2095 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.

Bacetti

$$ | Echo Park Fodor's Choice

Though it’s a relative newcomer to the dining scene, Bacetti instantly established itself as one of L.A.’s best Italian restaurants, serving Roman-inspired dishes with a California twist in a stylish, sprawling, wood-framed dining room and patio. This farm-driven, Roman trattoria--inspired spot, tucked in Echo Park’s intimate commercial strip in the midst of a quiet residential neighborhood, is worth a trip, if only for the Focaccia Ebraica, which has gained a little cult following. Salads here are a revelation, as are the antipasti, pastas, and desserts. 

1509 Echo Park Ave., Los Angeles, CA, 90026, USA
213-995--6090
Known For
  • Focaccia Ebraica
  • Stylish setting
  • Italian wines

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Back Road Pizza

$$$ | South Side Fodor's Choice

Voted Santa Fe's best pizza for over a decade and featured in several national magazines and TV shows, this midtown spot is clearly a local favorite for dine-in or take-out. The unique flour crust is rolled in cornmeal (there's also a gluten-free version), and the meat is sourced from local farms known to treat the cows and pigs humanely and raise cage-free chickens. This one-stop shop also sells pints of local La Lecheria ice cream.

the backspace

$$ | Downtown Fodor's Choice

This stylish pizzeria, another hit from chef/restaurateur Shawn Cirkiel, is one of Austin’s best bets for classic Neapolitan pizza and authentic Italian antipasti. Tables are hard to come by in this intimate (read: tiny) downtown space, but the service and menu are approachable and laid-back. Antipasto selections, like baked ricotta and eggplant caponata, rival the main attraction: thin-crust, wood-fired pizzas, from margherita to the popular fennel sausage.

507 San Jacinto Blvd., Austin, TX, 78701, USA
512-474–9899
Known For
  • Perfectly cozy, date-night ambience
  • Daily happy hour, 4:30–6 pm, for half-off antipasti
  • Classic Neapolitan pizzas fired in an Italian brick oven

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Bad Roman

$$$ | Upper West Side Fodor's Choice

Set on the third floor of the Deutsche Bank center at Columbus Circle, and one floor down from the temple of haute cuisine, Per Se, this irreverent, playful, maximalist, authentic, inauthentic, gimmicky, and just plain fun Italian restaurant is not bad at all; in fact, it's very good. Any illusions that this is a traditional and polite Italian dining experience are left at the door where you are met with a half-ton wild boar statue wearing a neon necklace and a dining room that is a feast of color and texture with red and white travertine, trompe l'oeil mosaics, and lush greenery suspended from wood coffered ceilings above orange banquettes. The bar is clad with marble and mirror, there's a working fountain by the bathroom, and floor-to-ceiling windows frame views of Central Park (not that you'll notice.) Yes, there's food, too, and it lives up to the stage set by the design with delicious riffs on classic Italian food. Highlights include a filet mignon meatball small plate, filet mignon topped with cacio e pepe raviolo, a broiled 2-pound lobster with a mound of Calabrian pasta between the claws (to share), and tiramisu ice-cream cake. Cocktails are creative and the crowd is here to play.

10 Columbus Circle, New York, NY, 10019, USA
212-970–2033
Known For
  • Playful setting and crowds
  • 2-pound lobster with a mound of pasta between the claws
  • Great wine list and reasonably priced by-the-glass wines

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Bagaduce Lunch

$$ Fodor's Choice

This tidy little joint next to the reversing falls on the Bagaduce River is the perfect place for a lunch of clam, shrimp, haddock, or scallop baskets that come with onion rings or chips; there are also hot dogs, burgers, and chicken fingers. Picnic tables dot this nub of land surrounded on three sides by water, and you can walk onto the pier (or moor your kayak or boat there) for tidal estuary views and glimpses of seals, bald eagles, and ospreys. At low tide kids can explore the shore.

145 Franks Flat Rd., Penobscot, ME, 04617, USA
207-326–4197
Known For
  • Outdoor dining only
  • The views
  • Fresh seafood
Restaurant Details
Closed mid-Sept.–late Apr. and Wed. in summer

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Baja Burrito

$ | Berry Hill Fodor's Choice
This colorful neighborhood staple is a locally owned Baja Californian--style Mexican food restaurant, with build-your-own counter service featuring local meats, handmade salsas, and delicious fruit teas. In addition to their namesake burritos, they offer plentiful taco and salad options, all in generous portions, making this funky and fun spot a local favorite.
722 Thompson La., Nashville, TN, 37204, USA
615-383–2252
Known For
  • Colorful atmosphere
  • Quick counter service
  • Pineapple salsa made in-house
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.

