Photograph: Jason J Bonello
Famed for its office buildings and tourist attractions, one of Manhattan's busiest neighborhoods also has some great restaurants
Written by Amber Sutherland-Namako & Victoria Marin
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For years, whenever someone’s asked for a restaurant recommendation in midtown,we’ve backed into the conversation with a list of caveats and requests that they don’t get their hopes too high. Midtown was for office lunch—assuming you even had the time for it—or maybe for a decent after-work happy hour. More recently, however, we’ve found countless good reasons to go out to eat and drink inmidtown on purpose. These new sushi spots, old favorite steakhouses and hidden-in-plain-sight dining destinations have us happily heading into the bustling neighborhood in the heart of Manhattan.
RECOMMENDED: Full guide to the best restaurants in NYC
Been there, done that? Think again, my friend.
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Best midtown restaurants
- Midtown West
4 out of 5 stars
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The crown jewel or Rockefeller Center dining, Le Rock is reason and reward to visit midtown. The follow-up to Frenchette downtown is largewith Art Deco details and menu items like escargots,agnoletti with corn and chanterelles, duck and bison that helped land Le Rock on our list of NYC's best new restaurants of 2022.
- Chinese
- Midtown East
Lovely Hutong sparkles all around its gleaming, cavernous space, including down its unique, dramatically lit wine hallway. Some of the Northern Chinese restaurant’s many highlights include the mapo tofu, a dumpling quartet, wok-tossed lobster and a flaming Peking duck that’s only available by advance order four nights a week.
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- Steakhouse
- Midtown West
price 4 of 4
Keens is a New York City institution for a reason. The dark wood paneling, lush carpeting and impressive collection of clay pipes dating back to the 1800s makes you feel as if you’ve snuck into a Gatsby-era dinner club. The menu also boasts a bygone relic: the classic mutton chop, once a steakhouse staple but a tougher find today.
- Korean
- Hell's Kitchen
When it first opened in the last days of 2019, it was too late for Kochi to make it to any of that year’s major ‘best of’ lists. Still, it was terrific then and remains one of the best restaurants in NYCtoday. Its $145tasting menu includes nine skewers fashioned after traditional Korean cuisine.
- Midtown West
This tiny sushi spot amid a row of nondescript addresses and up a narrow staircase is one of NYC’s most exciting new restaurants. Its fish is fastidiously sourced, expertly prepared and approachably priced. It's also a fun place to bring those who aren’t yet in-the-know.
- Contemporary American
- Midtown West
price 4 of 4
Good looks aren’t everything, but they’re serious business here, where tables overlook the MoMA’s sculpture garden, and dinerssliceinto$250, four-course dinners with Porsche steak knives. The pre-fixe menus are an art onto themselves,so get an early reservationto gaze upon the garden while the sun’s still out.
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- Midtown West
Another Rockefeller Center gem, Lodi is open from breakfast meetings all the way through your lower-pressure business dinners. Its space and creations areinfluenced by "Italianaperitivo culture," including menu items like salumi and formaggi varieties, risotto, lamb, fish and chicken.
- Midtown East
Home to one of NYC’s most Instagrammabledishes, a kaleidoscopic beef tartare, Little Mad incorporates Korean recipes and French techniques in a fun environment where flames flicker from the open kitchen and you crack open that previously mentioned appetizer with a little wooden hammer.Its spot in midtown's southeast cornerismuch calmer than Times Square, Herald Square, or Rockefeller Center.
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- Steakhouse
- Midtown West
price 4 of 4
Steakhouses are somewhat synonymous with midtown, but modernQuality Meatshas a downtown feel. The warm tones, exposed brick and Edison bulbslend it this style, and the filet mignon, NY strip and dry-aged sirloin would be as satisfying iat any address.
