2051 Best Restaurants in USA

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We've compiled the best of the best in USA - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Bao Bao Bakery

$ | Chinatown Fodor's Choice

French macarons with an Asian spin (think flavors like lychee, taro, Thai tea, and Hong Kong milk tea), fresh strawberry and mango cakes, and many layered crepe cakes (order by the slice), are all stars of the menu at Bao Bao. Grab-and-go baked goods include many types of buns from savory (curry beef) to sweet (pineapple with custard), and taro paste loaf bread. Milk teas, Ovaltine, iced tea drinks, and smoothies round out the offerings. The only con we can find is that there's no place to sit. 

Barney Greengrass

$$ | Upper West Side Fodor's Choice

Since 1908, this local landmark has been known for brusque waiters serving stellar platters of smoked salmon, sturgeon, whitefish, and pickled herring to a happy crowd packed to the gills at small Formica tables. Split a fish platter with bagels, cream cheese, and other fixings, or get your velvety nova scrambled with eggs and buttery caramelized onions. If still hungry, go for a plate of cheese blintzes or the to-die-for chopped liver. Be warned that the weekend brunch wait can exceed an hour, so you may want to get food to go or come during the week.

Basecamp Books and Bites

$$ Fodor's Choice

Equal parts indie bookstore, bar, and coffee house, this hip hangout set in one of Roslyn's quirky Victorian storefronts turns out creatively prepared American classics morning to night, including elk sausage scrambles, candied-bacon and blue-cheese burgers, apple-maple salads, and turkey potpies. Espresso drinks are brewed using a beautiful teal La Marzocco machine, and craft cocktails are served in the cozy basement tavern. On the adjacent patio, an airstream trailer doles out snacks and is staffed by employees who can recommend local hikes and activities.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Bay Cities Italian Deli

$ | Santa Monica Fodor's Choice

Part deli, part market, Bay Cities has been home to incredible Italian subs since 1925. This renowned counter-service spot is always crowded (best to order ahead), but monster subs run the gamut from the mighty meatball to the signature Godmother, made with prosciutto, ham, capicola, mortadella, Genoa salami, and provolone. At the market you can buy rare imported pastas, cheeses, wine, and sliced meats for a sunset beach picnic.

1517 Lincoln Blvd., Los Angeles, CA, 90401, USA
310-395–8279
Known For
  • 100-year-old market with rare imports
  • Old-school, deli-style service
  • Huge sandwiches
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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Beach Bakery Café

$ Fodor's Choice

This is really the place to be in WHB. Sit and sip an iced coffee and watch the world go by from the porch or sidewalk tables or grab a gelato and join the others on the stoop. With cases filled with fresh-baked goods, the worst thing about this place is that it's just so hard to decide. Try the devilishly delicious deep-fried jelly- or cream-filled "cronuts"—all the rage these days, but this bakery has been doing it for years. A full menu of bagels, pancakes, omelets, salads, sandwiches, pizza, and entree dishes will keep you coming back for more. Don't let the long lines and chaotic scene inside scare you away—there are many friendly young people behind the counter who keep things moving and do it with a smile.

Beacon Hill Books & Cafe

$$ | Beacon Hill Fodor's Choice

You could walk right past this tucked-away café on the ground floor of Beacon Hill Books, but you shouldn't. Stop in for a coffee, a glass of wine, or afternoon tea (Sunday only), or stay a bit to lunch on scratch-made soup, quiche, and salad. After your meal, browse through four floors of books. Note: You enter through an alleyway, into a hidden outdoor courtyard, and then through the door to a narrow space lined with tiny tables for two and a few counter seats.

71 Charles St., Boston, MA, 02114, USA
617-945--4713
Known For
  • Adorable space for a quiet coffee
  • Secluded courtyard with twinkling lights and tables
  • Really tasty food
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No dinner
Reservations recommended

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Bear Flag Fish Co.

$$ Fodor's Choice

This popular indoor and outdoor dining spot grills up the freshest local fish (swordfish, sea bass, halibut, and tuna) and offers a wide range of creative seafood dishes, sushi, fish tacos, and Hawaiian-style poke salad. Order at the counter, which doubles as a seafood market, and sit inside or outside on the patio. This is one of the few restaurants in Southern California with its own fishing boat, so there's a good chance some line-caught local fish will be on the menu.

