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Home > Restaurants > Allen & Delancey

Allen & Delancey

Critic's Pick Critics' Pick

115 Allen St., New York, NY 10002
at Delancey St.  See Map | Subway Directions Hopstop Popup
212-253-5400 Send to Phone

  • Critics' Rating: star star Price Range: $$-$$$
  • Reader Rating:

    5.1 out of 10

    7 Reviews | Write a Review

  • Cuisine: American Nouveau, Irish/English
Photo by Julie Mack

Hours

Mon-Wed, 6pm-11pm; Thu-Sat, 6pm-2am; Sun, 5pm-10pm

Nearby Subway Stops

F at Delancey St.; J, M, Z at Essex St.

Prices

$27-$32

Payment Methods

American Express, MasterCard, Visa

Special Features

  • Hot Spot
  • Late-Night Dining
  • Notable Chef
  • Design Standout
  • Special Occasion
  • Online Reservation

Alcohol

  • Full Bar

Reservations

Recommended

Profile

Allen & Delancey exhibits many characteristics common to the neighborhood, with one twist. The rooms are windowless and dimly lit, yes, and there is an elegant little bar up front, where you can sit nursing your cinnamon pisco sour by candlelight. A thick curtain of red velvet separates the two little dining rooms, which are appointed with old oil paintings and shelves of books. But the menu at Allen & Delancey is not your normal Lower East Side menu. It contains references to truffled fingerlings, fenugreek syrup, and slips of raw hamachi decorated with what are described as “pink grapefruit beads.” These conspicuous uptown flourishes are the work of an uptown chef, Neil Ferguson, who toiled for many years as chief lieutenant to Gordon Ramsay before getting summarily sacked by the volatile Scotsman. Like his former boss, Ferguson is a fussy classicist at heart, and he labors mightily to introduce a sense of posh, even delicate Britishness to his new hipster milieu. More often than not, he succeeds, especially when serving fancified versions of old English favorites, like deposits of beef-bone marrow larded with caviar and puréed shallots, and a delicious terrine made with layers of pressed ham knuckle, guinea hen, and foie gras. My little sweetbread “raviolo” was a welcome relief from the endless procession of meatball sliders you see in restaurants downtown, and the seared sea scallops (doused with “celery-root cream”) were the equal of the seared sea scallops served in some of the city’s more-established fine-dining Zip Codes. On the negative side, the fishy, crispy-skinned mackerel appetizer didn’t seem to meld with all the fruit and bacon on the plate, and the sashimi-quality hamachi was soaked in perhaps a few too many beads of pink grapefruit.

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New York Magazine Reviews

Featured In

5.1 "Mixed Reviews"
Average Reader Rating
on a Scale of 10
Write Your Own Review

Poor Service ruined experience

ip17268 from 10028 | Posted on 8/12/08

Overall Reader Rating: 6 (Mixed Reviews)
Food: 8
Service: 4
Décor: 10
Value: 5

I went to Allen & Delancey for a special dinner last night, and had anticipated the evening for a month. We had a 9:30 reservation (on a Monday night) and planned to take our time and enjoy the dinner. Our intial...Read More

average food, terrible service

countdemonet from 10019 | Posted on 5/7/08

Overall Reader Rating: 3 (Not Recommended)
Food: 4
Service: 2
Décor: 6
Value: 2

What stands out about Allen & Delancey is the egregiously terrible service - both at the bar and in the restaurant. If the food was excellent, it might be possible to overlook the pitifully low quality service. No such luck. I'll never...Read More

Read All 7 Reviews >>

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