandwich, that is until New York City chef Kwame Onwuachi took this iconic NYC staple out of the local deli and into a shimmering space in Lincoln Center, elevating it accordingly with a steamed bun, dry-aged beef, smoked mozzarella, and shaved black truffles. Within weeks of opening, the celeb chef's first New York City restaurant was lauded and applauded by locals and media alike for bringing delicious African and Caribbean flavors and interesting twists on classic New York dishes to Lincoln Center, and specifically back to San Juan Hill, an area that once housed a vibrant community of Black and brown residents who were removed for the center's development. A couple of years in, this is one of New York City's highest-rated restaurants and one of the city's hottest reservations. The vibes are relaxed and upscale, with comfortable booths, marble tables, floor-to-ceiling gold link chains, and cloudlike light fixtures that change color—all set to a loud and lively soundtrack of classic and contemporary hip-hop. The menu is inspired by the chef's experience working in some of New York City's top kitchens; his mom's Creole cooking; and the Nigerian, Trinidadian, and Jamaican foods he grew up eating in the Bronx. Standouts include egusi (a one-pot soup) dumplings, Jamaican curried goat patties, and a flavorful pastrami sandwich, served on the bone, coated with a Nigerian-inspired suya (spice blend) with a side of warm bread. Just be sure to leave room for the Harlem Chocolate Factory white chocolate cheesecake.
Tavern 214
Taverna Kyclades
Té Company
On the surface this diminutive spot with a handful of seats may seem like just a teahouse, but it's really much more than that. Elena Liao expertly sources oolong tea from her native Taiwan while her husband, Portuguese-born Frederico Ribeiro, who has worked at some of the most lauded kitchens on the planet, including El Bulli in Spain and Per Se in New York, makes savory and sweet snacks to pair with your tea. There's a second location in the East Village.
Terrapin
This 1825 church contains two dining options: a casual bistro and a more-formal dining room. The bistro menu lists soups, stews, and a make-your-own sandwich board, as well as traditional entrées. Expect a lively crowd at the bar, especially on weekends. With white-cloth-draped tables, the main dining area is quieter. The food veers from creative to comforting. A popular starter is baby-arugula salad with goat-cheese wontons. For entrees, try the horseradish-crusted ahi tuna with miso aioli or the grilled, dry-aged T-bone served with Roquefort blue cheese butter.
Tomiño Taberna Gallega
Little Italy may not be home to any real Italian-seeming restaurant, but this intimate Galician tapas spot readily evokes the spirit of northern Spain and its gastronomic traditions. The kitchen excels at regional seafood dishes like grilled octopus with pimentón (red pepper), and the sea scallops with jamon, served in the shell, but meatier options like the lamb chops are also delicious.
Torrisi
With its high ceiling, green pillars sculpted into the walls, and deep, circular leather booths on the periphery of the dining room, opulent Torrisi is a quintessential New York dining experience. Technically, Torrisi is Italian cuisine, but the menu is an homage to old immigration patterns to Little Italy, Chinatown, and the Lower East Side, as dishes' ingredients often make references to various demographics: the chopped chicken liver with Manischewitz, octopus Nha Trang, stir-fried lobster with ginger ... you get the idea. There are plenty of pastas on the menu, too—the spaghetti with lamb Amatriciana is outstanding.
Tweeds Restaurant & Buffalo Bar
Housed in the old John J. Sullivan hotel on Main Street, this homey restaurant harks back to the Victorian era and exudes masses of charm—stained glass, chandeliers in old oil-burning style, an 1893 mahogany and marble bar made for the Chicago Exposition, a rich mantled fireplace, and the head of the last buffalo shot by Teddy Roosevelt. Buffalo (bison) meat is on the menu, lower in fat and higher in protein than beef and it tastes pretty much the same, only "beefier." If you don't want to splurge on the $44 cowboy steak, go for the $20 buffalo burger. An organic beef burger is also available. You may have guessed that meat is king here, but vegetarians are not entirely forgotten—try the roast portobello mushroom with homemade ricotta. Tweeds also boasts the biggest selection of bourbons.
Txikito
Husband-wife chef duo Alex Raij and Eder Montero are the talented toques behind this wonderful restaurant that relies on Spain's Basque Country for inspiration. Prop yourself at the inviting bar in the front room or grab a table in the back and get ready to be wowed by dishes like crispy beef cheeks and jowl, tender swordfish belly paired with smoked eggplant, and gooey croquettes (the ingredients of which change weekly). The restaurant has a great wine list of Spanish wines, particularly from La Rioja.
Uma's
If you need evidence that Rockaway is becoming hip, look no further than this sceney spot serving a mix of Uzbek and Central Asian specialties. There are juicy pelmeni (meat) and manti (spicy lamb or butternut squash) dumplings, lagman noodles, and savory filled pastries known as bichaki, plus the expected very good borscht. There are also Korean menu options like Korean carrot salad and scallion pancakes, as a nod to the large Korean diaspora in Uzbekistan. Pressed tin ceilings, exposed-brick walls, and menus written on blackboards give the place a decidedly Brooklyn vibe.
Union Square Cafe
Noted restaurateur Danny Meyer's unpretentious but classy American restaurant has been serving impressively well-executed food to much acclaim since it first opened on Union Square in 1985, and the tradition continues in this elegantly clubby spot a few blocks north of the original location. It's almost impossible to go wrong anywhere on the menu; this place is truly the real deal, with standout steak, fish, and pasta dishes, as well as excellent desserts.
UnTable
The prefix \"un-\" in this acclaimed Thai restaurant's name is a double entendre: un, homophone of the nickname of its chef, Aun Kampimarn; and un as in it proudly serves unconventional Thai food, when compared to common Thai take-out fare like pad Thai or Panang curry. Here, supple okra finds balance with crispy fried garlic, whole fishes are smothered in curries, and northern Thai dishes of steak or ground pork have a perfect balance of spice flavor and heat. For those wanting to turn the spiciness up to a new level, they also offer \"WHAT THE HELL!!\" fried rice, with 12 unapologetic chili icons on the menu to denote its intensity.
Urban Hawker
Fresh, flavorful dishes from around Southeast Asia are calling at this enticing and unexpected Midtown food hall. Tucked mid-block between 6th and 7th Avenues, with entrances on both 50th and 51st Streets, Urban Hawker is an ode to Singaporean food markets. Browse affordable meals, snacks, and desserts from 17 vendors representing Malay, Peranakan, Indian, Japanese, Chinese, and other cuisines, and sip drinks at gin-centric The Sling Bar.