The 21 best Lower East Side restaurants to try right now (2024)

The 21 best Lower East Side restaurants to try right now (1)

These Lower East Side restaurants are some of the hottest, most exciting and most famous in the city

Photograph: Courtesy of Kopitiam

Written by Rachel Pelz

Advertising

The Lower East Side’s food scene is as diverse and dynamic as its history. Brushing up against Chinatown and Little Italy, it’s the sort of neighborhood where you can find the best New York deli just steps away from some of the city’s best sandwiches. Snack your way through some of the city’s best ice cream shops, order a slice of unparalleled pizza, and soak in the living history of New York City one bite at a time.

RECOMMENDED: See the full guide to Lower East Side

Been there, done that? Think again, my friend.

By entering your email address you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy and consent to receive emails from Time Out about news, events, offers and partner promotions.

🙌
Awesome, you're subscribed!

Thanks for subscribing! Look out for your first newsletter in your inbox soon!

The 21 best Lower East Side restaurants to try right now (3)

Clinton St. Baking Company
  • American
  • Lower East Side
  • price 2 of 4

If we could brunch every day, we would do it in heart beat, and you'd find us at Clinton St. Baking Company. We never tire of the pancakes and breakfast-as-dinner fare.

Mr. Taka Ramen
  • Japanese
  • Lower East Side
Photograph: Courtesy of Mr. Taka Ramen

Countless bowls of soothing ramen can be found across New York, but Mr. Taka Ramen stands out for its overall quality (the chef has Michelin cred, after all). We can't get enough of the hearty tonkatsuand basically any dish from this kitchen.

Wayla
  • Thai
  • Lower East Side
Photograph: Courtesy Wayla

Located in a basem*nt storefront on Forsyth Street, you might just miss Wayla upon first glance. With little signage pointing you in the right direction, down the steps is a cavernous Thai restaurant with a backyard oasis not to be missed. The new LES spot from Northern Tiger’s Erika Chou offers home-style dishes prepared by Chef Tom Naumsuwan.

Best Lower East Side restaurants

1.Cheeky Sandwiches
  • Sandwich shops
  • Lower East Side
  • price 2 of 4

Photograph: Time Out/Ali Garber

With barely any signage out front, the white brick walls scrawled with handwritten notes buttressing a corrugated-tin ceiling makes the ambiance have zero frills. But it's here that you'll find one of our favorite sandwiches in the whole damn city: the chicken gravy biscuit with purple cabbage is made even better by the warm staff members.

2.Dirt Candy
  • Vegetarian
  • Lower East Side
  • price 2 of 4

Photograph: Paul Wagtouicz

Chef Amanda Cohen was one of the most prominent champions of vegetarian cuisine, well before vegetable-forward was the gastro buzzword on every menu. Cohen bucks the hackneyed health-nut tenets of vegetarianism with some of the most experimental cooking around the city.

Advertising

  • Lower East Side

Originally launched as a pop-up, Sami & Susu has found a new home on the Lower East Side. Homey favorites like Mom’s Chicken Soup (complete with matzo balls, naturally) join with fresh takes on sandwiches—try the cauliflower pita with zingy zhug or a sabich baguette with eggplant, eggs and tahini. The restaurant doubles as a market for hard-to-find delicacies including tuna conserva and matbucha with tomatoes and peppers.

4.Cibao
  • Lower East Side

This low-key Dominican cafe first opened in 1958 with the name La Lechonera, where they served up roasted pork for the neighborhood. All these years later, they’re still making melt-in-your-mouth cubanos for locals and tourists alike. A Cubano’s only $7, leaving plenty of money in your pocket for a velvety soursop shake.

Advertising

5.Kopitiam
  • Malaysian
  • Two Bridges
Photograph: Courtesy of Kopitiam

The Malaysian café is now bigger and (arguably) better in its new location, just a few blocks from the original. Here, you can actually sit back and relax with their all-day menu of affordable small plates and snacks like nasi lemak.

