« Main

March 05, 2005

* Beauty Bar Brooklyn

beauty-bar.jpg
image via

921 Broadway, Brooklyn NY 11206, near Melrose Street
PHONE: 347.529.0370
HAPPY HOUR: Martini and Manicure Happy Hour ($10) is offered Wed-Fri 7-11PM and Sat 9-12.
MAP: Click Here
SUBWAY: J, M, Z at Myrtle Ave.
NY MAG SAYS: In order to build his seventh location including outposts in L.A., Vegas, and Austin, owner Paul Devitt acquired the fixtures of a Lancaster, Pennsylvania, beauty salon for $1,500 (including the crucial dryer chairs) and hauled them back here, along with some finds from a local flea market. Devitt describes the feel of this larger space (about 1,500 square feet compared to 900 square feet in the East Village) as "more seventies soul, Super Fly." The prices, funny enough, are more in line with the 1996 ones at Beauty Bar’s original location (think $3 to $5 beers, $5 to $7 mixed drinks), and another difference is that “retro finger foods” such as pigs in a blanket are served. Also: Manicures start at 6 p.m.

Continue reading "* Beauty Bar Brooklyn" »

Beco

beco-small.jpg
images via

CUISINE: Brazilian
LOCATION: 45 Richardson Street Brooklyn NY 11211
PHONE: 718.599.1645
CARDS: All major
HOURS: Tue-Thurs 5:30pm-12am, Fri 3pm-1am, Sat 10am-1am, Sun 10am-11pm. Brunch Sat-Sun 10am-4pm. Closed Mondays.
BOOZE: Full bar
MENU: www.becobar.com/menu.htm
BRUNCH: Yes
DELIVERY: No
WEB: www.becobar.com/
MAP: Click Here
SUBWAY: L Train to Lorimer or Bedford
NY MAG SAYS: Williamsburg's Beco has flown pretty much under the radar during the month it's been open—maybe because it's located in a sort of Williamsburg-Greenpoint netherland, but also because the owners wanted to keep the place a neighborhood secret while getting it off the ground. Rather than a full-blown restaurant like Miss Favela, David Giddings says he and his partners envisioned it as a modest São Paolo boteco, where you can laze about while popping made-to-order pão de queijo and sip cocktails made with fresh passion fruit and pressed sugar cane. As Giddings describes it, the décor harks back to the days of Pele, and "doesn't scream 'Brazil' in your face, but it's more like what a boteco is—a real hangout." Starting next week, you'll be able to hang there during a brunch that will include açaí and granola, omelettes, bife a cavalo (Brazilians refer to their steak and eggs as "steak on horseback"), and a feijoada that's prepared over the course of two days by a Carioca chef, Casia Steinberg (Fabiane Lima, the Brazilian owner of Fabiane's, also consulted on the menu).


* Berry Park

Berry-Park.jpg
image c/o Brownstoner

ADDRESS: 4 Berry Street, Brooklyn NY 11211 (corner N. 14th)
PHONE: 718.782.2829
CARDS: Cash Only
MAP: Click Here
SUBWAY: L Train to Bedford Ave, G Train to Nassau
OTHER: Has a 3,000 squarefoot roofdeck with a bar, sports bar
TIME OUT SAYS: Williamsburg welcomes its latest beer hall, a bi-level behemoth with a 3,500-square-foot ground floor and a roof deck almost as large. Brooklyn boosters may be disappointed to find that the 15 taps are dedicated to imports (mostly German and Belgian drafts). Other amenities that might make up for it: a 13-foot-wide screen dedicated to soccer, Manhattan (and McCarren Park) views and a forthcoming beer-friendly food menu.


