With so many options in NYC, choosing the best restaurant for Valentine’s Day can be challenging. But we made this choice easier for you. Check out our list of restaurants that are offering special dishes for a romantic dinner.
Bell Book & Candle
This West Village subterranean restaurant is offering a prix fixe menu for $75 a person or $200 a couple with a bottle of champagne. It includes choices of starters, like Garlic Bread Soup, entrees, like Butter Poached Lobster with black truffle and assorted sweet endings to share. A vegetarian menu will also be offered for $75 a person with Caramelized Tofu, Roasted Cauliflower Soup, grilled and roasted vegetables enveloped in rainbow chard with romesco sauce and a Stuffed Baby Pumpkin with coconut curry, mixed roots, squash and crispy chickpeas.
Spend a romantic evening at this sophisticated Greek restaurant. Nerai is offering a five-course prix fixe menu for $125 per person. For wine lovers, there’s also a Valentine’s Day special wine pairing for $60 per person. The menu features dishes like Black Truffle Spaghettoni, a 28 day dry aged ribeye and two choices of dessert to share.
Probably one of the most romantic restaurants in NYC right under the Brooklyn Bridge, with amazing views of Manhattan. The Michelin-starred restaurant will be offering a four course Prix Fixe dinner for $215 per person. Guests will start with a caviar and smoked salmon amuse paired with a glass of roséchampagne, followed by a choice of appetizer and main course. Dessert will be a tasting of three classic River Café desserts.
Enjoy harpist live music at this neighborhood bistro while tasting delicious french dishes. Valentine’s Day specials at Le Privé include Côte de Boeuf for two (prime rib, whipped potatoes, asparagus hollandaise) or Poussin Farci for two (pork and mushroom stuffed boneless cornish hen, potato brabant and english pea ragout ). Plus, a Complimentary Veuve Clicquot tasting will be offered.
Having dinner with a view is a romantic choice for Valentine’s Day. At Haven Rooftop, on top of Sanctuary Hotel, you can enjoy a three course prix fixe meal for two, including a glass of prosecco for $105 per person. The menu is very diverse with choices of meat, chicken, seafood and pasta. There are two options of dessert: cheesecake and chocolate covered strawberries.
This cozy italian restaurant in West Village will make you feel warm on this Valentine’s Day. Palma will be offering a four-course chef’s tasting for $150 per person. Each guest will choose one of the four Antipasti options to start. Then, one Primi to share, with three pasta options. Followed by a choice of Carne & Pesce per guest and ending with a chef’s dessert tasting. Check out the menu:
The saying might be eat your colors, but drinking them is so much more fun! With Spring weather on the way we’re craving fruity, colorful cocktails. Here’s a roundup from all over the city to check out in the coming weeks!
Celebrate Bagatelle’s 11th anniversary with a color changing, ombré cocktail featuring a miniature bottle of Möet and a Blue Butterfly Tea Flower ice cube. The cocktail is made with Cîroc apple, lemon juice, and simple syrup then garnished with an edible pink orchid from Thailand. The interactive cocktail changes from blue to purple to pink as you sip it due to an interaction between the vodka, simple syrup, and champagne mixing with the dissolving ice cube.
When Hole in the Wall turns to Sugar Momma at night, they keep some of the breakfast flavors on the menu with this Matcha Martini. The combination of white rum, matcha, coconut cream, and honey is garnished with a brûléed banana and a coconut rim.
Nothing goes better with modern Japanese cuisine than a refreshing cocktail. Made with Prosecco, strawberry, and basil-infused Aperol, the Sojo Spritz is a springtime rendition of your typical Aperol Spritz. This rose-colored, fruity libation is finished off with a garnish of strawberry and a sprig of basil.
The Little Beet Table’s signature margarita is a veggie-centric version of the classic drink, made with tequila (or mezcal), fresh carrot juice, cayenne, lime, and ancho chili salt. The drink is vibrantly orange from the nutrient-dense carrot juice, which balances the spicy punch from cayenne and ancho chili salt in this cocktail. Eating your veggies is so last year, get ready to drink them!
Blue foods aren’t just for kids anymore! Message in a Bottle, created by beverage director Rael Petit, is a vibrant blue drink made with Bacardi 4 year, clarified milk punch, Chinese cinnamon cordial, lemon, and Blue Majik pineapple juice (made with algae), which gives the cocktail its bright hue. The drink is garnished with a tropical flower, playing off of the island vibes found in this eclectic spin on a rum punch.
