38 Best Restaurants in New York City, New York

Background Illustration for Restaurants

Ready to take a bite out of New York? Hope you've come hungry. In a city where creativity is expressed in innumerable ways, the food scene takes center stage, with literally thousands of chances to taste what Gotham is all about. Whether lining up at street stands, gobbling down legendary deli and diner grub, or chasing a coveted reservation at the latest celebrity-chef venue, New Yorkers are a demanding yet appreciative audience.

Every neighborhood offers temptations high, low, and in between, meaning there's truly something for every taste, whim, and budget. No matter how you approach dining out here, it's hard to go wrong. Planning a day of shopping among the glittering flagship boutiques along 5th and Madison Avenues? Stop into one of the Upper East Side's storied restaurants for a repast among the "ladies who lunch." Clubbing in the Meatpacking District? Tuck into a meal at eateries as trendy as their patrons. Craving authentic ethnic? From food trucks to hidden joints, there are almost more choices than there are appetites. Recent years have also seen entire food categories, from ramen to meatballs to mac 'n' cheese, riffed upon and fetishized, and at many restaurants you find an almost religious reverence for seasonal, locally sourced cuisine.

And don't forget—New York is still home to more celebrity chefs than any other city. Your chances of running into your favorite cookbook author, Food Network celeb, or paparazzi-friendly chef are high, adding even more star wattage to a restaurant scene with an already through-the-roof glamour quotient. Newfound economic realities, however, have revived appreciation for value, meaning you can tap into wallet-friendly choices at every level of the food chain. Rest assured, this city does its part to satisfy your appetite. Ready, set, eat.

Daniel

$$$$ | Upper East Side Fodor's Choice

At his namesake restaurant, celebrity-chef Daniel Boulud offers one of Manhattan's most refined dining experiences in an equally elegant dining room with a formal dress code (men's jacket required). A predominantly French-driven, five- or nine-course prix-fixe menu is served. Selections can encompass such seasonal and modern classics as upstate New York foie gras, Maine lobster, local venison, and other decadent dishes. Vegetarian menus are also available. Equally impressive are the professional service, extensive wine list, and masterful cocktails. Don't forget the decadent desserts and enticing artisan cheese trolley. 

ACRU

$$$$ | Greenwich Village Fodor's Choice

After a few years in the kitchen at highly acclaimed Korean restaurant Atomix, chef Daniel Garwood fuses culinary nostalgia from his native Australia with inspiration and ingredients from Korea and Scandinavia at this narrow, charming, 47-seat restaurant. Garwood cooks up an à la carte menu and a reasonably priced tasting menu that is both elevated and accessible at the same time. Ambrose Chiang, another Aussie and formerly at Momofuku Ko, has curated a short, but excellent wine list from small winemakers around the globe.

79 MacDougtal St., New York, NY, 10012, USA
646-861–3154
Known For
  • Affordable tasting menu
  • Cheeky dishes
  • Excellent cocktails
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. No lunch

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Café Sabarsky

$$ | Upper East Side Fodor's Choice

In the Neue Galerie, this stately coffeehouse—open for breakfast, lunch, and dinner—offers a Viennese café experience, with Eastern European-style furnishings and banquettes outfitted with fabric from 1912, daily newspapers, and cases with cakes and strudels. The menu of hearty sandwiches, goulash, sausage dishes, and traditional fare is under the direction of German-born executive chef Christopher Engel, who worked at Wallsé and Aureole, earning a Michelin star. Prix-fixe dinners are sometimes followed by a cabaret performance but note that a ticket costs $300. Museumgoers linger over coffee—it's sometimes tough to find a seat (it's easier in the more understated outpost of the café in the basement.) Breakfast is best for getting seated at Sabarsky; often with no line.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Corima

$$$ | Chinatown Fodor's Choice

Chef Fidel Caballero mines his upbringing on the U.S.--Mexican border, as well as his time cooking in award-winning restaurants in Spain's Basque Country and in Shanghai by producing dishes that marry all these cultures into one unique and delicious meal. The 54-seat eatery is split in two: more casual à la carte options up front and a tasting menu (with a counter overlooking the kitchen) in the back. Expect wow-inducing dishes with multilayered flavor strata, inventive cocktails, and a nicely curated wine list with bottles from Spain and Mexico. 

