Bonita
"We don't like new," says Williamsburg
restaurateur Mark Firth. No kidding. Three years ago,
he and partner Andrew Tarlow restored a 1927 Brooklyn
diner (now Diner),
preserving its quaintly dilapidated ambience while applying
a veneer of hipness and-most important-assembling a talented
kitchen. Until recently, some of that talent stayed backstage:
A Oaxacan brunch cook's soft tacos were the undisputed
highlight of staff meals, but never made it on to the
menu. They can now be found, along with their creator
himself, at Bonita, Firth and Tarlow's new cantina,
four blocks away. In their trademark preservationist style,
they've kept the former Latino lunch counter's sign trumpeting
comidas criollas, the row of stools opposite the open
kitchen, and a few nods to the old menu, like plantains
and rotisserie chicken. But cheese-dusted corn on the
cob, fish tacos, and chiles rellenos, not to mention soft
light flickering off multicolored tiles, set an entirely
different tone.
338 Bedford
Avenue, Brooklyn
718-384-9500
· Cuisine: Latin
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Wondee
Siam ll
Given that there are no fewer than
six Thai restaurants on the Hell's Kitchen blocks between
49th Street and 53rd Street, we're unofficially calling
this neighborhood Little Bangkok. The latest addition,
Wondee Siam ll, pushes the boundary a little farther
north. Named in classic Mulberry Street fashion after
the first tiny Wondee Siam takeout joint, which resides
across the avenue and is bathed in enough fluorescent
wattage to light Shea Stadium, Siam ll is a relatively
posh and low-lit spin-off with 45 seats, linen napkins,
a rose on every table, and an expanded menu of tangy,
fiery salads like laab gai (minced chicken with red onion,
scallions, chilis, and lime juice), crispy-duck salad
with cashews and pineapple, and well-balanced curries
from subtly spiced to fierce the sort of thing food snobs
refer to as "good for New York" Thai.
813 Ninth Avenue,
near 53rd Street
917-286-1726
· Cuisine: Thai
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preview
Barocco
Hots
For Italian food's true believers, microwaving
lasagna is sacrilege. So at Barocco Hots, opening next
week, the owners insist on baking and reheating the various
meat and vegetable casseroles in the oven. Like all the branches
of the popular prepared-foods chain, this new one offers salads,
soups, and signature items like chicken potpie. But here, there's
table service, pressed panini, and a more extensive menu of
made-to-order hot food like pappardelle with green olives and
rabbit rag�, spaghetti with red clam sauce, and hanger steak
with red-wine reduction. Eventually, there will be breakfast,
brunch, and a backyard.
94 Greenwich Avenue
212-366-5936
· Cuisine: Italian
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Openings Archive
Week
of February 25
NYC, Beekman Kitchen, Bemelman's Bar
Week
of February 18
Negril Village, Kai, Cipriani Dolci, ONY
Week
of February 11
Calle Nueve
and
more ...
Photos: From top to bottom- Patrik Rytikangas,
Kenneth Chen, Carina Salvi
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