Strange Delight
Strange Delight occupies a Lafayette Avenue address in Brooklyn's Fort Greene, operating at the quieter edge of a neighbourhood that has produced some of New York's more interesting independent dining in recent years. With sparse public data and no declared cuisine type, the restaurant invites investigation rather than assumption, a posture that, in itself, says something about where Brooklyn dining is headed.
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- Address
- 63 Lafayette Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11217
- Website
- strangedelight.nyc

Fort Greene's Quieter Dining Register
Brooklyn's premium dining conversation tends to start and end with a handful of names in Williamsburg and Carroll Gardens, which means Fort Greene operates at a remove from the borough's most saturated press coverage. That distance has become a functional advantage for a small number of addresses along and around Lafayette Avenue, where restaurants can build a local following before the wider city catches up. Strange Delight, at 63 Lafayette Ave, Brooklyn, is a restaurant serving New Orleans-Inspired Seafood at a $50 per person price point.
The broader pattern here is worth naming. New York's most discussed restaurant openings in the last several years have clustered in Manhattan's upper-tier brackets, Atomix, Jungsik New York, and the enduring presences of Le Bernardin and Per Se, while Brooklyn's more interesting independent openings have been absorbed into neighbourhood life rather than the awards circuit. Strange Delight fits that second pattern, and for a certain kind of diner, that is precisely the appeal.
Reading the Menu Architecture
The most direct interpretation is that the kitchen resists the shorthand categories that drive search and aggregator placement, a position that has become more common among independent Brooklyn operators who are building for regulars rather than algorithm-driven traffic. A menu that refuses easy labeling typically signals one of three things: aggressive cross-category cooking, a format that changes frequently enough to make any single label obsolete, or a deliberately intimate operation that communicates through word of mouth rather than public-facing copy.
Each of those orientations produces a different kind of dining experience, and they are not mutually exclusive. Restaurants along this stretch of Brooklyn have increasingly adopted formats where the menu functions as a sequence of decisions rather than a static list: smaller courses offered in combinations, a central protein or technique that anchors a rotating set of accompaniments, or a format that blurs the line between tasting menu discipline and à la carte flexibility. The name Strange Delight suggests a kitchen comfortable with register shifts, something that reads as comfort food in structure but arrives with unexpected technical or ingredient choices underneath. That is speculative, but it is the kind of speculation the venue's own presentation invites.
What the menu architecture tells a diner, even before they sit down, is how a kitchen thinks about the relationship between the cook and the guest. Restaurants that publish precise, detailed menus in advance are signaling transparency and repeatability. Restaurants that offer less are typically signaling either improvisation or exclusivity. In Fort Greene, where the dining room tends to skew local and returning rather than tourist-driven, the latter posture can sustain a room without the marketing infrastructure that Manhattan venues depend on. Compare that to the tightly structured tasting formats at Masa, where every logistical and communicative decision reinforces an omakase discipline, and the contrast clarifies what Strange Delight is choosing not to be.
The Brooklyn Independent Tier in 2024
Across American cities, the independent mid-tier restaurant has been under sustained financial pressure since 2020, and New York has been no exception. What has survived in Brooklyn specifically is a particular type of operator: small rooms, chef-driven menus with lower labor overhead, and a pricing structure that sits below the Manhattan tasting-menu ceiling without competing directly with the neighbourhood's casual end. This is the tier that places like Blue Hill at Stone Barns in Tarrytown and Lazy Bear in San Francisco occupy at a higher price point, but with a similar philosophy of intentional smallness driving the format.
Fort Greene's dining scene specifically has benefited from proximity to a consistent arts audience, BAM's programming calendar creates a reliable wave of pre- and post-show diners who are culturally engaged and price-tolerant without being exclusively drawn to the city's most expensive rooms. A restaurant at 63 Lafayette is positioned to serve that audience without the overhead of a higher-profile block. Whether Strange Delight is explicitly calibrated to that opportunity or simply well-located for it, the address carries its own logistical intelligence.
For readers tracking the broader American independent dining picture, the Fort Greene model rhymes with what has happened in other cities' secondary neighbourhoods: think the way certain Atlanta operators orbit the Bacchanalia-anchored Westside scene, or how Providence in Los Angeles holds a position slightly apart from the Hollywood dining cluster. Bacchanalia and Addison in San Diego represent different ends of what intentional positioning away from the most competitive cluster can produce over time. Strange Delight is earlier in that arc.
Planning a Visit
Strange Delight is located at 63 Lafayette Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11217. Reservations are recommended. The address, 63 Lafayette Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11217, is in the Fort Greene neighbourhood, accessible from the G train at Fulton Street or the C train at Lafayette Avenue, both within a short walk. Fort Greene sits between Downtown Brooklyn and Prospect Heights, making it a logical stop when combining an evening at BAM with dinner.
Logistics at a Glance
| Factor | Strange Delight (Fort Greene) | Atomix (Midtown/NoMad) | Per Se (Columbus Circle) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Neighbourhood | Fort Greene, Brooklyn | NoMad, Manhattan | Columbus Circle, Manhattan |
| Price tier | $$ | $$$$ | $$$$ |
| Booking channel | Reservations recommended | Tock (advance required) | Direct / OpenTable |
| Cuisine declared | New Orleans-Inspired Seafood | Modern Korean | French Contemporary |
| Transit | G to Fulton St / C to Lafayette Ave | N/R/W to 28th St | A/C/B/D/1 to 59th St |
Cuisine and Recognition
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Strange DelightThis venue — the venue you are viewing | New Orleans-Inspired Seafood | $$ | , | |
| Greenpoint Fish & Lobster Co. | Sustainable Seafood Raw Bar | $$ | , | Greenpoint |
| Grand Banks | Sustainable Seafood Oyster Bar | $$$ | , | Tribeca-Civic Center |
| Cap't Loui | Cajun Seafood Boil | $$ | , | Midtown South-Flatiron-Union Square |
| Lure Fishbar | Modern Seafood & Sushi | $$$ | 1 recognition | SoHo-Little Italy-Hudson Square |
| Seamore's | Sustainable Seafood | $$ | , | Downtown Brooklyn-DUMBO-Boerum Hill |
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