Skip to content, or skip to search.
Skip to content, or skip to search.
Home > Restaurants >
130 West Broadway, New York, NY, 10013
at Duane St.
212-219-1011
chunkybeefstyle from 10065 | Posted on 10/25/09
|
|
Food was terrific - quality ingredients, robust flavors, appropriate portions. Broad selection suits just about any palate. Big plus is the ambience of the upstairs room - open kitchens infuse the room with wonderful smells. Don't settle for the bar area on the first floor! Upstairs is worth the wait. Only down side was service - slow slow slow. Would have been a problem if we were on a schedule. Nonetheless, would go back in a heartbeat.
VaninaG from 10025 | Posted on 7/10/09
|
|
Although the food is refined, with high quality ingredients, the much-boasted price value of the place is just as low as the portions are tiny. The biggest deterrent was the dreadful service, with a bartender in charge of the downstairs room who seemed more into wining and dining his friends than taking care of the other customers. The wines by the glass list, for a place that wants to achieve a brasserie vibe, was ridiculously short (again, a size issue). The stairs and bathroom were somewhat dirty (that would achieve the authentic brasserie vibe, though). Finally, the dessert was a real disappointment, a chestnut and vanilla terrine that was ruined by the addition of obtrusive maraschino cherries and the use of too much hazelnut in the biscuit, destroying the delicate, rare taste of the chestnut. The incompetent staff gave a hand in ruining it, too: the sorbet accompanying the dessert only made it in the state of a quasi-soup, as a result, I would assume, of having been left to melt after being prepared in the kitchen. I had thought a sweet bite would make me forget the shortcomings of the place. It just left a bitter aftertaste.
washingtonpl from 10014 | Posted on 6/30/09
|
|
The service is far from terrible and the sushi is wonderful...I find this restaurant to be consistently good and the sushi is certainly better than Nobu! Better value as well. The ambiance is interesting and welcoming.
svp from 9000 | Posted on 7/30/08
|
|
we ( 3 pers.) had a little table outside (3rd of July), but could not complain of the service at all ! We had a very friendly young lady who served us , and when we ordered the desserts , we even got an extra one (too much , of course , but delicious !!) I will surely recommand this cute little restaurant to all my friends (Belgium ,Italy , France etc) when they come to NY !! Very fine dinner !! svp
emlohrman from 10013 | Posted on 10/7/07
|
|
Food is good. Service is TERRIBLE! The service outside is not good either. They really need to fix that because that is what makes me not want to go back.
embley from 10013 | Posted on 4/16/07
|
|
The tables are cramped, the space is tiny, the servers are a bit distracted...but it's absolutely worth it because the food is great, and very well-priced given its caliber (entrees are $21-$29)). My squash soup was wonderful, my dry-aged sirloin with golden raisins, currents, and red wine sauce delicious, and dessert was excellent. Definitely go for the option to sample some of the pastries from the bakery downstairs. They are the closest approximation I've had in New York to the kind of pastries one finds at Laduree or Fauchon in Paris.
jaredroussel from 10022 | Posted on 12/6/06
|
|
Upstairs at Bouley is in the building adjacent to Bouley restaurant on West Broadway & Duane Street above the Bouley bakery. Bouley offers a wonderful menu with great service, and this is what I expected in more of a casual, quick meal. However, I must say I was quite disappointed. The price for the meal here wasn't exactly cheap (running a good $20-25 per person for brunch, and $35-45 per person for dinner), and I don't feel that I was offered the best service or selection here in comparison to Bouley or even other comparable restaurants. A friend and I had brunch here, and I ordered the hamburger which was really good and uniquely seasoned, but then I found that the fusion of French and Japanese for dinner wasn't something I particularly cared for. It just didn't hit the right spot. I'd give Bouley a try for brunch/lunch because the price is right and the selection is better, but I'd have second (and third and fourth) thoughts about going back again for dinner there.
Adam Platt picks 2009’s top dining destinations,
including Dovetail, Momofuku Ko, and Corton.
The best that the city’s restaurants have to offer:
paella, coffee, grilled cheese, ramen, and more.
We live in a city full of small cheap-eats miracles,
including $1 foods, Korean fried chicken, and burgers.