Continue reading "* Berry Park" »

Bodega

bodega.jpg
image c/o BrooklynVegan

ADDRESS: 1089 Broadway, Williamsburg Brooklyn
CALENDAR: Click Here
MAP: Click Here
SUBWAY: JMZ to Myrtle
WEBSITE: www.chiefbodega.com/
MYSPACE: http://www.myspace.com/bodegabk
WE SAY: New bars and venues open constantly in this neighborhood--it almost feels like the community board consists of a solitary robot with a giant rubber "Approved" stamp for liquor license applications. To which I say "Huzzah!" because papa needs his sweet, sweet booze. Anyway, today we take a look at a new music venue in Bushwick called Bodega (1089 Broadway), which is run by those hip souls over at Chiefmag. The space holds 300 people and used to be an actual bodega--one which used to sell crack I am told, which goes great with beef patties and Boar's Head turkey sandwiches. Most bands they host are of the Todd P variety, including Japanther, The Death Set, Ninjasonik, etc. Shows are usually in the $5-$6 range, perfect for the club's young, eight-people-to-a-loft crowd. [review by Keith Wagstaff]

* Bridge Vineyards Urban Winery

bridgewinery.jpg

image c/o Eater

20 Broadway, Brooklyn, NY 11211 (nr. Kent Ave)
PHONE: 718.384.2800
HOURS: Wed-Sun, noon-midnight; Mon-Tue, closed
MENU: Click Here
CUISINE: mainly a wine bar but Italian & Spanish Tapas are available
SUBWAY: J, M, Z at Marcy Ave.; L at Bedford Ave.
MAP: Click Here
WEBSITE: http://www.bridgevineyards.com
WINE PRICES: $6-$12
CARDS: American Express, MasterCard, Visa
BOOZE: Beer and Wine Only
RESERVATIONS: Not Accepted
NY TIMES SAYS: Greg Sandor and Paul Wegimont, the owners, have opened Bridge Vineyards Urban Winery and Tasting Room, an industrial, brick-walled space nudging the Williamsburg Bridge. Their wines and others are available for tasting with small plates of wine-friendly food ($4 to $10). Come fall, they hope to start using the stainless steel tank on the premises for blending wines and bottling, too.

Continue reading "* Bridge Vineyards Urban Winery" »

Cornichon

cornichon.jpg

CUISINE: French Winebar/Cafe
ADDRESS: 251 Grand Street between Driggs and Roebling
PHONE: 718.599.3840
CARDS: All major
HOURS: Mon-Thurs: 5pm to midnight; Fri: 5pm to 1am;
Sat 10am to 1am; Sun 10am to midnight
BRUNCH: saturday and sundays
BOOZE: Full bar
OUTDOOR DINING: Yes
SUBWAY: L to Bedford Ave; J, M, Z to Marcy Ave
MAP: Click Here
MENU: Click Here
WEB: www.cafecornichon.com
DELIVERY: Yes
L MAG SAYS: Last Friday I ate and drank at Cornichon, a new wine bar/cafe/small plates restaurant on Grand Street in Williamsburg. What they sell is terrific--lovingly presented cheese and meat plates, cheap bottles of good French wines--but the decor made it seem as if they had rushed to open a week before they finished decorating, and then just decided against finishing. The front and back are pretty attractive--lots of pale, neutral greens and blonde wood--but the spacious area in the back (where my friends and I stayed well into the night, and were always the only people there) felt like a spare afterthought, with naked wooden tables, benches, empty dark green walls, and that's it. Right angles and right angles and unset tables. The food was so carefully prepared--the crudite salad arranged with wedges of boiled egg, ruby cherry tomato halves, and slivers of avocado, drizzled delicately with some kind of rich, opaque dressing--that it's mysterious why more consideration hasn't yet gone into making the place more comfortable. But the owners (all French) were sweet and eager to please (they gave us free Champagne and encouraged us to sign the mailing list) that if they softened some of the pointy, lonely edges, I'd happily go back. Especially in the summer, when their lovely back patio opens for warm-weather wine. Like white zinfandel.

* The Diamond

1diamond.jpg
image c/o NY Mag

43 Franklin Street, Brooklyn, NY 11222
Between Calyer Street and Quay Street
PHONE: 718.383.5030
HOURS: Tue-Thu 5pm-1am, Fri 5pm-2am, Sat 2pm-2am, Sun 2pm-1am
CARDS: Visa/MasterCard
MAP: Click Here
SUBWAY: G at Greenpoint Ave; L at Bedford Ave
CITY SEARCH SAYS: The owners of this Greenpoint bar are pushing the doctrine of "session beers," that is, beer that one can drink multiples of and still win at the shuffleboard table. So, strong ales like the dark bottled Oerbier from Belguim are on the menu alongside lighter tastes like the Harviestoun Bitter and Twisted from Scotland. Beer fans--especially of U.S., Belgium, German and English brews--can make friends at the bar, bring their own to the table seating, or shoot Quiots (NYC-sized horseshoes) in the backyard garden. Why the glittery interior and Van Halen on the juke box? The owners have a penchant for "Diamond" David Lee Roth. Sometimes the bar holds "vintage" tastings, which means that you can taste a 1998 version of a beer alongside its 2006 counterpart.

