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Posts Tagged ‘none’

Atlas Cafe

Screen shot 2010 04 27 at 3.00.09 PM Atlas Cafe

Atlas Cafe

116 Havemeyer St
Brooklyn, NY 11211
view map
718.782.7470

Cuisine: Coffeeshop
Our Rating: ★ ★ ★
Cards: Cash Only
Price: $
Hours: 7am-10pm Daily
Booze: None
Subway: L to Lorimer St., J,M,Z to Marcy Ave.
Menu: Click Here Delivery: No
New York Mag says:

There’s something about this coffee shop that has the feel of a college town cafe. The two floor-to-ceiling windows of the corner place fill the room with sunlight, making it particularly attractive for the laptop writers who occupy their tables for hours at a time, digging the free Wi-Fi and occasionally spacing out to the wall-sized map of the world. Large, milky pendant lights and wooden tables lend a softness to the room, and two outside benches take on some of the extra traffic when the turnover slows down. Everything is served at the counter, and hot and cold drinks run the typical gamut-cappuccino, espresso, mocha, sweet and spicy chai latte, and a strong yet delicately foamed macchiato, as well as Odwalla juices and Boylan’s sodas. The edibles cover basic breakfast pastries-soft scones, danishes and muffins from Tomcat Bakery in Long Island City-as well as a few lunch items, like mozzarella, pesto and tomato or a nicely mashed tuna salad on a baguette. Bagels also go over big, especially topped with creamy hummus or tender slices of lox. The cafe largely empties out by nighttime, leaving plenty of seats for freelancers on an evening schedule. Recommended Dishes: Bagel with cream cheese and lox, $6; tuna salad on baguette, $6

Permalink »         No Comments »     by FREEwilliamsburg   Saturday, April 17th, 2010, 5:23 pm

Bagelteria

Screen shot 2010 10 13 at 5.52.33 PM 300x224 Bagelteria

c/o The Brueklyn

483 Grand St
Brooklyn, NY 11211
view map
718.387.0270

Cuisine: Coffee shop
Our Rating: ★★★
Cards: Yes
Price: $
Hours
: Mon-Sun 6am-9pm
Booze: None
Subway
: L to Lorimer St., J,M,Z to Marcy Ave.
Menu: Click Here
Delivery
: Yes

Permalink »         No Comments »     by Fiona Goldstein   Wednesday, October 13th, 2010, 9:52 pm

Bamonte’s

Screen shot 2010 04 27 at 2.21.40 PM Bamontes

c/o NY Mag

32 Withers St
Brooklyn, NY 11211
view map
718.384.8831

Cuisine: Old school Italian
Our Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Cards: All Major
Price: $$$
Hours: Mon, Wed, Thurs Noon-10:30pm; Fri Noon-11pm; Sat 1pm-11pm; Sun 1pm-1opm; Closed Tue
Booze: Full Bar
Subway: L to Lorimer St.
Menu: Click Here Delivery: No
We say:

Established in 1900, Bamonte’s has the best Italian atmosphere in the hood. Has an old-school, Sopranos feel and is gloriously hipster free. Plus, many of the pastas are homemade. Bamontes effin rules and is a hidden treasure. The best place in Williamsburg to take out of towners. Be sure to make a reservation on weekends. Bamonte’s will make you feel like you have gone back in time to experience the authentic American Italian experience in Brooklyn.

NY Mag says:

Bamonte’s attracts an unusual mix of customers: Some have been kicking around the place since the 1950s (as have the waiters), and others are drawn from Williamsburg’s now-thriving artists-and-yuppies community. You don’t need an archaeologist to identify the strata of renovations, from original chandeliers to mid-century paneling to a modern glassed-in kitchen. Stick to the basic appetizers: clams casino, mussels marinara, and prosciutto with melon. Salads are serviceable, but they just delay the inevitable: Bamonte’s gigantic handmade cheese ravioli, in a light tomato-and-meat sauce, are de rigueur, and among the finest available. Lasagna with chicken and spinach, too, is extraordinary. Many customers order pastas as their entrees, but for those who must have meat, stick to veal-the seafood isn’t quite so impressive. –Steven A. Shaw ” Recommended Dishes: Handmade cheese ravioli in tomato-and-meat sauce, $12.95; lasagna with chicken and spinach, $12.95; pork chops with hot and sweet vinegar peppers, $17.50

