The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

5 New York City restaurant­s...

... for lunch, brunch — and dinner with a view.

- By Tom Sietsema

“The mindset of the people has changed” in New York, says Chintan Pandya, the chef of Dhamaka, one of the hardest reservatio­ns in Manhattan. He thinks his rustic Indian restaurant would not have been the smash hit it’s become before the pandemic. These days, diners want something they can relate to, not “a 12-inch plate with a 1-inch piece of food.”

Three years after I last ate in New York, I returned to find answers to some frequent reader questions — where to go before a show, what’s cooking in Brooklyn, ideas for brunch — with the aim of focusing on restaurant­s, old or new, that deliver value and what Pandya calls “real food.”

Here are five places I can’t wait to revisit.

Ardesia Wine Bar

The name translates to “slate” in Italian, and sure enough, the outsize chalkboard listing wines and the surface of the floor both feature the fine-grained rock. But owner Mandy Oser says she had other reasons for calling her Hell’s Kitchen wine bar Ardesia. She liked the way the word rolled off the tongue and figured it left room for evolution.

The small-plates menu highlights “things you crave when you’re having a drink,” says Oser, who opened the restaurant in 2009. So there are soft pretzels, baked in house, and a fabulous banh mi: roast duck and duck liver mousse inside a slender sandwich slathered with sriracha aioli and crunchy with pickled carrots. The good taste extends to the pedigree of the bread, from Sullivan Street Bakery, and the fistful of housemade fingerling potato chips.

Housed on the ground floor of an apartment building, the bar and dining area are modern and warm. The wine program combines classics with selections from lesser-known wine areas. Best of all, the restaurant is all-purpose. Ardesia allows you to enjoy a leisurely three-course meal or a quick bite and a glass of wine, hold any discussion of “how the volcanic soil” informs what’s in your glass, jokes the owner.

510 W. 52nd St. 212-2479191. ardesia-ny.com. Open for indoor and outdoor dining. Snacks and small plates $6 to $20.

Cookshop

Here’s where you want to land for brunch: a corner restaurant in Chelsea with a choice of indoor or outdoor seating, streams of light, pleasant servers in gingham blue shirts and the kind of American menu that takes into account that some people like to rise and shine for chicken liver mousse or chilled Maine lobster instead of eggs and beignets.

The dining room has so many plants, you feel as if you’re eating alfresco. A painting of a tractor underscore­s a farm-to-table philosophy, and isn’t it nice to see a band of mirrors at eye level, so everyone gets a view? A little list of specials speaks to the season. A scorching Saturday in late summer was tamed by watermelon salad with snow-white crumbles of feta cheese, breezy mint and a little trumpet blast of chiles – fire and ice in every forkful.

The standing list is nice, too. Go for the egg sandwich served with skin-on, chive-freckled potatoes, a tender Dutch baby gilded with juicy peaches or the strapping huevos rancheros perked up with pickled jalapeños.

156 10th Ave. 212-9244440. cookshopny.com. Open for indoor and outdoor dining. Brunch dishes $12 to $25.

Dhamaka

The server beams as she sets a pan of steaming gurda kapoora on our table. “Our most adventurou­s dish,” she says of the chopped lamb kidneys and testicles in a fire-colored sauce made from trotters, hits of ginger and garlic, and a swarm of warm spices. Companions and I mop up the rustic pleasure, sometimes made with goat, with pao, the pillowy rolls introduced to Goa by the Portuguese. If there’s a meal that best sums up this hot spot in the sprawling Essex Market, gurda kapoora is it.

Before coming to the United States in 2013, chef Chintan Pandya traveled around India collecting recipes from home cooks in villages, figuring his taste memories were for personal consumptio­n rather than future restaurant menus.

Happily, Dhamaka’s customers are the beneficiar­ies of his extensive treks, including delicious peppers stuffed with chickpea masala, crushed peanuts and the sweetener jaggery, a recipe Pandya got from his motherin-law and made his own.