Continue reading "* The Diamond" »

* The Gutter

the_gutter.jpg
Image c/o Gothamist

(Bowling Alley)
200 North 14th Street, Brooklyn NY 11211
between Wythe and Berry
PHONE: 718.387.3585
HOURS: Mon-Thurs 4pm-4am, Fri-Sun noon-4am
MAP: Click Here
SUBWAY: L Train to Bedford, G to Nassau
WEBSITE: www.thegutterbrooklyn.com
GOTHAMIST SAYS: The first bowling alley to open in Brooklyn in (we can't even believe this) nearly 50 years is about to open up! The Gutter is new...but the feeling old. Brought to you by two of the same people who brought you Barcade, expect a similar vibe. There's a Schlitz globe spinning over the shoe counter, vintage bowling items adorning the bar, old lamps throughout, and even some TVs with rabbit ear antennas.

You won't find flashy flatscreens displaying your scores and advertisements hanging above the lanes. The scoring machines are straight out of the past, and the only advertisements are on the pin clearing machine. Those ads are likely for establishments in a town far far away, however -- as the equipment was all purchased from an old bowling alley in the midwest.

THRILLIST SAYS: The most notable throwback's the price: $6 games ($7 on weekends) and $4 shoes -- which everyone will steal, forcing Gutter to reticently inaugurate this cash-cow of ill repute: "Taking Care of Business Tuesdays (Now With Lasers!)".

The Habitat

the-habitat.jpg

ADDRESS: 988 Manhattan Ave., Greenpoint
PHONE: 718.383.5615
HOURS: Monday thru Friday 4pm to close
Saturday and Sunday 2pm to close
SUBWAY: G train to Greenpoint Ave, exit at India Street,
located one block north on Manhattan Ave.
MAP: Click Here
WEBSITE: Click Here
CARDS: American Express, MasterCard, Visa
BOOZE: Full Bar [beer/spirits menu]
MENU: Click Here
HAPPY HOUR: 4pm - 7pm
"2 for 1" Victory, Sweet Action, Lagunitas and Penn Dark
$2 off Well Drinks
$8 Glass of Sangria + Empanada
$4 Mac & Cheese
GOTHAMIST SAYS: New York City's urban rustic trend keeps on trucking with the newest addition to Greenpoint’s ever-expanding nightlife scene, The Habitat. Housed in an old convenience store and built with lumber salvaged from as far away as Maine, the bar and restaurant will let Brooklynites savor back porch ambiance without having to breathe the air from the nearby sewage treatment plant. The kitchen is located behind what looks to be the exterior wall of a house, and a raised deck seems destined for late-night bluegrass jams. Chef Ashley Engmann, former manager at Park South and cook at Lotus, [prepares] mostly-American small plate menu, though her specialty is said to be her empanadas. A pecan mandarin salad, a twice baked potato, cheeseburgers, sandwiches and other late night snacks are also planned. The yellow pine bar, salvaged from an old mechanic shop, is irreverently topped with cement in the center, and 12 beers, mostly microbrews, will be on tap, as well as wine and spirits.

* Hotel Delmano

Hotel-Delmano.jpg
image c/o Noah Kalina

82 Berry Street, Brooklyn NY 11211
(Berry & North 9th)
PHONE: 718.387.1945
HOURS: Sun-Thu 5pm-2am, Fri-Sat 5pm-3am
CARDS: All Major
ALCOHOL: Full Bar (including fancy, top dollar concoctions)
MAP: Click Here
SUBWAY: L Train to Bedford Ave
SHECKY'S SAYS: Tired of waiting three hours for that text that reveals you finally scored a table at Milk and Honey? Now that even the most snobbish city dweller knows that Brooklyn has more to offer than dive bars and seedy one night stands, why not head to Williamsburg for your fancy cocktail fix? You'll be kickin' it with a more sophisticated set (i.e., actual cool people) that prefers the Last Word (gin, maraschino, chartreuse, and lime, $9) to a watered down whiskey. While the front room, with its marble topped tables and shelves of liquor that the bartender reaches by ladder, is the main hub of activity, the side rooms are just as intoxicating. Order a Corpse Reviver No.2 and you'll find out just how invigorating it is to be in the 'Burg.

