Chick Chick
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A Michelin Bib Gourmand recipient two years running, Chick Chick brings Korean-leaning Asian cooking to a narrow, atmospheric room on Amsterdam Avenue. Chef Jun Park's fried chicken — amber-skinned, sticky with black pepper soy — has become a reference point on the Upper West Side. The price point sits firmly in the accessible tier, making it one of the few Michelin-recognised addresses in the neighbourhood at this range.

A Corner Post on Amsterdam Avenue
The Upper West Side has always maintained a quieter relationship with serious dining than Midtown or the Lower East Side. The neighbourhood runs on familiarity: long-standing Italian-Americans, reliable Jewish delis, the occasional French bistro that has outlasted three rental cycles. Against that backdrop, a Korean-leaning Asian kitchen earning back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition in 2024 and 2025 is a meaningful data point about how the area's dining character is shifting.
Chick Chick occupies a prominent corner of Amsterdam Avenue at 618, and the room reflects the format well: narrow and deep, with an open kitchen in full view of the dining tables. Wood-panelled walls and pendant lighting pull the space toward warmth rather than minimalism, which separates it from the clinical aesthetic that tends to follow Michelin attention in other Manhattan neighbourhoods. The atmosphere reads less like a destination restaurant and more like a neighbourhood anchor that has outperformed its own expectations.
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Get Exclusive Access →The Food: Korean Leanings in an Asian Frame
Seoul's fried chicken tradition has spent the last decade earning serious attention on the global stage, and New York's Korean dining scene has been one of the primary engines of that recognition. At the fine-dining tier, venues like Atomix — a two-Michelin-star address in Midtown — have made the case for Korean technique at the highest price brackets. Chick Chick operates in an entirely different register, but the culinary seriousness transfers.
The kitchen's approach draws from across East and Southeast Asian cooking, but Korean flavour logic anchors the menu. The fried chicken is the clearest expression of that: crisp amber skin, the meat cooked through without drying, and a black pepper soy glaze that works in the sticky-sweet register common to Korean chimaek culture. This is not American Southern fried chicken with an Asian garnish; the seasoning and sauce structure are a different tradition entirely.
The fried rice demonstrates range. Chinese sausage, tobiko, and kimchi in the same bowl represent three distinct culinary geographies , Cantonese, Japanese, Korean , and the combination works because each component serves a textural or flavour function rather than appearing for novelty. A runny fried egg finishes the dish, which is a finishing technique found across Asian rice cultures from Japan to Vietnam. The menu logic is pan-Asian in execution but disciplined rather than unfocused.
For further context on New York's Asian dining scene at this price tier, Cha Kee offers a useful peer reference, while the broader range of recognised addresses across the city is covered in our full New York City restaurants guide. Those seeking the contrast at the upper end of the Korean dining spectrum should note the distance in format and price between this address and Atomix , that gap is part of what makes the Bib Gourmand tier interesting to track.
Where It Sits in the Pricing Structure
The Michelin Bib Gourmand designation is awarded specifically to addresses that offer what the guide characterises as high-quality cooking at accessible prices. In New York terms, that typically means a meal well under the threshold where tasting menus and wine pairings begin. Chick Chick's two-dollar-sign price indicator confirms it sits in that accessible band, making it one of the few Michelin-flagged addresses on the Upper West Side that does not require advance planning around a budget.
For comparison, the other end of New York's recognised dining spectrum involves considerably different commitments. Le Bernardin, Eleven Madison Park, and 53 each operate at price points where a single dinner represents a significant spend. The Bib Gourmand category exists precisely to map the distance between those tiers and the everyday addresses that still meet a quality standard. Chick Chick holds Michelin recognition while sitting closer to the cost of a neighbourhood takeout than a special-occasion dinner.
The Drink Question: What the Format Suggests
The editorial angle here requires acknowledging what the available record does and does not tell us. Chick Chick's drink offering is not documented in the available data, and the format , a narrow, accessible-price neighbourhood room built around fried chicken and rice , does not typically point toward a deep wine cellar or a sommelier program of the kind found at destination restaurants. The Bib Gourmand tier in New York rarely supports the kind of cellar depth that defines addresses like Lazy Bear in San Francisco or Alinea in Chicago.
What that means practically is that drink pairing at Chick Chick should be understood on the venue's own terms. Korean fried chicken has a documented cultural pairing tradition with lager and soju, and a kitchen operating in this idiom is more likely to support that logic than to maintain an allocation-heavy wine list. If cellar depth is the priority for a New York evening, the reference set shifts toward venues like The French Laundry in Napa or Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg. Chick Chick makes a different case: that the drink should follow the food rather than compete with it.
For those exploring comparable Asian dining programs in other cities, taku in Cologne and Jun's in Dubai provide useful international reference points, as do Emeril's in New Orleans and Providence in Los Angeles for understanding how accessible-tier recognised dining operates across American cities.
Planning a Visit
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Michelin Recognition | Neighbourhood |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chick Chick | Asian, Korean-leaning | $$ | Bib Gourmand (2024, 2025) | Upper West Side |
| Atomix | Modern Korean | $$$$ | 2 Stars | Midtown |
| Cha Kee | Asian | N/A | N/A | Manhattan |
| Le Bernardin | French, Seafood | $$$$ | 3 Stars | Midtown |
Chick Chick is located at 618 Amsterdam Avenue, New York, NY 10024. Google review data shows a 4.6 rating across 414 reviews, which is a strong signal of consistent execution at the neighbourhood level. Hours and booking specifics are not confirmed in available records; the venue's physical address suggests walk-in availability may be practical, though weekend demand around a recognised address warrants arriving early or checking current practice directly.
For a broader picture of where to stay, drink, and experience the city around a visit, see our full New York City hotels guide, our full New York City bars guide, our full New York City wineries guide, and our full New York City experiences guide.
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Comparable Options
A small comparison set for context, based on the venues we track.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chick Chick | Asian | $$ | This venue |
| Le Bernardin | French, Seafood | $$$$ | French, Seafood, $$$$ |
| Atomix | Modern Korean, Korean | $$$$ | Modern Korean, Korean, $$$$ |
| Masa | Sushi, Japanese | $$$$ | Sushi, Japanese, $$$$ |
| Per Se | French, Contemporary | $$$$ | French, Contemporary, $$$$ |
| Eleven Madison Park | French, Vegan | $$$$ | French, Vegan, $$$$ |
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