Every Haitian restaurant worth eating at in New York City (2024)

Every Haitian restaurant worth eating at in New York City (1)

At a Haitian restaurant in NYC, feed your Caribbean food obsession (or curiosity) and have zero room left over

Photgraph: Courtesy Yelp/Nina M.

Written by Arielle Shorr

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At a Haitian restaurant, the food is fusion food and a gastronomical guide to the country’s history—as is the case with many other kinds of West Indian food. It shares ingredients and cooking traditions with Cuban, Trinidadian, Dominican and Jamaicanrestaurants, all originating in places the indigenous Taíno people once inhabited. On top of that, you find influence from Spanish, French and African restaurants, all reflective of Haiti’s colonial past. Today, these NYC cafes and bakeries serve up authentic flavors, so venture out for griot, patties and some good old grilled meat. After all, it was from the Taíno word barbicu that the Spanish coined barbacoa, aka BBQ!

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Best Haitian restaurants

1.La Caye
  • Haitian
  • Fort Greene
  • price 2 of 4

Photograph: Courtesy Yelp/David S.

Fort Greene’s La Caye is a gem. This is your destination when you’re ready to explore Haitian food beyond the basics, with its comparatively large array of menu options. Start with the Fritay Platter for appetizers, and be sure to order at least one thing with Creole sauce. Wash everything down with Prestige, Haiti’s national beer, or choose from the selection of unusually creative co*cktails. The Goodnight Kiss, for example, includes jalapeño, tomatillo, thyme and champagne(!). Live Caribbean and African music gives the warm and cozy ambiance that extra-special buzz.

2.Grandchamps
  • Haitian
  • Bedford-Stuyvesant
  • price 2 of 4

Photograph: Courtesy Yelp/Jiwon K.

Grandchamps provides a spacious dining room, warmed up by yellow ceramic tiles that line the walls. It’s a hybrid of a restaurant and street fairs and sells some of the ingredients found in its dishes. Chef Shawn Brockman channels his mother-in-law’s homestyle cooking, serving some of the tastiest, crispy-on-the-outside, miraculously juicy griot (fried cubes of pork), as well as a number of Haitian classics converted into sandwich form. Just promise us you won’t leave until you try the pain potate, which is a coconut-y sweet potato bread pudding. So good.

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3.Kafe Louverture
  • Haitian
  • Bedford-Stuyvesant
  • price 1 of 4

Photograph: Courtesy Yelp/Anthony C.

Grab one of the few seats at this adorable little brick-walled bake shop in the heart of Bed-Stuy. It used to be just a breakfast spot where locals got their fix of Haitian drip coffee and patties with buttery, fluffy pastry dough that melts in your mouth, giving way to perfectly spiced meat or vegetable filling. Luckily, however, it’s recently expanded its menu to include dishes like jerk chicken, Diri Djon Djon (black mushroom rice) and coconut curry shrimp, along with lunch and dinner options. By the way, the decorations are all hand-made, totally purchasable artwork.

  • Haitian
  • Prospect Heights
  • price 2 of 4

Photograph: Courtesy Yelp/Steves V.

White tablecloths, a long wood-top bar and mood lighting set this Flatbush establishment aside from the typical no-frills, laminate table tops of many Caribbean restaurants. More important than the decor, this is one of your best bets for lambi, the national dish of Haiti. Lambi is a stew made from conch, the creature that lives in those big seashells found on the beach, pounded down for chewability and simmered in a spicy tomato broth. If that’s not quite your thing, its chayote squash and vegetable stew, legume, can either come meatless or with the tenderest of beef.

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5.Le Soleil Restaurant
  • Haitian
  • price 2 of 4

Photgraph: Courtesy Yelp/Nina M.