Continue reading "* Hotel Delmano" »

* Huckleberry Bar

01_huckleberry_lg.jpg
image c/o NY Mag

588 Grand Street, Brooklyn NY 11211
between Leonard and Lorimer
PHONE: 718.218.8555
HOURS: 4pm-4am every day
CARDS: all major
MAP: Click Here
SUBWAY: L Train to Lorimer
WEB: www.huckleberrybar.com
MYSPACE: www.myspace.com/huckleberrybar
EATER SAYS: Bars are a dime a dozen in Williamsburg, but the pedigree of the team behind Huckleberry Bar sets it apart from the pack (two clichés in one sentence!). Owners Stephanie Schneider and Andrew Boggs and chef Seth Johnson have all done time in one or more of Danny Meyer's joints. They are offering, per Lady Strongbuzz, 'well-valued wines by the glass, inventive seasonal cocktails and carefully chosen imported and domestic beers' as well as small plates (natch). It all seems a bit fancy for East Williamsburg, but hey, if Wombat can survive over there...

Continue reading "* Huckleberry Bar" »

* The Manhattan Inn

the manhattan inn
image c/o Eater

CUISINE: New American
ADDRESS: 632 Manhattan Ave., Brooklyn NY
PHONE: 718.383.0885.
CARDS: All Major
HOURS: 4 PM - 2:30 AM weeknights, open from 11 AM on the weekend
BOOZE: Full bar
SUBWAY: G to Nassau, L to Bedford
MAP: Click Here
MENU: Click here
DELIVERY: No
EATER SAYS: Greenpoint, meet your newest/coolest neighbor, The Manhattan Inn. Those nutjob geniuses at Glasslands, the superhip rag tag performance space on Kent in Williamsburg, have managed to do something original and pretty damn good looking on an otherwise unexciting strip a block from McCarren Park. The bar and restaurant serves New American cuisine from chef Justin Farmer. Fancy cocktails, sourcing from Rooftop Farms, repurposed design details, you know the drill.

Continue reading "* The Manhattan Inn" »

* The Music Hall of Williamsburg

The Music Hall of Williamsburg

MUSIC VENUE (Formerly Northsix)
66 North Sixth Street, Brooklyn, NY 11211
PHONE: 212.260.4700
CARDS: American Express, Diners Club, Discover, MasterCard, Visa
MAP: Click Here
SUBWAY: L Train to Bedford Ave
WEBSITE: www.musichallofwilliamsburg.com
CALENDAR: www.musichallofwilliamsburg.com
NY MAG SAYS: Bowery Presents, the bookers behind Webster Hall and Bowery Ballroom, have expanded their indie empire again with the rebirth and renaming of the former Northsix. The fancy face-lift stretches the space from two to three levels (with bars to match), adds balcony seating, and reshapes the interior via a curved wall for optimized acoustics. With the removal of the steel columns, sightlines were also markedly improved. And as if the cosmetic modifications weren't enough, the inaugural lineup put the previous incarnation's schedule to shame; Top notch indie acts and veteran critical faves look sure to pack the house while a gamut of great, on-the-verge bands should solidify the rep on the street.

* Nita Nita

nita-nita-1.jpg
image c/o NY Press

CUISINE: Spanish Tapas
ADDRESS: 146 Wythe Ave (At N. 8th St.)
PHONE: 718.388.5328
CARDS: Cash Only
HOURS: Mon-Fri 4pm-1am, Sat-Sun 11am-4pm, 5pm-1am
BOOZE: Full bar
SUBWAY: L to Bedford Ave
BRUNCH: weekends between 11am and 4pm
MAP: Click Here
MENU: Click Here

