Borgo




Andrew Tarlow's first Manhattan venture, Borgo opened in September 2024 on East 27th Street with a trattoria-style menu that changes monthly. Recognized by New York Magazine's 43 Best Restaurants in New York (2025) and awarded a White Star on Star Wine List, the restaurant pairs wood-oven Italian cooking with a natural-leaning wine list and a roving martini cart — a confident debut for a restaurateur better known for Brooklyn.

The Aperitivo Hour on East 27th Street
Manhattan has never lacked for Italian restaurants, but the aperitivo ritual — that unhurried pause between the day and dinner, built on a cold drink and something small to eat — has rarely been executed with the discipline it receives in northern Italy. Most New York trattorie treat the pre-dinner moment as an afterthought. Borgo, which opened in September 2024 on East 27th Street, takes a different position. The martini cart that circulates through candlelit dining rooms is not a gimmick imported from a tasting-menu playbook; it is a structural choice that sets the pace for everything that follows. A well-made martini before a plate of cheese-filled focaccia is an argument for slowing down, and Borgo makes that argument from the moment you sit.
The aperitivo instinct runs through the wider Italian-American dining scene, but it tends to surface in the West Village more than in Midtown or NoMad. Andrew Tarlow's cross-river move , his first Manhattan restaurant after two decades building a restaurant culture in Williamsburg and Brooklyn at large , plants a version of that sensibility in a neighborhood that needed it. East 27th Street is not a dining destination in the way that, say, the West Village or the Lower East Side commands attention, which makes Borgo's arrival more pointed: the restaurant is importing a mood, not coasting on a neighborhood's existing energy.
What the Room Signals Before the Food Arrives
The physical environment at Borgo communicates grown-up elegance without austerity. Candlelight is a deliberate design choice that shapes how the room feels at 8 p.m., and the candlelit dining rooms described by New York Magazine carry the sensibility of a space that wants conversation rather than performance. There is nothing about Borgo's aesthetic that gestures toward spectacle. It is closer in spirit to a Roman neighborhood osteria that has learned to take itself seriously without broadcasting the fact , a tone that Tarlow refined over years in Brooklyn and has now adapted, with some evident care, to a Manhattan context.
Aperitivo cart reinforces this. A martini made tableside, from a well-appointed cart, is a hospitality gesture that belongs to a particular tradition: the Italian bar counter extended into the dining room. Paired with a wine list that wine director Lee Campbell has built around natural-leaning producers, the drinking program at Borgo reflects a coherent point of view. Natural wine and a classic martini are not obvious companions, but in a trattoria context, the combination works , one nods to tradition, the other to a contemporary Italian-American sensibility that has become the dominant mode among New York's better casual Italian rooms, including Via Carota and Altro Paradiso.
The Menu's Dual Register
Italian cooking in New York has split, broadly, between two registers: the red-sauce comfort mode and the ingredient-forward, northern-influenced approach that has dominated critical attention since the late 2000s. Borgo, with chef Jordan Frosolone shaping a menu that changes monthly, operates in both registers at once , and that duality is the interesting editorial fact about the restaurant.
Crowd-pleasers appear without apology. The focaccia filled with cheese, the ricotta ravioli, the roast chicken with Marsala: these are dishes that belong to the Italian-American canon and are executed here with enough confidence that their familiarity reads as mastery rather than safety. But the menu does not stop there. Sweetbreads, fried rabbit with shallots, beef heart prepared to read like rare steak, coffee-glazed offal from the wood oven , these are the dishes that signal a kitchen comfortable with the less photogenic registers of Italian cooking. The wood oven is not decorative; it is doing serious work, providing the char and primal heat that separates Italian wood-fire cooking from its more timid urban cousins.