Permalink »         1 Comment »     by FREEwilliamsburg   Saturday, April 17th, 2010, 5:28 pm

Bánh Mì

Screen shot 2010 04 27 at 4.22.33 PM Bánh Mì

Banh Mi

580 Grand Street
Brooklyn, NY 11211
view map
718.599.5015

Cuisine: Vietnamese
Our Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Cards: Cash Only
Price: $
Hours: Noon-10pm Daily
Booze: None
Subway: L to Lorimer St.
We say:

Great news for all Vietnamese food lovers-Bánh Mì has opened an expanded Williamsburg location in the former Curves Gym on Grand Street. The owners Vu Bui, Dung Trinh, and Thomas Bui are three Brooklyn-raised Vietnamese (“Brooklyn-mese”, as they called themselves) friends who met on a handball court as children. Now they’ve joined forces to open their third Vietnamese restaurant in Williamsburg (they also own the sit-down restaurant An Nhau on Bedford Avenue).

The larger Bánh Mì location on Grand Street is airy and bright with a colorful mural painted by okMitch who has also done work for Tarif, Northern Spy Food Co., St. Anslem, and many other local eateries. okMitch received inspiration for the mural from photos the three owners took during their various trips to Vietnam. Owner Dung Trinh said they wanted to expand their menu from the Bedford Avenue take-out shop and offer more rice dishes, pho, additional appetizers, Vietnamese milk shakes, and bubble tea along with ample seating. The dark wood tables scattered around the restaurant all have Café Du Monde coffee canisters to hold the spoons, forks, and chopsticks. When asked about the containers, Vu Bui said, “we’re Vietnamese, that is what we do. We take everything and recycle it, even the canisters from our coffee”.

We tried the Chicken Pho ($8), which is served with rice noodles, shredded chicken, bean sprouts, lettuce, chives, and fresh mint. The pho wasn’t too oily and had the perfect balance of broth and noodles. We also sampled the Lemongrass Chicken Sandwich ($5.50), which came on a toasted baguette with cucumber, pickled carrots, daikon, cilantro, and French mayo. Often Bánh Mì shops go overboard with the mayo on the sandwiches, but the mayo to sandwich ratio was perfect. If ordering the sandwich, we’d suggest getting a side since they aren’t particularly large. If you’re looking for something more filling we would suggest the Grilled Pork Chop served over rice ($9) or the Grilled Salmon with Sweet Lemongrass sauce and sugar snap peas on the side ($12). There are also a few options for vegetarians: Spicy Lemongrass Vermicelli with Tofu and Mushroom ($11), Vegetarian Banh Mi with Tofu and Mushrooms ($6), and the Summer or Veggie Roll (($5).

Slow dripped Vietnamese coffee is served with condensed milk ($2), along with home brewed Iced Tea ($2.50), Iced Coffee ($3.50), and Limeade ($2.50), which is a homemade traditional fresh-squeezed lime juice drink. The owners are working on their Beer and Wine license, which should be finalized in a few weeks. There is no dessert offered yet, but except to see bubble tea, ice cream, sorbet, and chocolate lava cake in next month or so. Delivery is coming soon.