NY PRESS SAYS: There is a smattering of tapas joints amid the ever-expanding dining landscape of Williamsburg, and most of them feel about as authentic as the infamous "loft-style" luxury apartment buildings that have been popping up in the neighborhood even more rapidly than restaurants. That changed three months ago, when Nita Nita, a tapas bar actually worth venturing into, opened its doors. Plate-glass storefront windows and a yawning set of doors reveal a candlelit interior with warm tones and clean lines that don't try too hard. Nita Nita's menu is Spanish-inspired and eclectic and the recipe list, like the decor, is pared-down. And with a short but appealing selection of wine, food and cocktails, patrons feel like they've stepped into the local bar they've always looked for, but classier, and with a delicate buttery scent calling to them from the kitchen. The cozy interior of Nita Nita was the perfect spot for dinner one rainy summer night since the place never feels too crowded, but there are always just enough people chatting with owner Samantha Di Stefano, or petting the part-time resident dog for you to feel welcome....An alcove behind the kitchen offers more seating, a well-stocked jukebox and a door to the back garden, which, while we visited, was being steadily drummed by rain. Although Nita Nita's mixed drink specials ($10 each), including the Tequila Mockingbird and Ginger Rummy, are the most innovative part of the menu, an insidious hangover prevented me from diving into the cocktail options. However, compelled by my duty as a responsible journalist, I returned the following night to try the Barton Pear, an insanely good combination of Grey Goose Lapoire, fresh pineapple and orange juice, seven up and a few other ingredients I failed to note as the drink went to work on my short-term memory. We started with an appetizer special of brie on a toasted baguette alongside a roasted leek soup ($10). The soup smelled great, but turned out to be somewhat bland, though inoffensive, sprinkled with refreshing parsley to give it a little kick. The bread was fresh and flaky, and the brie warm—the perfect addition. Next, we ordered the sauteed greens and shaved parm ($5) next, and got exactly what you'd want from this simple dish. Chopped collards were cooked in butter just long enough to take the edge off the bitter vegetable, release its flavor and keep a crisp freshness intact. Unfortunately, the Mojo potatoes ($5) were disappointing, drenched as they were in a peppery red sauce, but oddly lacking in spice. A salad of cranberries, sliced almonds and feta dressing over pedestrian mixed greens ($6 special, price varies) is a fresh and satisfying, if not massively original, flavor combination. My friend had the Mojo chicken ($7) next: three drumsticks nestled together with a cucumber dipping sauce on a white porcelain plate. The meat was tender, and fell off the bone easily, with a slight spiciness nicely complemented by the cool cucumber. Meanwhile, I inhaled the Cheese Board ($12), a delightfully stinky mix including a sharp aged Gouda that I could taste in the back of my mouth, complimented by apple slices and quince paste. The bar pizza ($6) is a light, cheesy take on Turkish-style pitza, with fresh mozzarella and just enough sauce drizzled over a nicely crisp flatbread. We finished off our meal by sharing a chocolate chip cookie ($2)--after such girl-centric conversation we chose to further the stereotype by daintily considering our figures. The dessert was phenomenal. Though it tasted like almost pure sugar, its gooeyness and melt-in-your mouth perfection was like some long-forgotten childhood memory.

Continue reading "* Nita Nita" »

* Radegast Hall & Biergarten

Radegast Hall and Biergarten

ADDRESS: 113 N 3rd Street, Williamsburg, Brooklyn NY 11211
PHONE: 718.963.3973
HOURS: Mon-Thu, 3pm-2am; Fri-Sun, noon-4am
CARDS: All Major
BOOZE: Beer Garden
MENU: Click Here
SUBWAY: L Train to Bedford
MAP: Click Here
DELIVERY: No
WEBSITE: www.radegasthall.com
NY MAG SAYS: Ivan Aohut, part of the team that turned Astoria's Bohemian Hall into a destination back in 2000 now partners with a couple of Czech friends and his wife Joanna, a private chef who cooks hearty dishes like roasted pork tenderloin topped with prunes and porter beer sauce and served with potato dumplings and red cabbage. Aohut, who built the outdoor bar at Bohemia, has built his solo venture to resemble a 1890s Austrio-Hungarian beer hall, with communal tables made from 150-year-old barn wood. The garden, where burgers and an array of wursts are grilled, will eventually have infrared heating under its retractable canopy.

