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Ramshackle Glam / Best Of NYC

I get a few emails every week from readers who are planning to visit NYC in the near future, and who are looking for some recs for places to shop, eat, and grab a drink.

Click through for my updated list of top NYC picks…and feel free to leave your suggestions in the comments! Would love to hear them.

Bars:

Fat Cat NYC (live jazz and every game imaginable, from billiards to chess), SPiN (Susan Sarandon’s ping-pong bar; also offers good food at in-house restaurant Ducks), the Breslin (in the Ace Hotel; excellent pickle-back shots), Raines Law Room (speakeasy vibe and decadent cocktail list), The Diamond (a Brooklyn bar done exactly the way you want it to be), The Patriot Saloon (Kendrick’s rec; it’s majorly cheap and majorly dive-y), and The Frying Pan (beers…on a boat!).

Restaurants:

Trattoria Casa Di Isacco (total hole-in-the-wall secret find), Menkui Tei ($8 ramen; my new favorite place in the world), Nobu (if you’ve never been, a visit to NYC is a good time to change that), 44 1/2 (for brunch) and 44 & X (for pre-theater dinner), Essex (very boozy, scene-y brunch), Minetta Tavern (go early, maybe sit at the bar, and definitely drink a martini), and Casellula (if you like cheese, there is no better restaurant in the entire city).

This walk (Midtown West), which includes free hotdogs and an excellent, affordable brunch spot.

This one (Lower East Side), which includes some of the best pizza in the city and a museum dedicated to the man who inadvertently bestowed upon me one of my favorite possessions.

And this one (Brooklyn), which includes neon drinks, board games, and indie jewelry. While you’re there, stop into Dear Fieldbinder for luxe basics that you can wear all year ’round.

Some must-do touristy-type things:

Spend an afternoon at the Museum of Natural History (stand under the whale), take a ferry ride around the island, eat a pastrami sandwich at Katz’s Deli, window-shop on 5th Avenue (and for-real shop on Broadway below Bleecker), hit The Highline (followed by a sunset drink at the Rusty Knot), stop into St. Patrick’s Cathedral, and eat a dirty-water dog and something from a Rafiqi Food Cart (they’re all over).

UPDATED WITH MORE!!

Delicious Eats:

Try Pastis for some fancy afternoon fries and cocktails – it’s a little (OK, a lot) frou, but it’s also very chic and located smack in the middle of Meatpacking, surrounded by great bars and upscale shops. For brunch, hit August: the baked eggs are spectacular, and there’s an adorable garden seating area out back (also love their beer menu). You might also want to try Cafeteria: it’s casual but very chic, and has insanely good mac ‘n’ cheese. For late night, go to Blue Ribbon for bone marrow, oysters, and champagne.

A couple more: if you don’t eat at Grimaldi’s (best pizza in the city, which is saying a lot) and Shake Shack (ditto for burgers), your trip will not be complete.

Local Music:

Here’s my translation of what Kendrick (who’s made the Grand Tour) has to say about it: Webster Hall is where well-known bands play before they graduate to stadiums, but it’s not the best space (sort of big and unfriendly). The Knitting Factory and Bowery Ballroom (Kendrick’s favorite places to play/see music) put on great shows (the sound and lighting are awesome), and you’re guaranteed to see an about-to-break (or broken) band. Mercury Lounge (my favorite) is juuuust below Bowery Ballroom in terms of who you’ll see playing; the bands are all talented but still sort of unpolished, which makes for a real communal, exciting experience.

Union Pool is a crappy little room that doesn’t fit a ton of people and has mediocre sound, but when a good band plays there it’s wild, and there’s an awesome bar outside and a photobooth. And Pianos has a good vibe, is located in a great area for going out afterwards. It’s a little bit hipster-angsty, but they have great burgers. And the truth is that the bands that are playing there aren’t there for the money; they’re there to play and to build an audience, so they’ll be happy to see you. If you want to talk to them afterwards…you can.

More good venues: Southpaw (Brooklyn), Union Hall (Brooklyn; there’s a bocce ball court!), Santos Party House.

Day Trip!

If you’re in town for a bit longer, you might want to check out the surrounding area. For a gorgeous day trip (only about an hour outside the city) with lots of fantastic antiquing, try Cold Spring.

P.S. That picture remains one of my favorites I’ve ever taken – I took it last spring, on a walk through the park with the dogs. Can’t wait to see it again in just a few more weeks!



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  • Alana

    I have some things you could add:

    -Have you been to Macbar down at Prince and Lafayette? It was always one of my favorite places to eat and seemed very NYC unique. You can stop there for a bite while you’re shopping on Broadway.
    -Union Square Farmer’s Market is fun too (was more fun when the city didn’t limit the number of art vendors allowed there).
    -The (free on weekends) Ikea Ferry has spectacular views of The Statue of Liberty and the South and East sides of the city.
    -I hear Governer’s Island is a cool place to go.

    Also, have you been to Nobu? It has such a fancy reputation that I’m intimidated to go there. Any suggestions? I guess this goes for any fancy place in NYC…

    Thank you for not recommending Canal Street and Little Italy!

  • Alana

    Oh, and Stone Street down in the Financial District for a restaurant and bar scene. On Thursdays and Fridays after work it’s bustling. The literally stone street is full of tables for the bars and restaurants in the area.

    And Two Little Red Hens in the Upper East Side for the best cupcakes in the city.

