Torrisi, located in the Puck building, is how a trendy New York restaurant would be depicted in a Hollywood movie, complete with black SUVs idling out front and a doorman standing guard at the entrance. Bartenders in white jackets shake and stir drinks with abandon at the mile-long bar (it seats 35), which faces the open kitchen. The grand dining room features white tablecloths and a checkered marble floor. The food is an homage to Italian food with a touch of outlier inspirations like cavatelli with Jamaican beef rags and Asian-style smashed cucumbers. It feels like the New Yorkiest of restaurants and exactly where you want to be on a Saturday night.
If Torrisi is big and bold, I Sodi is the epitome of discreet luxury dining. Since opening her eponymous restaurant on a seedy strip of Christopher street in 2008, chef Rita Sodi has amassed an “ if you know, you know” crowd who comes for her Nonna-style food like homemade lasagna and grilled rabbit with rosemary. The restaurant recently moved around the corner but the vibe is still the same: simple and delicious food, a warm intimate setting, and always a cool vibe.
Some people equate dining at Per Se, Thomas Keller’s temple of fine dining in Columbus Circle, as an almost religious experience. It’s certainly a long one—you’ll get bragging rights for just sitting through a meal that can take up to four hours. But you will delight indulging in a procession of some of the most intricate and ambitious plates coming out of any kitchen. Highlights include his signature dish of oysters and pearls (a sabayon of pearl tapioca, Island Creek oysters, and sturgeon caviar), Hudson Valley duck with foie gras and charcoal grilled Waygu beef. The kitchen takes pride in showcasing the finest bounty from local farms and no ingredient is ever repeated during the meal. All served on Limoges china and presented by a team of expert waiters who seem to float through the room, this is a meal for the books.
See the other spots that made the list below.