Burritos From the Kitchen of El Vez in Battery Park City

Restaurants offering only pickup and delivery have become hallmarks of pandemic-era dining. Lately, this has taken an interesting turn as restaurants-within-restaurants pop up. The new Smillie Pizza at Il Buco Alimentari & Vineria in NoHo opened last week. Now, there’s Jackass Burrito, with well-stuffed specialties in six varieties, being assembled and wrapped in the kitchen of Stephen Starr’s El Vez in Battery Park City. Mr. Starr is opening another of these setups in Philadelphia this week, at El Rey there, and has plans for other similar ventures moving forward. Daily after 4 p.m., Black Seed Bagels in the East Village becomes Black Seed Pizza, with the chef Bobby Hellen making five kinds of designer pies, mostly squares, for pickup and delivery. These join a growing list that includes Washington Squares for pizza from Dan Kluger’s Loring Place in Greenwich Village, and Otto’s Tacos from the kitchen of Mighty Quinn’s BBQ on the Upper East Side. For an example of just how successful these ventures can be, look to Ghostburger in Washington, D.C. It began offering burgers and Philadelphia-style cheesesteaks from the kitchen of Espita, Josh Phillips’s Mexican restaurant, in late summer. He said he needed something easier to deliver than his high-end fare. Like most of the pizzas at Loring Place and Il Buco Alimentari, which are available to people dining in at those restaurants, the Ghostburger menu is also served at Espita. Mr. Phillips says it’s provided an extra $6,000 a week, and is preparing to spin the pop-up into a brick-and-mortar business.

259 Vesey Street (West Street), 646-540-9740, jackassburrito.com.

Creative soups are the stock-in-trade (pun intended) of this new food pickup platform trying to help small neighborhood restaurants bolster their bottom lines. The brainchild of Ken Farmer, the founder of Wild Dogs International, a creative studio in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, it has enlisted restaurants in Brooklyn and Queens — a different one each week — to offer two or three hearty soups (and usually a loaf of einkorn sourdough bread from Nick + Sons Bakery), for pickup at wine shops in Brooklyn and Queens. Coming up are For All Things Good, Le Succulent, Adda and the Islands. A quart of soup is usually $25 and includes the bread. But orders must be submitted by 9 p.m. Mondays evenings, for pickup that Thursday.

soupshop.org.

This seafood spot based in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, has branched into Crown Heights. Like the original, it sells assorted fried seafood on plates and in sandwiches, and also has seafood boils with Dungeness crab, snow crab legs, shrimp, crawfish, mussels and lobster tails, most with Cajun seasoning. Pickup and delivery are the options.

770 Washington Avenue (Sterling Place), Crown Heights, Brooklyn, 712-513-0046.

Enrique Olvera’s NoHo restaurant has started operating a monthly subscription service with two offerings: the Atla Mezcal Club with mezcal tastings from $45 a month; and Mr. Olvera’s Cookbook Experience to prepare dishes from the chef’s book “Tu Casa Mi Casa” to serve two ($100) or four ($180). Both kits include the delivery of ingredients. The subscriptions are under an umbrella, Table22, which began last spring. The founder, Sam Bernstein, thought the model could help restaurants struggling because of the pandemic fatten their bottom lines. The subscriptions do not interfere with the restaurants’ regular takeout or delivery business. Table22, which helps the restaurants design their subscription packages, takes a 10 percent cut. It operates in more than 40 cities. In New York, in addition to Atla, it represents Frankies Spuntino, Oxalis, Il Buco, the Four Horsemen, and more. Other restaurants include Cotogna and Che Fico in San Francisco, Iris in Memphis and Restaurant August in New Orleans.

table22.com/atla.

source: nytimes.com