6.Essex Market
  • Lower East Side
Photograph: Courtesy SHoP Architects

When it was announced that Essex Market, New York's oldest public market, would close its location that had been on the Lower East Side since the 1940s, a ripple of fear shot through New York. Would the existing vendors continue on in the space at Essex Crossing, a sprawling mixed-use mega development opening across the street? Thankfully, the new Essex Market debuted with all 21 existing vendors, including Puebla Mexican, Shopsin's General Store and Ni Japanese, alongside 17 new vendors, like South Williamsburg favorite Samesa (their first expansion to Manhattan).

Advertising

7.Kiki's
  • Greek
  • Chinatown
Photograph: Ali Garber

Kiki Karamintzas' namesake restaurant manages to be one of the neighborhood's hippest spots without maintaining an Instagram presence or photographable interior design. Which is to say, Kiki's is cool and lively without feeling like it's trying too hard. There's a Chinese sign hanging out front, but the restaurant actually only serves Greek food. Diners love it so much, the team opened another spot for spill-over seating across the street.

8.Dimes
  • Californian
  • Chinatown
  • price 2 of 4

Photograph: Liz Clayman

At this SoCal-inspired café, the lineup can change weekly. Expect colorful plates with equal parts Japanese, South American and Mediterranean influences like a bonito-chili–spiced black-rice bowl loaded with sweet potato and eggplant or braised chicken in stick-to-your-ribs apricot couscous.

Advertising

9.Freemans
  • American
  • Lower East Side
  • price 2 of 4

Tucked away in an easily missed dead end, this treasure feels like it’s straight out of aWes Anderson movie, in all of its taxidermied,vintage-wallpaper–laden, old-book–strewnglory, creating a nice atmosphere to spill the beans with pals at one of the long communal tables.

10.BBF
  • Midtown West

Daikon french fries, paripari fried chicken (paripari is a Japanese onomatopoeia for the crunch of the skin) and Instagrammable “sushi bombs'' make this seasonal izakaya-meets-NYC-faves mashup more than worthy of the Lower East Side. Michelin-starred chef Chikara Sono has teamed up with Nana Shimosegawa, the first female bartender at the iconic Angel’s Share, to create Japanese-inspired co*cktails.

Advertising

11.Congee Village
Photograph: Ali Garber

There is comfort (and eastern medicinal healing properties) in congee, the Cantonese rice porridge that is the focus at this multilevel, always-packed LES standby. Choose among 29 versions—like the sliced pork with preserved egg, or chicken with black mushrooms, cooked over a low fire until bubbling. The rest of the expansive menu yields such finds as an excellent chicken with garlic sauce.

12.El Castillo de Jagua
  • Dominican
  • Lower East Side
  • price 1 of 4

This casual Lower East Side gem was anAnthony Bourdain favorite for good reason. El Castillo de Jagua serves up heaping portions of delicious Dominican food. Rest assured, if you have a laundry list of chores to do, the grub comes out fast.

Advertising

13.Davelle
  • Japanese
  • Lower East Side
  • price 1 of 4

Photograph: Courtesy Davelle

Order Napolitan spaghetti, karaage fried chicken and a fruit sandwich at this pint-sized Japanese café that specializes in comfort food with aesthetically pleasing plating compositions. Check out the mesmerizing jam toast, which is checkerboarded with cream cheese for an extremely Instagrammable meal.

14.Jajaja
  • Mexican
  • Chinatown
  • price 2 of 4

Photograph: The Social Club x ByTheGrace

This small but colorful vegan Mexican spot at the meeting point for Two Bridges, the Lower East Side and Chinatown, could easily be cast off as somewhere gaggles of Instagram influencers hang out. But the food can back it up with inventive plant-based spins on Mexican favorites. There's a "chorizo" burrito made with cauliflower rice, a rainbow chard bowl with vegan cotija and a crispy chayote fish taco made with a seafood substitute.

Advertising

15.Cocoron
  • Japanese
  • Lower East Side
  • price 1 of 4

Photograph: Daniel Krieger

This soba shop's name translates to "heartwarming," but it could also be dubbed heart-healthy for its fiber-rich, low-fat fare.Chef Yoshihito Kida, who owned a soba restaurant back in Japan, makes the buckwheat noodles in house, whileChef Mika Ohie focuses on sides and appetizers, like a cold house-made tofu with scallions, ginger and bonito.

