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Spice Market
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Hours
Sun-Thu, noon-midnight; Fri-Sat, noon-1am
Nearby Subway Stops
A, C, E at 14th St.; L at Eighth Ave.
Prices
$15-$36
Payment Methods
American Express, Diners Club, Discover, MasterCard, Visa
Special Features
- Bar Scene
- Celeb-Spotting
- Hot Spot
- Late-Night Dining
- Notable Chef
- Romantic
- Design Standout
- Teen Appeal
Alcohol
- Sake and Sojou
- Full Bar
Reservations
Recommended
- Make a Reservation with opentable.com
Profile
Considering its location (in the middle of meatpacking-district hell), its ridiculous size (as big as a bus depot), and its strange hothouse décor (like the palace of an arriviste Balinese drug lord), it’s a wonder this restaurant works at all. But Jean-Georges’s take on the street foods of Southeast Asia works to surprising effect, and despite its eccentricities, Spice Market is just plain fun. If you can’t get a table (and even if you can), sit at the cantilevered bar upstairs, where it’s a pleasure to dine on chicken wings drizzled in a sticky-sweet chile sauce, or bowls of curried duck, or the short ribs, which are softened in a mass of onion and green chiles, and watch the party unfold.
Recommended DishesMushroom egg rolls, $9.50; mussels steamed in lemongrass, $11.50; fried chicken wings, $9; shrimp with black pepper sauce, $14.50; chicken samosas, $10.50; lobster with garlic and chili, $35; cod with chili-and-basil sauce, $19; curried duck, $19; pork vindaloo, $16; grilled chicken with kumquats, $18
Related Stories
New York Magazine Reviews
- Hal Rubenstein's Full Review (4/19/04)
Best of New York Awards
- The Best New Restaurant That Isn’t Masa or Per Se (2005)
- Sweet Successes (2005)
- Best Hot Date (2004)
Featured In
Recipes at Spice Market
- Pork Satay (2004)
- Chicken Satay (2004)
- Black-Pepper Shrimp and "Sun-Dried" Pineapple (2004)
- Tamarind Rum Punch (2004)
- Charred Sirloin With Soy, Garlic, and Cilantro (2004)
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