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New York City, United States

The Butcher's Daughter

Price≈$25
Dress CodeCasual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseConversational
CapacityMedium

On Kenmare Street in Nolita, The Butcher's Daughter occupies a corner of downtown Manhattan where plant-forward eating and a carefully assembled drinks program intersect. The café draws a steady crowd looking for something more considered than the neighborhood's typical bistro fare, with a menu and back bar that reward repeat visitors across seasons.

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Address
19 Kenmare St, New York, NY 10012
Phone
+1 212 219 3434
The Butcher's Daughter bar in New York City, United States
About

Nolita's Plant-Forward Corner and What It Says About Downtown Drinking

Nolita has spent the better part of a decade sorting itself into two camps: quick-turnover brunch spots and more deliberate addresses that develop a regular following on the strength of a coherent program. The Butcher's Daughter at 19 Kenmare Street belongs to the second category. The name itself signals a certain self-awareness, a vegetable butcher shop and café that plays on carnivore language to underscore a different approach to produce-led cooking and drinking. In a block where the foot traffic tilts toward the fashion and design crowd, that positioning has proven durable.

What keeps The Butcher's Daughter in the conversation beyond its first wave of press is its drinks program, which has matured alongside broader downtown Manhattan bar culture. The back bar here operates on the same principle as the kitchen: curation over volume, with selections chosen to support the food rather than compete for attention. That alignment between kitchen and bar is less common than it should be, and it places this address in a comparable set closer to the more considered cocktail rooms around Lower Manhattan than to the category of casual café.

The Back Bar as Editorial Statement

Downtown New York has produced several bars in recent years where the spirits collection functions as intellectual argument. Amor y Amargo made its case through amaro depth and bitter-first philosophy. Attaboy NYC built its reputation on off-menu responsiveness and a broad spirits foundation. The Butcher's Daughter approaches the question differently: the selection leans toward bottles that complement botanical and vegetable-forward flavors, gins, vermouths, herbal liqueurs, and a rotating cast of natural wines, rather than anchoring to a single spirits category.

It is a bar built for the meal, which is a different and arguably more disciplined editorial position. The drinks here are weighted toward aperitif-style thinking, lighter, more acidic, often lower in alcohol, which mirrors a broader shift in downtown Manhattan's drinking culture away from spirit-forward builds toward session-friendly formats that hold up across two hours of plant-based food.

Compared to the depth on show at Superbueno, where the agave program drives the whole room, or the rare-bottle ambition at Angel's Share in the East Village, The Butcher's Daughter's back bar is focused in scope. What it does well is coherence: every bottle connects to the logic of the food menu, which is harder to achieve than it looks when the food runs entirely on vegetables, grains, and fruit.

Seasonal Drinking and the Case for Visiting Now

Late spring through early autumn is when a program like this feels most in step with the menu. The Butcher's Daughter has always leaned into seasonal produce cycles, and the drinks menu follows suit, lower-proof spritzes, vegetable-infused preparations, and juice-forward builds that make sense when the temperature on Kenmare Street is pushing past 80 degrees. Those same drinks feel less compelling in January, which is a useful logistical signal: if the botanical-leaning cocktail program is the draw, plan the visit for the warmer months when the menu is operating at its fullest range.

The same seasonal logic applies to the food side. Produce-led kitchens in this part of Manhattan tend to track the market closely, and the menu at a café of this type shifts accordingly. Visiting in late June or September gives you the widest selection and the tightest connection between what's on the menu and what's at peak quality in the northeast growing season.

Where It Sits in the New York Drinks Scene

New York's bar scene has fractured into distinct sub-categories more sharply than most cities. There are destination cocktail bars where the program is the entire reason for the visit. There are neighborhood bars where the drinks are competent but the room and the company carry the night. And there is a third tier, smaller and more specific, where the drinks program exists in genuine dialogue with the food.

The Butcher's Daughter belongs to that third tier. It shares that positioning with a handful of addresses nationally: Kumiko in Chicago, where the Japanese whisky and liqueur program is built entirely around the kaiseki-influenced food; Jewel of the South in New Orleans, where cocktail history and Creole food create a unified sensibility; and further afield, Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu, where a Japanese-influenced spirits program anchors a serious food menu. The ambition at The Butcher's Daughter is less grand than any of those, but the underlying philosophy, that the bar should serve the meal, is consistent.

For visitors who want to see how that philosophy plays out across the wider American bar scene, ABV in San Francisco, Julep in Houston, and Allegory in Washington, D.C. each represent a regional variation on the same idea. And for the international equivalent, The Parlour in Frankfurt on the Main demonstrates how the food-and-bar dialogue translates into a European context.

Planning Your Visit

The Kenmare Street location puts The Butcher's Daughter within walking distance of much of Nolita and the northern edge of Little Italy, with easy access from the Spring Street subway stop. The café format means seating is first-come at most hours, though weekend brunch sees the longest waits. For weekday visits, mid-morning is the quietest window. Evening hours attract a different crowd and are when the back bar is most actively in use.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the signature drink at The Butcher's Daughter?
The drinks program at The Butcher's Daughter emphasizes botanical and produce-aligned builds, lighter-proof cocktails, natural wines, and herbal preparations that complement the plant-forward menu. There is no single definitive signature in the way a dedicated cocktail bar might anchor its identity to one preparation, but the aperitif-style drinks represent the clearest expression of the bar's editorial position.
What is the standout thing about The Butcher's Daughter?
In a city where the vegetable-forward café category has grown substantially, The Butcher's Daughter maintains a drinks program that takes the same produce-led logic applied to the kitchen and extends it to the bar. That coherence between the two sides of the menu, unusual in the café tier, is what separates it from comparable addresses in Nolita and the surrounding neighborhoods.
How far ahead should I plan for The Butcher's Daughter?
The café format generally does not require advance reservations in the way a tasting-menu restaurant would. Weekend brunch is the highest-demand period, and the most practical approach is to arrive outside the 11am-1pm peak window. If you are visiting specifically for the evening drinks program, weekday evenings offer the most relaxed experience without walk-in wait times.
What is The Butcher's Daughter a good pick for?
It works well for anyone whose priority is a drinks-forward, plant-based meal in a neighborhood setting rather than a destination bar experience. It also suits visitors who want to see how the botanical and natural wine category operates at the café level in downtown Manhattan, as a useful reference point before visiting more specialized bars in the city.
Is The Butcher's Daughter suitable for guests who are not vegetarian?
The menu is plant-forward by design, meaning the kitchen operates without meat as a primary ingredient, a structural choice rather than a dietary accommodation. The drinks program, however, is fully open to any drinker, and the cocktail and wine selection holds its own independently of the food. Guests who eat meat but are curious about the botanical cocktail approach will find the bar program accessible regardless of what they order to eat.
Signature Pours
Grilled Lemon Spritz

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At a Glance
Vibe
  • Trendy
  • Modern
  • Whimsical
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Casual Hangout
  • After Work
Experience
  • Design Destination
  • Standalone
Format
  • Lounge Seating
  • Outdoor Terrace
  • Communal Tables
Drink Program
  • Natural Wine
  • Zero Proof
  • Craft Cocktails
Dress CodeCasual
Noise LevelConversational
CapacityMedium
Service StyleUpscale Casual

Vibrant, modern aesthetic with layback atmosphere, jazz standards, and produce-driven nourishing menus.

Signature Pours
Grilled Lemon Spritz