16.Barrio Chino
  • co*cktail bars
  • Lower East Side
  • price 2 of 4

Photograph: Ali Garber

Some of the neighborhood’s best margaritas can be found at restaurant-bar Barrio Chino. Jalapeño lime, habanero grapefruit, tamarind and elderflower keep things interesting as you make your way through a round or two (or four). The menu also offers corn tostadas with pickled shrimp, pulled pork tacos and shish*to peppers with amaranth seeds.

Advertising

  • Filipino
  • Lower East Side
Photograph: Paul Wagtouicz

Run by former Top Chef contender Leah Cohen, the joint has a familiar setup, with plenty of canned beer, hot chilies and hip-hop. Chef Leah Cohen has been turning diners on to funky Southeast Asian flavors since 2012with a pig-centric menu. Enclosed backyard seating is available year-round, and the restaurant prepares a traditional Filipino brunch on the weekends with bottomless mimosas.

18.Wildair
  • Contemporary American
  • Lower East Side
  • price 2 of 4

Photograph: Liz Clayman

The 45-seat restaurant is a sister to chef Jeremiah Stone and pastry chef Fabian von Hauske Valtierra’s avant-garde tasting-menu den, Contra, two doors down. Wildair is low-pressure, set with sardine-packed bar tables, a fuzzy mid aughts soundtrack and neighborhood affability. Their snacky, à la carte menu is packed with low-key innovations.

Advertising

19.Katz’s Delicatessen
  • Delis
  • Lower East Side
  • price 2 of 4

Photograph: Courtesy Katz Delicatessen

This cavernous cafeteria is a repository of New York history—glossies of celebs spanning the past century crowd the walls, and the classic Jewish deli offerings are nonpareil. Flag down a meat cutter and order a legendary sandwich. The brisket sings with horseradish, and the thick-cut pastrami stacked high between slices of rye is the stuff of dreams.

  • Delis
  • Lower East Side
  • price 2 of 4

Photograph: Paul Wagtouicz

Start your day off with a little something old and a little something new at this spin-off of iconic century-old appetizing store Russ & Daughters. All the classics are accounted for but repackaged as composed plates: silky smoked fish is best highlighted in bagel-and-schmear boards, and chocolate-webbed babka loaves are sliced and griddled as French toast. The restaurant is currently takeout only, so you can order online and pick it up for brunch at home.

Advertising

21.Tsismis NYC
  • Filipino
  • Lower East Side
  • 4 out of 5 stars

  • Recommended

Photography: Courtesy of Tsismis NYC

While other Southeast Asian cuisines have a bigger presence in New York, it was only recently that Filipino restaurants started gaining notice, with Jeepney and Maharlika being the most well known in Manhattan. Here, chef Jappy Afzelius has concocted a menu that teems with multiple options in every section. Don't skip out on the purple sweet potato aka ube pudding.

Order online

Been there, done that? Think again, my friend.

By entering your email address you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy and consent to receive emails from Time Out about news, events, offers and partner promotions.

🙌
Awesome, you're subscribed!

Thanks for subscribing! Look out for your first newsletter in your inbox soon!

Been there, done that? Think again, my friend.

By entering your email address you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy and consent to receive emails from Time Out about news, events, offers and partner promotions.

🙌
Awesome, you're subscribed!

Thanks for subscribing! Look out for your first newsletter in your inbox soon!

Recommended

    You may also like

    You may also like

    Advertising

    The 21 best Lower East Side restaurants to try right now (2024)

    FAQs

    What food is the lower east side known for? ›

    Foods of the Lower East Side
    • Cafe Katja (pretzels & beer)
    • Pickle Guys (new pickle, garlic stuffed olive, pickled pineapple)
    • Que Chevere (fried plantain cups with pulled pork or rice and beans)
    • Essex Olive and Spice (olive oils & balsamic vinaigrettes)
    • Lower East Side Ice Cream Factory (ice cream)

    What is the 1st best restaurant? ›

    Best restaurants
    Year1st2nd
    2018Osteria FrancescanaEl Celler de Can Roca
    2019MirazurNoma
    2021NomaGeranium
    2022GeraniumCentral Restaurante
    18 more rows

    What is the name of the number one restaurant in the world? ›

    NEW YORK, Nov. 16, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- Today, Le Bernardin was named the number one restaurant both in the U.S. and worldwide by La Liste, the global restaurant guide and ranking system of the world's top 1,000 restaurants.

