Slider Image 1 Content
Choose best, Choose tasty
Here you can showcase the x number of Featured Content. You can edit this Headline, Subheadline and Feaured Content from "Appearance -> Customize -> Featured Content Options".
December will be a make-or-break month for many Midtown restaurants hobbled by slow lunch business, but they’re not sweating it at Le Bernardin.
The West 50th Street seafood palace, where Michelin recently reaffirmed a precious three-star rating, was just named the world’s No. 1 restaurant for 2023 by La Liste, the increasingly influential rankings based in Paris. The findings are based on analysis of thousands of guidebooks, media stories and online reviews worldwide, while Michelin relies on anonymous inspector visits.
Eric Ripert, Le Bernardin’s chef and co-owner with Maguy Le Coze, celebrated the second time Le Bernardin has been so honored (it was also No. 1 on La Liste in 2019) as “excellent news for us. La Liste, which is only seven years old, is starting to impose itself,” and is widely followed by visitors to the Big Apple from Asian countries including Japan and Korea.
Le Bernardin hardly needs another boost. It shares the no. 1 billing with Guy Savoy in France and Frantzen in Sweden.


“We have never been so busy,” Ripert said — at lunch as well as at dinner.
But although tables are hard to come by before the end of the year, the one-two punch of Michelin and La Liste “are much more important to us in January and February.”
However, not everybody in Midtown, the heart of Manhattan’s restaurant industry, is ready to break out the Champagne. Holiday party bookings have been unexpectedly robust, but weak lunch traffic continues to be a lump of coal for places still recovering from the pandemic.
Although fine places have opened such as Fasano, Le Rock and Simon Oren’s buzzing new Monterey, and old favorites like Fresco by Scotto and Polo Bar seem like non-stop parties, the pandemic felled the fabled ’21’ Club and more are on the brink .
Times Square Alliance president Tom Harris said he’s “watching December closely.” He said the restaurant business area is down 9% overall from 2019 levels. Reduced lunch demand kept places such as Jasmine’s on Restaurant Row dark before 4 pm
The turbulent scene keeps savvy owners on their toes. Jeff Bank, CEO of Alicart Restaurant Group, which owns Carmine’s and Virgil’s, said operators must “acknowledge the huge shifts in demographics and timing.”
Before COVID, “You pretty much knew what was going to happen at lunch and dinner,” he said. But now, “We have to be flexible. It’s easier for [better-established places] that have multi-legs to stand on. We know Friday is dead due to empty offices, but we can pick up tourism on the weekend.”

Owners or landlords of Gallagher’s, Bryant Park Grill and Nobu 57 all claim their revenues are running 20-25% higher than in 2019. But New York Hospitality Alliance’s Andrew Rigie said, “For restaurants that relied heavily on office workers, it’s tough when the building upstairs is less than 50% occupied.”
The new Avra on Sixth Avenue always looks full, but partner Nick Tsoulos says his three restaurants are only “about 60% to 70% back” compared to pre-COVID levels.
“I’m waiting to see [what happens] this Christmas season,” he said. the
“power lunch” where prime-movers did business over their meals, “has faded,” he added.
Ben Grossman, CEO of Fireman Hospitality Group, said that the company’s overall business is “close to pre-COVID.” But lunch is a little softer at Italian spots Bond 45 and Trattoria Dell’ Arte.
Dinner still rocks, especially at Trattoria across Seventh Avenue from Carnegie Hall.
“What’s missing in the area is lunch,” Grossman said. “Friday which used to be our best lunch day is now the worst.”
Some lunch traffic is location-specific, based on office occupancy in the same buildings as the restaurants. Porter House Bar & Grill at Columbus Circle had less of a lunch crowd because Deutsche Bank staff, who replaced Time Warner upstairs, seemed to take more meals in their cafeteria than their media predecessors did.

However, chef/owner Michael Lomonaco said, “Our private events have never been stronger since the summer” and his 260 seats are filled almost every night.
The private events frenzy is making up for a slower lunch trade — half as in 2019 — at Dino Arpaia’s Cellini on East 54th Street. The popular spot has hosted recent parties for Santander Bank, Jefferies, KPMG, Blackstone and Black Rock.
But, “They’re all condensed into Tuesday through Thursday because they don’t come in
A wonderful all-rounder.
to serve
free-range eggs
vegetable oil
caster sugar
salt
cinnamon
ground cloves
bicarbonate of soda
plain flour
walnuts
bramley apples 4, peeled and finely chopped
calvados
For the mist
Breton cider
caster sugar
calvados
Line a 23cm diameter cake tin with baking parchment and set aside. Break the eggs into a bowl and whisk as you slowly incorporate the vegetable oil, then add the dry ingredients and whisk them into the egg mixture. Throw in the nuts, apples and calvados and fold so that all the nubbles are evenly coated.
We must stress that, at this point, your mixture will not look right. It will look as though you have too little batter, of too loose a consistency, too light coating too much apples and nuts. Believe in us! this is correct. Spoon the batter into the cake tin and bake in a medium oven (about 160C fan/gas mark 4) for 1½ hours.
When you have removed this glorious cake from the oven, make the mist by putting all the components into a pan over a medium heat. As soon as it has reached a boil, pour the mist over the cake and serve the slices warm, with chantilly cream.
From The Book of St John by Fergus Henderson and Trevor Gulliver (Ebury, £35)
A seafood food truck is opening its first brick-and-mortar location in Fern Creek by Christmas.
Lameshia Cunningham, the owner of Sweet & Juicy Seafood food truck, plans to open the restaurant at 8402 Hudson Lane as soon as inspections are passed.
“It’s perfect timing because my food truck just closed for the season,” Cunningham said. “People don’t really want to be out in the cold waiting for food.”
The 1,600-square-foot restaurant has 52 seats and two main seating areas. Cunningham said all he really needed was some paint to be ready to open. She anticipates the restaurant to be a “casual setting with good food, nothing fancy.”

Sweet & Juicy Seafood mainly serves Cajun-style seafood boils, including shrimp boils, crab boils, seafood platters and fried seafood dishes. There are three signature sauces: sweet Cajun, Cajun garlic and spicy, and guests can add corn, potatoes, sausages, shrimp or lobster to boil as they wish. In the restaurant, Cunningham will be adding on chicken boils, a burger or two, wings, and a seafood stuffed potato. Menu items range between $4 for appetizers to $50 for full platters.
“I wasn’t even in the food industry originally,” Cunningham said. “I worked for Jefferson County Public Schools and I had a salon. Me and my partner travel and try different seafood and I come back and make my own variations. One day after I posted a dish on Facebook, my son’s barber asked if he could buy some. And then it became lots of people who wanted to order. It took off from there.”
You may likeThis Black-owned restaurant is bringing vegan soul food to the Mellwood Art Center
Cunningham expanded from home orders to the food truck in 2019. Now the restaurant will offer more space and time to do what she loves. The food truck will remain in operation for special events.
“I love cooking. It doesn’t even feel like a job to me,” she said. “The fact people are paying me for it is kind of crazy.”
Sweet & Juicy Seafood will be open Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday from 11:30 am to 7 pm and on weekends from 11:30 am to 9 pm

Reach food reporter Dahlia Ghabour at [email protected].