Explore the city's social history told entirely through its restaurants
New York
A Social History of the City: Told Entirely Through Its Restaurans

Celeste Holm, Walter Slezak, and Dolores Gray watch as flames from a dish rise behind James Beard. Photo: Obtained by New York Magazine

Restaurants are extensions of our offices and refuges from our tiny kitchens, many of which are barely functional. With respect, our best spots are not defined only by their cooks and their hosts and their servers; they are defined by us, the indefatigable regulars. For our tenth “Yesteryear” issue, we dove into the haunts and the joints, choosing the moments when individual scenes flourished. During the entire month of April, we shared nostalgic glimpses at New York’s restaurant scenes to tell the city’s social history. Keep reading for the latest “Who Ate Where” stories.

— By the Editors

Where the East Village Never Changes

Photo: Eye Ubiquitous/Alamy

Even the menu has not wavered in 40 years: the flavors of Moroccan eggs with spicy tomato sauce and the sides of merguez sausage; the lamb-shank tagine with a sauce of preserved lemon and olives, acidic and tangy. This restaurant is an oasis of memories.

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Where Midwestern Tourists Ate Eggs Next to Jake Gyllenhaal

Inside Prune, which opened in 1999. Photo: Mark Peterson/Redux

“The rule was that this is where the brunchers and Joe Schmos could sit next to some very famous people and you wouldn’t bother them,” says Kat Robinson, who worked as a host. “The people of New York got it. They knew the rules.”

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More “Who Ate Where” Stories

Anjelica Huston at the release party for The Only Place to Be in 1982. Photo: Sonia Moskowitz/WWD/Penske Media via Getty Images

Where the Epicenter of Manhattan Power Was in the ’80s

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Photo: Matthew Weinstein/The New York Times/Redux

Where Writers Went to Gossip and Everyone Was Having an Affair

⇒ Discover the Restaurant

Photo: Mark Peterson/Corbis via Getty Image

Where the Law Students Lunched

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Tina Girouard, Carol Gooden and Gordon Matta-Clark in front of Food in 1971. Photo: Dick Landry/© 2024 Estate of Gordon Matta-Clark / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

Where Soho Artists Cooked for One Other Back in the ’70s

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The Hottest Dishes Ever

Cotton candy at the Four Seasons. Photo: Amy Sussman/January Images/Shutterstock

All month, Grub Street has been documenting New York’s past through its assorted restaurant scenes. The focus has been the people, but this is not to say the food was completely secondary. To cap off the series, we present 14 of the buzziest individual dishes in the city’s history, the culinary innovations that were delicious and sophisticated enough to create little scenes of their own.

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