Pandya and a colleague spend up to 10 hours a week sourcing meat and spices from small suppliers in the area. Dine early, then, or reserve ahead, if you hope to sample the whole rabbit, only one of which is supposedly offered a day. Marinated for two days, the feast takes six hours to cook and is presented in a clay pot.

A caveat: Dhamaka requires you to lean in to converse, and ask your server to repeat the specifics of a dish. It’s loud, even early at night.

119 Delancey St. 212-2048616. dhamaka.nyc. Open for indoor and outdoor dining. Dinner entrees $33 to $39.

Laser Wolf Brooklyn

The elevator leading to the rooftop of the Hoxton hotel is guarded like Fort Knox.

Here’s why: Israeli maestro Michael Solomonov opened a branch of his popular Philadelph­ia skewer house there in May and the view from the Williamsbu­rg hot spot is a postcard come to life. Seemingly all of Manhattan is the backdrop for Solomonov’s charcoal-grilled feasts and Laser Wolf ’s hospitalit­y.

As in a typical Israeli shipudiya, or skewer house, diners choose an entree – fish, meat or vegetables – that is preceded by hummus, housebaked pita and 10 or so cold salads arranged on a big tray. The last, salatim, is so luscious, it almost negates the need for a main course. I could easily fashion a meal from just the platter’s garlicky near-liquid hummus, fine-sliced cabbage and fennel, alive with s’chug, and the refreshing combinatio­n of charred pineapple and celery. But the entrees are pretty compelling, too, particular­ly the barbecue-spiced braised short ribs, so soft you barely need teeth to chew. The lamb and beef for the juicy koobideh is ground in house and seasoned with dill, turmeric and onion.

The restaurant, whose long bar is first come, first served, takes its name from Lazar Wolf, the wealthy butcher in “Fiddler on the Roof.” Pro tip: The best way to reach the restaurant from Manhattan is to take the ferry from the East 34th Street terminal, a bargain $2.75 excursion.

97 Wythe Ave. 718-215-7150. laserwolfb­rooklyn.com. Open for semi-enclosed dining. Entrees, including salatim, $43 to $175 (for dry-aged T-bone).

Nom Wah Tea Parlor

Chances are good you’ll face a wait at Chinatown’s oldest source for dim sum. The holding pattern is worth it. Open on the same block since 1920, Nom Wah Tea Parlor is a time warp wrought from tile floors, lipstick-red booths, a pressed tin ceiling and slender mirrored columns. No carts. Instead, you check off what you want from a list of dishes that are made to order back in the kitchen and brought out in short order.

Salt-and-pepper shrimp are served so hot, you have to wait a minute to sink your teeth into the crackling seafood. Steamed buns the size of baseballs break open to reveal cores of what tastes like pork stew with caramelize­d onions. Bitesize soup dumplings spurt golden juices; gone in a gulp, they leave the flavor of pork and ginger in their wake. These might be small plates you’ve had before, but they’re executed with finesse. Behold the sheen in the stack of Chinese broccoli, cooked to retain some bite and lashed with oyster sauce.

Know before you go: “Only cash or Amex,” a server greeted my party.

13 Doyers St. 212-962-6047. nomwah.com. Open for indoor dining. Dim sum selections $3.50 to $15.50.

 ?? JEENAH MOON FOR THE WASHINGTON POST ?? People dine outside Nom Wah Tea Parlor in the Chinatown neighborho­od of New York. Open on the same block since 1920, the restaurant is a time warp wrought from tile floors, lipstick-red booths, a pressed tin ceiling and slender mirrored columns.
JEENAH MOON FOR THE WASHINGTON POST People dine outside Nom Wah Tea Parlor in the Chinatown neighborho­od of New York. Open on the same block since 1920, the restaurant is a time warp wrought from tile floors, lipstick-red booths, a pressed tin ceiling and slender mirrored columns.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States