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Home > Restaurants > Café d'Alsace

Café d'Alsace

Critic's Pick Critics' Pick

1695 Second Ave., New York, NY 10128
at 88th St.  See Map | Subway Directions Hopstop Popup
212-722-5133 Send to Phone

Photo by Shanna Ravindra

Hours

Mon-Thu, 11am-midnight; Fri, 11am-1am; Sat, 9am-1am; Sun, 9am-4pm

Nearby Subway Stops

4, 5, 6 at 86th St.

Prices

$15.75-$25.50

Payment Methods

American Express, MasterCard, Visa

Special Features

  • Brunch - Weekend
  • Lunch
  • Private Dining/Party Space
  • Prix-Fixe
  • Take-Out

Alcohol

  • Full Bar

Reservations

Recommended

Profile

Like Simon Oren's other popular French-themed establishments (Nice Matin, Marseille), Café d’Alsace boasts many of the cheery features that have helped make the ersatz bistro-brasserie model the dominant comfort formula of our age. There is the curved pewter bar (here with a ring of decorative, antique seltzer bottles suspended over the barflies' heads), and rows of tables jammed together, which, in summertime, will no doubt spill out onto the street. There is the meticulously tiled floor, which suggests equal parts bonhomie and old-fashioned good taste, and, of course, there are the posters on the wall, in this case ones depicting hoisted beer steins and other scenes evocative of old Alsace. Luckily, there is also a real live French chef in the kitchen at Café d'Alsace, and an accomplished one to boot, although Philippe Roussel, who last ran the very good midtown brasserie Montparnasse, is from Brittany, not Alsace. Several of the familiar staples of the French-American brasserie canon are on display here (charcuterie platter, foie gras terrine, a fine hanger steak and frites), but mostly Roussel (who is also a partner in the venture) peppers his menu with rib-sticking Alsatian specialties such as a tarte flambé (slightly weathered and overcrisped on the night I tried it); crocks of potée Alsatian swirling with white beans, cabbage, and nuggets of bacon; and big, heavy-artillery items like the famous Alsatian casserole called baeckoffe.

Extra

True, "beer sommelier" is a ridiculous title, but Aviram knows his stuff. There are 100 beers on the list.

Ideal Meal

Pork or duck sausage, $8-$9; baeckoffe, $22.50; chocolate tart, $8

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New York Magazine Reviews

7.5 "Recommended"
Average Reader Rating
on a Scale of 10
Write Your Own Review

Best experience in a long time

JaredMiller27 from Astoria | Posted on 2/23/07

Overall Reader Rating: 10 (Highly Recommended)
Food: 10
Service: 10
Décor: 10
Value: 10

I loved this place from the old Alsatian beer signs on the wall to the gently lit selzer bottles above the bar. The beer sommolier was ecstatic to pair every course for us and we tried some really weird beers (all...Read More

What beer pairing??

JENRD from New York | Posted on 10/27/06

Overall Reader Rating: 5 (Mixed Reviews)
Food: 6
Service: 3
Décor: 7
Value: 5

The beer sommelier was too busy having dinner & a glass of wine at the bar behind us to finish pairing beer with our meal (which he had told us he was going to do). We got aperitif and appetizer beers, but...Read More