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Russ & Daughters Café, best brunch NYC
Photograph: Paul WagtouiczRuss & Daughters Café

The best restaurants for Father’s Day brunch in NYC

Celebrate pop with Father’s Day brunch at top New York restaurants, from legendary delis to big-deal burger joints

Written by
Christina Izzo
&
Time Out New York editors
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You’ve already gone the usual whiskey, cigar and tie route, so why not amp up your Father’s Day celebrations by treating dad to a festive Father’s Brunch out on the town. Give it up for dad with some of the best burgers NYC has to offer, blow-out smoked-fish spreads at classic New York delis and top-rate ribs at the city’s best BBQ restaurants. Here’s where to take dad to for Father’s Day brunch in NYC.

RECOMMENDED: Full guide to Father’s Day in NYC

Restaurants for Father’s Day brunch

  • Restaurants
  • French
  • Greenwich Village

For three decades Keith McNally’s New York restaurants have defined effortless cool, generating the sort of overnight buzz—and long-running exclusivity—institutions are made of. McNally’s Minetta Tavern, a West Village relic reborn, may be the first iconic restaurant of postmillennial recession New York. The lovingly restored dining room is as nostalgic as the '21’ Club’s, setting a timeless, elegant stage for downtown brunching.

  • Shopping
  • Specialist food and drink
  • Lower East Side
Russ & Daughters has been serving lox, herring and other specialty appetizing foods since 1914, and its Super Heeb of horseradish cream cheese, wasabi-flavored roe and sublime whitefish salad form a holy trinity with an unholy name.
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  • Restaurants
  • French
  • Flatiron
The luxurious setting, flawless service, and preponderance of foie gras and truffles call to mind an haute cuisine titan like Jean-Georges Vongerichten or Daniel Boulud. The NoMad is the sophomore effort from chef Daniel Humm and front-of-house partner Will Guidara, who’ve been in cahoots at Eleven Madison Park since 2006. They inherited the lease and the reins of 
the place from their former boss Danny Meyer, capping a meteoric rise through New York’s fine-dining ranks. With plush armchairs, well-spaced tables and three-course dining, it's the kind of place dad can ease into while enjoying trussed-up brunch plates. 
  • Restaurants
  • American
  • Central Park
For 75 years, the gilded dining room nestled inside Central Park was a New York hallmark, a scenic magnet for tourists, brides and megawatt diners (Grace Kelly, John Lennon) alike. When the razzle-dazzle cash cow went bankrupt and shuttered in 2010, big-name backers from Danny Meyer to Donald Trump expressed interest in reviving the historic space. Imagine the surprise, then, when a pair of Philadelphia crepe-makers won the bid: Jim Caiola and David Salama, who revamp the landmark as an urban farmhouse decorated with wood-beam ceilings, leather-covered tables and multiple hearths. Mesa Grill alum Katy Sparks does a 180 from the original's Eisenhower-era plates for modern, fire-driven fare. The 11,000-square-foot space—nearly half the size of the old Tavern—is enclosed in a glass cube overlooking the park, with a 300-seat couryard and outdoor bar.
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  • Restaurants
  • Pizza
  • Prospect Heights
The sweet smell of smoke greets diners—and sticks to their hair and clothes—at this insta-classic. Thin, bubbly, locavore pizzas are the soul of this operation, helmed by husband-and-wife team Francine Stephens and Andrew Feinberg (Savoy). A sausage-and-cheese pie isn’t just a cravings-sater—it’s a work of art. The chewy, charred pizza, with coins of funky house-cured meat, buffalo mozzarella and fragrant Parmesan cheeses, a sauce that’s so sweet it reminds you that tomatoes are fruit, plus a drizzle of olive oil, is among the city’s best. Note: The place is popular, and they don’t take reservations.
  • Restaurants
  • Delis
  • Lower East Side
This cavernous cafeteria is a repository of New York history—glossies of celebs spanning the past century crowd the walls, and the classic Jewish deli offerings are nonpareil. Start with a crisp-skinned, all-beef hot dog for just $3.10. Then flag down a meat cutter and order a legendary sandwich. The brisket sings with horseradish, and the thick-cut pastrami stacked high between slices of rye is the stuff of dreams. Whether it's morning or night, everything tastes better with a glass of the hoppy house lager; if you’re on the wagon, make it a Dr. Brown’s.
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  • Restaurants
  • British
  • West Village

Blame talented toque April Bloomfield for the inevitable wait at this still-hopping West Village gastropub—a pioneer in the kind of meaty go-big-or-go-home grub that’s proliferated since the spot’s 2004 opening. The Pig still serves one of New York City’s best burgers, a rare patty heaped with intense Roquefort cheese and served with a tower of rosemary- and garlic-kissed shoestring fries. For brunch, seek out both classics (French toast with bananas and bourbon syrup, $17) and globally-inspired (sizzling sisig with jalapeño and egg, $17).

