Dutch Kills

Dutch Kills earned back-to-back World's 50 Best Bars rankings in 2011 and 2012, placing it among a small cohort of New York bars to achieve that recognition from a Queens address rather than Manhattan. With a 4.5 Google rating across more than 1,200 reviews, it has held its position in the serious cocktail conversation well beyond its peak press years — a reliable indicator of sustained execution rather than momentary hype.
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Queens on the Global Bar Map
When the World's 50 Best Bars list published its 2011 rankings, Dutch Kills appeared at number 38 — a signal that serious cocktail culture in New York City had begun spreading beyond its traditional Manhattan axis. The following year, it climbed to number 35. That two-year consecutive placement, in a period when the global bar recognition circuit was tightening its criteria and expanding its geographical reach, placed Dutch Kills in a specific historical bracket: among the first wave of outer-borough bars to receive that tier of international attention.
The broader pattern matters here. In the early 2010s, New York's cocktail scene was consolidating around a craft-revival ethos — ice programs, house-made syrups, spirit-forward builds , and the venues earning international recognition were almost exclusively operating in Manhattan's established bar corridors. Dutch Kills, operating from Long Island City in Queens, was an anomaly in that geography, and the recognition it received reflected how clearly it had matched the technical standard of its Manhattan-based peers without attempting to replicate their setting or format. For a deeper map of where the city's bar conversation now stands, see our full New York City restaurants guide.
What the Awards Record Actually Tells You
Two consecutive World's 50 Best Bars placements, peaking at number 35, function as a durable credential rather than a historical footnote. The list's methodology during that period weighted technical execution, menu depth, and consistent guest experience , criteria that do not reset when a bar drops off the annual ranking. Bars that reached that tier in the early 2010s tended to either maintain their standard quietly or collapse under the weight of their own reputation. Dutch Kills' 4.5 Google rating across more than 1,200 reviews suggests the former: a bar that has held operational quality long after the peak press attention moved on.
That kind of sustained score across a large review base is more informative than a single award year. It implies consistent execution across staff changes, seasonal shifts, and the kind of volume pressure that erodes standards at bars relying on a single founding figure. In the competitive context of New York bar culture , where Attaboy NYC runs a no-menu format with comparable critical weight and Amor y Amargo has built an entire identity around bitter spirits , Dutch Kills sits in a peer group defined by program depth rather than concept novelty.
Long Island City as a Bar Context
Long Island City occupies an interesting position in New York's hospitality geography. A short subway ride from Midtown Manhattan, it developed a small but serious food and drink culture in the 2000s and 2010s that operated with lower rent pressure and correspondingly more room for program investment. The bars that emerged there during that period were not destination venues in the tourist sense; they became destinations because the work warranted the trip, not because the address was convenient.
That dynamic shapes how Dutch Kills reads against Manhattan comparisons. Bars like Angel's Share in the East Village or Superbueno operate within a denser hospitality cluster, where foot traffic and adjacency to other venues do part of the work. A Queens address removes that ambient support, which means the bar's own offering carries the full weight of drawing guests across a borough line. The World's 50 Best placement confirms it succeeded at exactly that.
How Dutch Kills Fits the Broader Craft Cocktail Generation
The early-2010s craft bar movement produced a recognizable set of operating principles: ice cut to order, syrups made in-house, a repertoire built around pre-Prohibition templates reworked with current ingredients. Bars that earned international recognition during that window tended to execute those principles with discipline rather than novelty , the point was precision, not eccentricity. Dutch Kills emerged from that same tradition, and its peer set internationally includes bars like Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu and Kumiko in Chicago, both of which apply comparable craft-revival discipline in non-Manhattan geographies.
Domestically, the comparison extends further. Jewel of the South in New Orleans, Julep in Houston, and ABV in San Francisco all represent the same generational shift: serious cocktail programs operating outside the primary bar corridors of their cities, earning recognition on program merit. Dutch Kills sits in that cohort by virtue of its awards record and sustained guest scores, not by virtue of marketing or concept. For reference across a different market entirely, The Parlour in Frankfurt on the Main and Allegory in Washington, D.C. illustrate how the same craft rigor translates across geographies.
Planning Your Visit
Dutch Kills is in Long Island City, Queens, accessible by subway from Midtown Manhattan in under fifteen minutes on multiple lines. The bar operates in an area that rewards arrival with time to explore rather than a strict point-to-point itinerary. The 4.5 rating across more than 1,200 reviews suggests the bar handles volume without significant service degradation, which indicates it is built for real use rather than special-occasion traffic only.
Peer Comparison at a Glance
| Bar | Location | Notable Recognition | Format Signal |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dutch Kills | Long Island City, Queens | World's 50 Best #35 (2012) | Craft-revival, borough destination |
| Attaboy NYC | Lower East Side, Manhattan | Consistent global recognition | No-menu, guest-led format |
| Amor y Amargo | East Village, Manhattan | Named editorial recognition | Bitter-spirits specialist |
| Angel's Share | East Village, Manhattan | Long-standing critical profile | Japanese-influenced, quiet format |
Peer Set Snapshot
A quick peer list to put this venue’s basics in context.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dutch Kills | World's 50 Best | This venue | ||
| The Long Island Bar | World's 50 Best | |||
| Dirty French | ||||
| Superbueno | World's 50 Best | |||
| Amor y Amargo | World's 50 Best | |||
| Angel's Share | World's 50 Best |
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- Hidden Gem
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Dimly lit with plush candlelit booths, dark atmospheric interior, and a cozy speakeasy vibe.



















