Google: 4.6 · 2,334 reviews
Union Square Cafe



Among New York's farm-to-table institutions, Union Square Cafe occupies a specific position: a restaurant where sourcing discipline and seasonal cooking have been consistent practice for decades, not a recent rebranding. Now at 101 E 19th St under Chef Lena Ciardullo, it holds an Opinionated About Dining Casual North America ranking and carries one of the city's more serious wine programs, with 865 selections and 10,250 bottles in inventory.
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- Address
- 101 E 19th St, New York, NY 10003
- Phone
- (212) 243-4020
- Website
- unionsquarecafe.com

The Farm-to-Table Tradition, Grounded in Flatiron
The farm-to-table movement in American dining has passed through several phases: the idealistic sourcing manifesto of the 1980s and 1990s, the mid-2000s saturation where the term became a menu cliché, and the current period where a smaller group of restaurants are judged not on whether they source locally but on how consistently and how long they have done so. Union Square Cafe, operating out of 101 E 19th St in the Flatiron district, sits in that last category. Its proximity to the Union Square Greenmarket is not incidental branding; the market has operated at the intersection of 17th Street and Broadway since 1976 and remains one of the city's most active farm-direct trading points. Restaurants in the immediate area that actually use it have a logistical advantage that newer venues in other neighbourhoods have to work around. This is the context in which Union Square Cafe's cooking should be read.
The New American category covers a wide range, from steakhouse-adjacent comfort menus to technically ambitious tasting formats. The upper tier of that category in New York currently includes places like Craft and ABC Kitchen, both of which operate under a similar sourcing philosophy and a comparable price point. Where Union Square Cafe differs from several peers is in its sustained recognition over time rather than a single high-visibility moment. Its Opinionated About Dining Casual North America ranking has moved from #63 in 2023 to #100 in 2024 and #121 in 2025, a modest decline in a competitive field, but the continued presence on that list across three consecutive years signals a consistency that rankings-chasing venues frequently fail to maintain.
Chef Lena Ciardullo and the Current Kitchen Direction
Within the broader farm-to-table tradition, the practical question is always who is executing it and with what discipline. Lena Ciardullo holds the chef position at Union Square Cafe, operating within a kitchen framework set by Union Square Hospitality Group, the larger organisation that owns the restaurant. USHG has shaped a significant portion of New York's casual-fine dining culture since the 1980s, and its operational standards carry weight across the portfolio. The kitchen at Union Square Cafe runs lunch and dinner service, Monday through Sunday, which is a fuller weekly schedule than many comparable restaurants in the city maintain. Dinner service extends to midnight on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, making it one of the later kitchens in the Flatiron area that operates at this tier.
The farm-to-table approach, when applied rigorously, produces menus that change with genuine frequency rather than seasonal rotation for its own sake. That means the menu a visitor encounters in late October is substantively different from one in early March, not just in the substitution of one root vegetable for another but in the whole logic of what the kitchen is building around. Comparing this to the fixed-format model used by restaurants like Alinea in Chicago or The French Laundry in Napa illustrates how different the underlying hospitality contract is: Union Square Cafe operates as a repeatable neighbourhood resource rather than a destination event. That positioning also separates it clearly from New York's highest-price tier, represented by venues like Per Se, Eleven Madison Park, and Masa, where the experience is structured around a single occasion at a significantly higher price point.
A Wine Program Built for the Table
The wine side of Union Square Cafe is substantial enough to warrant separate consideration. At 865 selections and 10,250 bottles in inventory, it sits in the serious mid-large range for New York restaurants at this category. Wine Director Dorian González Vega leads a sommelier team that includes Willa Cmeil, David Thornton, Tyrone Halliman, Adam Lewis, and Rocco Mcguire, which is a deeper floor staff than most restaurants in the casual-fine tier carry. The list's documented strengths run across California, Burgundy, Italy, Bordeaux, France, Tuscany, and the Rhône, covering the major reference regions without narrowing to a single identity. The pricing tier is $$$, indicating a concentration of bottles above $100, and the corkage fee is set at $35 for those bringing their own. A Star Wine List White Star recognition, published in August 2022, provides an external validation point for the program's quality.
For comparison, wine-forward casual restaurants in New York like The Four Horsemen have built their identity around a more curated, natural-wine-led selection. Union Square Cafe's approach is broader in scope and more classically anchored, which suits its farm-driven menu framework. The pairing logic of the list follows the kitchen: seasonal ingredients that have California and European counterparts in the cellar.
Where Union Square Cafe Sits in the New York Scene
New York's farm-to-table restaurants now occupy a well-defined middle ground between the white-tablecloth French and contemporary formats that dominate the Michelin lists and the casualised natural wine bars that have expanded sharply since 2018. Union Square Cafe has held a position in that middle ground longer than most of its current peers. Places like Beauty & Essex and Clocktower occupy adjacent parts of the New York dining map but operate under different format logic. Further afield, the farm-to-table discipline has produced strong regional counterparts: Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg pursues an extreme form of the same sourcing idea; Lazy Bear in San Francisco brings seasonal American cooking into a tasting format; Emeril's in New Orleans, Providence in Los Angeles, The Inn at Little Washington, and Bayona in New Orleans each represent how the New American tradition has developed across different cities with different ingredient bases. Union Square Cafe's version is specifically New York in its reliance on the Greenmarket network and its density of hospitality infrastructure.
Google reviews register a 4.6 rating across 2,169 responses, a data point that, at that volume, carries some weight as a signal of consistent execution over a large number of covers rather than a few memorable evenings.
Planning a Visit
Union Square Cafe operates lunch service from 11:30 am to 3 pm and dinner from 5 pm daily, with the kitchen running to midnight on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday nights. The address is 101 E 19th St, a short walk from the 14th Street–Union Square subway hub, which connects the N, Q, R, W, 4, 5, 6, and L lines. The cuisine pricing sits at $$$, meaning a typical two-course meal (excluding wine and tip) runs above $66 per person. The wine program carries the same pricing tier, and the depth of the sommelier team means guidance on the 865-selection list is available from knowledgeable floor staff. A $35 corkage fee applies for outside bottles. General Manager Kaitlyn Merges oversees the floor operation. For those building a wider New York itinerary, our full New York City restaurants guide, hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide cover the broader city in the same editorial depth.
A Tight Comparison
A quick peer check to anchor this venue’s price and recognition.
| Venue | Notes | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Union Square Cafe | This venue | |
| Le Bernardin | French, Seafood, $$$$ | $$$$ |
| Atomix | Modern Korean, Korean, $$$$ | $$$$ |
| Masa | Sushi, Japanese, $$$$ | $$$$ |
| Per Se | French, Contemporary, $$$$ | $$$$ |
| Eleven Madison Park | French, Vegan, $$$$ | $$$$ |
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Classy yet comfortable with inviting, contemporary design by Rockwell Group; warm and welcoming atmosphere suitable for both casual lunches and special occasions.



















