They also serve an extravagant meal (called the LSD) that involves lobster, steak, and duck, which costs $495 and feeds 5-6. Check their Instagram for more information.īrooklyn Chop House : Brooklyn Chop House has steak, pork chops, veal chops, and red velvet cake.
Stop by for some flavors like Foxy Brown (mocha with caramel and chocolate wafers) and Pink Floyd (strawberry cheesecake). Mikey Likes It East Village : This East Village ice cream spot is open every day, and it stays open extra late (until 1am) on weekends. This place is open every day but Monday, and you can find delivery options on their website. But no matter which one you choose, you’ll get several rolls of fantastic injera bread with your order. This counter-service spot is open noon to 8pm every day.Īwash : The meat sampler at Awash includes your choice of four Ethiopian dishes for $20, while the vegetable sampler includes your choice of five for the same price. Tings Jamaican Jerk Chicken : Want to pick up some bread pudding, jerk chicken with rice and peas, and curry goat in Chelsea Market? That's what Tings is for. You can also enjoy their $35-dollar prix-fixe weekend brunch among the greenery on their outdoor patio. Gypsy Rose Bistro: Gypsy Rose is an extensive space attached to a Holiday Inn Hotel with a selection of bar snacks like fried shrimp and wings, and mains like assiette du pêcheur and dibi lamb. Please also consider donating to organizations fighting for racial justice-like the ACLU, NAACP, Know Your Rights Camp, Black Visions Collective, Equal Justice Initiative, and Mutual Aid NYC. But the following sites have been compiling Black-owned business information for years: EatOkra, Black-Owned Brooklyn, Travel Noire, I Got Your Black, and Brunchnista. Email us at to let us know of restaurants that should be included on this list, and we’ll check them out as soon as we can. These are restaurants that we should be supporting always. This is not just a list of Black-owned restaurants we should all be supporting today, tomorrow, or next week. One incredibly important, tangible way to show up is by supporting Black-owned restaurants, which is why we’ve put together this list of NYC’s Black-owned restaurants, organized by borough and neighborhood. Show solidarity with the Black community by putting your money straight into Black-owned businesses.