Tag: new-york

  • NYC Weekday Lunch Deals by Borough

    I have been doing research on this recently, going through menus and deal listings across the boroughs to find where the actual value is hiding. Here is what I found, organized by type.

    French Prix Fixe: More Than You Would Expect for the Price

    A French prix fixe lunch is one of the better known deals for people who work in Midtown, but most people do not realize how far the value actually goes. A fixed price gets you two or three courses during a midday window on weekdays. The rooms tend to be calm. The food tends to be real restaurant cooking, not a pared-down lunch version.

    Here are the spots that stood out in my research.

    RestaurantNeighborhoodDealHours
    Paname Petite BrasserieMidtown East (2nd Ave & 56th St)2 courses $23 / 3 courses $26Daily, noon to 3pm
    Boucherie West VillageWest Village (7th Ave South)3 courses $33Mon to Fri, 11am to 4pm
    Red Eye GrillMidtown (7th Ave)2 courses $32Weekdays only
    CopinetteMidtown East (1st Ave & 50th St)3 courses $34Mon to Fri, noon to 3:30pm

    Paname is the standout value on paper. Three courses for $26 in Midtown, with a menu that includes escargot, crab cakes, chicken paillard, and creme brulee. That is not a discounted menu. It is just an honest price for a French restaurant that wants to fill seats at lunch.

    Boucherie gives you the widest window, 11am to 4pm, which creates real flexibility for either a late morning or early afternoon meal. Three courses includes soup or salad plus a main like mushroom ravioli or croque monsieur.

    Copinette runs a strong three course menu with crispy tortellini, grilled branzino, and pappardelle ragu. Steak frites is available as a $15 supplement if you want to go further, but the base menu already looks like more than you paid for.

    Pizza and Italian Casual: The Everyday Lunch

    This is where the range gets wide. New York has hundreds of Italian spots running weekday lunch specials. Most of what I found lands between seven and fifteen dollars and includes a drink. The best of them are genuine meals, not just filler.

    Here is what the menus show across the boroughs.

    RestaurantNeighborhoodStarting PriceWhat Is Included
    Big John’s Pizza and PastaQueens Village, Queens$4.75Daily rotating hero or pasta special
    Sicily’s Best PizzeriaBushwick, Brooklyn$7.00Pasta or burger with fries, 11am to 4pm
    Michelangelo’s PizzeriaWest Brighton, Staten Island$8.50Wrap, gyro, hero, or personal pie with soda or water
    Dino’s PizzeriaRiverdale, Bronx$9.00Hero or pasta with mini wedge, soda, and fries or salad
    Plaza PizzaStaten Island$9.95Entree with drink
    Joe’s Pizza and PastaWoodhaven, Queens$9.99Pasta, entree, or panini with drink, 11am to 3pm
    Genesis PizzaFlushing, Queens$10.40Hot hero, pasta, or wings with fries and free soda
    Bklyn PizzaBushwick, Brooklyn$11.56Heroes and pizzette, 11am to 3pm
    Bari’s PizzaStaten Island$12.00Entree with drink
    Rosebank PizzaRosebank, Staten Island$13.50Wide selection with a can of soda
    Goodfella’s Brick OvenHylan Blvd, Staten Island$16.00Entree with side salad and beverage, 11am to 3pm

    Big John’s in Queens Village is the most remarkable thing on this list in terms of pure value. Their menu shows a different special every day of the week. Monday is meatball hero. Tuesday is chicken. Wednesday is eggplant. Thursday is sausage. Friday cycles back to meatball. Specials start at $4.75. In 2026, in New York, that number is striking.

    Dino’s in Riverdale posts a $9 all in lunch that bundles a mini wedge, a soda, your choice of fries or salad, and a full hero or pasta. That combination of price and completeness is harder to find than it should be.

    Genesis in Flushing lists hot heroes, baked pastas, or wings with fries and a free drink at $10.40 across the board. The menu is long and the pricing is consistent, which is usually a good sign.

    What Makes a Lunch Deal Worth It

    Not every lunch special is actually a deal. Some are just the regular menu with a fountain soda added at the same price as ordering them separately. Here is what separates a real deal from a dressed-up regular order.

    What to look forWhat to avoid
    The price is lower than ordering items separatelyA regular entree plus a soda at the same total price
    The special is available consistently throughout the weekSpecials that disappear seasonally or change without notice
    A drink is included, not just listed as an add-onA drink listed at an additional charge that erases the savings
    The window is long enough to eat without feeling rushedA 90 minute technical window with obvious table-turning pressure

    The pattern in my research is that the best deals come from restaurants using lunch to fill seats during slower hours. French spots use prix fixe menus to attract the midday crowd. Pizza shops run specials to compete with fast food. The ones that do it honestly tend to also be the ones where the food and the room reflect some actual care.

    My Current Top Picks by Category

    CategoryPickWhy
    French prix fixePaname Petite BrasserieThree courses for $26 in Midtown including dessert
    Budget ItalianBig John’s, Queens VillageDaily rotating specials from $4.75
    Midrange ItalianDino’s Pizzeria, Riverdale$9 all in with salad, soda, and a full entree
    Upscale casualGoodfella’s, Staten Island$16 with salad and drink from a brick oven
    Best time windowBoucherie West Village11am to 4pm, which gives you real flexibility

    This list will keep growing as I find more worth adding.

  • Living in NYC: Recommendations from Year One

    This isn’t a “best of New York” list. It’s a set of things that made day-to-day life here noticeably better after a year of trial, error, and mild overcommitment.

    Live somewhere walkable, even if it costs more.
    Being able to walk to coffee, groceries, bars, parks, and friends changes how often you actually use the city. Central neighborhoods beat “nice but remote” ones. If you can walk most places, the city feels smaller and calmer.

    Optimize for your daily radius, not your weekend fantasies.
    It’s tempting to pick a neighborhood based on where you might go. Pick based on where you actually end up going on a Tuesday night. Your regular routes matter more than edge cases.

    Say yes early, then get selective later.
    The first six to nine months are for sampling. Go to things. Accept random invitations. Use social apps if that lowers friction.

    Don’t confuse busyness with connection.
    New York makes it easy to be socially full but relationally thin. That’s normal. The goal isn’t more plans, it’s seeing the same people again without effort.

    Let the city regulate you instead of pushing against it.
    You don’t need to extract everything from New York. You don’t need to “do the most.” Some weeks are loud. Some are quiet. Both count.

    Walk as much as possible.
    Walking is the cheat code. Transit is efficient, but walking teaches you where you actually are.

    Expect housing to be temporary, and don’t panic about it.
    Month-to-month living feels unstable until you realize that flexibility is the feature.

    Spend money on access, not status.
    Pay for things that reduce friction: proximity, convenience, time.

    Use the city instead of escaping it.
    Ironically, living here reduced my urge to travel.

    Accept that NYC won’t give you direction.
    A city is a container, not a compass.

    If New York works for you, it’ll feel like a place that quietly supports a lot of different lives at once, including yours.