Continue reading "* Radegast Hall & Biergarten" »

* The Richardson

richardson.jpg
Photo from http://sieve-gcs.blogspot.com/

451 Graham Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11222
(at Richardson Street, beside the BQE)
PHONE: 718.389.0839
HOURS: 12pm-4am
CARDS: All Major
SUBWAY: L Train to Graham
FOOD: It's mainly a cocktail lounge, but smakll dishes are available
MAP: Click Here
WEBSITE: http://therichardsonnyc.com
CITY SEARCH SAYS: Despite the fact that it's located right under the Brooklyn Queens Expressway, a long mahogany bar, wainscot wood paneling, wooden slat blinds, sconce lighting, old-fashioned cash registers, gold brocade wallpaper, and a soundtrack of mostly pre-1969 American classics provide a romantic backdrop. It's a pleasant alternative to the otherwise uber-cool Williamsburg bar scene. The $9 specialty cocktails, served up by friendly mixologists, are reasonably priced and extremely tasty. High-back bar stools make for a more comfortable drinking experience. The Richardson has a great selection of wines, liquors and frothy German and American beers on tap. Although the marble-painted stucco columns that separate the long angular bar are designed to create a more intimate vibe, the space still feels a bit too large. Grilled sandwiches and other light fare is served between the hours of 1pm and 2am daily.

Continue reading "* The Richardson" »

* Trophy Bar

trophybar.jpg

351 Broadway, Brooklyn, NY 11211
Between Keap Street and Rodney Street
PHONE: 347.227.8515
HOURS: Daily 5pm-4am
CARDS: Cash Only
SUBWAY: J, M, Z at Marcy Ave; G at Broadway
OUTDOOR AREA/GARDEN: Yes
HAPPY HOUR: From 5pm to 8pm daily, grab a fistful of corn nuts and down $3 drafts of Sixpoint Righteous Rye and Guinness, and $3 well cocktails
MAP: Click Here
WEBSITE: www.trophybar.com
MYSPACE: http://www.myspace.com/trophybar
CITY SEARCH SAYS: On a bar-bereft stretch of Broadway, this sign-less storefront (look for the sidewalk awning) serves as an understated oasis for South Williamsburg denizens. Inside the vintage-themed room with slate-gray walls, black leather booths, a chandelier concocted from gramophone horns and, naturally, tons of trophies, you'll find eight draft beers (including summery Hennepin and hoppy Lagunitas IPA), inventive cocktails utilizing fresh fruit, and a '50s-era jukebox spinning 45s that span everything from Salt-N-Pepa to the Zombies to Earth, Wind and Fire. Hits: You'll want to permanently camp out at the backyard's picnic tables or snuggle into the leather booths and max out to the tunes on the vintage juke. Misses: Searching for the entrance to this sign-free spot may be a bit frustrating. There's no need for Manhattan-style pretension in South Williamsburg.

* The Woods

art20590nar.jpg
image via NY Press

ADDRESS: 48 South 4th Street, Brooklyn NY 11211
(between Wythe and Kent)
PHONE: No phone
MAP: Click Here
SUBWAY: L Train to Bedford Ave
NY PRESS SAYS: Williamsburg's sweeping old spaces may have been designed for industrial work, but they were really made for bars.The Woods is tucked away in an old brick building that used to house a metal shop, but when the workers would call it quits after a backbreaking day on the job, did they look around at the high ceilings and exposed brick walls and think one day people will drink here?

Probably not. It was the new owners of the space who found some libation inspiration and spent over a year changing this former industrial site into a stylish den of drink. Concrete floors, open space and exposed ceiling beams give some flavor of the bar's former life. Even though neighboring G&G's Scrap now deals with the area's metal, the real work is going on here:The Woods is a drinking factory, and neighborhood bar goers seem ready to get the job done.

The bar is charming because it's served without trappings — it's replaced trendy design and uppity cocktails with drinking utility. A beer and a shot of whiskey goes for $5 (we call this "The Williamsburg Dinner") and for a buck more you can upgrade to Bud and Jameson. It's that kind of place.Whether you come after work on a Tuesday or on a Saturday at midnight, the space is comfortable, and you'll get your drinking done.There's even a backyard strewn with picnic tables for when you want a bit of air.

And the backyard holds the bar's hidden treasure. A mish-mosh of chairs and wooden fencing give it the feeling of being Union Pool-lite. Smoking buckets line the ground, and you can hear the traffic race by on the Williamsburg Bridge — it's kind of soothing after your third shot.While the interior invokes some awe, at first glance the outdoor space provokes a shrug. Is this just another pen for Brooklyn's pigs? Not so much.

