logo
Bodegas are the new ‘It' restaurants as dining out costs spiral: ‘It's not just mozzarella sticks anymore'

Bodegas are the new ‘It' restaurants as dining out costs spiral: ‘It's not just mozzarella sticks anymore'

New York Post14 hours ago
NYC's corner markets are cornering the market — on haute cuisine.
As the cost of dining out in the Big Apple spirals higher, eating well without breaking the bank could be as simple as visiting your nearest bodega.
The city's humble bazaars are increasingly perceived as epicurean pioneers — with gourmands and social media influencers clamoring for a bite.
The craze comes as the price of eating out in the five boroughs has been said to soar by nearly 30%, according to a 2024 City Comptroller's Office report — with even a sad Midtown desk lunch of salad or fast food often costing a minimum of $15 nowadays.
16 A worker prepares a shrimp and octopus cocktail at La Esquina Del Camarón Mexicano, a Mexican seafood depot at the back of an Indian bodega in Jackson Heights, Queens.
Tamara Beckwith/N.Y.Post
By contrast, determined diners willing to look past the toilet paper rolls and bricks of Cafe Bustelo can fill their belly at a wave of unlikely grocery gastro-hubs for a fraction of the price — without degrading their palate.
'I go to my bodega every day, and the halal food is better than the food truck next door and cheaper — and they can do it all,' Karissa Dumbacher, an NYC foodfluencer with over 5 million followers across TikTok and Instagram, told The Post. 'I mean, it's not just mozzarella sticks anymore.'
Here's the dish on six tasty, cutting-edge supping spots.
Java, no jive
16 IndoJava Chef Anastasia Dewi Tjahjadi and owner Elvi Goliat display a bowl of lontong mie.
Tamara Beckwith/N.Y.Post
There's no menu at IndoJava, a bite-sized bodega in Elmhurst, Queens — but behind the selection of sambals and other Indonesian staples, intrepid diners will find one of the toughest tables in town.
Javanese chef Anastasia Dewi Tjahjadi, one of two haute-hash slingers (Thursdays, a chef from Jakarta takes over the stove), recently served just one dish: lontong mie ($15), a fragrant specialty from her hometown of Surabaya.
The piquant combo of noodles, bean curd, bean cake wedges, compressed rice cakes, garlic crackers, prawns and clam skewers packed a punch — in a brawny broth infused with pungent shrimp paste and served with weapons-grade chili peppers.
16 Diners can eat at a squat yellow table at the back of the bodega.
Tamara Beckwith/N.Y.Post
And don't bother asking the chef to turn the heat down.
'I don't want the people to come here and be, like, 'Oh, I'm sorry, I don't like spicy' — because my food … is spicy,' the griddle gourmet proudly told The Post. 'I can't make it not spicy.'
Opened back in 2008, IndoJava has become a bona fide sensation. In a viral video, influencer Dumbacher labeled the offerings the closest thing to 'actual authentic Indonesian food in New York City.'
IndoJava's food pop-ups are available on Tuesdays from 10 a.m.-8 p.m. and Thursdays from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. while supplies last; daily specials are announced on Instagram.
'We do very traditional, very authentic,' owner Elvi Goliat told The Post. 'We need to make something interesting so they will come every week.'
IndoJava, 8512 Queens Blvd., Elmhurst
Mart of the deal
16 A variety of Guatemalan specialties are displayed at the Karen Deli.
Stefano Giovannini for N.Y.Post
In Sunset Park, Brooklyn, the tiny Karen Deli has an ace up its sleeve — a speakeasy-like Guatemalan canteen located incongruously at the back, near a Central American mural.
The crown jewel drawing in-the-know types is the Pepian De Pollo ($13), a rich, spice-inflected stew studded with pumpkin seeds, best paired with a chuchito ($3), a miniature Guatemalan tamale, and washed down with a regional soda from the cooler.
This hearty combo costs a fraction of what you'd pay for one entrée at a sit-down spot in nearby trendy neighborhoods.
16 It is one of many bodegas serving unique dishes.
Stefano Giovannini for N.Y.Post
According to legendary NYC restaurant critic Robert Sietsema, unexpected finds like these show how bodegas are evolving.
'For decades, [the bodega] was a province of Puerto Ricans and Dominicans and African-Americans, hence the term bodega, which is just Spanish for store,' the Village Voice alum told The Post.
'This is indicative of other groups taking over the bodegas, having a much broader selection,' he said.
Karen Deli, 6116 5th Ave., Brooklyn
Prawn stars
16 A cocktail of shrimp and octopus at La Esquina Del Camaron.
Tamara Beckwith/N.Y.Post
Jackson Heights, Queens, has always been the Big Apple's multicultural bouillabaisse.
Head to Roosevelt Avenue — where diners will find an Indian mini mart in the front and a Mexican seafood restaurant in the back.