Bering Tea & Coffee

$ Fodor's Choice

This little coffee shop, in a repurposed old A-frame house, is an adorable place and the perfect spot for a breakfast sandwich or midday coffee. Tasty beverages and delicious homemade scones, cinnamon rolls, cupcakes, and muffins are a welcome respite from Nome's wind and the industrial surroundings. The homey atmosphere is helped along by soft benches, stained glass lamps, local art, original wood floors, and bookshelves full of magazines, books, and games.

Bidwell Perk

$ Fodor's Choice
A clean and tidy, many-windowed chain alternative for coffee (several different roasts daily) and pastries, Bidwell Perk also serves full breakfasts and light lunches. Bagels, French toast, quiche, and croissant sandwiches in the morning give way to small plates, salads, panini, and sliders as the day moves along.

Billy Gail's Cafe

$ Fodor's Choice

Whether you have a penchant for all things classic Americana, or you just want a hearty breakfast served with a smile, Billy Gail’s is not to be missed. This roadside diner serves throughout the day, but it's best known for the generously portioned breakfasts, which range from four-egg omelets to buttermilk pancakes larger than the plates on which they are served. From the outside, this place looks like a log cabin; step inside and you’ll find wood-paneled interiors and tables cloaked in red gingham vinyl.

Billy's Homemade Boudin & Cracklins

$ Fodor's Choice

You're probably not going to go to Billy's for your fanciest occasions (or if you're trying to eat healthy), but if you're looking for some amazing Cajun snacks with no frills, then this is the place for you. Go inside and order at the counter to see what they've serving that day or swing through the drive-thru if you're in a rush.

The Bistro Box

$ Fodor's Choice

Just a short drive from the busy downtown you'll find this seasonal roadside food shack that always has a line of locals waiting to order the famous Box Burger with hand-cut Parmesan and truffle oil fries. Fresh lobster and crab rolls, fish tacos, and pulled pork sandwiches with rhubarb barbecue sauce are the last thing you'd expect to find at this eclectic spot along a busy road out of town.

937 Main St., Great Barrington, MA, 01230, USA
413-717–5958
Known For
  • Delicious burgers and hand-cut fries
  • Freshly squeezed lemonade and fruit slushies
  • Spring Fries made with ramp pesto, wild mushrooms, goat cheese, and a balsamic reduction
Restaurant Details
Closed Wed. and Nov.–Apr.

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Bite Into Maine

$$ Fodor's Choice

Hands down Maine's best lobster roll is found at this food truck that overlooks the idyllic Portland Head Light in Cape Elizabeth. Traditional rolls smothered in ungodly amounts of drawn butter are delicious, but you've also got the option to get out of the lobster comfort zone with rolls featuring flavors like wasabi, curry, and chipotle. There are vegetarian and nonseafood options on offer, too.

Black Oak Coffee Roasters

$ Fodor's Choice

Skilled baristas churn out a dizzying array of coffee drinks—drip, cold brew, all the fave espresso options—in a clean downtown space with white walls and teal wainscoting. Pastries, avocado toast, quiche, and egg-inflected sandwiches (some vegan or gluten-free) are the breakfast hits, with banh mi and the like added for lunch.

Blue Bottle Coffee

$ Fodor's Choice
Self-described coffee aficionados line up for the espresso and pour-overs at Blue Bottle, which originated in Oakland but feels very much at home in Williamsburg. The former factory building has light streaming in through large windows so the La Marzocco espresso machine seems to shine, and a Kyoto-style iced-coffee dripper, which looks like it belongs in a science lab, is displayed opposite the coffee counter. There's not much seating, so it's best to get your coffee and snack (mmmm, s'mores) to go. Beans are roasted in a vintage Probat roaster in back.

Blyth & Burrows

$ | Old Port and Waterfront Fodor's Choice

There are craft cocktails, and then there is Blyth & Burrows, where the alchemy of spirits is taken to the next level with creative concoctions that include the unholy integration of gorgeous (albeit unusual) ingredients such as absinthe foam, house-made black-lime cordial, blackstrap maple-chipotle syrup, and uncommon liqueurs and spirits. Delicious and inspired small plates, like deviled eggs with duck confit, charred oysters with absinthe butter, and local meat and cheese boards keep you from falling under the table.