Thank Me Tomorrow is perfect for the moody drinker who wants to deny Spring’s arrival. The drink combines vodka, lemon juice, coconut syrup, and charcoal for a tropical tasting yet literally dark and stormy cocktail.
How do you upgrade a drink that’s already beloved? Make it a slushy! Greenpoint bar, lounge, and patio The Springs is inspired by the retro of vibes of Palm Springs in the 1950’s. The indoor/outdoor space has upgraded the Aperol spritz by turning the combination of Aperol, sparkling wine, sparkling water, and orange into a frozen treat.
You’ve got two weeks left to score a reservation for Valentine’s Day, and we here at Downtown think it should definitely be at one of these unique spots. Read on for our 2019 Valentine’s Day dining guide.
The home of Sleep No Moreis ready to take you on a journey this Valentine’s Day! Start with dinner in The Club Car where you’ll enjoy a three course meal, live jazz music and the option of a private train car. If you’re looking for something a bit cozier, you can drink and dine on the roof at The Lodge at Gallow Green while sitting by the fire or cuddling in a private nook. Of course you don’t want to miss the Valentine’s performance of Sleep No More, which begins at 7 PM.
Bell Book & Candle doesn’t want vegans to feel left out this V-Day so they are offering two 7-course tasting menus, one of which is entirely vegan. Dishes will include black truffle topped cauliflower soup and surf & turf featuring grass fed filet and crab stuffed fluke. For the most intimate evening, ask to dine in the Pink Lady Room which seats two and has a private line to the bartender.
If you’re getting a hotel room for the special night, consider the Loews Regency on Park Avenue. Their special three-course menu includes lobster cream soup, yuzu marinated steak and a chocolate dome prepared by new Executive Chef Serge Devesa.
What’s more intimate than sharing food? Boqueria is offering three, special menus of tapas for Valentine’s Day featuring dishes like striped bass with chanterelles and cockles and molten chocolate cake. Tapas are also a great option for a Galentine’s Day get together!
Head to buzzy Taiwanese spot 886 to sip on a delicious Lycheé Rosé Cocktail while enjoying snacks like the sausage party (a sausage wrapped in a glutinous, sticky-rice bun) and soy-sesame glazed chicken wings.
Looking for an aphrodisiac? Ed’s Lobster Bar aims to please with $2 oysters all night long as well as cocktail specials, champagne deals, and whole lobsters.
If you’re celebrating Valentine’s Day the day after, check out Eataly Downtown’s Winter Wine & Food Festa. Enjoy drinks and bites all over the store, including oysters, chocolate, cocktails, and heart-y dishes.
Whether you’re staying in for the big game or heading out to watch on someone else’s big screen, we’ve got all your Super Bowl snacking covered. Read on for the best places to watch the best commercials of the year and where to order your all important halftime meal from.
Located in the heart of the West Village, Due West has multiple big screen TV’s and is the perfect spot to start your Super Bowl celebrations! Grab your friends and come check out Due West’s $13 Super Bowl Combo featuring Chicken Bites served Buffalo style with Bleu Cheese and celery plus your choice of one of their signature shots including the Undead (gin, absinthe and lemon) and the Delusional (Mezcal, aperol, chartreuse and lime).
The city’s staple beer hall is offering $30 buckets of beer and $25 giant bowls of wings for the Super Bowl at all Clinton Hall locations. The regular menu, which includes tons of sharable appetizers and decadent burgers, will also be available. Drink up and chow down while watching the game on their 100 inch HD projector screen.
Clinton Hall 90 Washington Street (FiDi)
16 W 36th Street
230 E 51st Street
247 Metropolitan Avenue (Williamsburg)
601 E 189th Street (Bronx)
Sunday: all open midnight or later
Bell Book & Candle will offer an exclusive Super Bowl Sunday menu while guests watch the game on two 75″ HD projectors complete with surround sound. Menu items include BB&C Smoked Whole Wings with Chipotle BBQ, blue cheese and hot sauce for $3 each, Drunken Bean Dip with goat cheese, tomato, and grilled flatbread for $10 and a BB&C Patty Melt Burger with grilled onions, vintage cheddar and rooftop pickles for $17. Don’t think they forgot to include drinks! Drink up with $25 beer buckets of Bud Light, Heineken, Tecate and Coors Banquet.
