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CuisineNew American
Executive ChefAndy Quinn
LocationNew York City, United States
Opinionated About Dining
Wine Spectator
Star Wine List

On Bleecker Street in the West Village, The Noortwyck occupies the neighbourhood-restaurant tier that sits well below the grand-tasting-menu circuit yet above the casual bistro crowd. Opened by Eleven Madison Park alumni Andy Quinn and Cedric Nicaise, it earned a place on Opinionated About Dining's 2025 Top Restaurants in North America list and draws a wine-serious, repeat clientele with a France-anchored list of 400 selections.

The Noortwyck restaurant in New York City, United States
About

A West Village Address Built on Repetition, Not Occasion

The West Village has long operated on a different logic from the rest of Manhattan's dining scene. Where Midtown and the Flatiron block runs on corporate expense accounts and destination-seekers, Bleecker Street's rhythm is shaped by residents who eat out three or four nights a week and have very specific ideas about where they want to sit. The neighbourhood-restaurant model that works here demands a quality ceiling high enough to hold serious diners and a comfort level low enough that nobody feels obligated to dress up. That particular balance is harder to strike than it sounds, which is why so few places on this stretch manage to sustain a loyal following past the first year or two.

The Noortwyck, at 289 Bleecker St, opened into that context with credentials drawn from one of the most scrutinised dining rooms in American fine dining. Andy Quinn had been a sous chef at Eleven Madison Park; Cedric Nicaise had served as its Wine Director. The two met there, worked together for years, and eventually stepped away from the white-tablecloth format to build something closer to the kind of restaurant people actually return to weekly rather than annually. That decision — trading institutional prestige for neighbourhood permanence — is the defining move behind what The Noortwyck has become. For comparison, see how a similar instinct shapes Craft in the Flatiron, where Tom Colicchio's departure from formal structure produced a different but related kind of repeat-visit loyalty.

Where It Sits in the New American Field

New American as a category covers an enormous range. At one extreme, you have tasting-menu operations like Alinea in Chicago or The French Laundry in Napa, where the format is theatrical and the price point reflects a singular evening. At the other end sit neighbourhood bistros where provenance is approximate and the wine list stops at thirty labels. The Noortwyck operates in neither register. Its cuisine pricing sits at the $$ tier, meaning a typical two-course meal lands between $40 and $65 before beverages, which puts it in the same bracket as ABC Kitchen without the Flatiron foot traffic and tourist draw that sustains that room. The peer set here is closer to The Four Horsemen in Williamsburg: quality-serious, wine-forward, priced for frequency rather than occasion.

The recognition that followed reflects that positioning accurately. Opinionated About Dining ranked The Noortwyck among its Leading Restaurants in North America in both 2024 (at #489) and again in 2025, a consistency that signals staying power rather than a single good season. OAD rankings are built on aggregated data from frequent, knowledgeable diners rather than anonymous inspectors, which makes them a reasonable proxy for exactly the kind of repeat-visitor endorsement The Noortwyck is built on. For broader context on where it sits regionally, places like Providence in Los Angeles, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, and Lazy Bear in San Francisco represent what the West Coast version of serious American cooking looks like at various price points. The Noortwyck's approach, anchored in a more European wine sensibility and a West Village dining cadence, reads as distinctly New York.

The Wine Program as the Real Return Driver

Among the things that keep a loyal clientele returning to the same room repeatedly, a wine list they can explore across multiple visits ranks high. The Noortwyck's list runs to approximately 400 selections with an inventory of around 3,000 bottles, a scale that places it well above the bistro tier and into territory usually reserved for rooms with significantly higher check averages. France is the acknowledged strength of the list, which tracks with Nicaise's background directing one of New York's most respected cellars. The list is priced at the $$$ level, meaning many bottles cross the $100 mark, though the range is wide enough that entry points exist. Corkage is set at $70 for those who bring their own.

Wine Director Jodi Mixon and Sommelier Marshall Miller now run the floor program day to day. A room where the wine list has genuine depth and the staff has been trained at a high level produces a different kind of regular than a place that happens to have a good cocktail. The diner who returns three times in two months to work through different sections of a France-heavy cellar is a specific type, and The Noortwyck has clearly attracted enough of them to sustain this format. That's a materially different dynamic from the bar-first energy at Beauty & Essex or the occasion-dining register of Clocktower. For the diner whose repeat-visit logic is guided by the cellar rather than a signature dish, The Noortwyck is one of the cleaner options at this price point in the city.

The Regulars' Logic

A Google rating of 4.6 across 352 reviews is a reasonable signal, but it doesn't distinguish between first-timers and the diner on their fifteenth visit. The more telling indicator is the OAD ranking, which weights exactly that kind of accumulated, knowledgeable engagement. What regular diners at a room like this tend to gravitate toward is different from what brings in a first-timer. The Saturday and Sunday lunch service, running 11am to 2:30pm, is less saturated than the evening slots and gives the room a different character: slower, more neighbourhood, closer to the brunch culture that regulars often use as their low-pressure entry point. The evening service runs from 5:30pm on weekdays, closing at 10pm Tuesday through Friday and Saturday, slightly earlier on Monday and Sunday.

For New American cooking with a comparable pedigree at longer-established addresses, Emeril's in New Orleans, The Inn at Little Washington, and Bayona in New Orleans each represent a different regional expression of what American fine dining has become over decades. The Noortwyck is a younger entry in that tradition, but its OAD consistency and the calibre of its opening team give it a floor that most new West Village openings don't have.

Planning Your Visit

The restaurant is located at 289 Bleecker St in the West Village, open for dinner Monday through Sunday and for weekend lunch on Saturday and Sunday from 11am. The wine list's $70 corkage fee is worth factoring in for anyone bringing a bottle from their own cellar. General Manager Amédée Timmer oversees the floor alongside the wine team. For more context on where The Noortwyck sits within the broader city dining picture, see our full New York City restaurants guide. For those planning a wider trip, our New York City hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide cover the rest of the city at the same level of detail.

Quick reference: 289 Bleecker St, West Village | Dinner nightly, weekend lunch | Wine list: 400 selections, France-focused, $$$ pricing | Corkage: $70 | OAD Leading Restaurants in North America 2024 and 2025

What Do Regulars Order at The Noortwyck?

The Noortwyck's repeat visitors tend to orient their meals around the wine list rather than a fixed dish order, which is a reliable sign that the kitchen is consistent enough that no single item has to carry the whole experience. The New American format, with its emphasis on seasonal sourcing and flexible composition, means the menu shifts with enough frequency to reward frequent visits. What the OAD ranking and 4.6 Google score together suggest is that the kitchen produces at the $$ price point without the inconsistency that often comes with trying to keep food costs down in a city with New York's overhead. For a room with this level of opening pedigree and a wine program of this depth, the regulars' real loyalty is almost certainly split between the cellar and a kitchen that gives them a reason to keep coming back rather than rotating to the next new opening.

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