The monthly menu rotation matters for context. It places Borgo outside the Italian restaurant tradition that relies on a fixed, nostalgic menu as a trust signal. Monthly changes require the kitchen to source differently, communicate differently to returning guests, and resist the comfort of repeating what worked. For a restaurant that opened in September 2024, that is a meaningful structural commitment , and it aligns Borgo with a cohort of more demanding Italian rooms rather than with the neighborhood Italian that settles into its hits within the first year. Comparable commitment to seasonal rotation can be found at Babbo, which established the template for serious Italian cooking in New York at a similar price positioning. For Italian cooking at the formal end of the spectrum, Ai Fiori operates in a different tier entirely. And the post-dinner Italian coffee tradition worth knowing about in New York has its own dedicated expression at Ammazzacaffè.
Recognition and Peer Context
Borgo's inclusion in New York Magazine's 43 Best Restaurants in New York for 2025 , less than four months after opening , places it in a competitive tier. New York's casual Italian scene is not short of contenders, and the publication's list draws from across the price and formality spectrum. A White Star recognition from Star Wine List, published in December 2024, adds a specific credential: the wine program is being taken seriously by specialists, not just generalist critics. Together, these signals suggest a restaurant that entered the conversation quickly and from multiple directions.
The Italian trattoria format is well-established in New York, with decades of reference points from downtown to uptown. Borgo is not proposing a new category; it is executing an existing one with precision and a specific mood. The aperitivo-forward hospitality, the rotating monthly menu, the natural wine list, and the wood oven together describe a restaurant that has opinions about what an Italian dinner should feel like. For context on how Italian cooking travels internationally, 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana in Hong Kong and cenci in Kyoto show how different markets interpret the tradition. New York's version, at Borgo, leans into comfort and complexity in equal measure.
For broader orientation across the city's dining, drinking, and hotel options, see our full New York City restaurants guide, our full New York City bars guide, our full New York City hotels guide, our full New York City wineries guide, and our full New York City experiences guide. For reference points elsewhere in the US, Emeril's in New Orleans, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Alinea in Chicago, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, The French Laundry in Napa, and Providence in Los Angeles each represent a distinct position in American fine and serious dining.
Know Before You Go
Address: 124 E 27th St, New York, NY 10016
Cuisine: Italian (trattoria-style, monthly rotating menu)
Opened: September 2024
Recognition: New York Magazine , 43 Best Restaurants in New York (2025); White Star, Star Wine List (December 2024)
Google Rating: 4.4 from 130 reviews
Neighborhood: NoMad / East Midtown, Manhattan
Reservations: Recommended, given the recognition level and early demand following the 2025 New York Magazine listing
Frequently Asked Questions
- Is Borgo a family-friendly restaurant?
- The candlelit, conversation-forward room is pitched at adults; families with young children will find it an awkward fit for a weeknight dinner.
- What kind of setting is Borgo?
- If you are after a loud, high-energy dining room, Borgo is not that. The candlelit space reads as grown-up trattoria , warm and social, but calibrated for conversation rather than celebration. Given its New York Magazine recognition and NoMad address, it sits in a tier of serious casual Italian rooms that reward dressing with some care without requiring formality.
- What's the leading thing to order at Borgo?
- Because the menu changes monthly, no single dish is fixed , but the wood-oven program is the kitchen's clearest editorial statement. The cheese-filled focaccia has been cited consistently in critical coverage since opening, and the offal dishes (sweetbreads, beef heart) represent the kitchen's more adventurous register, shaped by chef Jordan Frosolone's approach to Italian classics. The martini cart and Lee Campbell's natural-leaning wine list are worth treating as part of the meal rather than an afterthought.
- Do I need a reservation for Borgo?
- Given its appearance on the New York Magazine 43 Best Restaurants list for 2025 within months of opening, and a Google rating of 4.4 across 130 early reviews, walk-in availability on weekends is unlikely. A reservation is the practical choice for any visit planned in advance.
A Pricing-First Comparison
A small comparison set for context, based on the venues we track.
| Venue | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Borgo | Borgo is a restaurant in New York City, USA. It was published on Star Wine List… | This venue | |
| Le Bernardin | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star | French, Seafood, $$$$ |
| Atomix | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Star | Modern Korean, Korean, $$$$ |
| Masa | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star | Sushi, Japanese, $$$$ |
| Per Se | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star | French, Contemporary, $$$$ |
| Eleven Madison Park | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star | French, Vegan, $$$$ |
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