Bell Book & Candle 141 W 10th Street
Sunday: 5:30 PM – 2 AM (Kitchen closes at 10:30 PM)
The Ess-a-Bagel near Stuyvesant Town on 1st Avenue and 19th Street will put every other sub you’ve ever eaten to shame with their Super Bagel filled with meats, cheeses, and condiments. Your guests might even get so distracted they loose sight of the game!
If you’re a die-hard Patriots fan and want to express that in your food, too, look no further than Ed’s Lobster Bar for all your New England-style food needs. Their catering menu includes mini lobster rolls, garlic parmesan wings, fish tacos, and beef chili. To place an order, call Ed’s Lobster Bar (212) 343-3236 or email Chef Ed McFarland at edward@lobsterbarnyc.com. Orders are available for pickup or delivery (Manhattan only).
Ed’s Lobster Bar 222 Lafayette Street
Sunday: 12:00–9:30 PM
This classic Mexican spot is famous for their table-side guacamole…it just usually isn’t your table-side! Take home a Big Game Fiesta Package of freshly made guac, chips and salsa for $55 and all you’ll have to do is sit back and relax. To make your life even easier, add on the Refresher Pack of margarita bases in flavors like blood orange-pomegranate and mango-pineapple-jalapeño. Each flavor costs $29 and makes 16 cocktails, just add tequila!
Rosa Mexicano 41 Murray Street (Tribeca)
9 E 18th Street (Union Square)
1063 1st Avenue (58th Street)
61 Columbus Avenue (62nd Street)
Sunday: all open until 10 PM or later
If you’re looking to spend Thanksgiving somewhere cozy and let someone else baste the turkey, stop into the West Village’s Bell Book & Candle — described by locals as “a hidden gem” — at 141 West 10th Street.
It’s the ideal backdrop for a special turkey-day meal, a menu that will include a choice of Rooftop Greens or Butternut Squash Soup with fried sage, followed by Heritage Turkey from Lancaster with Pan Gravy served with Sourdough Sage Stuffing, chive Mashed Potato, Brussel Sprouts with Bacon, John’s Special Cranberry Sauce, and Maple Roasted Sweet Potato with Candied Pecan. Save room for that Brown Bag Apple Pie with Crème Fraiche Ice Cream.
Be sure to get those greens in: they actually come from the roof of the building. For the past six years, the food program has centered around local, organic, sustainable and overall responsible procurement of ingredients, used to build seasonal menus that also pull, literally, from the aeroponic roof-top tower garden six stories above the restaurant.
The menu is designed, in price and portion, based on the number of diners in your group — if you’ve got a big family, they can find room for everyone, as long as you reserve your spots.
“Thanksgiving is my all-time favorite holiday,” said Executive Chef John Mooney. “I love cooking traditional American meals, and when the restaurant is filled, it feels like one huge family. Nothing can beat it.”
Chef Mooney’s career has taken him on a winding, global culinary journey overseeing kitchen operations everywhere from India to Ireland and ultimately back to New York City. We’re glad he’s home for the holidays.
$55 per person; children under 10 years of age: $30
For a lot of brands, it’s a big deal when they have celebrated a 25th anniversary. In the case of Barone Fini Wines, the company’s history goes back over 500 years, and owner Giovanni Bonmartini-Fini is the 15th generation of the family involved with the company. These days, 150,000 cases of Barone Fini wine each year, specializing in Pinot Grigio and Merlot. Its tagline is “a noble commitment to quality,” as Barone Fini’s output is the product of sustainable agriculture.
Giovanni Bonmartini-Fini spoke to Downtown about the history of his family’s wine, also touching on his history with New York. Speaking of which, last month, Barone Fini partnered with I Trulli on a Ferragosto menu, of which 100% of the proceeds from sales of Barone Fini were donated to the Food Bank For New York City. More about Barone Fini can be found on the website of Deutsch Family Brands: www.deutschfamily.com.
Giovanni Bonmartini-Fini / Photo by Melinda McCoy
Is it true that your brand has been around since the late 1400s?
Giovanni Bonmartini-Fini: Yes, dating back 15 generations, my family has been cultivating vineyards since 1497 when the Bonmartinis and the Finis were joined in marriage and began producing wine. The Barone Fini brand has been in market for 40 years.
Did you ever consider a different career path? Or did you always known that wine was going to be in your future?
GB-F: With a long lineage of family members before me who cared for the vineyard, I always knew that I would be involved in the winery. But it was important to me to chart my own course and learn about science and business operations and as a foundation for my career. I studied Molecular Biology at Princeton University, which opened my eyes to science and chemistry and I ventured on my own to begin a printing business as well. Both of these experiences I bring with me to my role in the winery, helping to foster and grow the operations.