Dubbed La Esquina Del Camaron Mexicano, the tiny, cash-only sit-down serves shrimp and octopus cocktails with cilantro, avocado and a 'secret' cocktail sauce ($15 for a small portion).
16 Indian bodega La Esquina Del Camaron features a bustling Mexican seafood restaurant.
Tamara Beckwith/N.Y.Post
16 Diners can check out a mini mart in the front — and the seafood paradise in the back
Tamara Beckwith
16 The Jackson Heights go-to also offers Coctel de Camarones y Pulpo, and fish and tacos.
Tamara Beckwith/N.Y.Post
It's perhaps one of the few places in town you'd want to tuck into a plate of shellfish while pondering a wall of e-cigarettes and playing your scratch-off tickets.
La Esquina Del Camaron Mexicano, 8002 Roosevelt Ave.
The hero we deserve
16 The hand-scrawled hero menu frames a kitchen worker at Sunny & Annie's Deli.
Tamara Beckwith/N.Y.Post
Sunny & Annie's Deli in Manhattan's East Village is much more than a bacon-egg-and-cheese broker, offering a 24-hour smorgasbord of inventive, submarine-sized, Asian-inflected heroes, which the Korean owners list on handscrawled notecards.
Wacky fare includes the Obama (grilled chicken and eggplant), the Bernie Sanders (teriyaki chicken and shiitake mushrooms), and other sandwiches whose ingredients appear to be charmingly unrelated to their celeb namesake.
Check out the Pho #1 ($10.99 cash, $11.97 using a card), which, like its eponymous soup, features beef, bean sprouts, basil, cilantro, sriracha and a slathering of hoisin.
The dining depot is a standby for food critic Sietsema, who described the noshes as 'just plain weird in a good sort of way.'
16 A pho-inspired sandwich from Sunny & Annie's Deli.
Tamara Beckwith/N.Y.Post
'There's no place that makes sandwiches that uses the odd combination of semi-healthy ingredients with good bread,' the pro told The Post. 'And people that go in there for the first time, they're dumbstruck by the menu.'
Sunny & Annie's Deli, 94 Avenue B
Way to plant
16 The Clinton Fruit Market on Ninth Avenue in Manhattan is one of 50 bodegas where customers can find Plantega.
Tamara Beckwith/N.Y.Post
Bodegas haven't historically been bastions of vegetarian-friendly fare, Plantega is changing that — offering a '100% plant-based menu' that 'reimagines New York's iconic deli sandwiches,' ranging from the steak, egg and cheese burrito to the chopped cheese (both $12).
'In a way, bodegas are the city's original test kitchens,' Plantega Founder and CEO Nil Zacharias told The Post.
The concept, launched in 2022, is available at 50 bodegas. It reflects the corner store's legacy for innovation, where a 'Dominican-owned grill meets halal ingredients, or a classic bacon, egg, and cheese gets a twist that reflects the neighborhood,' he said.
'Too often, 'better food' is framed as something exclusive,' he told The Post of grub which is often 'packaged for a certain demographic.'
16 A vegan chopped cheese, courtesy of Plantega.
Tamara Beckwith/N.Y.Post
'Instead of asking people to change their habits, we chose to meet them where they already eat,' he added. 'That meant starting with the bodega, one of the most trusted, culturally rooted spaces in New York City.'
Plantega features a Chopped Cheese with Beyond Meat, Stockheld cultured cheddar and Fabalish vegan mayo — a combo that's tasty and healthier than oft-dubious deli protein.
'The food is hot, satisfying and made to order, just without the meat sweats or the 3 p.m. crash that makes you question your life choices,' Zacharias quipped.
Plantega, various locations
Ock-ed and loaded
16 'For years, I [saw] people get the same sandwiches and order all of these things on the side,' said Rahim Mohamed, owner of Red Hook Food Corp.
Stephen Yang
Probably the only bodega in remote Red Hook, Brooklyn, to have lured celebs like Ed Sheeran and Giants quarterback Eli Manning, Rahim Mohamed's Red Hook Food Corp has become a viral sensation.
Better known online as General Ock — derived from Americanized Arabic slang for 'akhi,' meaning 'brother' — the savvy seller has created a cutting-edge meal mecca, amassing over 5.5 million TikTok followers by sharing videos of him whipping up some of NYC's wildest vittles.
16 A sandwich hits the griddle before heading to a hungry customer.
Stephen Yang
16 A stuffed sandwich at Red Hook Food Corp.
Stephen Yang
And no ingredient is too outlandish.
Here, chopped cheese sandwiches are piled high with Pop-Tarts, mozzarella sticks, cotton candy, Rice Krispies Treats and more — in a method dubbed the Ocky Way.
'For years, I [saw] people get the same sandwiches and order all of these things on the side. I thought, 'Why can't I mix it all together?'' he told The Post in 2021.
Red Hook Food Corp, 603 Clinton St., Brooklyn
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump issues order imposing new global tariff rates effective Aug. 7
Trump issues order imposing new global tariff rates effective Aug. 7