    What is the Lower East Side known for? ›

    This vibrant downtown neighborhood is a popular nightlife destination—its streets are lined with trendy places to drink, dance and hear live music. Many of the area's synagogues, museums and restaurants serve as reminders of its immigrant history.

    Is Lower East Side fancy? ›

    The eclectic Lower East Side is where gritty alleys and tenement-style buildings mix with upscale apartments and chic boutiques. Nighttime draws hip, young crowds to the area's trendy bars, music venues and restaurants.

    Where do the Kardashians eat in LA? ›

    Dine and 'Dash' ! The L.A. Hot Spots Where You're Most Likely to Spot a Kardashian
    • 01 of 08. BANDERA. Splash News. ...
    • 02 of 08. CAROUSEL. INFphoto. ...
    • 03 of 08. HANSEN'S CAKES. Courtesy Khloé Kardashian. ...
    • 04 of 08. SUGARFISH. ...
    • 05 of 08. EREWHON NATURAL FOODS. ...
    • 06 of 08. CASA ESCOBAR. ...
    • 07 of 08. MARMALADE CAFÉ ...
    • 08 of 08. SHIBUYA SUSHI.
    Mar 2, 2017

    What is the only 7 star restaurant in the world? ›

    Dinning in the only 7 star restaurant in the world - Review of Jumeirah Burj Al Arab, Dubai, United Arab Emirates - Tripadvisor.

    Where do the rich and famous eat in LA? ›

    You can rub shoulders with the rich and famous at these Los Angeles restaurants.
    • The Polo Lounge. 1/15. ...
    • Spago Beverly Hills. 2/15. ...
    • Chateau Marmont. 3/15. ...
    • Gwen. 4/15. ...
    • The Ivy. 5/15. ...
    • Bestia. 6/15. ...
    • Gracias Madre. 7/15. ...
    • Image credit: Casa Vega/Instagram. Casa Vega.
    Feb 14, 2024

    What's the #1 restaurant in America? ›

    And the top spots have stayed consistent. For the seventh consecutive year, Manhattan's Le Bernardin was named the number one restaurant in the U.S. This is also the fourth time chef Eric Ripert's signature seafood restaurant is ranked at the top spot globally.

    What is the highest selling restaurant? ›

    Sales of the leading chain restaurants in the U.S. 2022

    In 2022, McDonald's was the leading chain restaurant in the United States in terms of sales. The world renown burger chain amassed over 48.6 billion U.S. dollars in sales that year, which was around 20 billion more than Starbucks.

    What is the East Coast known for food? ›

    Think New England clam chowder, lobster rolls from Maine, Philly cheesesteaks, Maryland crab cakes, and of course, New York-style pizza and bagels. Each bite tells a tasty tale of East Coast flavors.

    What are the Upper East dishes? ›

    The main dishes of the Upper-East Region are “TZ” or “Tuo Zafi” rice balls or Omo Tuo with groundnut soup or green leaves soups, beans, rice and cowpea or “Tubaani”, koko with “koose”.

    Top Articles
    Latest Posts
    Article information

    Author: Barbera Armstrong

    Last Updated:

    Views: 5447

    Rating: 4.9 / 5 (79 voted)

    Reviews: 94% of readers found this page helpful

    Author information

    Name: Barbera Armstrong

    Birthday: 1992-09-12

    Address: Suite 993 99852 Daugherty Causeway, Ritchiehaven, VT 49630

    Phone: +5026838435397

    Job: National Engineer

    Hobby: Listening to music, Board games, Photography, Ice skating, LARPing, Kite flying, Rugby

    Introduction: My name is Barbera Armstrong, I am a lovely, delightful, cooperative, funny, enchanting, vivacious, tender person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.