The 15 Most Iconic NYC Foods You Have to Try

And exactly where to get them. Specific addresses, exact orders, real prices. No hedging.

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Pastrami on Rye
01

Pastrami on Rye

Katz's Delicatessen· 205 E Houston St, Lower East Side
What to OrderPastrami on rye, hand-carved, with mustard — not mayo, never mayo~$25

Katz's has been open since 1888. The pastrami is cured for weeks, smoked, and then steamed to order. The sandwich is enormous — half is a reasonable meal. The other half is lunch tomorrow. This is the most famous deli sandwich in the world, and it deserves the reputation.

Insider TipAsk the carver for a taste before they assemble the sandwich. It is expected, and they will give you a generous slice. Tip your carver $2–3 — it earns you a more generous hand.
The New York Slice
02

The New York Slice

Joe's Pizza· 7 Carmine St, Greenwich Village
What to OrderOne plain slice, eat it standing at the counter~$4

Joe's has been the benchmark for the New York slice since 1975. Thin crust, blistered undercarriage, cheese that pulls to your elbow. This is what every other American city is trying to replicate. The price is still $4. The quality has never changed.

Insider TipFold it lengthwise before the first bite. This is not optional — it is structural engineering. The slice is too wide to eat flat without losing cheese.
Everything Bagel with Lox
03

Everything Bagel with Lox

Russ & Daughters· 179 E Houston St, Lower East Side
What to OrderEverything bagel, cream cheese, Nova lox, capers, red onion~$22

Russ & Daughters has been selling smoked fish on the Lower East Side since 1914. The Nova lox is silky, barely salty, and nothing like the packaged version you have had anywhere else. The everything bagel is baked fresh daily — the seeds are toasted, not raw.

Insider TipGo on a weekday morning before 10am. Weekend lines can run 45 minutes. The café next door (Russ & Daughters Café) takes reservations if you want to sit down.
Soup Dumplings (Xiao Long Bao)
04

Soup Dumplings (Xiao Long Bao)

Joe's Shanghai· 9 Pell St, Chinatown
What to OrderPork soup dumplings (xiao long bao), 8 per order~$12

Joe's Shanghai brought soup dumplings to New York and they have been the standard ever since. The broth inside is made from pork gelatin that melts during steaming. Each dumpling contains a full mouthful of rich, porky broth that will burn you if you are not careful.

Insider TipPlace the whole dumpling on a spoon, bite a small hole in the side, let the soup drain onto the spoon, drink the soup, then eat the dumpling. Do not bite straight through — the soup is boiling hot.
Dim Sum
05

Dim Sum

Nom Wah Tea Parlor· 13 Doyers St, Chinatown
What to OrderShrimp rice noodle rolls, egg tarts, turnip cake, pork buns$4–8 per dish

Nom Wah opened in 1920 and is the oldest dim sum restaurant in New York. Dim sum is not a single dish — it is a style of eating. Small plates arrive continuously. Order 3–4 dishes per person and keep adding as you go. The egg tarts are non-negotiable.

Insider TipGo on a weekend morning between 10am and noon for the full experience. Cash preferred at most Chinatown spots. Bring $40–60 for a full morning of eating for two.
The Chopped Cheese
06

The Chopped Cheese

Hajji's (Blue Sky Deli)· 1st Ave & 110th St, East Harlem
What to OrderChopped cheese on a hero roll~$8

Ground beef, onions, and American cheese chopped together on a flat-top grill, served on a hero roll with lettuce, tomato, and condiments. It is the Harlem equivalent of a Philly cheesesteak — and many New Yorkers would argue it is better. This is a bodega sandwich. The counter is small and there is no menu on the wall.

Insider TipJust say 'chopped cheese' when you walk in. They know. Be respectful, be patient, and tip if there is a jar. The sandwich takes about 5 minutes.
Hand-Pulled Noodles
07

Hand-Pulled Noodles

Xi'an Famous Foods· 38 W 46th St, Midtown (multiple locations)
What to OrderSpicy cumin lamb hand-ripped noodles (biang biang style)~$16

Xi'an Famous Foods started as a single stall in Flushing, Queens. The hand-pulled noodles are thick, chewy, and coated in a cumin-heavy lamb sauce that is unlike anything else in the city. The noodles are made to order — the wait is worth it.

Insider TipThe spice level is real. If you are sensitive to heat, ask for medium. The Midtown location on 46th St is the most convenient for visitors near Times Square.
Junior's Cheesecake
08

Junior's Cheesecake

Junior's Restaurant· 386 Flatbush Ave Ext, Downtown Brooklyn
What to OrderOriginal plain cheesecake, one slice~$12

Junior's has been making the same cheesecake since 1950. Dense, creamy, with a thin graham cracker base. New York cheesecake uses cream cheese, not ricotta, and it is not light. This is the standard that every other cheesecake in the city is measured against.