3 Allen St., New York, NY, 10002, USA
915-408–0578
Known For
  • Multicourse tasting menu with inventive wine pairing
  • Cocktails with the Mexican spirit sotol
  • Chinese- and Basque-inspired Mexican fare
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No lunch

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Dirt Candy

$$$$ | Lower East Side Fodor's Choice

One of the most inspired vegetarian restaurants in the country, Dirt Candy shines thanks to chef Amanda Cohen, who knows how to coax every bit of flavor out of vegetables—which she has described as "candy from the earth"—so that they dazzle on the plate and the palate. There's just one five-course tasting menu every night, which might include signature dishes like the build-your-own Brussels sprouts tacos, the "Tower of Terroir" deconstructed salad, or the addictive and spicy Korean fried broccoli.

86 Allen St., New York, NY, 10002, USA
212-228–7732
Known For
  • Creative and fun vegetarian and vegan food
  • Interesting alcohol and nonalcohol cocktails
  • Rather nondescript space
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch
Reservations essential

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Eleven Madison Park

$$$$ | Flatiron District Fodor's Choice

Luxury, precision, and creativity are the driving forces at this internationally renowned prix-fixe restaurant in a refined high-ceilinged space. Swiss-born chef Daniel Humm oversees the kitchen, concocting unexpected, often whimsical, dishes that change often but have a solid grounding in locavore American tastes. This is one of the most fine-tuned dining experiences you can have in New York City.

11 Madison Ave., New York, NY, 10010, USA
212-889–0905
Known For
  • Ultimate special-occasion restaurant
  • Shorter tasting menu at the bar
  • Reserve ahead
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
No lunch Mon.–Thurs.
Reservations essential

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Gabriel Kreuther

$$$$ | Midtown West Fodor's Choice

Entering the large, rustic-elegant dining room of Gabriel Kreuther invites a sense of calm as well as anticipation for a memorable meal—and it delivers. The renowned namesake chef celebrates his native Alsatian culinary influences with sublime tasting menus of three or four courses, or an inspired chef's tasting menu of at least seven courses (wine pairing optional, and worth the splurge). GK's haute cuisine, attentive service, and even its lovely handmade ceramic dishware are all part of an exceptional dining experience. Here's your chance to taste cuisine by a chef who's earned many of the world's most prestigious fine-dining accolades, including a James Beard award, Relais & Chateaux membership, and two Michelin stars. Note: if dinner is too pricey, enjoy a four-course prix-fixe lunch or à la carte menu, or opt for more casual dining in the inviting bar.

41 W. 42nd St., New York, NY, 10036, USA
212-257–5826
Known For
  • Elegant, cozy ambience
  • Pretheater dining in the bar
  • Award-winning menu
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.

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Gramercy Tavern

$$$$ | Gramercy Fodor's Choice

Danny Meyer's perennially popular restaurant tops many a New Yorker's list of favorite dining spots, as much for the exemplary food as for the clubby, art-filled space. In front, the cozy, first-come, first-served Tavern has an à la carte menu (the $35 burger with duck-fat potato chips is a standout) along with great craft beers and cocktails; the more formal dining room in back serves a four-course Greenmarket Lunch and a showstopping five-course tasting menu for dinner. 

Ilili

$$$ | Flatiron District Fodor's Choice

Famed Washington, D.C., restaurateur and chef Philippe Massoud brings his culinary talents—emphasizing cuisine from his native Lebanon—to New York City at this bi-level, 400-seat eatery. The menu of innovative Middle Eastern fare includes a mouthwatering variety of shareable hot and cold meze, as well as mains that run the gamut from lamb chops with za'atar to chicken livers with pomegranate molasses to duck shawarma with fig jam. Waiters never fail to refresh the basket of hot, fluffy, house-baked pita bread. A glass of Lebanese or French wine is a nice accompaniment to the cuisine.

