Italian
Most Popular guides
Because you don’t eat enough baked clams.
From an Arthur Avenue classic to a tiny takeout spot in Windsor Terrace, these are the reliable neighborhood Italian restaurants for any weeknight.
There's bucatini on every block, but here are the spots to prioritize.
Stylish pizza joints, pastry shops from the 1890s, and more actually good places to eat Italian food around Mulberry Street.
29 spots to order delivery from when you’re in the mood for cacio e pepe, veal parm, and lots of red wine.
Eating carbohydrates alone is a beautiful thing. Here’s where to do that.
Top Rated Spots
All Posts
Bring visitors to the second location of this NYC pizza-making institution.
Lioni Italian Heroes makes over 150 different sandwiches on impeccably blistered bread.
G&R Deli is home to a viral Italian meatball cone, but we suggest focusing on the sandwiches.
Locanda Verde’s Hudson Yards location caters to a new group of businesspeople with the same crowdpleasing Italian food.
Because you don’t eat enough baked clams.
In the West Village, Ciccio Cincin is an Italian restaurant with some Chinese flavors mixed in.
This splashy Italian restaurant is perfect for Midtown East power lunchers—but anyone is bound to love these pastas.
It’s still a Tao spot, and you can tell, but the Italian-ish Crane Club is more mature than its sister restaurants.
You can get F&F Pizzeria’s legendary clam pie at their sit-down restaurant. But don’t miss the scampi.
Pasta Night is an easy spot on Vanderbilt Avenue for reasonably-sized plates of pasta at somewhat reasonable prices.
The Southern Italian sister restaurant of Rezdôra serves an incredible plate of chilled spaghetti.
Stylish pizza joints, pastry shops from the 1890s, and more actually good places to eat Italian food around Mulberry Street.