Permalink »         No Comments »     by FREEwilliamsburg   Tuesday, April 27th, 2010, 12:25 pm

Barcade

Screen shot 2010 04 28 at 5.38.30 PM Barcade

Barcade

388 Union Ave
Brooklyn, NY 11211
view map
718.302.6464

Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Cards: All Major
Hours: Mon-Fri 5pm-4am; Sat-Sun 2pm-4am
Subway: L to Lorimer St.
Food/Menu: No food available
Booze: Full Bar
Happy Hour: Mon-Fri 5pm-8pm & Fri-Sat 2pm-8pm ; $1 off tap beers, $1 off well drinks, $6 Fisherman’s Brew and shot of Jim Bean
We say:

A fabulous bar with tons of classic arcade games like Moon Patrol, Centipede, Frogger, and Donkey Kong,and Zaxxon. Plus, there are a dozen beers on tap and its spacious. Barcade rules.

NY Mag says:

Some people’s idea of a romantic nightspot involves candles, slow jams, and a heart-shaped box of candy. But for girls on the hunt for that elusive small-torsoed, tight-jeaned, floppy-haired species known as the Emoboyis Williamsburgus, there’s no better pick-up spot than Barcade. Here, finding and chatting up prime specimens is as easy as shooting fish in a barrel–or, more accurately, as easy as shooting aliens in Moon Patrol, one of almost thirty vintage arcade games that give Barcade its name. The airy, loft-like space never feels crowded, and there’s plenty of room to sit and watch Union Avenue’s finest compete for high scores of all varieties. Most importantly, the rotating list of more than 20 microbrews includes many local beers on tap. The heavyweight ones, with names like Sixpoint Diesel and higher-than-usual alcohol contents, may be just what’s needed to seal the deal with that dude in the faded Smiths T-shirt–or to sabotage your opponent at two-player Tetris.

Permalink »         No Comments »     by FREEwilliamsburg   Saturday, March 5th, 2005, 11:19 pm

Bozu

mainbozu Bozu

Photo by Robert K. Chin, NY Mag

296 Grand Street
(between Havemeyer and Roebling Sts.)
Brooklyn, NY 11211
view map
718.384.7770

Cuisine: Eclectic Asian/Japanese Tapas
Our Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Cards: All Major
Price: $$$
Hours: Sun-Thurs 6pm-12am; Fri-Sat 6pm-1am
Booze: Full Bar
Subway: L to Bedford Ave., L to Lorimer Ave.
Menu: Click Here
Delivery: No
NY Mag says:

Bozu chef-owner Makoto Suzuki has expanded the definition of Japanese tapas (if there is one) to include deep-fried kataifi-crusted shrimp, pumpkin risotto croquettes stuffed with mozzarella, and an unconventional version of sushi. Suzuki’s “bombs” are the shape of things to come—small mounds of rice tinted red from cabbage or pink from codfish roe, and topped either traditionally (salmon, tuna, eel) or not (sun-dried tomato, olive, and caper). These light bites can be eaten at the bar, on epoxy tables ringed with Eames chairs, or on the back deck.

The Village Voice says:

Bozu (“bald-headed”) thrives on taking culinary chances. Tuna tataki ($7), for example, develops a voice and sings via an elfin scoop of strawberry sorbet that melts as the pinwheeled formation is ferried to the table. It brings a welcome pucker to the lips. Against all odds, I liked the “Italian” onigiri (two for $4.50), a newfangled take on the rice ball, Japan’s favorite snack. Mixed with chopped green olives and slivers of sun-dried tomato, it remained more Japanese than Italian.

Bozu eschews normal sushi. Among the seaweed-wrapped maki, find the “salmon stinky roll” ($5), which applies garlic to the bored-stiff orange fish. Another roll, called U.S.A., cryptically incorporates eel, shiso, and asparagus into the compressed pipe of rice. But the predominant form of sushi at Bozu—and the restaurant’s most arresting invention—is the “bomb.” Standing in for normal, finger-shaped sushi are round buttons of vinegared rice topped with raw fish, further extended skyward by ingredients like avocado, cucumber, green-tomato sauce, and frizzled deep-fried noodles of miniature circumference. What is the bomb’s significance? Well, individual pieces are smaller in volume than normal sushi, hence you never have to wonder whether to bite a piece in half or swallow it whole. Individual bombs (there are nine of them) vary in price from $4.50 to $6, but the most impressive way to experience them is via the “party bomb,” a 12-piece selection of four types.

