Google: 4.1 · 2,523 reviews
Congee Village Restaurant & Bar

A Lower East Side institution on Allen Street, Congee Village has earned consecutive Opinionated About Dining recognition from 2023 through 2025, climbing from Recommended to a ranked position in North American casual dining. The kitchen anchors its menu in Cantonese comfort — congee, roasted meats, clay pot dishes — served in a setting that draws both neighbourhood regulars and curious visitors from across the city.
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Allen Street and the Cantonese Roast Tradition
The Lower East Side has long held an unusual position in New York's Chinese dining geography. Tucked at the southern edge of the neighbourhood, Allen Street sits at the point where Chinatown's older Cantonese infrastructure meets a younger, more mixed dining corridor. The roasted meat tradition that defines much of Cantonese cooking — char siu pork hung in deli windows, lacquered ducks suspended on hooks, crispy-skinned roasts displayed at counter level — arrived in New York with Cantonese immigrants and took firmest hold in this part of Manhattan. Congee Village Restaurant and Bar at 100 Allen St sits directly inside that tradition, and understanding it means understanding the broader arc of Hong Kong-style cooking in New York.
Cantonese roasting is a discipline that rewards patience and penalises shortcuts. Char siu relies on high heat, precise glazing, and timing that produces a caramelised crust over a yielding interior. Whole duck preparations demand temperature staging across multiple phases. The techniques are not complicated to describe but are difficult to execute consistently at scale , which is why the better Cantonese roast houses in New York tend to be operations that have been running these same processes for years. Congee Village's three consecutive years of Opinionated About Dining recognition, moving from Recommended in 2023 to a ranked position at #554 in 2024 and then #695 in 2025, points to a kitchen that has maintained a workable standard over time, even if that ranking movement also signals a field that keeps growing.
What the Roast Counter Tells You
In Hong Kong-rooted restaurants, the roast meat counter functions as an editorial statement. A kitchen that invests in proper siu mei , the category that covers char siu, roast goose, soy-poached chicken, and crispy pork belly , is signalling a commitment to Cantonese fundamentals that extends through the rest of the menu. Congee Village built its reputation on the pairing of its namesake rice porridge with these preparations: congee as the neutral, silky base; roasted meats as the protein layer that brings fat, sweetness, and char. It is a combination that has fed working Cantonese households for generations and one that higher-end Chinese restaurants in New York have been revisiting with renewed seriousness in recent years.
That renewed attention to fundamentals is visible across the New York Chinese dining scene. Compare the positioning here to something like Mister Jiu's in San Francisco, which applies fine-dining technique to Cantonese traditions in a tasting-menu format, or Restaurant Tim Raue in Berlin, where Chinese flavour architecture is translated through a European fine-dining lens. Congee Village operates in the opposite direction: the cooking is grounded in accessibility and volume, the prices remain low relative to the city average, and the format is the neighbourhood dining room rather than the destination tasting counter. That is not a compromise. It is a different brief entirely.
The Menu's Breadth and Its Logic
Cantonese menus of this type tend to run long, and for good reason. The cuisine covers a wide technical range: braised preparations, wok-fried dishes, steamed seafood, clay pot cooking, and the congee base that gives this restaurant its name. The congee itself , rice cooked low and slow with stock until individual grains dissolve into a thick, savoury porridge , is a dish that reads as simple and is technically demanding to get right. Achieving the correct texture (neither watery nor stiff, with a clean rice flavour under the toppings) requires attention at every stage. It is also a dish that rewards customisation: century egg and lean pork, fish slices, shredded chicken, or roasted meats laid over the surface.
The bar component, flagged in the restaurant's name, places this in a slightly different tier from the pure roast-and-congee storefronts concentrated further south in Chinatown. Big Wong on Mott Street represents the older, counter-service end of the same tradition. The Allen Street format suggests a more extended dining occasion, with space for groups and a wider range of table configurations. For comparison within a similar Lower East Side context, Alley 41 and Blue Willow offer different registers of Chinese cooking in the same neighbourhood, while Chongqing Lao Zao anchors the Sichuan end of the spectrum downtown. Asian Jewel Seafood Restaurant addresses the Cantonese seafood dimension at a different price point.
Where Congee Village Sits in the New York Casual Tier
The Opinionated About Dining ranking is specifically a casual dining list, which positions Congee Village in a competitive set that includes hundreds of Chinese restaurants across North America. A ranking in the 500-700 range across three consecutive years indicates sustained relevance at the neighbourhood and city level without the kind of critical traction that moves a restaurant into the top 100 of that list. To calibrate: the restaurants at the upper end of that OAD casual ranking tend to be operations with either long institutional histories or a distinctive regional specificity that has attracted specialist food media attention. Congee Village's value is in its consistency and its role as a reliable delivery mechanism for a cuisine that New York absorbed over a century ago and has never really let go.
Google rating of 4.1 across 2,393 reviews is a significant volume signal. That review count, assembled over years of regular service, reflects a customer base that is broad and recurring rather than driven by media attention spikes. High-volume ratings at 4.1 tend to reflect a kitchen that handles large tables and late sittings without dramatic quality collapse , which, for a roast-and-congee operation serving a mixed residential and tourist neighbourhood, is the relevant performance criterion.
Planning Your Visit
Table below places Congee Village in context against a selection of dining options across New York's Chinese and upscale restaurant spectrum. The comparison is calibrated for travellers deciding how to allocate dining occasions rather than suggesting these restaurants compete directly.
| Venue | Category | Price | Awards | Format |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Congee Village | Cantonese Casual | Low | OAD Casual Ranked 2024–2025 | Full-service dining room, bar |
| Big Wong | Cantonese Roast | Low | N/A | Counter-service, minimal seating |
| Le Bernardin | French Seafood | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Stars | Formal tasting and à la carte |
| Eleven Madison Park | French Vegan | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Stars | Set tasting menu only |
| Masa | Sushi Japanese | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Stars | Omakase counter |
For visitors building a multi-day New York dining itinerary, see our full New York City restaurants guide, our full New York City hotels guide, our full New York City bars guide, our full New York City wineries guide, and our full New York City experiences guide. For reference points elsewhere in the country, Emeril's in New Orleans, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Alinea in Chicago, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, The French Laundry in Napa, and Providence in Los Angeles each define their respective category anchors in American fine dining. Congee Village occupies a different register entirely, but sits within the same conversation about what serious eating across price points looks like in American cities.
Cost and Credentials
Comparable venues for orientation, based on our database fields.
| Venue | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Congee Village Restaurant & Bar | Opinionated About Dining Casual in North America Ranked #695 (2025); Opinionated… | This venue | |
| Le Bernardin | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star | French, Seafood, $$$$ |
| Atomix | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Star | Modern Korean, Korean, $$$$ |
| Masa | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star | Sushi, Japanese, $$$$ |
| Per Se | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star | French, Contemporary, $$$$ |
| Eleven Madison Park | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star | French, Vegan, $$$$ |
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