26 Exchange St., Portland, ME, 04101, USA
207-613–9070
Known For
  • Knock-you-under-the-table cocktails
  • Nautical-theme atmosphere filled with antique ships and mermaid figureheads
  • Adventurous food that goes well with cocktails
Restaurant Details
Casual, but make it cool.

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Bobbie's Dairy Dip

$ | Sylvan Park Fodor's Choice

This classic ice cream and burger stand feels like a blast from the past with retro decor, classic diner fare, ice cream, and milkshakes that can be enjoyed on their covered patio. The family-friendly staple embraces their throwback energy, even naming their delicious signature shake flavors after 1950s rockers.

5301 Charlotte Ave., Nashville, TN, 37209, USA
615-864–5576
Known For
  • Dipped soft-serve ice cream
  • Creatively flavored milkshakes
  • Hand-dipped corn dogs

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Bobby Boy Bakeshop

$ | University Fodor's Choice

Stepping into this artisanal patisserie with attached wine bar feels like being in Europe, save for the Southern hospitality. Hungry customers line up for plump Valrhona chocolate croissants, slabs of burrata-dotted focaccia, and sandwiches made on fresh bread with locally milled grains. Bobby Boy exists in perfect harmony with Caviste Wine Bar; bakery customers enjoy sandwiches and coffee at the bar by day, then fancy bar snacks are made to pair with the natural wines at Caviste at night. 

1100 Reynolda Rd., Winston-Salem, NC, 27104, USA
336-955–3284
Known For
  • Natural and small-producer wines at attached Caviste wine bar
  • Lunch baguette sandwiches and slabs of focaccia
  • Decadent yet sophisticated pastries and desserts
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon.

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Bolivian Llama Party

$ | Sunnyside Fodor's Choice

If not for the pandemic, the folks behind this eatery with arguably the best restaurant name in NYC might still be slinging salteñas (like an empanada, but hand-braided and filled with a rich, savory stew) out of the food hall in Manhattan's Columbus Circle subway station. But now, they've claimed their brick-and-mortar shop out of their original prep kitchen in Sunnyside, with satisfying peanut soup, salad and grain bowls with barbecued meats or jackfruit, and fried chicken sandwiches, all which are best with dollops of llajua, their homemade Bolivian hot sauce. It's window-serve only, with a few outdoor picnic tables for seating in the front.

Brancaccio's Food Shop

$ Fodor's Choice
In need of picnic supplies, lunch, or a take-home meal? Owner Joe Brancaccio has been feeding the neighborhood with his daily-changing menu of sandwiches, rotisserie chicken, and prepared pastas and vegetables since 2010, and the shop just keeps getting busier. There are also house-baked croissants (plain, chocolate, or cheese), imported Italian sodas, and hard-to-find Mexican Coca-Cola (made with cane sugar, not high-fructose corn syrup).

Breadfarm

$ Fodor's Choice

A favorite stop on the Bow-Edison Food Trail, this cozy purveyor of savory artisan breads and delectable pastries is a great place to stock up on picnic supplies before venturing up scenic Chuckanut Drive. The offerings change regularly and feature ingredients from local farms—you might find pumpkin brioche, herb focaccia, black olive baguettes, ham-and-cheese pastries, and chocolate babkas.

The Brew & Brew

$ | East Austin Fodor's Choice

What started as a streamlined coffee and craft beer purveyor with sparse hours has evolved into an all-day mainstay of east Austin. The industrial garage vibe blends in well with its I–35-adjacent neighbors and attracts a hip clientele from morning to night, who flock here for cold brews and stacked breakfast sandwiches and then like to stick around for their local lineup of draft brews, full bar, and light café fare including late-night guilty-pleasure snacks.

Bricco Salumeria

$ | North End Fodor's Choice

Frank DePasquale’s sandwich and pasta shop is easy to miss, but just follow the steady stream of savvy locals down the alley adjacent to his award-winning restaurant to find the tiny spot packed with imported Italian meats and cheeses, vinegars, tomatoes, olive oils, and more. The monumental Italian sandwich is a heaping pile of mortadella, Genoa salami, soppressata, provolone, and all the fixings, while the packed chicken parmigiano is a shareable feast. All are served on house-made breads from the panetteria next door.