Bozu has been called a Japanese tapas bar, and that’s fair enough. The smaller dishes are certainly the best, including a plethora of composed vegetarian salads featuring grains, tofu, tomatoes, seaweed, and grapefruit, generally dressed with soy and miso. The tofu salad ($6.50)—creamy tofu with avocado and plum tomatoes—is probably the best thing on the menu. The bigger dishes, like seafood stew and sake-marinated skirt steak, don’t fare as well. But who needs them when you’ve got the bomb?

Permalink »         2 Comments »     by FREEwilliamsburg   Sunday, March 6th, 2005, 7:35 pm

Brooklyn Cupcake

4763820811 b83c4f31a0 z 300x225 Brooklyn Cupcake

Brooklyn Cupcake

335 Union Ave
Brooklyn, NY 11211
view map
347.762.2253

Cuisine: Bakery
Our Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Cards: Cash Only
Price: Fairly Cheap
Hours: Sun- Wed 11am-7pm, Thurs-Sat 11am-9pm
Booze: None
Subway: L to Lorimer St.
Menu: Click Here
Delivery: No
We say:

Brooklyn Cupcake’s owner Carmen Rodriguez comes from Puerto Rican and Italian Roots which she has successfully infused into the offerings at Brooklyn Cupcake. Our favorite flavors include tres leches, dulce de leche, guava con queso, rainbow cookie, and tiramisu. The cute bakery also serves coffee and tea.

Permalink »         2 Comments »     by Fiona Goldstein   Thursday, August 11th, 2011, 2:46 pm

Brooklyn Star

Brooklyn Star

c/o NY Mag

593 Lorimer Street
Brooklyn, NY 11211
view map
718-599-9899

Cuisine: Southern, American
Our Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Cards: All Major
Price: $$$$
Hours: Sat and Sun 11 am to 4 pm., Dinner Everyday 5:00 pm to 2 am
Booze: Beer and Wine
Subway: L to Lorimer St.
Menu: Click Here
Delivery: No
NY Mag says:

After a kitchen fire closed its original location in 2010, the Brooklyn Star is open in the former Lazy Catfish space. Cook Justin Burchill tells us that he and the rest of Joaquin Baca’s team have been working since last August to build the new restaurant. They’ve installed the old tables, chairs, and benches in a space that’s a bit bigger (there are about 75 seats in the dining room) and best of all, in possession of a liquor license. The downside: No woodburning oven, but the core of the menu is the same, with the addition of dishes like roasted veal marrow bones and a chilled grilled lobster tail. The full menu will be served from 5 p.m. till 2 a.m., and there’ll be a list of whiskey-heavy classic and classic-inspired cocktails from bar manager Simon Gibson.

Permalink »         1 Comment »     by FREEwilliamsburg   Sunday, March 6th, 2005, 7:34 pm

Buffalo Cantina

l 97c84f06d27c11a8f061767f80362218 Buffalo Cantina

c/o Buffalo Cantina

149 Havemeyer Street
Brooklyn, NY 11211
view map
718.218.7788

Cuisine: Mexican
Our Rating: ★ ★ ★
Cards: All Major
Price: $$
Hours:
11am-11pm
Booze:
Beer and Wine
Subway:
L to Bedford Ave. or Lorimer Ave.
Menu: Click Here
Delivery: Yes
NY Mag says:

