A hearty pasta recipe for your next night in.
A hearty pasta recipe for your next night in.
Grab your growlers and settle next to the wood-burning stove at this super-fine beer shop stocking 200 hard-to-find brews.
In 1908, it was built as a hotel for sailors. In 2008, it was restored as a hotel for hipsters and the fashion gypset. Take your inner rock star (or groupie) and grab a perch in the louche lounge or the (already notorious) Ballroom.
Marlow & Sons former chef makes herself a hero by dishing inventive sandwiches at her new bakery.
Gourmet bodega in the front is jam-packed with offbeat pantry items. Battered-enough saloon-like dining room is made for lingering over an insanely good caramel sea salt tart. Makes other seasonally focused eateries jealous as hell.
Photo: Courtesy of Marlow & Sons
Hipster watering hole set in a refurbished pool supply store lures the locals with indie bands, a large outdoor patio perfumed by the scent of Marlboro Reds, a black and white photo booth, and cheap PBRs. On the weekends, the packed crowd skews younger.
David Chang’s exquisite (original) pork and noodle palace is always in demand, but power suits and unemployed writers must wait it out together. Vegetarians openly discouraged.
Photo: Noah Kalina / Courtesy of Momofuku
Late-night spot where a young crowd with asymmetrical haircuts dances to electro-pop and indie bands while sipping local beers (if their budgets allow). The long, tunnel-like space has a stage at the back and games like Skee-Ball in the front.
Rustic Brooklyn hotbed for serious food types with a coveted outdoor garden and old stable for private parties. Envy of the neighborhood.
Retro caboose diner with cozy booths and chummy waiters who memorize the changing menu and pull up a chair to scribble it on your tablecloth. The specials are out of this world. The hipsters are to dine for.