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Modern Chinese Dim Sum

Google: 4.4 · 1,058 reviews

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CuisineChinese
Executive ChefJoe Ng
Price≈$60
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseLively
CapacityMedium
Opinionated About Dining

RedFarm on Broadway has been one of the Upper West Side's most consistent Chinese dining addresses since it first drew notice in the early 2010s, earning Opinionated About Dining recognition through 2023–2025. Chef Joe Ng's approach to dim sum and Chinese-American cooking keeps a loyal local following returning well beyond first visits. Friday through Sunday lunch service adds a daytime option that weekday-only dining rooms rarely offer.

Pearl is the En Primeur Club membership app — saves, bookings, and concierge access live there. Same editors, same standards.

RedFarm restaurant in New York City, United States
About

Where the Upper West Side Eats Chinese

New York's Chinese dining scene has historically concentrated downtown — Flushing's Cantonese and Fujianese blocks, Chinatown's roast-meat windows, the escalating regional variety along Eldridge and East Broadway. The Upper West Side has operated on a different logic: a residential neighbourhood with high repeat-visit rates and diners who prioritise reliability over discovery. RedFarm, at 2170 Broadway, arrived into that context and found a durable audience. By the time our full New York City restaurants guide was assembled, it was already carrying years of accumulated loyalty rather than novelty buzz.

That loyalty is the operative word. The Opinionated About Dining ranking — Recommended in 2023, #293 in the Casual North America list in 2024, #452 in 2025 , tells the story of a restaurant that has stayed in critical view across multiple years without requiring a menu reset or concept overhaul. A Google score of 4.4 from over 1,000 reviews reflects the same pattern: consistent performance read across a large sample, not a spike driven by a single press moment.

The Dim Sum Framework on the Upper West Side

Dim sum in New York has traditionally demanded either an early morning start in Flushing or a weekend table at a Chinatown banquet hall. RedFarm recalibrated that access point. Chef Joe Ng's background in high-volume dim sum production , he spent years at establishments where the technical precision of folded and pleated dough is treated as a craft standard rather than a throughput problem , informs a menu that applies classical dim sum architecture to a neighbourhood restaurant format. The result sits in a specific tier: more technically considered than a takeout-friendly Chinese-American spot, more accessible in format than the downtown specialists.

For regulars, this translates into a practical rhythm. The Friday-to-Sunday lunch window (noon to 3 pm) functions as the primary entry point for the dim sum-adjacent portion of the menu. Weekday evenings, from 4:30 to 10 pm Monday through Thursday, draw a different crowd , the post-work Upper West Side diner who has already moved past the exploratory phase and knows what they are ordering. The distinction between those two visit patterns is where the regulars' perspective becomes most visible: the people who eat here on a Tuesday at 6 pm are not the same people as the Saturday afternoon crowd, and the kitchen holds for both.

What Keeps Regulars Returning

The editorial angle that matters most at RedFarm is not what the menu contains on any given week , it is what the restaurant has trained its regulars to expect. In Chinese dining specifically, repeat-visit culture operates through a kind of unwritten menu fluency: the knowledge of which dishes arrive in what condition on which day, which items to anchor a table around, and which newer additions have earned permanent mental real estate. That fluency takes multiple visits to develop, and RedFarm has had enough years in operation to cultivate it across a substantial base.

Comparatively, this positions RedFarm differently from the downtown Chinese specialists at Big Wong or the Cantonese seafood format of Asian Jewel Seafood Restaurant, and equally differently from the cocktail-bar-meets-Chinese format at Alley 41. Each serves a different kind of regular. RedFarm's version is the Upper West Side household that has assigned it a specific role in the weekly rotation , Chinese food that requires no cab to Flushing and no 45-minute wait outside a ground-floor Chinatown operation.

The 2025 OAD ranking drop from #293 to #452 is worth reading accurately rather than dismissively. The Casual North America list has expanded and intensified in competition year over year. A venue remaining ranked across three consecutive years in that environment , including landing a specific numeric position rather than a generic recommendation , reflects sustained kitchen performance. For context, the same list contains entries across dozens of cities; staying inside the top 500 over multiple years while operating in a high-cost, high-competition market like New York is not a passive achievement.

RedFarm in the Broader Chinese Dining Context

The global conversation around Chinese cooking has shifted considerably in the past decade. In Berlin, Restaurant Tim Raue has built a high-tasting-menu interpretation of Chinese flavour architecture. In San Francisco, Mister Jiu's operates in Chinatown with a farm-driven, California-inflected approach. New York's equivalent conversation has tended to focus on regional specificity , Sichuan heat, Shanghainese precision, Cantonese restraint , rather than the chef-driven fusion model. RedFarm occupies a different register within that conversation: it takes the technical demands of dim sum seriously without repositioning the cuisine as a vehicle for a chef's personal statement.

That makes it a different kind of reference point than the fine-dining tier , the Le Bernardin or Per Se level of New York dining , and more directly comparable to the neighbourhood Chinese addresses that have built durable reputations through consistency rather than spectacle. Among those, RedFarm's track record of critical recognition across three OAD cycles puts it in a relatively small group.

For New York dining beyond Chinese, our full New York City bars guide and our full New York City hotels guide cover the broader picture. Visitors building an itinerary around Chinese specifically should also consider the Sichuan-focused Chongqing Lao Zao and the quieter Cantonese option at Blue Willow.

Planning Your Visit

DetailRedFarm (2170 Broadway)Typical downtown Chinese specialistUpper-tier NYC dining (e.g. Alinea-tier)
Lunch availabilityFri–Sun, noon–3 pmVaries; often dailyLimited or weekend-only
Dinner hoursMon–Sun, 4:30–10 pmOften earlier startSet seating times
Critical recognitionOAD Casual NA 2023–2025Varies widelyMichelin / 50 Best tier
NeighbourhoodUpper West SideChinatown / FlushingMidtown / West Village
FormatÀ la carte, casualÀ la carte or dim sum cartTasting menu

RedFarm is at 2170 Broadway, New York, NY 10024. Dinner runs seven days a week from 4:30 to 10 pm; lunch is available Friday through Sunday from noon to 3 pm. For the full picture of where RedFarm sits within New York's Chinese dining offer, see our full New York City restaurants guide. Travellers planning around experiences and wineries can reference our full New York City experiences guide and our full New York City wineries guide.

Signature Dishes
Pac-Man Shrimp DumplingsPeking DuckPastrami Egg RollCrispy Oxtail Dumplings
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At a Glance
Vibe
  • Lively
  • Modern
  • Whimsical
  • Trendy
  • Elegant
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Group Dining
  • Special Occasion
Experience
  • Open Kitchen
Drink Program
  • Craft Cocktails
  • Sake Program
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelLively
CapacityMedium
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingStandard

Warm, lively atmosphere with fun, modern farmhouse decor featuring exposed pipes, plants, and intimate communal seating.

Signature Dishes
Pac-Man Shrimp DumplingsPeking DuckPastrami Egg RollCrispy Oxtail Dumplings