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Baked

$ | Red Hook Fodor's Choice
Original creations like the Brookster (chocolate chip cookie dough baked inside a brownie) and delicious interpretations of whoopie pies, blondies, bars, and cookies keep this sleek bakery and café buzzing. There are breakfast items and a few lunchtime savory selections, too. Buy the cookbook so you can re-create the recipes at home.

Baked & Wired

$ | Georgetown Fodor's Choice

Skip the chain bakeries and head to Baked & Wired for their legendary cupcakes (the red velvet is a must), savory scones, and chocolate chip cookies. Any D.C. native will tell you this is one of their favorite spots! Also, coffee lovers will be pleased with all the options on the menu. 

Bakeri

$ | Greenpoint Fodor's Choice
When Williamsburg's best European-style bakery wanted more space, it opened a Greenpoint outpost and included a rustic communal table, antique finishes, and hand-painted wallpaper. From house-made focaccia to financiers, there are plenty of mouthwatering choices (including vegan and gluten-free options) for breakfast and lunch. At breakfast you can watch the bakers in the open kitchen as you sip your morning coffee and snack on a raspberry pistachio muffin or Norwegian skolebrød. Soups and sandwiches on freshly baked bread are served at lunch.

Baltaire Restaurant

$$$ | Brentwood Fodor's Choice

The chicest and buzziest nighttime spot in the neighborhood, Baltaire attracts both well-heeled Brentwood denizens on dressed-up dates and single sippers looking for late-night rendezvous. The meat-heavy menu features giant slabs of porterhouse steaks as well as special A5 Wagyu straight from Japan. Rounding out the treats is a full raw bar, caviar selection, and a one-of-a-kind cocktail program. There's lunch on weekdays only, and live music on Thursday and Friday.

11647 San Vicente Blvd., Los Angeles, CA, 90049, USA
424-273–1660
Known For
  • Sizzling steaks
  • Buzzing bar scene
  • Classic cocktails
Restaurant Details
No lunch weekends

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Balthazar

$$$ Fodor's Choice

Even with long waits and loud noise levels, most people agree that it's worth the effort (make reservations) to experience restaurateur Keith McNally's flagship, a perfectly New York reproduction of a Parisian brasserie. Like the decor, entrées re-create French classics: Gruyère-topped onion soup, steak frites, and icy tiers of crab, oysters, and other pristine shellfish.

Banán

$ | Waikiki Fodor's Choice

Follow a narrow beach pathway (between The Cheesecake Factory and Outrigger Waikiki Beach Resort) lined with surfboards to reach this takeout spot specializing in banán, a frozen, vegan-friendly dessert made with local bananas and containing no added sugar. Other snack options include smoothies, smoothie bowls, and ulu (breadfruit) waffles. Try the “Riss Moore” flavor, filled with tropical fruits and named after surfer Carissa Moore, the 2020 Olympic gold medalist and five-time world champion. There's no seating here, but Banán is steps from the beach and the main drag in Waikiki. 

Bangkok Supper Club

$$$ | Meatpacking District Fodor's Choice

This hot spot is culinarily impressive and instilled with enough Meatpacking attitude that you're bound to be rubbing elbows with both the food fanatics and the pretty people. The menu is inspired by Bangkok's late-night dining scene, but you certainly need not book a table late into the evening. Like its NoHo sibling, Fish Cheeks, the food here is elevated and creative but grounded enough in authenticity that it would not be out of place at all in a contemporary and chic eatery in Bangkok. 

641 Hudson St., New York, NY, 10014, USA
646-344–1733
Known For
  • Inventive cocktails mixed with things like fish sauce
  • Not always easy to nab a reservation
  • Beef cheeks and grilled seafood dishes
Restaurant Details
No lunch
Reservations essential

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Bangkok Thai

$$ Fodor's Choice
You could be forgiven for not expecting to find legit Thai food in northern Wyoming, much less in tiny Thermopolis, but this simple downtown eatery turns out flavorful, authentic curries and stir-fries. Choose from the usual proteins along with duck and lamb—the avocado curry, drunken noodles, and steamed pork pot stickers are among the specialties. There's no alcohol.
512 Broadway St., Thermopolis, WY, 82443, USA
307-864–3565
Known For
  • Friendly, welcoming service
  • Plenty of vegetarian options
  • Mango sticky rice
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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Bantam 46

$$ Fodor's Choice

At this convivial two-level downtown tavern with exposed brick walls and tall windows, boldly flavored Southern fare—prominently featuring rotisserie or fried (buttermilk or spicy-hot) chicken—rules the day. The chicken dishes come with a variety of sauces and sides and in several different formats, from chicken and waffles to fried chicken thigh sandwiches with Tabasco mayo.

