Highlights from a recent NYC trip. Ate a lot. These are the bites worth going out of the way for:
There's a free bus that leaves LaGuardia every 15 minutes 24 hours a day and drops people off at the Roosevelt/74th train station. Steps away is Nepali Bhanchha Ghar, which has the best momos I've ever had. This place has been my first or last stop on my last several trips to New York. There are other momos in the neighborhood that get raves and I should probably branch out at some point. Maybe I'll do a momo crawl one day. Anyhow, get whatever filling you like (I love the goat), but make sure you get the option where they're served in a bowl of the magnificent jhol.
It's about a 3 minute walk from there to Tong, a Bangladeshi food cart where these fuchka are available. The shells are made to order and your choices are spice/not spicy and with or without egg. I recommend spicy with egg. Just outstanding and fun to eat. Note: Tong also has a brick and mortar location but I haven't been. I assume it's great. At the cart, they put out stools for you if you aren't taking your food somewhere else.
World class pizza and world class soft serve in one place? Yep, at the Manhattan location of L'Industrie (Brooklyn location has both as well). The burrata slice is much hyped and every pit of it is deserved. Great crust, great sauce, great cheese; this might be the best slice in NYC at the moment. I might have liked the ice cream even more (though the 90+ temperature and high humidity surely influenced that hot take). Swirl is always the right choice with soft serve. The flavors on my visit were cantaloupe and olive oil. Perhaps not a natural pairing, but my goodness did it work.
I'm no expert on Burmese food but I thought the mohinga at Rangoon in Brooklyn (there's a Chelsea location too) was exceptional. So much flavor and that onion fritter in there was a culinary masterpiece. The tea leaf salad was also great, though I should have asked for more chiles, as was the cold tamarind noodle.
I was eating with a pescatarian so I couldn't get the goat roti at Ali's Trinbago Roti Shop. I'm not going to say the vegetarian roti made me forget about goat, but this was fantastic. No seating but there's a concrete park with a few benches a couple blocks away.
The famed veggie burger at Superiority Burger was a massive mushy disappointment (though the pickles and tomato on top were great). But feel free to ignore me on that one since my dining companion and I are clearly outliers. Do not ignore me on this: the apricot sorbet is one of the best ice creams I've ever had. Unfortunately, the sorbet flavors change every few days, but this one was good enough that I'd vouch for every other flavor they come up with. So tangy and sweet and inexplicably creamy.
I'm a sucker for pandan and Bánh by Lauren didn't disappoint. The macaron was the winner, but the bánh bò nướng (honeycomb cake) and coffee cake were both very good. I was alone on this stop so I couldn't try the pandan chiffon cake, but that's the priority for my next visit.
I've explored a lot of NYC over the years but I've never made it as far north in Manhattan as D'Lili Bakery. I'd seen the quesillo on the
Eating in Translation Instagram account and it looked great. I couldn't tell you the definitive difference between quesillo and flan, though the quesillo seemed denser than the flan I'm used to. Anyhow, this was great. Would I make a special trip all the way up to 207th street just to get it? Probably not, but there's plenty of other stuff to do up there.
And once you're done up in that part of Manhattan, you can easily take a bus east into the Bronx. 20 minutes on the bus and a 10 minute walk will get you to the Arthur Avenue neighborhood, where the homemade mozzarella at Casa Della Mozzarella is top notch and stars in some really great sandwiches. This is the mozzarella, artichoke, & tomato. It was a great, great sandwich. Had I added some prosciutto or other salty meat, it would have reached legendary status. Let me put it this way: when most people tell me an Italian sandwich is as good as Graziano's, I think they're idiots. If someone told me they think Casa Della Mozzarella is as good as Graziano's, I'd say I need to do more research but they might be right. The smoked mozzarella is also excellent.
The best Indian meal I've ever had was Semma. It's a pain in the ass to get into. Either be online at 12:01 AM far in advance to claim a table or get there early to snag a walk-in seat at the bar. It's completely worth it, but just a pain. This trip was booked a week ahead of time and timing made walking into Semma a practical impossibility. Adda, from the same restaurant group, is in Long Island City, so it made a very convenient final meal before getting to the airport. This was an exceptional meal from start to finish but the dish that sticks with me is the "Paneer Chilly," a housemade paneer coated in spices. So simple but so, so delicious.