Insider TipTake the B or Q train to DeKalb Ave — it is a 20-minute ride from Midtown. The Brooklyn original is worth the trip. The Times Square location is convenient but the atmosphere is entirely different.
The Lobster Roll
09

The Lobster Roll

The Lobster Place· 75 9th Ave (Chelsea Market), Chelsea
What to OrderCold Maine lobster roll, dressed with mayo and lemon~$28–32

The Lobster Place sources directly from Maine. The lobster roll is cold, dressed simply with mayo and a touch of lemon, served on a toasted split-top bun. It is a working fish market — you can see the live lobsters in the tanks. Chelsea Market itself is worth the visit.

Insider TipGet there before 1pm on weekends to avoid the longest lines. The Connecticut-style (warm, with butter) is also excellent — same quality lobster, different preparation.
The Black & White Cookie
10

The Black & White Cookie

William Greenberg Desserts· 1100 Madison Ave, Upper East Side
What to OrderOne black and white cookie — the large size~$4

The black and white cookie is a New York institution that does not exist anywhere else in the same form. Half vanilla fondant, half chocolate fondant, on a soft lemon-scented cake base. It should be soft, not crispy. If it is crispy, it is stale. William Greenberg has been making these since 1946.

Insider TipEat it the same day — these do not travel well and are best within a few hours of baking. Buy two: one for the walk home, one for later.
Peter Luger Steak
11

Peter Luger Steak

Peter Luger Steak House· 178 Broadway, Williamsburg, Brooklyn
What to OrderPorterhouse for two, medium rare, with the German fried potatoes$60–80 per person

Peter Luger has been serving the same dry-aged porterhouse since 1887. The steak arrives in a pool of butter and beef drippings. There is no menu to speak of — you are here for the porterhouse. The service is famously brusque. The steak is famously extraordinary.

Insider TipCash only — they have not accepted credit cards in over a century and they are not starting now. Bring cash. Make a reservation weeks in advance, especially for weekends.
The Cronut
12

The Cronut

Dominique Ansel Bakery· 189 Spring St, SoHo
What to OrderThe Cronut (flavor changes monthly) — one per person limit~$7

Dominique Ansel invented the Cronut in 2013 — a croissant-doughnut hybrid that created a line around the block for two years. The hype has settled but the pastry has not changed. It is still laminated in the same way, still filled with the same care, still worth the trip to SoHo.

Insider TipThey make a limited quantity each day. Arrive by 8am to guarantee one. The bakery opens at 8am on weekdays, 9am on weekends. The DKA (Dominique's Kouign Amann) is equally worth ordering.
The NYC Hot Dog
13

The NYC Hot Dog

Gray's Papaya· 2090 Broadway (at 72nd St), Upper West Side
What to OrderTwo hot dogs with mustard and sauerkraut, one papaya drink~$6 for the combo

The New York street hot dog is a specific thing: a natural casing frankfurter, snapped when you bite it, served in a steamed bun with yellow mustard and sauerkraut or onion sauce. Gray's Papaya has been serving them since 1973. The papaya drink is not optional.

Insider TipThe 'Recession Special' — two hot dogs and a drink — is still one of the best value meals in the city. Open 24 hours. The hot dog cart version outside Katz's is also excellent and more convenient if you are already on the LES.
Peking Duck
14

Peking Duck

Peking Duck House· 28 Mott St, Chinatown
What to OrderWhole Peking duck (serves 2–3), carved tableside$50–60 for the whole duck

Peking Duck House has been carving ducks tableside since 1973. The skin is lacquered and crispy, the meat is rich, and the pancakes are thin. The carver brings the duck to your table and works through it in front of you. It is a meal and a performance.

Insider TipOrder the whole duck, not the half — the ratio of skin to meat is better. Call ahead to reserve a duck; they sometimes sell out on weekends. The hoisin sauce and scallions are already on the table.
Egg Cream
15

Egg Cream

Yonah Schimmel Knish Bakery· 137 E Houston St, Lower East Side
What to OrderChocolate egg cream (contains no eggs, no cream)~$4

The egg cream is a New York original: Fox's U-Bet chocolate syrup, whole milk, and seltzer. No eggs. No cream. The name is a mystery. The drink is not — it is cold, slightly sweet, and fizzy in a way that no other drink replicates. Yonah Schimmel has been on Houston Street since 1910.

Insider TipDrink it immediately. An egg cream separates within minutes and is not the same drink after that. Order the knish while you are there — it is the other thing Yonah Schimmel is famous for.

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