1327 Railroad Ave., Bellingham, 98225, USA
360-788–4507
Known For
  • Novel cocktails
  • Pimento cheese hush puppies
  • Roasted shiitake–and–chicken gravy poutine
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.–Tues. No lunch

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Bantam King

$ | Penn Quarter Fodor's Choice

From the owners of Daikaya, Bantam King is another fun option for ramen in the Penn Quarter neighborhood. Chicken broth serves as the base of their flavorful ramen with noodles sourced from Sapporo, Japan. There's also a vegetarian option on the menu. In addition to ramen, Bantam King offers crispy Nashville hot fried chicken, a favorite among regulars. 

501 G St. NW, Washington, DC, 20001, USA
202-733–2612
Known For
  • Rich ramen bowls
  • Lively dining room
  • Fried chicken
Restaurant Details
Walk-in only

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Banzai Sushi Bar

$$ Fodor's Choice

An array of authentic Japanese dishes made with Hawaiian seafood and fresh, seasonal, mostly organic North Shore veggies and fruits attracts locals and visitors alike to this hip yet family-friendly sushi house. The extensive menu includes classic sashimi and tempura, standard and off-the-wall sushi rolls, Wagyu beef, broiled fish entrées, and various vegetarian and gluten-free options.

66-246 Kamehameha Hwy., Haleiwa, HI, 96712, USA
808-637–4404
Known For
  • Full bar with good selection of Japanese whiskeys and sakes
  • Rolls using macadamia nuts and island spices
  • Some traditional Japanese seating
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch

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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. 

Bao Bao Dumpling House

$$ Fodor's Choice

The exceptionally good Portland favorite has moved to Brunswick, with award-winning chef Cara Stadler and her mother, Cecile, still at the helm. And while dumplings are indeed the focal point (from shumai in curry broth and beef bulgogi pot stickers to clay-pot rice balls with Chinese sausage), other nuanced dishes are worth digging into, too, like the local oysters with lemongrass mignonette, and big-flavored smashed cucumbers loaded up with chili oil and garlic.

22 Pleasant St., Brunswick, ME, 04011, USA
207-725–9002
Known For
  • Award-winning dumplings
  • Nuanced and authentic Chinese dishes
  • Locally sourced ingredients
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch

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Bar Acuda

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

Hip and pricey, this tapas bar is a top place in Hanalei in terms of flavor and creativity, with food that's often organic and consistently remarkable. The dining room is super-casual but chic, with a welcoming bar and a nice porch for outdoor dining. Owner-chefs Hanna and Kenny Uddifa's brief menu changes regularly, but favorites include honeycomb with goat cheese and apple or Hawaiian fish (type depends on the local catch) with leek couscous, sunchokes, white wine beurre blanc, and sunflower sprouts. The adjacent sister restaurant, Ama, serves ramen and other Asian-style dishes in an upscale outdoor setting.

5--5161 Kuhio Hwy., Hanalei, HI, 96714, USA
808-826–7081
Known For
  • Sophisticated eclectic cuisine
  • Short, often-changing menu with innovative specials
  • Interesting wine list
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch
Reservations open 30 days in advance and typically fill up within a day. Book early!

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Bar Boheme

$$$ | Downtown Fodor's Choice

Chef James Trees has had a bit of a Midas touch around his native Las Vegas; every restaurant he creates is gold. It's no surprise, then, that this French-influenced Arts District restaurant has become an instant hit among locals and visitors alike. The menu features fresh spins on classic dishes such as escargot, boeuf Bourguignon, and sole Veronique, but the real stand-outs are the appetizers. The "Plateaux de Fruits de Mer" allow guests to assemble their own seafood towers, while three different pates options will make mouths water. The space itself is exquisite, with a marble-capped bar and lights that resemble palm fronds. After dinner have a nightcap at the Petite Boheme cocktail bar out back.

1401 S. Main St., Las Vegas, NV, 89104, USA
702-848--6823
Known For
  • Best French fries in Las Vegas
  • Hamburger that comes standard with over-easy egg
  • Extensive list of French wines
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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Bar Cecil

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

Since this posh bistro sprung to colorful wallpapered life just beyond downtown in the spring of 2021, it has been the toughest ticket in town to score—and Michelin agrees that it's worth the hype. Hoping to be the culinary manifestation of British photographer, artist, and Renaissance man, Cecil Beaton, the meaty menu is rich, flavorful, and full of financial and caloric splurges (caviar-topped deviled eggs, Wagyu tomahawk steaks), as well as fundamentally familiar dishes (roast chicken, steak frites, Bibb-lettuce salad, lemon tarts), but chef Gabe Woo adds unexpected touches like seasonal chutney atop a smoked pork chop. There's also a wild visual feast to be consumed (even in the bathrooms!). The look is splashy yet chic, centered on a marble and wooden bar, an enviable art collection that includes Calder and Warhol, and a showpiece custom light fixture. Start the reservation hunt early, and, if unsuccessful, show up before the restaurant opens,and pray for a cancellation or that one of the bar's grommeted, electric-blue, stool-chair hybrids, reserved for walk-ins, is available.

