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Smithereens
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Opened in November 2024, Smithereens brings a subterranean New England seafood sensibility to the East Village, with Chef Nick Tamburo's tight, seafood-forward menu championing under-appreciated species like bluefish, mackerel, and whiting. A Star Wine List White Star and 2025 Resy Hit List pick, it occupies a dimly lit, counter-and-table space at 414 E 9th St with a wine program built almost entirely around high-energy whites.
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East Village, November 2024: A Different Kind of Seafood Room
New York's seafood dining has long been split between white-tablecloth institutions and casual raw bars, with relatively little in between that takes the product seriously without dressing it in ceremony. When Smithereens opened on East 9th Street in November 2024, it arrived in that middle ground — a subterranean room in the East Village that draws on the flinty, workaday tradition of New England coastal cooking rather than the breezy summer-clam-shack version most restaurants reach for. The East Village is not the city's obvious address for serious seafood. That distinction tends to belong to Midtown and the West Side, where places like Marea and Lure Fishbar operate against a different price and formality register. Smithereens plants itself firmly downtown, and everything about it — the pricing, the format, the fish it chooses to feature , reflects that positioning.
What the Neighbourhood Demands, and What Smithereens Delivers
The East Village has a long appetite for restaurants that take a point of view without demanding deference in return. The neighbourhood's dining character runs toward independent operators, modest room sizes, and menus that reward attention without requiring a occasion. Smithereens fits that profile precisely. The room is dim, counter-and-table, filling every available nook , a layout that puts the food and the drink front and centre without architectural flourish. At the $$$ price point, it sits a full tier below the city's prestige seafood addresses: the four-star French register of Le Bernardin, or the tasting-menu ambition of Oceans. That gap matters. It means Smithereens is in practical rotation for a downtown diner in a way those rooms are not. Its peer set is closer to Crevette and Mermaid Oyster Bar than to the city's grand seafood institutions , though its wine credentials and the ambition of its sourcing push it toward something more considered than either.
The Menu: Championing the Under-Appreciated Side of the Sea
The decisive editorial choice at Smithereens is what it refuses to centre. There are no luxury-fish defaults here , no halibut at market price, no Dover sole to signal seriousness. Instead, Chef Nick Tamburo builds a tight menu around species that the restaurant industry has historically treated as secondary: bluefish, mackerel, whiting, amberjack belly. These are fish with strong flavour profiles and a tendency to be written off as difficult or unfashionable, and they are precisely what makes this kitchen's approach credible. Bluefish, which feeds aggressively and picks up the character of its diet, requires real technique to handle well. Mackerel's reputation for oiliness obscures a genuine delicacy when sourced and cooked with care. Whiting is abundant and largely ignored by restaurant menus that chase perceived prestige.
Cooking method for amberjack belly , grilled over binchotan charcoal , signals a kitchen that understands how heat source shapes flavour, not just how to present an interesting species. Binchotan, the dense Japanese charcoal used in yakitori and high-end grilling contexts, burns at a consistent temperature with minimal smoke, allowing fat to render without acrid char. Applying it to a New England-influenced menu is a coherent cross-reference, not an affectation. Boston mackerel brightened with seaweed and ginger shows the same logic: a classic New England species pulled through an acid-and-umami frame that makes the fish taste more like itself, not less. A bowl of beans rich with shrimp, uni, and squid shows the kitchen's willingness to weight a dish toward the hearty end without losing precision in the bowl.
Two dishes demonstrate how the menu treats familiar formats from a slightly tilted angle. Chowder , the definitive New England reference point , is reworked here with creamy rice and quahog clams, arriving frothed in a way that redistributes the dish's richness across the bowl rather than pooling it. It is recognisably chowder, and recognisably not. The cider doughnut, often a rustic fairground item in its home territory, is treated as a considered dessert; the celery root float, by contrast, pushes harder into the unexpected. Both choices confirm a kitchen that finds its material in working-class coastal tradition and refuses to flatten it into comfort-food nostalgia.
The Wine Program: White-Led, Built for the Menu
Serious seafood restaurants in New York increasingly treat the wine list as a structural element of the meal rather than an afterthought. Smithereens, with its Star Wine List White Star designation awarded in April 2025, belongs to this cohort. Sommelier Nikita Malhotra has constructed a list weighted heavily toward white wines described as bright and high-energy , the kind of acidity-forward, mineral-inflected selections that work with the briny and citrus-touched flavour profiles on the food menu. The White Star recognition from Star Wine List is a credentialled signal: that publication evaluates lists on depth, range, and coherence rather than simply on size or name-brand bottle count.
For comparison, the broader New York seafood category includes rooms where the wine program is perfunctory , a short list of obvious Chablis and Sancerre designed to satisfy rather than engage. The structure at Smithereens is more intentional than that, which matters at a price point where the wine spend may represent a significant portion of the total bill. Knowing the list is somm-led and award-recognised informs that decision in a useful way.
Context: Seafood Ambition Beyond New York
The approach Smithereens takes , unglamorous species, technique-forward, wine-serious , echoes patterns visible in ambitious seafood cooking elsewhere. Gambero Rosso in Marina di Gioiosa Ionica and Alici on the Amalfi Coast both operate in a register where the identity of the fish, its origin, and its handling carry the meal rather than sauce, ceremony, or luxury ingredient additions. The comparison is not about style , the New England reference point is distinct , but about the underlying philosophy: that the sea's less celebrated products, treated with genuine skill, produce more interesting meals than the premium defaults. That is the same argument Smithereens is making on East 9th Street.
For other ambitious seafood experiences across the United States, the spectrum runs from the coastal simplicity of Providence in Los Angeles to the Californian precision of The French Laundry in Napa and the ingredient-led focus of Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, where sourcing discipline is the organising principle.
Planning Your Visit
Smithereens is located at 414 E 9th St, New York, NY 10009, in the East Village. The restaurant opened in November 2024 and earned a place on the Resy Leading of the Hit List for 2025 within its first operating months, alongside its Star Wine List White Star designation. Price range: $$$ (mid-tier by New York standards, accessible relative to the city's prestige seafood addresses). Reservations: check current availability through Resy, which published the Hit List recognition. Dress code: no formal dress code indicated; the room's character is downtown-casual. Timing: as a restaurant that opened in late 2024 and collected two notable recognitions before its first full year, booking ahead is advisable , early visibility tends to accelerate demand at this price point in this neighbourhood.
For further reading on where Smithereens sits in the wider city picture, see our full New York City restaurants guide. For planning the rest of your visit: our New York City hotels guide, our New York City bars guide, our New York City wineries guide, and our New York City experiences guide.
Price Lens
These are the closest comparables we have in our database for quick context.
| Venue | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Smithereens | $$$ | Smithereens is a restaurant in New York City, USA. It was published on Star Wine… | This venue |
| Le Bernardin | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star | French, Seafood, $$$$ |
| Atomix | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Star | Modern Korean, Korean, $$$$ |
| Masa | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star | Sushi, Japanese, $$$$ |
| Per Se | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star | French, Contemporary, $$$$ |
| Eleven Madison Park | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star | French, Vegan, $$$$ |
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Dark, low-ceilinged subterranean space with gray-and-blue tones and ski cabin-like back room; dimly lit with taper candles creating an intimate, sexy submarine aesthetic rather than seaside cottage feel.



