This is the only non-Brooklyn spot on our list, but that’s because it’s the only restaurant left over from what used to be Manhattan’s Haitian neighborhood in the 1960s. Today its menu is split into two parts: The first covers the classic Haitian staples, griot (fried chunks of fatty pork) tassot (fried lamb) and lambi (spicy stewed conch). The second part is the daily specials, so check before you go to see which days are serving up rich and savory oxtails or the cabrit en sauce, goat meat cooked in a Creole sauce.

6.Immaculee Bakery
Photograph: Courtesy Yelp/Romi J.

Patties with a perfectly flaky crust—and the heavenly smell that goes with them—fill this little bakery and Haitian grocery store. Each patty, or pate (pronounced pah-tay), only cost about $1, so when in Flatbush, do as the locals do and stock up on as many as your stomach will allow. You can also grab ingredients for your own Caribbean cooking adventures, and don’t miss out on trying some of the uniquely Haitian homemade bottled drinks, such as AK-100 (a corn-flour drink) and Phoscao (a chocolate syrup drink).

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7.Venus Restaurant
  • Haitian
  • Prospect Lefferts Gardens
  • price 2 of 4

Photgraph: Courtesy Yelp/Fred Diem

Though it falls under the category of hole-in-the-wall, you can recognize Venus Restaurant by the mural painted on its white brick exterior—and by the crowds it attracts on weekends. You can count on every dish arriving with rice, beans and the unbelievable macaroni gratin, Haitian-style baked macaroni and cheese. The menu varies day by day, so be sure you keep an eye out for the boulettes, slightly spicy Haitian meatballs, as well as the hearty turkey stew and the fried fish. This last one is only for those who can really handle their spice, thanks to the addition of scotch bonnet chili peppers.

8.La Tranquilite L’Impressioniste Restaurant
  • Haitian
  • Brooklyn
  • price 1 of 4

Photgraph: Courtesy Yelp/Wilkie J.

This cheerful little Canarsie spot is best for diners who are hungry yet (somehow) also patient. Plates come loaded up with rice, and though they take their time exiting the kitchen, they are well worth the wait. The specialties include fritaille, which refers to a variety of fried foods such as accra, fritters made from a taro-like tuber called malanga, in addition to the classic griot (pork).

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9.Kreyol Flavor
  • Haitian
  • Brooklyn
  • price 2 of 4

Photograph: Courtesy Yelp/Prince E.

Tucked in amongst the other West Indian eateries on Church Avenue, hit this stop for its massive portions of uniquely Haitian fare. Find your staples: rice, beans, fried plantains and fried pork or goat. Then top it all off with some cold beet and corn salad and Pikliz, spicy pickled vegetable relish. Busy hours are definitely busy and service is notoriously slow, so it’s best to order your food to-go. Plus, the takeout servings are magically even larger than what you’re served in-shop.

Looking to try Hawaiian food?

Check out the best Hawaiian restaurants in NYC
  • Hawaiian
Photograph: Liz Clayman

At a Hawaiian restaurant in NYC, find island flavors in the urban jungle with everything from shave ice to seaweed

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    Every Haitian restaurant worth eating at in New York City (2024)

    FAQs

    What is the most famous food in Haiti? ›

    The country's national dish of rice and beans, Riz et Pois, is served at the main meal at lunchtime, as this is meant to provide crucial carbohydrates to field workers. It is often preceded by a plate of viv — boiled plantain and other boiled roots and tubers with a meat dish.

    Why is Haitian food so good? ›

    Haitian cuisine, like the people, is a mash-up of influences. They include a blend of spices and roots that combine the distinct flavors of the tropics with the complexity of French cuisine.

    What is the Haiti national dish? ›

    The national dish of Haiti is Soup Joumou which is traditionally enjoyed on Haitian Independence Day, January 1.

    What is the meaning of Haitian food? ›

    Haitian cuisine consists of cooking traditions and practices from Haiti. It is a Creole cuisine that originates from a blend of several culinary styles that populated the western portion of the island of Hispaniola, namely African, French, indigenous Taíno, Spanish and Arab influences.

