Restaurants

Noodletown Notebook: A Four-Dollar Lunch to Herald the Year of the Prosperous Rat

At Great N.Y. Noodletown.
graciepoo via flickr.com
At Great N.Y. Noodletown.

Great N.Y. Noodletown is a long-established restaurant on Bayard and the Bowery that seats about forty and has brown glazed ducks in the windows.

Sunday, which began bright and cold after a long and rainy Saturday, seemed perfectly suited to a bowl of Seaweed Noodle Soup, so I put on my shoes and began walking east. I had forgotten it was Chinese New Year: the sidewalks of central Chinatown were packed from storefront to street as people gathered to celebrate the Year of the Earth Rat.  read more »

Get Aussie Fare, Models at Nick Mathers' New West Village Restaurant

Ruby Café on Mulberry Street is getting a sibling.

Australian-born entrepreneur Nick Mathers has closed on a 3,000-square-foot space at 121 West 10th Street, according to broker Steven Kamali. Mr. Mathers, who opened the Aussie-inspired Ruby Café four years ago at 219 Mulberry Street, will open Little Ruby’s, a high-end restaurant on the ground floor in late-August, and plans on opening a lounge in the basement in November.  read more »

New Allen Street Eatery Has Fish from Chile, Wine from Spain, and Bathroom Stones from Peru

The most prominent feature of Rayuela, the soon-to-open "freestyle Latino" eatery at 165 Allen Street, is the two-story olive tree that sits in the middle of the restaurant. Like most else in the establishment, the tree was imported.

"I spent three days without sleep looking for this tree in California," co-owner Hector Sanz told The Observer. "It is a menzanillo, a rare type of olive tree."

Rayuela, which means "hopscotch" in Spanish, will open next Friday and join a host of other modern Latin restaurants (Mercadito, Centrico) that have sprouted up downtown over the last few years. However, Mr. Sanz makes it clear that it will be different from its predecessors.  read more »

Shott On Location: High-Ranking Brooklyn Burger Joint Also Scores High With DOH

Bonnie's Grill, home to perhaps Park Slope's best beef burgers (yet arguably worst veggie burgers), remained shuttered on Friday--one week after becoming the latest casualty in the Health Department's reactionary rat-frenzy crusade.

The tiny hipster hangout, located along trendy Fifth Avenue, between 1st and Carroll streets, has twice failed inspections since March. (Read the reports here and here.)  read more »

Rat Central, R.I.P.

It's curtains for Manhattan's most infamously rat-infested landmark.  read more »