Buffalo Cantina’s Mexican menu has a twist: an extensive wings section. In classic Buffalo, BBQ, and teriyaki flavors, this wings here are served hot, hotter, and suicidal (and they aren’t messing around). You can order them in, but a hundred-count party bucket is ideal takeout for a lowbrow gathering, and a pan-fried tofu substitute ensures that no one has to miss out. Massive burritos and smaller tacos come filled with more than a dozen proteins and wrapped in flour, spinach, wheat, jalapeño or tomato tortillas. The chicken mole comes slathered in a smoky chocolate sauce while the jerk chicken is accompanied by subtly sweet plantains. American influences reappear in the form of sloppy-joe sliders, burgers, fries, and onion rings as well as the bizarre Little King, a buffalo burger crowned with fried chicken and topped with cheese, onions, spinach, tomato and ranch dressing on a bun. South-of-the-border desserts include cinnamon-fried churros, sopapillas, and a pair of banana-and-fudge chimichangas, more than enough to share. With no table service, step to the counter to choose from the large menu boards above. Until your food arrives, you can pass the time with a selection of board games and books or people watch through the restaurant’s glass façade. Three small tables in front are available for outdoor eating.

Citysearch says:

In Short – This casual spot satisfies the neighborhood’s appetite for hearty party fare, i.e. Buffalo wings, nachos, burritos and more. Most customers favor delivery and takeout, so there is always a spot to sit in the fairly large dining area. Everything from jerk chicken burritos to teriyaki wings to fish tacos spice up the menu, although the Buffalo wings (available in quantities of six, 12 or 24) are the main attraction. Mexican beers sit alongside Jarritos, sodas and more in the restaurant’s small refrigerator.

Permalink »         Comments Off     by FREEwilliamsburg   Sunday, March 6th, 2005, 7:34 pm

Burnside

BURN WEB 300x225 Burnside

Burnside

506 Grand St
Brooklyn, NY 11211
view map
347.889.7793

Booze: Full bar
Happy Hour
: No
Rating: ★ ★ ★
Cards: All Major
Hours: Mon-Sun, 5pm-4am
Price: Fairly Cheap
Subway: G, L at Metropolitan Ave.-Lorimer St.
Food/Menu:
Small bites
We say:

Burnside is one of our favorite new cozy spots to open this Fall. The bar is wood-paneled and features beers & cocktails from the Midwest, in addition to a few small plates including the “Jucy Lucy” burgers with molten American cheese cores, Sheboygan brats & “fancy beer mustard”, and an onion-dip-and-cheese tater tot casserole called the Hot Dish. An expanded menu is expected to be rolled out over the next few months.

Thrillist says:

Moving from the Midwest to New York can be dicey — some people strike it big, while others just strike out texting photos of their junk to cheerleaders. Ohhhh, in your face, Brett Favre! For a less licentious/more enticing Midwestern transplant, check out Burnside Brooklyn.

After noticing how many of their friends hailed from the region (and the perhaps-correlated groundswell of geographically themed events in their ‘hood), the trio behind BB recruited the gosh-darned friendliest team they could find to help construct a back patio’d ode to their homeland, which ended up feeling like a rustic grandmother’s house, assuming your grandmother’s into curved wooden bars, shuffleboard, and lights sitting in cages (at least they can’t judge you for constantly hanging in bars).

The menu’ll be rolled out in stages, but expect a range of very unhealthy-sounding delights including chewy and gooey, State Fair-inspired fried Beecher’s cheese curds, “Jucy Lucy” burgers w/ molten American cheese cores, Sheboygan brats & “fancy beer mustard”, and an onion-dip-and-cheese tater tot casserole called the Hot Dish, also what you’ll do with your “friends” after you see Miranda eating one. She said she was on a juice fast, that lying b*tch.

Like chicks at a Wisconsin frat party, the brews you’ll be hooking up with are mostly “whatever they could get from the Midwest” (Beast, Leinenkugel Honey Weiss, Stevens Point Special Lager…), plus outliers like Kostritzer & 21st Amendment, and local craft joints from Brooklyn and Allagash.

They’re also doing house cocktails, including, of course, a take on the Midwest fave Brandy Old Fashioned Sweet, the gin & green chartreuse Bijou, and a tequila Honeysuckle, also the exact text that went along with Brett’s photo. Honeysuckle on that, Favre!

Permalink »         2 Comments »     by Fiona Goldstein   Tuesday, November 1st, 2011, 7:00 pm

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