Dim sum brunches in NYC: Five great dim sum palaces to visit
Check out our favorite picks for the Chinese breakfast spread, from dim sum stalwarts in Chinatown to a well-heeled Cantonese chain in Queens.
Tue May 29 2012
-
Bargain brunches
-
Beyond the mimosa: Best cocktails for brunch
-
Meals for brunch agnostics
-
Added-value brunches
-
Breakfast sandwiches
-
Huevos rancheros
-
French toast
-
Eggs Benedict
-
Pancakes
-
Dim-sum brunches
-
Food photos: Brunch dishes and drinks (SLIDE SHOW)
The best brunch in NYC 2012: Your guide to a late breakfast
When you tire of eggs for brunch, try a communal style of cuisine with our favorite places for a dim sum brunch.
Genting Palace
Kick off a day at Ozone Park’s Resorts World Casino New York with dim sum at this well-heeled Cantonese chain, which caters to numerous Chinese businessmen taking a break from cranking the slot machines or betting on electronic game tables. Grab a seat by the windows overlooking the Aqueduct Racetrack and work through à la carte standouts like sticky cheong fun (rice noodles) with shrimp and golden chives ($4.50), exceptionally tender pan-fried taro cakes ($3.50), and Shanghai-style steamed buns that gush a soupy mix of pork and crab ($4.50).
- Resorts World Casino, 110-00 Rockaway Blvd, Ozone Park, Queens
Jing Fong
- Price band: 2/4
- Critics choice
Those seeking the atmosphere of a bustling Hong Kong dim-sum palace will find it at this Chinatown stalwart, where gaudy neon lights line the ceiling and walkie-talkie–toting staff orchestrates the seating like air-traffic controllers. Flag down passing carts carrying dependable bites like translucent dumplings packed with snow-pea leaves and shrimp, and mounds of fried sticky rice studded with Chinese sausage. Arrive before 10am on weekends to beat the crowd and snag the freshest items.
- 20 Elizabeth St, (between Bayard and Canal St), 10013
Nom Wah Tea Parlor
- Price band: 1/4
- Critics choice
The city’s oldest dim-sum parlor (it first opened in 1920) is also one of its most innovative, eschewing pushcarts for made-to-order dim sum that’s as fresh as any in town. The egg rolls ($3.50–$3.95) are like none you’ve ever tasted, with a crunchy shell that gives way to delicate folds of egg crêpe and a savory chicken-and-vegetable filling. Other highlights include fluffy roasted-pork buns ($1.25) and tender eggplant stuffed with a spiced shrimp-and-scallion mixture ($3.50).
- 13 Doyers St, (between Bowery and Pell St), 10013
RedFarm
- Price band: 2/4
- Critics choice
Restaurateur Ed Schoenfeld redefines the Chinese breakfast tradition at his sceney West Village joint, where dumpling wizard Joe Ng turns out whimsical riffs on the classics. Delicate har gao—shrimp dumplings also stuffed with bamboo shoots, crab or lobster—are designed to look like ghosts fleeing from a sweet-potato Pac-Man, and pork-and-shrimp shumai arrive skewered over shot glasses of warm carrot soup. While not to everyone’s taste, the playful Katz’s pastrami egg roll is a novelty worth trying at least once.
- 529 Hudson St, (between Charles and W 10th Sts)
Pacificana
- Price band: 1/4
- Critics choice
A scrum of Chinese families snakes out of this boisterous 450-seat Cantonese joint on weekends, marking it as one of the highlights of Brooklyn’s Chinatown. Once you’re in, flag down waiters ferrying a procession of goodies coming out of the open kitchen—fatty spareribs with bean-curd sauce, plump chive-packed dumplings with a sear from the griddle and platters of roasted pork served with exceptionally crispy strips of skin. All the familiar items hit the spot, but save some room to sample offbeat selections like Hong Kong–style duck tongues marinated in soy sauce.
- 813 55th St, (between Eighth and Ninth Aves)
Related
Newsletter
Get our free daily newsletter for access to handpicked events and activities at insider-only prices.












Comments & ratings