1555 S. Palm Canyon Dr., Palm Springs, CA, 92264, USA
442-332–3800
Known For
  • Charming patio where you might spy celebrities
  • Perfect vegetable accompaniments
  • Complex and elegant cocktails, including a $50 martini
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.
Reservations essentials
Cash only; only serves parties of 6 or less

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Bar Dojo

$$ Fodor's Choice

In a strip mall a short drive east of downtown, this simply decorated pan-Asian restaurant serves creative, often complex, dishes that often reflect Latin American influences—think ahi tacos and birria ramen. Fried soft-shell crab with tuna poke are stars among the noodle bowls, but also consider the gochujang-braised short ribs with kimchi-fried rice, pickled Fresno chilies, and a sunny-side-up egg. 

8404 Bowdoin Way, Edmonds, 98020, USA
425-977–0523
Known For
  • Great deals during late-night happy hour
  • Plenty of creative plant-based options
  • Asian-Latino taco nights on Tuesday
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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Barboncino

$$ | Crown Heights Fodor's Choice
Settle in with the after-work crowd, and you'll feel like a Crown Heights local at this beloved neighborhood pizza parlor. Here, friends meet for specialties like the standout Neapolitan pizza (order the "Arugula") and the famous veal-and-pork meatballs topped with Parmesan, and for the convivial late-night drink specials. Tuesday is jazz night.
781 Franklin Ave., Brooklyn, NY, 11238, USA
718-483–8834
Known For
  • Excellent wood-fired Neapolitan-style pizzas
  • Happy hour deals after work and late at night
  • Tuesday-night live jazz
Restaurant Details
No lunch weekdays

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Bardea Food & Drink

$$$ Fodor's Choice

Italy-trained chef Antimo DiMeo's exciting, creative Italian fare using regional ingredients helped spark a culinary resurgence in Wilmington and makes Bardea's 120 seats a popular reservation. Service is professional and warm, and the industrial-look space, with high ceilings, tile, and wooden floors and tables, is attractive, but the food on the changing menu steals the show: small plates like ricotta gnocchi; pastas and pizza; and shareable mains and vegetable dishes make it possible to compose a feast in different ways (just keep an eye on the price). Desserts deserve attention, including an artisanal cheese plate.   

620 N. Market St., Wilmington, DE, 19801, USA
302-426–2069
Known For
  • Chef also runs Bardea Steak, steps away
  • Italian wines (some very pricey) and good cocktails
  • Two-time James Beard Foundation semifinalist
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. No lunch

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Barley Brown's Brewpub

$$ Fodor's Choice

A frequent winner at American beer festivals, Barley Brown's is just as famous in the area for its food, which is prepared with locally sourced ingredients and hormone-free beef for burgers and other tasty grub. The "Shredders Wheat" American Wheat Ale has beaten out international contenders for a gold at the World Beer Cup. You can watch the process behind glass windows as they brew some of the more than three dozen beers available. The adjacent taproom is open daily.

2190 Main St., Baker City, OR, 97814, USA
541-523–4266
Known For
  • Crowds in high season
  • Hand-cut fries made with Baker County potatoes
  • Branded merchandise makes for cool souvenirs
Restaurant Details
Restaurant closed Sun. and Mon.

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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.

Barrio Café

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

Chef Silvana Salcido Esparza has taken Mexican cuisine to a new level, routinely winning accolades for modern specialties such as cochinita pibil, 12-hour slow-roasted pork with red achiote and sour orange, and chiles en nogada, a delicious traditional dish from central Mexico featuring a spicy poblano pepper stuffed with fruit, chicken, and raisins. In short, this is no taco joint.

2814 N. 16th St., AZ, 85006, USA
602-636–0240
Known For
  • Strict seating policy (no reservations, no waiting for members of your party)
  • Fine Mexican cuisine, not a burrito stand
  • Exterior covered with murals
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.
Reservations not accepted

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Barry's Downtown Prime

$$$$ | Downtown Fodor's Choice

Chef Barry Dakake made a name for himself in this town with his work at N9NE Steakhouse inside the Palms (back when the Palms was at the forefront of cool). This new eponymous restaurant, on the lowest level of Circa Las Vegas, is a mix of old and new, blending classics from N9NE with modern dishes and a variety of fish and shellfish. Big parties love the bone marrow appetizer, which includes the opportunity to drink a shot of vodka through a hallowed-out bone. Another crowd favorite: seafood towers, which come in a variety of sizes. Cocktails here are strong and creative; some are made tableside by scantily clad mixologists working different cocktail carts. The dining room at Barry's is swanky and sophisticated, with plenty of hidden alcoves. Perhaps the only demerit: sometimes the music can be deafening. 

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.