A New To-Go Window From an Uptown Fixture

The new Butterfield Market, a branch of the 105-year-old store on Lexington Avenue, is moving into the spacious storefront once occupied by Dean & DeLuca, but it won’t be ready until the fall. Evan Obsatz, one of the owners (along with his sister, Joelle, and his father, Alan), said the neighborhood had been quiet: “I hope the Upper East Side gets busier in September.” For now, he’s offering a taste of the store’s specialty, frozen yogurt, from a window on the 85th Street side, near Madison Avenue. But the window is not just about frozen yogurt. Sandwiches, cold soups and composed salads like salmon with potatoes, haricots verts, tomatoes and arugula, are some of the options sold to take away. There are benches along the Madison Avenue side of the store, whose name recalls its telephone exchange, dating back to the days when such things existed. Remember the movie “Butterfield 8”? (Opens Wednesday)

1150 Madison Avenue (85th Street), 212-758-2800, butterfieldnyc.com.

At this new Chinese restaurant, one of the specialties is chicken skeleton, deep-fried with bits of meat still clinging. (It’s reminiscent of a sole dish found in some Cantonese restaurants served on a fried rack of crunchy fish bones for nibbling.) Karen Song, one of the owners, is from Northeast China, where that dish originates. Kiyomi Wang, the chef and co-owner, is from Sichuan, which is the cuisine most represented here: smashed cucumbers, assorted noodles, dumplings and Sichuan spicy fries. There are a few tables outside and more seating in Seward Park across the street. Inside, there is seating for 15, but social distancing will reduce the number.

23 Essex Street (Canal Street), 646-476-7501, publicvillagenyc.com.

A third outlet of this restaurant based in Murray Hill is from a team that once called Australia home: the owner Barry Dry and the executive chef Brent Hudson. Among the specialties are burgers that include miso, chile garlic prawn fettuccine and a daily curry. The restaurant has an outdoor patio. (Friday)

Hotel Henri, 37 West 24th Street, 212-243-0800, holeinthewallnyc.com.

A series cooked by Black chefs is taking up residence at Greg Baxtrom’s French yakitori restaurant through Aug. 30. Until July 19, the chef is Lani Halliday, of the vegan and gluten-free Brutus Bakeshop in Brooklyn; July 22 through Aug. 2 will be Jared Howard of Honey Bunny’s Chicken, a mobile pop-up for Southern food; Aug. 5 through 16 Michelle Williams of Good IV the Soul, a Brooklyn caterer, will be on hand; and Aug. 19 through 30, Mohamed Wahiba, who runs Tripoli Events and is now in residence at the Berg’n food hall in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, will prepare Mediterranean-Italian food.

626 Vanderbilt Avenue (Prospect Place), Prospect Heights, Brooklyn, 718-552-2609, maisonyaki.com.

source: nytimes.com