  • Anonymous

    two little red hens is right by me – i always hear people talking about their cupcakes! i don’t usually love cupcakes, but i’ll have to bite the bullet and try one :)

  • Anonymous

    ooh, i meant to say the greenmarket – it’s such a must-do. and nobu is probably my #1 favorite restaurant in the city, but it’s so expensive that i reserve it for special occasions (like maybe my upcoming 30th?). my favorite menu items are the black cod, the rock shrimp tempura, the squid “pasta”, the matsuhisa martini (sake-cucumber), and the matsuhisa salad (i think that’s what it’s called – the one with tuna in it). you have to go at least once for the omakase (tasting menu); it’s definitely an experience not to be missed.

  • http://www.guidetomenhattan.com Rachel

    Walking/exploring the city is one – if not the – best tourist activity. One of my favorite walks on a Saturday is through the union square greenmarket up broadway, being tempted by ABC Carpet & Home, then up by the Flatiron building and through Madison Square Park. I also like taking visitors through Meatpacking and on the Highline, ending up in Chelsea Market. Oh, and Grand Central Terminal never loses its charm for me (even though I commute through it every day), especially on rainy days when you’re looking for a place to escape!

  • http://www.guidetomenhattan.com Rachel

    Walking/exploring the city is one – if not the – best tourist activity. One of my favorite walks on a Saturday is through the union square greenmarket up broadway, being tempted by ABC Carpet & Home, then up by the Flatiron building and through Madison Square Park. I also like taking visitors through Meatpacking and on the Highline, ending up in Chelsea Market. Oh, and Grand Central Terminal never loses its charm for me (even though I commute through it every day), especially on rainy days when you’re looking for a place to escape!

  • http://www.guidetomenhattan.com Rachel

    Walking/exploring the city is one – if not the – best tourist activity. One of my favorite walks on a Saturday is through the union square greenmarket up broadway, being tempted by ABC Carpet & Home, then up by the Flatiron building and through Madison Square Park. I also like taking visitors through Meatpacking and on the Highline, ending up in Chelsea Market. Oh, and Grand Central Terminal never loses its charm for me (even though I commute through it every day), especially on rainy days when you’re looking for a place to escape!

  • http://www.guidetomenhattan.com Rachel

    Walking/exploring the city is one – if not the – best tourist activity. One of my favorite walks on a Saturday is through the union square greenmarket up broadway, being tempted by ABC Carpet & Home, then up by the Flatiron building and through Madison Square Park. I also like taking visitors through Meatpacking and on the Highline, ending up in Chelsea Market. Oh, and Grand Central Terminal never loses its charm for me (even though I commute through it every day), especially on rainy days when you’re looking for a place to escape!

  • http://www.guidetomenhattan.com Rachel

    Walking/exploring the city is one – if not the – best tourist activity. One of my favorite walks on a Saturday is through the union square greenmarket up broadway, being tempted by ABC Carpet & Home, then up by the Flatiron building and through Madison Square Park. I also like taking visitors through Meatpacking and on the Highline, ending up in Chelsea Market. Oh, and Grand Central Terminal never loses its charm for me (even though I commute through it every day), especially on rainy days when you’re looking for a place to escape!

  • Alana

    Ooo yeah Chelsea Market is a good one! I definitely agree about walking. That’s the best way to get a taste of real NYC. None of that Times Square nonsense!

  • Anonymous

    agree re: walking! although i have to say – i know it’s an unpopular opinion, but i just love times square. i grew up there, and it still never gets old for me; i just think it’s such an exciting place.
    and chelsea market is an EXCELLENT addition. can’t believe i left it out!

  • Anonymous

    i love grand central too – especially the “whispering gallery”.

  • Alana

    I just feel like there is so much more to see outside of Times Square and the surrounding Midtown. I can go to an American Eagle in my local mall, ya know? I understand that it’s kind of a unique NYC thing in itself, but it just seems inauthentic. It is certainly a sight during the night time hours though.

  • Anonymous

    totally – shopping and eating there are pretty much big old ‘nos’ (although my mom’s says that Virgil’s BBQ is good)…but at night it’s really something to just stand in the center of it all.

  • http://southerngirltravels.wordpress.com/ Brei

    So when I was there over New Years visiting my best friend. She and I stumbled upon Peels (Southern). Great old school Southern drinks and good food.
    Also love The Bowery Hotel for drinks and great servers!
    Totally agree a trip to NYC isn’t complete without a visit to Shake Shack! If only the squirrels would deliver to Brooklyn when I am there.
    But my all time fav. is the Gansevoort Hotel roof top bar in the Meatpacking. I like to sit and watch the highline and the people go by.

  • Anonymous

    great recommendations! i’ve never heard of peels – sounds fun.

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  • beth

    Lunch at Basso 56.  A few blocks from Central Park near Broadway and 56th.  They have a prix fix lunch for about $18 that includes an appetizer and an incredible Italian dish.  A great deal, cozy atmosphere.  :)

  • Anonymous

    great rec – that area can be a pain to find good, reasonably priced lunch spots in.

  • Brooke

    I am loving this post as well as all the walks you included. I have been to New York a few times for girls weekends with my mom and sisters but this time I am bringing 4 girlfriends. I think only one of them has been to New York before.  We always loved going down to SoHo and of course doing half price broadway shows. I can’t wait to try some of the walks you suggested and try more of the bar scene that didn’t work with my little sister. We’ll be there early October – any other seasonal/not crazy expensive ideas?

  • Brooke

    I am loving this post as well as all the walks you included. I have been to New York a few times for girls weekends with my mom and sisters but this time I am bringing 4 girlfriends. I think only one of them has been to New York before.  We always loved going down to SoHo and of course doing half price broadway shows. I can’t wait to try some of the walks you suggested and try more of the bar scene that didn’t work with my little sister. We’ll be there early October – any other seasonal/not crazy expensive ideas?