Jean-Georges

$$$$ | Upper West Side Fodor's Choice

Chef célèbre Jean-Georges Vongerichten's prix-fixe–only culinary flagship focuses wholly on his spectacular dishes, which either approach the limits of the taste universe (perhaps foie-gras brûlée with fig jam and ice-wine reduction) or are models of simplicity (say, toasted egg yolk and caviar). The dining room is sleek but understated, with floor-to-ceiling windows adding sparkle to the white leather furnishings, white walls, and white linens; fresh-cut flowers adorn every table. Exceedingly personalized service and a well-selected wine list contribute to an unforgettable meal. For a less expensive lunch and brunch, try the less formal front room, Nougatine.

1 Central Park W, New York, NY, 10023, USA
212-299–3900
Known For
  • Exquisite cuisine and service
  • Award-winning dining
  • Lunch in Nougatine, the less-pricey front room
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.
Reservations essential
Jacket required

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Lakruwana

$$ | Stapleton Fodor's Choice

Staten Island has one of the largest Sri Lankan communities outside the South Asian nation, which means it's the perfect place to taste its cuisine. Along an unassuming strip of restaurants and groceries is this acclaimed, standout restaurant, tastefully adorned with Sri Lankan curios. During the week, different curries accompany à la carte dishes known as lamprais, kottus, and hoppers, however, on weekends there's an all-you-can-eat buffet of greatest hits for $22.

Le Bernardin

$$$$ | Midtown West Fodor's Choice

Enter the serene, teak-paneled dining room at this trendsetting French seafood restaurant, and let chef Eric Ripert work his magic with anything that swims—at times preferring not to cook it at all. Deceptively simple dishes are typical of his style, which has earned this restaurant many James Beard and other awards, including a rank among the world's top 20 restaurants and an incredible three Michelin stars. Expect to savor every bite of Le Bernardin's thrilling cuisine, along with exceptional cocktail and wine selections, and some of the finest desserts anywhere. The menu is expensive and prix-fixe only, but you can count on a truly unforgettable gastronomic experience. Along with a vegetarian prix-fixe option, there's also a marvelous chef's tasting menu of at least eight courses, and the option of an over-the-top wine pairing. Opt for the spectacular three-course lounge menu if time (or budget) is tight.

155 W. 51st St., New York, NY, 10019-6019, USA
212-554–1515
Known For
  • Splurge-worthy prix fixe only
  • Impeccable service
  • Reservations essential well in advance
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.
Reservations essential
Jacket required

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Le Pavillon

$$$$ | Midtown East Fodor's Choice

Set in the heart of Midtown, and located on the second floor of One Vanderbilt, a glassy 93-story skyscraper that dwarfs the nearby Chrysler Building (views of which you can appreciate from the restaurant's massive windows), Le Pavillon is named for a French restaurant in 1940s Manhattan that first defined French cuisine in the United States and is itself redefining fine dining in Midtown Manhattan. Immediately hailed a culinary oasis, world-renowned chef Daniel Boulud’s restaurant is also a soothing oasis, with its understated, neutral interiors, 57-foot ceilings, grand views, and lush forestlike setting complete with 20-foot-tall olive trees. The menu is prix-fixe and focuses on locally sourced vegetables and seafood. The Oysters Vanderbilt is named for the railroad magnate Cornelius Vanderbilt, who built Grand Central Terminal. À la carte menu items are available in the bar and lounge.