Often imitated but never replicated, Halal Guys have become a critical component of any midtown bar night. If you happen to find yourself stumbling to the train after a long session at Jimmy’s Corner,its chicken over rice (with plenty of white and hot sauces) and gyros are well worth the detour—the blend of booze-absorbing starch and perfectly seasoned poultry makes for the perfect nightcap. A late-night visit might also help you avoid the lines that form at lunch time.
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- Indian
- Midtown West
price 2 of 4
Indian Accent’s chic, streamlined space has a stylish bar, a few cozy nooks for date night and long banquettes to accommodate larger parties. Dinner is served in three or four courses (for $85 or $98) with items like potato sphere chaat, tofu masala and ghee roast lamb.
- Mexican
- Midtown East
price 3 of 4
Empellón's 8,000-square-foot, 150-seat space features a ground-level dining room with bold, wall-spanning muralsand a large balcony above. Must-try tacos are filled with pastrami,maitake mushrooms and lobster. Salads,fajitas and larger plates are also available.
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- French
- Midtown West
Midtown’s Boucherie has transformed its plot on semi-obscure “Sixth-and-a-half Avenue” into a veritable indoor/outdoor paradise replete with large, leafy flora and soaring ceilings. The space aims to evoke a Parisian square with French-forward menus to match, and it's a fine little stop for brunch or visiting parents.
- American
- Midtown East
price 4 of 4
The Grill has the kind of showy, hyper-personalized service and keen eye for detail that has come to define Major Food Group, the restaurant group behind this, Carbone, Dirty French and Sadelle’s. Its branded blend of modern touches and nostalgic reverence has brought new light to the iconic former Four Seasons restaurantspace. Expect raw bar items, market price caviar, chops, birds and fish.
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- French
- Midtown West
price 3 of 4
Michelin-starred chef Gabriel Kreuther is behind this palatial ode to French cuisine overlooking Bryant Park. As romantic as it is chic, Gabriel Kreuther restaurant is a dining experience. Every dish is expertly prepared and exquisitely presented. You can also swing by to his artisan chocolate shop, right next door.
- Italian
- Midtown West
price 4 of 4
Marea means "tide" in Italian, and seafood is the focus at this Michelin-starred destination near Central Park and Columbus Circle. Its signature octopus (a tentacled illustration is Marea's logo) is particularly lovely, tossed with fusilli and rich, buttery bone marrow.
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- Japanese
- Midtown East
price 2 of 4
One ofNYC's best sushi restaurants, SushiYasuda’s ever-changing menuhas à la carte options and omakase offerings that might include excellently executedamberjack, yellowtail and unagi. Its 12-piece option for $110 is still on the more affordable end of itscompetitors.
- French
- Midtown West
price 4 of 4
Still one of NYC's premier fine dining sestinations,Le Bernardin's seafood-focused menu is impressive to say the least. Its ambiance is also pure elegance, the wine list stretches for miles and thebartenders mix a mean classic co*cktail. It has a variety of prix fixe configurations, none cheap, like the $198 four-course dinner.
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- Japanese
- Midtown East
price 4 of 4
Just a hop, skip and jump down from Grand Central Station, Karumazushi has been delighting midtowners with classic, flavorful, fresh sushi and sashimi fornearly 40 years. Theà la carte menu is loaded with freshwater eel, fatty tuna and Japanese sea urchin.
- co*cktail bars
- Midtown West
price 3 of 4
Gilded decor with the warm light to match, a broad variety of box-checking food and drinks and a prime central location make Valerie an easy choice for after-work drinks, business dinners and, more recently, weekend brunch.
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- Japanese
- Midtown West
price 1 of 4
More than two years after its beloved West Village location closed, Hakata TonTon reopened in a new Midtown South space complete with an expanded menu of izakaya-style small plates.Some signature dishes made the move, too, like mentai gnocchi and the foie gras inari.
Find more Midtown restaurants
Looking for somewhere to grab a drink?
From dives to co*cktail dens and craft-brew havens to wine haunts, here are the best bars in NYC to visit right now
Been there, done that? Think again, my friend.
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