The Best Restaurants in the West Village, New York City

Lasagne
Lasagne | Photo by Angèle Kamp on Unsplash
Amy Schulman

Food Editor

The West Village boasts many things: charming, tree-lined, twisty streets, high-end fashion boutiques and a smattering of distinctive restaurants that deserve a visit.

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Joe’s Pizza

Joe’s has been slinging classic NYC slices since 1975, shuttling pie after pie out of the ovens and into the glass case – so no matter what time you arrive, you’re guaranteed to get a hot slice. The teeny, no-frills, cash-only institution has a slimmed-down menu: you’ll simply have to choose from plain, fresh mozzarella or Sicilian, with the occasional white or pepperoni pie making a cameo. Don’t fret if a line curls down Carmine Street – it always moves quickly.

The lasagna for two at Don Angie

Operated by a husband-and-wife team, Don Angie blends American comfort food with the precision and delicacy of Italian fare. Leafy chrysanthemum greens are showered with parmesan, garlic and sesame for a riff on caesar salad. The lasagna for two – thick-cut sheets of pasta rolled into delicate roses and swiped with tomato sauce, cheese and hunks of meat – is served bubbling in a cavernous ceramic dish. There’s an assortment of other dishes, too, like stuffed garlic flatbread and charred octopus – all prepared in a cozy space on the corner of Greenwich Avenue.

I Sodi

Thanks to the West Village’s maze-like streets, you’d almost miss I Sodi. At the helm is Rita Sodi, a self-taught chef who boasts an extensive West Village empire (including Buvette and Via Carota). I Sodi is crafted out of her mother’s Tuscan cooking – the beloved lasagna is a soaring structure of soft sheets of pasta offset with meat sauce, and the branzino is simply grilled, its supple meat a confluence of lemon and olive oil straight from Sodi’s property in Florence. The bar program is wonderfully dizzying: eight riffs on the negroni, plus a wine list as thick as the lasagna.

The Beatrice Inn

Formerly a chophouse helmed by Graydon Carter, The Beatrice Inn has morphed into a carnivore’s paradise. The subterranean restaurant is owned by Angie Mar, whose love of meat has catapulted it from a boys’ club into civilized ambience, rife with platters of rib eye and glittering vintage silverware. The move here is meat, and lots of it: cherrywood-smoked pork chops, mutton stroganoff and 90-day dry-aged porterhouse, all to be shared at the table.

Mary’s Fish Camp

Try the oysters, lobster rolls and shrimp burgers

It’s not too often a restaurant can seemingly catapult you to a dock on the ocean – one shepherding out gargantuan, buttery lobster rolls and oyster po’boys – without leaving the comfort of a city. That’s Mary’s Fish Camp: a quaint fish shack on a brownstone-lined West Village corner. Expect shrimp burgers and fish tacos, alongside seared sea scallops and shellfish bouillabaisse, served with charred bread primed to chase after runaway mussels.

Buvette

With its brick-lined walls, bottles of red wine shelved in the narrow dining room, and long, sweeping bar fronted by experienced baristas, Buvette serves as the neighborhood’s go-to for weekend brunch – or simply for a glass of wine in the hidden garden. Helmed by chef Jody Williams, who boasts a growing number of restaurants in the neighborhood, the all-day French gastrothèque opens at 7am and doesn’t close until 2am, crafting flaky croissants, steamed eggs painted with pink smoked salmon and crème fraiche and other French bistro standards like coq au vin and ratatouille topped with dollops of goat cheese.

Corner Bistro

Everyone flocks to Corner Bistro for the burger. The bona fide dive bar – complete with dark interiors, wooden booths, a long bar flush with stools and a black tin-stamped ceiling – has been a West Village mainstay since 1961. The tailored menu doesn’t offer much variety (think pub sandwiches, French fries and grilled cheeses), but it’s the famed burger that you’re here for: a thick patty is crowned with cheese and a tangle of crispy bacon, lettuce and tomato, bookended by a soft bun and slipped onto a white paper plate.

Via Carota

Fret not that Via Carota is walk-in only and often has insufferable wait times. It’s all part of the charm at this enchanting Italian restaurant that puts just as much heart into the kitchen’s slew of vegetables as into the house-made pasta. A rainbow of carrots arrives glistening under spiced yogurt and a dusting of pistachios; raw artichokes are brightened with mint and orange. Pastas are simple but elegant: hand-pinched tortelli stuffed with smoked ricotta; ribbons of tonnarelli swirled with cheese and pepper. Choose from a smattering of Italian wines to pair with lunch or dinner, or opt for one of the five kinds of negronis.

Barbuto

Barbuto is crafted out of a former industrial garage and still has that distinctive look and feel: tables and chairs are scattered in the loft-like space in view of the open kitchen, surrounded by garage window panes that open up when the weather gets warm. Here, chef Jonathan Waxman flaunts his characteristic California cuisine: puffy sweet-potato gnocchi slick with pesto; charred chicken painted with salsa verde; and slivers of raw brussels sprouts flush with almonds and kumquat.

L’Artusi

Drink Italian wines and feast on small plates at L’Artusi

Whether you’ve arrived at L’Artusi for a date night, a glass of wine at the bar or to fulfill your hankering for pasta, the swanky, dimly lit Italian restaurant aims to please. The smartly suited staff delivers platters of roasted mushrooms crowned with fried eggs, ribbons of bucatini swirled with pancetta and salty pecorino, and a whole squid flanked by hot Italian sausage, while the expert sommeliers guide you through the thick, Italian-focused wine list. Reservations can be hard to come by, but parties of two are often quickly seated at the bar.

Sushi Nakazawa

The eponymous Nakazawa was once an apprentice of Jiro Ono, the sushi authority from the documentary Jiro Dreams of Sushi. His New York City restaurant specializes in a pricey 20-course omakase, which changes depending on the fish provided by the fisherman. There might be wisps of sockeye or translucent snapper, soft Japanese sea urchin and spongy tamago. Sitting at the sushi counter provides a close-up encounter with all the action (and a higher price tag), but there are a handful of tables as well (where the omakase is slightly cheaper).

Joseph Leonard

This neighborhood restaurant, tucked into the first floor of a white townhouse, blends American fare with the charm of a faraway, rustic cabin. During the morning hours, the sunlight slants through the soaring windows, warming up the space where tables are filled with cups of coffee and scrambled eggs whisked with smoked trout and caramelized onions. Stop by at night for a drink at the bar; after midnight, the late-night menu kicks in, replete with a towering fried-chicken sandwich and crispy french fries.

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