One Vanderbilt Ave., New York, NY, 10017, USA
212-662–1000
Known For
  • Prix-fixe and à la carte menus
  • Lush setting
  • Oysters Vanderbilt
Restaurant Details
No lunch weekends
Reservations essential

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Luthun

$$$$ | East Village Fodor's Choice

Arguably the best restaurant in Manhattan without a Michelin star, Luthun has 29 seats—including nine at the bar overlooking the kitchen—and offers a 10-course tasting menu that reflects the chefs' heritage and work experience. The two toques in charge have collectively worked at august eateries The Fat Duck in England, El Bulli in Spain, and The French Laundry in Napa and it shows in the refined but eclectic flavor-popping fare they produce here. The wine list focuses on small producers in places like La Rioja in Spain, Slovenia, and Virginia. 

432 E. 13th St., New York, NY, 1009, USA
646-454–9484
Known For
  • Theater-like counter seats overlooking kitchen
  • Friendly, professional staff
  • Worldly elevated dishes
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.–Tues. No lunch

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Marseille

$$$ | Midtown West Fodor's Choice

With excellent food and a convenient location near Broadway theaters, this brasserie is perpetually packed. Marseille's French standards are seriously impressive, including the bouillabaisse, the signature dish of the region for which the restaurant is named—a mélange of mussels, shrimp, and whitefish in a fragrant broth. Leave room for the fresh-baked desserts and farmhouse cheeses. Ambience is charming with a mix of locals and visitors, inviting all to feel welcome—just be wise and reserve a table or arrive early for a spot in the bar. Pre- and posttheater dining are great here, the bar has daily happy hour food specials, and weekends bring great brunch specials.

Meadowsweet

$$$ Fodor's Choice
Amid Williamsburg's culinary landscape of casual, comfort food–centric bistros with rock-and-roll sound tracks, this Michelin-starred restaurant and bar feels thoroughly grown-up. Chef-owner Polo Dobkins serves New American cuisine in an airy space with blond-wood accents. The striking mosaic floor was preserved from the original 1890 building, at one point a kosher cafeteria. The sophisticated dishes might include crispy baby artichokes peeking out of a mound of arugula and topped with shaved Parmesan or wild-caught sea bass with stewed tomato, yellow squash, zucchini, and olive vinaigrette. If you can't choose, the $75 tasting menu is a great way to sample the greatest hits.

Per Se

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

The New York interpretation of what many consider one of America's finest restaurants (the Napa Valley's French Laundry), Per Se is chef Thomas Keller's Broadway stage—set in a large, understated dining room with great views of Central Park. Keller embraces seasonality and a witty playfulness, and some dishes are world-renowned, such as the tiny cones of tuna tartare topped with crème fraîche or the "oysters and pearls"—tiny mollusks in a creamy custard with tapioca. The menu changes daily. Dessert service is a multicourse celebration of all things sweet, including a choice of 27 house-made chocolates. Service is sublime, as you'd expect. An à la carte "salon" menu is available in the front barroom, but let's face it: if you snag a reservation, there's nothing else to do but submit to the prix-fixe. 

10 Columbus Circle, New York, NY, 10019, USA
212-823–9335
Known For
  • Reservations needed at least several months ahead
  • Prix-fixe menus (service included in price)
  • Nine-course tasting menu
Restaurant Details
No lunch
Reservations essential
Jacket required

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The River Café

$$$$ | Brooklyn Heights Fodor's Choice

A deservedly popular special-occasion destination, this waterfront institution complements its exquisite Brooklyn Bridge views with memorable top-shelf cuisine served by an unfailingly attentive staff. Lobster, lamb, duck, and steak are among the staples of the prix-fixe menu. The chocolate Brooklyn Bridge mousse delivers the perfect ending to dinner. 

1 Water St., Brooklyn, NY, 11201, USA
718-522–5200
Known For
  • Unforgettable location
  • Top-shelf cuisine
  • Refined atmosphere
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues.
Jackets and collared shirts required for men

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Sushi Noz

$$$$ | Upper East Side Fodor's Choice

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. 