Politico

time32 minutes ago

  • Politico

Trump issues order imposing new global tariff rates effective Aug. 7

According to the text of the first order, the Trump administration is maintaining its 10 percent so-called baseline tariff on countries where the U.S. has a trade surplus — i.e. it sells more American products to those countries than it imports from them. And it officially imposes the 15 percent rate that Trump agreed to set as part of negotiations with leading trading partners like the European Union, Japan and South Korea. The Philippines, Vietnam and Indonesia also reached tentative agreements with the administration that set their duties at 19-20 percent. Other countries, mainly smaller economies, face far higher rates, topping out at 41 percent for Syria, which is emerging from a civil war, and 40 percent for Myanmar, which is still in the midst of one. The Southeast Asian nation of Laos also faces a 40 percent tariff, and Iraq will be hit with a 35 percent duty. Bigger trading partners like Switzerland also face a significant tariff hike — to 39 percent. Trump also signed a second order raising tariffs on Canada, one of the country's biggest trading partners, from 25 to 35 percent for goods that are not compliant with an existing North American trade deal known as the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement. The senior official told reporters that Canada hasn't 'shown the same level of constructiveness that we've seen from the Mexican side.' Trump announced earlier Thursday that he was maintaining the 25 percent tariff on Mexico for another 90 days after a phone call with their president, Claudia Sheinbaum. Higher tariffs on Canada take effect Friday. The executive actions suggests that Trump decided to punish countries that he did not believe offered enough concessions since the president first threatened to impose his 'reciprocal' tariffs on April 2. 'Some trading partners have agreed to, or are on the verge of agreeing to, meaningful trade and security commitments with the United States, thus signaling their sincere intentions to permanently remedy the trade barriers,' the global order says. 'Other trading partners, despite having engaged in negotiations, have offered terms that, in my judgment, do not sufficiently address imbalances in our trading relationship or have failed to align sufficiently with the United States on economic and national-security matters,' 'There are also some trading partners that have failed to engage in negotiations with the United States or to take adequate steps to align sufficiently with the United States on economic and national security matters,' it continues. White House officials said Thursday night that they expect to strike additional agreements with countries ahead of the new Aug. 7 implementation date for the tariffs. 'We have some deals, and I don't want to get ahead of the president on those deals,' the senior administration official told reporters. 'I'll just say generally, we have more to come.' Taiwan is hoping to be one of those countries. The semiconductor powerhouse faces a 20 percent tariff in a week's time, but in a statement released late Thursday, Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te suggested the rate was 'provisional.' 'Due to the procedural arrangement of the negotiations, the Taiwan-U.S. sides have not yet concluded the final meeting. Therefore, the U.S. has temporarily announced a 20% tariff rate for Taiwan,' President Lai said. 'Once an agreement is reached in the future, there is hope that the tariff rate can be further lowered. Both sides will also continue negotiations on supply chain cooperation and issues related to Section 232 tariffs.'