    What is Haiti's signature food? ›

    Griyo and Diri Kole ak Pwa Wouj

    Griyo is the national dish of Haiti. It is made by washing pieces of pork shoulder in lemon or lime juice and marinating it in a Haitian spice mix (epis). Then it is fried.

    What religion is Haitian? ›

    Haiti is a majority Christian country. For much of its history and up to the present day, Haiti has been prevailingly a Christian country, primarily Catholic, although in practice often profoundly modified and influenced through syncretism.

    What is Haiti rich for? ›

    Haiti has an agricultural economy. Over half of the world's vetiver oil (an essential oil used in high-end perfumes) comes from Haiti. Bananas, cocoa, and mangoes are important export crops. Haiti has also moved to expand to higher-end manufacturing, producing Android-based tablets and current sensors and transformers.

    What do people in Haiti eat for breakfast? ›

    Breakfast (dejne) is small; usually coffee, bread, fruit juice, and an egg. Lunch (manje midi) is a large meal. Usually rice, beans, and meat. Snacks are frequent and consist of fruit.

    What is the national fruit of Haiti? ›

    Mango Francique

    What animal is Haiti known for? ›

    The country's two national parks—La Visite and Pic Macaya—each contain tropical and pine forests, which are home to a variety of species, including the rhinoceros iguana, the Haitian boa, and Haiti's national bird: the Hispaniolan trogon.

    What is the Haitian food taboo? ›

    Haitians generally do not eat yogurt, cottage cheese, or runny egg yolks. Drink lots of water and homemade fruit juices, coffee in the morning, and tea only when sick. Food prohibitions are related to particular diseases and life stages.

    What seafood do Haitians eat? ›

    Haiti's position in the Caribbean Sea means seafood has an important role in the Haitian diet. Haitians often prepare foods like red snapper and spiny lobster on the grill with a simple squeeze of lime and a side of bannann peze (twice-fried green plantains) and pikliz (spicy cabbage slaw).

    What is fufu in Haitian? ›

    In Haiti it is called tonm tonm and foofoo. It is mostly made of breadfruit but can be made of plantain or yams and is usually served with an okra based stew or soup. It is primarily consumed in the southernmost regions of Haiti namely the Grand'Anse and Sud departments.

    What is the national flower of Haiti? ›

    Haiti. The national flower of Haiti is the Choeblack or rose kayenn (Hibiscus).

    Why don't Haitians eat ackee? ›

    Ackee is used in voodoo in West Africa and Haiti. In fact, the only nation that eats ackee is Jamaica. A legend says most Haitians fear ackee because they don't understand when the fruit is poisonous and when it isn't, and they fear Jamaicans too, because they can eat it.

    What is Haiti most famous for? ›

    These Haitians had created the first independent nation in the Caribbean. (The others were colonized, or ruled, by countries like Spain and France.) Haiti was also the second democracy in the Western Hemisphere (after the United States), and the first Black republic—or a government not led by a monarch—in the world.

    What does pikliz mean? ›

    Pikliz is a condiment in Haitian cuisine of pickled cabbage, carrots, bell peppers and Scotch bonnet peppers. It is often seasoned with garlic and onion and pickled in white vinegar. The spicy dish is very commonly served on the table along with other dishes to enhance the flavor.

    What do Haitians eat for breakfast? ›

    Haitians love to eat plantains and eggs together. Plantains are a greener and thicker banana that is not as sweet as yellow bananas. You must peel and boil the plantains before putting them in a bowl. As for the eggs, they need to be scrambled so you can mix them with the plantains more easily.

    What is Haiti's stable food? ›

    The main staple foods in the country are rice, maize, wheat flour, sorghum, pulses (beans and peas), tubers (yams, cassava or yuca, and sweet potato), bananas (particularly plantains), and edible oil. These are consumed to varying degrees across the territory, based on supply and demand dynamics.

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