  • Restaurants
  • Soul and southern American
  • Flatiron
What would dad love more than a brunch of Southern-style comfort classics? At this offshoot of popular Carroll Gardens 'cue joint Char No 4, gut-sticking options range from pulled pork with red cabbage slaw, pickles and spicy jalapeño aioli to glazed doughnuts with citrus and sea salt. For the booze lovers, a backlit bar showcases the restaurant's selection of more than 200 bourbons.
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  • Restaurants
  • Barbecue
  • Flatiron
St. Louis native Danny Meyer’s barbecue joint tops the short list of Manhattan’s best ’cue contenders. Chef Kenny Callaghan knows his wet sauces and dry rubs: The menu includes traditional St. Louis spareribs, Texas salt-and-pepper beef ribs, Memphis baby backs and Kansas City spare ribs. The atmosphere is sports-heavy and includes a prominent bourbon bar and galvanized-metal buckets for your bones.
  • Restaurants
  • Italian
  • Nolita
When your first restaurant goes platinum, all eyes are trained on your next project. Torrisi and Carbone unspooled theirs in two parts, turning their original venue into a serious restaurant (all tasting menus, all the time) and moving its casual half into the vacant spot next door. Parm, that new cozy annex, is the Italian-American deli the daytime Torrisi strived to be, with more sandwiches and sides, new starters and mains, and a full-service bar with house wines and cocktails. The decor pays kitschy homage to the old-school venues that inspired this cooking, with wallpaper from the 1950s, neon, Formica and red swivel barstools.
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  • Restaurants
  • East Village

Chef Daniel Boulud doesn’t do decent, so-so or almost great. Even as he branches out around the world—with outlets in Palm Beach, Beijing and Vancouver—the perfectionist chef is forever tinkering with even his most venerable spots. Which is why it’s hardly surprising to discover that the food and service at DBGB improve week after week. Even in a city awash in unruly menus, DBGB’s stands out for its kitchen-sink scope. Until Boulud has the common sense to pare the thing down, you may want to come with a shortlist of desired dishes—and a preemptive idea of the sort of experience you’re after.

  • Restaurants
  • Peruvian
  • Flatiron

At this 159-seat Peruvian canteen and pisco bar in Chelsea, Peru native Jaime Pesaque serves upmarket Latin American plates: grilled hanger steak anticucho (skewers) with an aji panca glaze and rocoto salsa; corvina ceviche made with leche de tigre, sweet potato, corn and chilies; and slow-braised veal cheek with Peruvian corn cake. If you're in a rush, visit the casual offshoot, Latin Beet Kitchen, in the front of the dining area, instead. 

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Red Rooster Harlem
  • Restaurants
  • Soul and southern American
  • Harlem

Some of the city's most popular restaurants serve food that satisfies on a visceral level—consistent, accessible, easy to like. Places where the music, crowd, drinks and space explain, as much as the menu, why it's packed every night. Which sums up precisely the instant and overwhelming success of Marcus Samuelsson's Harlem bistro, Red Rooster. The restaurant's global soul food, a "We Are the World" mix of Southern-fried, East African, Scandinavian and French, is a good honest value. But it's outshone here by the venue itself, with its hobnobbing bar scrum, potent cocktails and lively jazz.

  • Restaurants
  • Mediterranean
  • Williamsburg

Michelin-starred chef Polo Dobkin reimagines his former Dressler space with creative American plates (Chatham cod "Pil Pil," horchata-spiked semifreddo), while wife Stephanie Lempert (Al Di La Vino) dreams up herbal cocktails like the rosemary-tinged Ra Ra Rye.

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  • Restaurants
  • American
  • Midtown West

Long before farm-to-table was more rule than exception, Jonathan Waxman was leading the produce-driven way. From 1984 to 1989, Waxman, with wine-expert partner Melvyn Master, introduced his then-exotic brand of California cuisine —nurtured under the great Alice Waters at Chez Panisse in Berkeley, California, and at Michael’s in Santa Monica—to the Upper East Side via Jams, a cabernet-fueled clubhouse with easy elegance and a killer roast chicken. After nearly three decades—and a successful foray into rustic Italian (11-year-old Barbuto)—, Jams is back, and so is that famed chicken ($25).

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