Nifty top gainers this week (ending August 1): Jio Financial Services, Hindustan Unilever, L&T, Asian Paints, Trent and more
Nifty top gainers this week (ending August 1): Jio Financial Services, Hindustan Unilever, L&T, Asian Paints, Trent and more

Business Upturn

time3 hours ago

  • Business Upturn

Nifty top gainers this week (ending August 1): Jio Financial Services, Hindustan Unilever, L&T, Asian Paints, Trent and more

By Aman Shukla Published on August 2, 2025, 09:12 IST The Indian stock market closed Friday's session on a downbeat note, with both benchmark indices—the Sensex and Nifty 50—slipping around 1% each. The Sensex ended 586 points lower at 80,600, while the Nifty dropped 203 points to close at 24,565. This marks the fifth consecutive weekly fall for the Indian equity market, making it the longest losing streak in nearly two years. Despite the bearish close to the week, several heavyweight stocks in the Nifty 50 index delivered notable weekly gains. Let's take a closer look at the top 10 losers of the Nifty 50 this week, according to Trendlyne. Top Nifty Gainers for the Week Jio Financial Services : Up 5.9%, closed at ₹329.5 Hindustan Unilever : Up 5.7%, closed at ₹2553.7 Larsen & Toubro : Up 4.2%, closed at ₹3587.3 Asian Paints : Up 4.1%, closed at ₹2431.0 Trent : Up 2.7%, closed at ₹5180.0 Hero MotoCorp : Up 1.9%, closed at ₹4311.6 Eicher Motors : Up 1.8%, closed at ₹5528.0 ITC : Up 1.7%, closed at ₹416.5 Tata Consumer Products : Up 1.5%, closed at ₹1070.4 Grasim Industries: Up 0.5%, closed at ₹2722.2 Disclaimer: The information provided is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial or investment advice. Stock market investments are subject to market risks. Always conduct your own research or consult a financial advisor before making investment decisions. Author or Business Upturn is not liable for any losses arising from the use of this information. Ask ChatGPDisclaimer: The information provided is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial or investment advice. Stock market investments are subject to market risks. Always conduct your own research or consult a financial advisor before making investment decisions. Author or Business Upturn is not liable for any losses arising from the use of this information. Ahmedabad Plane Crash Asian PaintsHindustan UnileverJio Financial ServicesL&TNiftyTrent Aman Shukla is a post-graduate in mass communication . A media enthusiast who has a strong hold on communication ,content writing and copy writing. Aman is currently working as journalist at

Nifty top losers this week (ending August 1): Adani Enterprises, Wipro, Kotak Mahindra Bank, Tata Motors, Tata Steel and more
Nifty top losers this week (ending August 1): Adani Enterprises, Wipro, Kotak Mahindra Bank, Tata Motors, Tata Steel and more

Business Upturn

time3 hours ago

  • Business Upturn

Nifty top losers this week (ending August 1): Adani Enterprises, Wipro, Kotak Mahindra Bank, Tata Motors, Tata Steel and more

By Aman Shukla Published on August 2, 2025, 09:17 IST The Indian stock market wrapped up Friday's session (August 2) on a weak note, with both benchmark indices—BSE Sensex and NSE Nifty 50—sliding nearly 1% each. The Sensex dropped 586 points to close at 80,600, while the Nifty 50 ended the day 203 points lower at 24,565. This marks the fifth straight weekly decline for Indian equities—its longest losing streak in nearly two years. Several heavyweight stocks took a significant hit this week. Based on data from Trendlyne, here are the top 10 losers from the Nifty 50: Top Nifty Losers for the Week Adani Enterprises Closed at ₹2,350.90, down 7.8% this week. Wipro Ended at ₹242.80, falling 6.4% over the week. Kotak Mahindra Bank Settled at ₹1,992.40, slipping 6.2% . Tata Motors Closed at ₹648.90, down 5.6% week-on-week. Tata Steel Finished at ₹153.00, declining 5.2% . IndusInd Bank Ended the week at ₹783.70, lower by 4.9% . Bharat Electronics Closed at ₹377.20, posting a 4.6% weekly drop. Dr. Reddy's Laboratories Settled at ₹1,220.60, down 4.5% . Titan Company Finished at ₹3,316.00, falling 4.2% over the week. Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) Ended the week at ₹3,003.00, down 4.2%. Disclaimer: The information provided is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial or investment advice. Stock market investments are subject to market risks. Always conduct your own research or consult a financial advisor before making investment decisions. Author or Business Upturn is not liable for any losses arising from the use of this information. Ahmedabad Plane Crash Adani enterprisesKotak Mahindra BankNiftyTata MotorsTata SteelWipro Aman Shukla is a post-graduate in mass communication . A media enthusiast who has a strong hold on communication ,content writing and copy writing. Aman is currently working as journalist at

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store