181 E. 78th St., New York, NY, 10075, USA
917-338–1792
Known For
  • Omakase only
  • Elegant setting
  • Prepaid reservations
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.
Reservations essential

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Aquavit

$$$$ | Midtown East

This Michelin-starred elegant and refined Scandinavian restaurant in the steady hands of Emma Bengtsson has prix-fixe options, including lunch, with a two-, three-, or four-course tasting menu, and a five-course or eight-course chef's tasting dinner menu. An à la carte option is offered within the sumptuous barroom area, best for sampling homemade aquavit, perhaps in a flight or mixed with tonic water. The dishes may seem simple, but even familiar meats, seafood, and seasonal ingredients are gifted with fresh creativity here. The elegant atmosphere features warm woods and modern Scandinavian design.

65 E. 55th St., New York, NY, 10022, USA
212-307–7311
Known For
  • Sleek bar area
  • Homemade aquavit
  • Seasonal Nordic cuisine
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. No lunch weekends
Reservations essential

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Babbo

$$$ | Greenwich Village

It shouldn't take more than one bite of tender barbecue squab to understand why it's so hard to get a reservation at this casually elegant restaurant, whose menu strays widely from Italian standards and hits numerous high points in dishes such as rabbit with Brussels sprouts and house-made pancetta. This is the perfect spot for a raucous celebratory dinner with flowing wine and festive banter. But be forewarned: if anyone in your party is hard of hearing or bothered by loud rock music, choose someplace more sedate.

110 Waverly Pl., New York, NY, 10011-9102, USA
212-777–0303
Known For
  • Palate-pleasing house-made pastas
  • Loud, questionable music
  • Great Italian wine list
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
No lunch Sun., Mon.
Reservations essential

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Bar Boulud

$$$ | Upper West Side

Acclaimed French chef Daniel Boulud, known for upscale New York City eatery Daniel, shows diners his more casual side with this lively, contemporary bistro and wine bar. The menu emphasizes charcuterie, including terrines and pâtés designed by Parisian charcutier Gilles Verot, as well as traditional French bistro dishes like steak frites and coq au vin. The 500-bottle wine list is heavy on wines from Burgundy and the Rhône Valley. The three-course prix-fixe menu ($68) from the entire menu is a good value.

1900 Broadway, New York, NY, 10023, USA
212-595–0303
Known For
  • Proximity to Lincoln Center
  • Lengthy wine list
  • Three-course prix-fixe menu

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Becco

$$$ | Midtown West

The two pricing scenarios at this Bastianich-owned Italian spot make bustling Becco a prime Restaurant Row choice for time-constrained theatergoers: one includes an affordable all-you-can-eat selection of salad, antipasti, and three pastas served hot out of pans that waiters circulate around the dining room; the other adds a generous entrée to the mix. The pasta selection changes daily but often includes gnocchi, ravioli, and fettuccine in cream sauce. The entrées may be braised veal shank, grilled double-cut pork chop, and Porterhouse lamb chops, among other selections. Decor is somewhat basic here, and the exposed brick amplifies the volume during busy hours, but the convivial vibes prevail.

355 W. 46th St., New York, NY, 10036-3810, USA
212-397–7597
Known For
  • Cheerful atmosphere
  • Gets noisy at busiest times
  • Mains including "Joe's veal chop"
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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The Drunken Munkey

$$ | Upper East Side

This cocktail-forward Anglo-Indian restaurant and bar, a warm, low-lit space with wooden tables, pays homage to the flavors and beverages found in the bistros, cafés, and supper clubs of "Old Bombay" in the early 20th century. In addition to biryanis, samosas, and kebabs, well-liked menu choices extend to butter chicken tikka masala, Goan pork vindaloo, and saag paneer (spicy greens cooked with Indian cheese), while the extensive beverage menu features reinvented cocktails such as Indian Spiced Old-Fashioned and the Bombay Gin Fizz---but think about ordering the house paanch, a five-ingredient drink whose name is a Hindi word commonly associated with punch. The Munkey prix-fixe dinner includes a cocktail, main course, and dessert.