Hidden in this bohemian backyard is a true gem of Williamsburg bar going: The Woods comes equipped with its own taco truck. $3.50 will get you a freshly made veggie, chicken or chorizo taco. And you'll need them after taking advantage of all those drink specials. If you're down to your last $5 and have to choose between another round and a tasty taco, go for the grub.

After all, owner Matt Relkin claims that he'd like The Woods to be an "end of the night" kind of place. And how do you want to end your night? Slurping down another whiskey? Sounds of bridge traffic aren't so soothing after that one.The Woods is clearly a bar that takes care of its locals, and they wouldn't send you into the night with an empty stomach.

The old metal workers might not have liked the hipsters invading their turf, but we think they'd be won over.

Continue reading "* The Woods" »


FREEdubya on Twitter FREEdubya on Facebook
Pool Parties -Williamsburg Waterfront concerts
Happy Hours and Events

ALL

· * The Abbey
· * Alligator Lounge
· * Art Land
· Balanza
· * Barcade
· * Beauty Bar Brooklyn
· Beco
· * Bembe
· * Berry Park
· Bodega
· * Boulevard Tavern
· * Bridge Vineyards Urban Winery
· * Brooklyn Ale House
· * Brooklyn Bowl
· * Brooklyn Brewery
· Bruar Falls
· * Bushwick Country Club
· The Charleston
· * Clem's
· Club Europa
· Club Exit
· * CoCo66
· Cornichon
· Cyn Lounge
· * Daddy's
· * Death By Audio
· * The Diamond
· * D.O.C. Wine Bar
· Don Pedro's
· Duckduck
· * Duff's
· East River Bar
· * Enid's
· * Glasslands
· * The Greenpoint Tavern
· * The Gutter
· The Habitat
· * Harefield Road
· Hope Lounge
· * Hotel Delmano
· * Huckleberry Bar
· * Hugs
· * Iona
· K & M
· Kings County
· * Larry Lawrence
· Legion
· The Levee
· Lenora's Way
· Life Cafe
· Lockinn
· * Lost & Found
· The Lucky Cat
· Lulu Lounge
· M Shanghai Bistro & Den
· * The Manhattan Inn
· Maracuja
· * The Mark Bar
· * Matchless
· * Metropolitan Bar
· * Monkey Town
· * Moto
· * Mugs Ale House
· Mulholland's
· * The Music Hall of Williamsburg
· My Moon
· * Nita Nita
· Oulo
· Palace Café
· * Pete's Candy Store
· * Pencil Factory
· * Public Assembly
· Pumps Bar
· R Bar
· * Radegast Hall & Biergarten
· Redd's Tavern
· * The Richardson
· Rock Star Bar
· Roebling Tea Room
· Rose Live Music
· * Royal Oak
· Savalas
· The Silent Barn
· Soft Spot
· * Sound Fix
· South 4th Bar and Café
· Spike Hill
· * Spuyten Duyvil
· * Stain
· Studio B
· Sugarland
· * Sweet Ups
· Sweetwater Tavern
· The Subway Bar
· * Teddy's
· Tommy's Tavern
· The Trash Bar
· * Trophy Bar
· * Turkey's Nest
· * Union Pool
· Van Gogh's Radio Lounge
· Velvet Cigar Lounge
· Vera Cruz
· * Warsaw (at Polish National Home)
· * The Woods
· The Wreck Room
· Zablozki's
· * Zebulon Cafe Concert
· Zipi Zape

W-Burg Guides









CONTACT US:
mail | at | freewilliamsburg.com

Advertise With Us

MASTHEAD:

Founding Editor:
Robert Lanham

Senior Editor:
Brian Ries

Senior Music Editor:
Nicole Wasilewicz

Arts Editor:
Lisa Baldini

Film Editor:
Dave Thomas

Senior Photo Editor:
Clarissa Roudabush

Writers:
David Bernstein
Elizabeth Brady
Scott Lachut
Lauren Mooney
Travis Mushett
Kristina Pedicone
Lola Wakefield

About FREEwilliamsburg




Add me to your
mailing list



Powered by
Movable Type 3.2




Advertise on New York blogs

blogads-blog-button3.png



Advertise With
FREEwilliamsburg