Brooklyn Roasting Company

$ | DUMBO Fodor's Choice
Artfully disheveled staffers brew coffee from fair-trade and rain-forest alliance–certified beans, while local gallerists and start-up techies flirt over perfectly poured cortados and other beverages at this East River--adjacent café. The loft-style industrial space is filled with antique roasting equipment and ample seating, and also serves pastries and sandwiches.

Bucklyn Coffee

$ Fodor's Choice

This tiny, friendly shop serves big, flavorful coffee and interesting sweet and savory pastries. On sunny days the patio tables out front fill up with locals and visitors alike.

103 Main St., Blue Hill, ME, USA
917-971–3246
Known For
  • Excellently made coffee
  • Delicious pastries
  • Maine-roasted beans
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.

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Búdin

$ | Greenpoint Fodor's Choice
Coffee aficionados head to Greenpoint for Búdin’s $10 latte—it's pricey because it's made with Danish licorice syrup, topped with licorice powder, and served on a silver tray. Come during the day for coffee by the Oslo-based roaster Tim Wendelboe, whose beans are favored by top European chefs, or after hours for wine and Nordic craft beer. The back of the shop is stocked with a rotating selection of Scandinavian-design goods .

Butcher & Baker Provisions

$$ Fodor's Choice

You'll find everything from thoughtfully curated artisanal groceries and prepared foods to a selection of creative contemporary American and international fare in the cheerful dining room of this stylish market in a retrofitted auto repair shop. Try the chilaquiles or croque madame at breakfast, and later in the day sample the salmon gravlax bagels and whole fried rainbow trout with grilled asparagus. Stock up on scones, cookies, and pecan sticky buns in the bakery.

The Butter Milk Ranch

$$ | 12 South Fodor's Choice

Come hungry for breakfast and brunch options that include zucchini pie, avocado toast, and unforgettable fluffy and crepe-like blueberry pancakes. This restaurant exudes boho California vibes with its bright airy interior and plant-filled wood accents around the open kitchen. If you're planning to dine on peak days, take advantage of the online waitlist. There's a small outdoor dining area out front; inside the seating is a mix of stand-alone tables and cozy banquettes tucked under conservatory-like windows. If you're driving, you may be able to find parking in the restaurant's parking lot.

2407 12th Ave. S, Nashville, TN, 37204, USA
615-465--8300
Known For
  • Out-of-this world, melt-in-your-mouth croissants like the babka or pistachio
  • Blueberry pancakes
  • A case full of house-cured meats
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No dinner

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Café du Monde

$ | French Quarter Fodor's Choice

No visit to New Orleans is complete without a chicory-laced café au lait paired with the addictive, sugar-dusted beignets at this venerable institution. The tables under the green-and-white-stripe awning are jammed with locals and tourists at almost every hour, for very good reason. If there's a wait, head around back to the takeout window, get your coffee and beignets to go, and enjoy them overlooking the river right next door or in Jackson Square. The most magical time to go is just before dawn, before the bustle begins and can hear the birds in the crepe myrtles across the way. The metro-area satellite stores (there's even one at the airport now) typically lack the character of the original, although the newest addition in City Park is quite charming.

800 Decatur St., New Orleans, LA, 70116, USA
504-525–4544
Known For
  • World's most famous beignets
  • Local landmark status
  • Long waits and 24-hour service
Restaurant Details
Reservations not accepted

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Café La Jefa

$ Fodor's Choice

Thanks to its misted patio, fast Internet connection, plethora of seating, and, most importantly, fine selection of caffeinated hot and cold drinks, this is a great work-from-café option on the main drag in uptown. The colorful, independently owned, Latina-influenced coffeehouse serves Sisters Coffee out of Oregon, local Townie bagels, Lotus Energy elixirs, fresh-daily pastries, and filling breakfast plates, including smoked salmon toast and chorizo con papas. There's also a vast assortment of chilled and canned beverages alongside healthy grab-and-go nibbles and prepackaged snacks by local makers for those in even more of a hurry.

750 N. Palm Canyon Dr., Palm Springs, CA, 92262, USA
760-673--7456
Known For
  • Chai chatas and chagaccinos
  • Wraparound patio with shaded section
  • Healthy grab-and-go nibbles and locally made snacks
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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