Do you have a favorite of the Barone Fini varieties?
GB-F: Pinot Grigio is my favorite varietal. It is the most universal wine I can think of with food, and I love to eat! It has a wonderful mountain crispness that resets the palate, enhancing the delicacy of a fish such as a Halibut or Seabass. But it also has the strength to slice through the salty, richest pasta sauce on earth called “Ragu alla Bolognese,” and its natural mineral balance soothes the heat of the hottest pepperoncini sauce. It will even make a steak taste better.
Beautiful packaging aside, what separates Barone Fini wines from other fine wines?
GB-F: Thank you for the compliment! The center of our label is my family’s coat of arms or crest. The Pinot Grigio inside our bottle is the highest quality standard for a Pinot Grigio because it is D.O.C. — Denominazione di Origine Controlata — and we go to great lengths to ensure that we produce the highest quality wine from old vines, through hand-harvesting methods. And most importantly, we are still able to produce this high-quality wine at an affordable price.
Why are only Pinot Grigio and Merlot made for the U.S.? Are there plans to offer other varieties in the future?
GB-F: 500 years of experience has taught us that both Pinot Grigio and Merlot are approachable wines that are perennial favorites for millions around the world, and our location in the region offers spectacular growing conditions for these two varietals. We take meticulous care of our old vines and cultivate only the finest grapes to produce the best Pinot Grigio and Merlot we can. Perhaps in time, we’ll look to plant new varietals on our gorgeous mountainsides, but for now, our focus is to continue producing the best quality wines at the most affordable prices.
When was the first time you came to New York City?
GB-F: I was born in Gloucester, MA and spent a lot of time in Milan as well as other European cities. My first time coming to New York City as an adult, I was incredibly excited to experience the energy and electricity of one of the greatest cities in the world.
Do you remember the first bar in New York to carry your products?
GB-F: It’s been a long time, so I don’t recall the first place I ever saw Barone Fini offered on the menu, but I vividly recall eating at Ristorante Gino on Lexington [Avenue] between 60th and 61st which had been in business for over 50 years and was a hotspot for the likes of Ed Sullivan and Frank Sinatra, back in the day. I remember sitting down and was so happy to see our Pinot Grigio on the menu, that we ordered a bottle and had a great meal.
Do you have a favorite bar in New York City?
GB-F: The city offers so many amazing places! I love The Loeb Boat House in Central Park. When I think of New York, I think Boathouse. How exciting to sip my Pinot Grigio with amazing food on a beautiful lake! I also enjoy AVRA on 48th between Lex and 3rd. Everything about Avra is about freshness. The fish is incredible and they have great wine to pair with their amazing menu and Mediterranean décor. I love the romantic setting of One If By Land Two If By Sea on 17 Barrow Street because I am a “romantico” at heart.
I also LOVE Pellegrino’s on Mulberry, it’s my new Gino’s! And of course, Delmonico Kitchen on West 38th [Street] –- a New York staple. I also enjoy going to Bell Book & Candle on West 10th Street. It reminds me of being in an underground cellar. Their rooftop garden is amazing, and the restaurant focuses on sustainable practices and responsible procurement, something we adhere to at the winery. Too many great places in the city to keep track of!
Later this month, there will be a Ferragosto menu at iTrulli in which 100% of the proceeds from sales of Barone Fini wines are donated to the Food Bank For New York City. How did that partnership come about?
GB-F: Ferragosto is an annual Italian summer holiday that originated as a religious holiday and a festival of the Italian harvest. Centuries ago, it was a time when aristocrats and peasants broke bread together, which was unheard of even back then. While today most Italians celebrate with fireworks and friends, we thought it would be appropriate to give back in the spirit of what Ferragosto was all about. The team at I Trulli put together a great menu and all proceeds from the sale of Barone Fini will support the Food Bank For New York City, which has worked to bring over one billion meals to hungry New Yorkers. What an incredibly beautiful accomplishment.
Is there a Barone Fini accomplishment you’re most proud of?
GB-F: Every day we’re blessed to be doing what we do for a living, and I often think if my ancestors would be proud of what we’ve accomplished. Adhering to their traditions and respecting the land they once cultivated, while producing a new vintage every year that maintains the highest quality, is something I take great pride in. It’s a responsibility we don’t take lightly, but I think my greatest accomplishment will be passing it down to the next generation and teaching them the skills that my parents taught me.