338 E. 92nd St., New York, NY, 10128, USA
646-846–8986
Known For
  • Inventive Indian-inspired cocktails
  • Fourth-generation carrot pudding
  • Butter chicken tikka masala
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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Empellón

$$ | Midtown East

This flagship by chef Alex Stupak (wd~50 and Allinea) applies Mexican influences toward an inventive contemporary American menu amid an open kitchen, two-level seating, and a display case adorned with ceramics in unique shapes and sizes. For the table dishes encompass queso fundido (baked cheese) with steak tartare and crab nachos with sea urchin. Taco variations are unexpected but delightful—maitake mushrooms, pastrami, dry aged beef picadillo (ground beef and potatoes simmered in a spicy tomato sauce) and lobster. Their fajitas are also unique, with jumbo tiger prawns or surf and turf, but the dessert selection has gotten much attention. In particular, the "avocado" does resemble the fruit but it's actually a creamy, lime-flavored parfait.

Indian Accent

$$$$ | Midtown West

Helmed by renowned chef Manish Mehrotra, this refined Midtown restaurant is arguably the Big Apple's best place for creative and classic Indian dishes. The menu, which has tantalizing vegetarian, meat, and seafood options, explores innovation by blending daring and seasonal flavors with traditional Indian cuisine. Dinner is a three- or four-course prix-fixe affair, with excellent brunch and cocktail menus. The understated, elegant dining room complements the sophisticated service and dish presentations.

The Lambs Club

$$$$ | Midtown West

This sumptuous supper club on the ground floor of the Chatwal Hotel has superb Art Deco detailing, red leather banquettes, and a roaring fireplace. Led by chef Jack Logue, the menu features contemporary American cuisine with luxe touches in everything from shellfish and classic salads to a shortlist of chophouse steaks and excellent sides and sauces. There's also a robust three-course pretheater menu ($89 or $95). The lunch menu is balanced with a range of perfected dishes; but the sleeper meal here is breakfast, with generous sweet and/or savory fare that will fill you up for the rest of the day.

Naks

$$ | East Village

This Filipino spot opened to great fanfare at the end of 2023. That's because it's brought you by the team from impossible-to-get-into Indian eateries Semma and Dhamaka. The top toque, Manila-born Eric Valdez, offers a lavish multicourse tasting menu in the 20-seat dining room in the a back and more affordable à la carte options in the 18-seat front bar room. Some of the dishes can be challenging for nonadventurous eaters—cow testicle or pig brains, anyone?—but there is also excellent fried chicken, bison rib-eye steak, and unctuous pork belly. 

201 1st Ave., New York, NY, 10003, USA
Known For
  • Excellent Filipino-inspired cocktails
  • Adventurous dishes
  • Authentic Filipino street food
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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National Restaurant and Night Club

$$ | Brighton Beach
Wear your dancing shoes and dress to impress and you'll fit right in at this lavishly gilded, Brighton Beach institution. The menu has an outstanding selection of Russian specialties, like smoked fish, caviar, kebabs, and dumplings. Vodka is best ordered by the bottle, especially if you're staying for the Vegas-via-the-Ukraine-style floor show. It's a glitzy spectacle of live music, show girls, and costume changes—this may well be one of the best experiences of your trip. Remember to dress up and be ready to join the convivial spirit!
273 Brighton Beach Ave., Brooklyn, NY, 11235, USA
718-646–1225
Known For
  • Russian specialties
  • Flashy floor shows
  • No sneakers allowed in the evenings
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.--Thurs.

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Nobu New York Downtown

$$$$ | Financial District

At this impressive location in a unique setting of Botticino marble that's part of a century-old building lobby, the sushi stalwart serves the innovative Japanese cuisine that namesake master chef Nobu Matsuhisa made famous (though he's rarely in attendance these days). Count on fresh, colorful, daring dishes, or just put your meal in the chef's hands with Nobu's tasting menu ($225), or omakase, then let the kitchen do the rest.

195 Broadway, New York, NY, 10007, USA
212-219–0500
Known For
  • Trendy crowd
  • High-quality sushi
  • Omakase tasting menu
Restaurant Details
Reservations essential

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