TOLNYA 2014, Park Slope header

Time Out Love New York Awards 2014: Park Slope

A local’s guide to Park Slope. Here are the area’s top local stores, bars, coffee shops, music venues and restaurants.

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Time Out readers have spoken, and below are the venues they named their absolute favorite in Park Slope. So the next time you’re in the area and in need of food, drink or retail therapy, make a beeline for these places and you won’t go far wrong.

For more great things to do in Park Slope check out our full Park Slope guide.

The winners

  • Mexican
  • Park Slope

It’s been a banner year for Mexican food in New York City, with cultish casual joints (Dos Toros) and fully articulated restaurants (Mesa Coyoacan) interpreting the country’s oft-oversimplified cuisine. Into the latter category falls Fonda, a dimly lit spot from chef Roberto Santibanez (Rosa Mexicana). Packed with locals since it opened, Fonda has become a South Slope hit. The spare room is mercifully devoid of South-of-the-Border kitsch: red paint on one wall, exposed brick on the other, and a bar wrapped in multi-colored fabric. If the decor is restrained, the food—contemporary, upscale Mexican—is comparatively indulgent. Duck zarape would have been an elegant starter—flavorsome braised fowl sandwiched between two tortillas—if not for the excess of creamy tomato-habanero sauce poured on top. Pink slices of carne asada (roasted beef) in an entre were juicy and beautifully cooked, but a messy blanket of mushroom-cream sauce obscured the flavor of the meat (along with everything else on the plate, including spinach and mashed sweet potatoes with honey). The same sloppy presentation undermined a special of cod envuelto—moist, flaky fish wrapped in serrano ham—which ceded its plate to a slew of shredded vegetables and yet another heavy mushroom sauce. The best dishes were the ones featuring just a few well-prepared components. Fish salpicon—a mixture of fish and spices meant to be spooned into tortillas—was moist chopped cod seasoned with a bright, herbaceous mix of serrano chil

  • Coffee shops
  • Park Slope

For Park Slopers, it doesn’t get any better than the funky, friendly, MacBook-loving vibe at women-owned microroastery-café Gorilla Coffee, where the rich, superdark coffee makes a fine accompaniment for that book proposal you’ve been procrastinating on for months. Score a window seat and get crackin’, buster.

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  • Shopping
  • Boutiques
  • Union Square

Clothing organized by color and lots of open space between the racks make shopping at this thrift store a breeze. Brooklyn native Lynette Kirchner’s second boutique (she also owns Two Lovers, a fancier vintage haven seven blocks away) offers truly affordable threads with everything priced between $6 and $70. Expect consignment goods from brands like Banana Republic and Theory, as well as vintage pieces from the 1950s through the 1980s. Try on a preworn striped knee-length skirt ($34) or snag an Ecote comfy cotton dress ($38). Other standouts include a John Meyer floral maxiskirt ($38) and an Aqua bright printed peasant top ($34).

  • Pubs
  • Park Slope

Liverpool-born Vinny Evans courts fellow expats with this English-style pub, decorated with maps of the motherland and taxidermied deer, squirrel and antelope heads. Eight taps dispense mostly British beers, including Guinness, Boddingtons and Fuller's London Pride, plus drinkers can also choose from cocktails, like a gin gimlet. You can pad all the boozing with savory pastries (such as steak and ale) from the English Pork Pie Company.

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  • Pubs
  • Park Slope

Upstairs in this bi-level bar, boozers chomp miniburgers and nip at microbrews like Sixpoint in the gentlemen’s-club–style anteroom (decorated with Soviet-era globes, paintings of fez-capped men, fireplaces)—before battling it out on the clay bocce courts. Downstairs, spectators are treated to a rotating roster of live talent, such as blaring bands, comedians and a monthly science night.

The runners-up

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The full list of winners by category

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