Living in Greenpoint, we are lucky to have one of the largest collections of Polish restaurants serving traditionally meat-centric goodness this side of Warsaw. And this is the season for it. Gray, fog-dampened, winter stretches where day and night are hard to tell from one another lend themselves to comfort food.

Grab your sweatpants and your inner fat kid, and read on for what we think are some of the best places in the neighborhood to get your international grub on.


Northside Bakery Corner of Nassau and Humboldt

Essentially a traditional Polish bakery that decided they could fit some tables and chairs in the space and provide quick counter service. Perfect for grabbing golobki (stuffed cabbage) to go, or chicken noodle soup that’s still has a perfect layer of chicken fat reflecting on the surface. Every variation of rye, multi-grain, rustic, and peasant bread are up for grabs if you wanna carbo-load. This place is about as legit as it gets and it’s crazy inexpensive. Next time you’re in the area, do yourself a favor and get yourself the beet salad.

Lomzynianka-646 Manhattan Ave

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Outside of actually having a Polish grandmother, this place is as close as you’re going to get to getting a home cooked meal. The decor here is probably more famous than the menu. Permanent Christmas lights, multi-colored streamers that scallop their way across the drop-tile ceiling, and taxidermied deer heads are festooned with Hawaiian leis can all be found in what is essentially a Polish rec-room from the early 70s. The white borscht and tripe soup are some of the best we’ve ever had and that’s no small compliment. For the more adventurous among you, boiled pork hocks and tongue in horseradish sauce can be found. This place is an institution, and the most expensive thing is only $9. Did we mention that this place is also BYOB? Yeah. We’ve spent many an afternoon sipping Żywiec and nibbling on perfectly prepared farmer’s cheese in this little gem.

Krolewskie Jadlo-694 Manhattan Avenue

We guess when you advertise the fact that you used to be a head chef at Rober DeNiro’s Nobu,  we should know what we are getting ourselves into. Easily spotted by the iconic suit of armor found out front, Krolewskie Jadlo takes traditional Polish dishes and elevates them to more complex and innovative offerings. Sure, most Polish dishes are one of the infinite iterations of meat, cabbage, and potatoes, but head chef and owner Krzysztof Drzewiecki is doing his best to change that misconception. A still wildly affordable menu is real big on game meat. Stuffed wild boar with cognac pepper sauce, venison meat balls with garden dumplings and mushroom truffle oil sauce, and grilled pheasant breast served with port fig sauce can all be had for less than $15 bucks each. Grubbing on wild boar in a space that feels like a king’s mead hall is also a pretty tight way to spend an evening.

Karczma Polish Restaurant– 136 Greenpoint Ave.

Growing up in Florida, we guess we’re just a sucker for a themed restaurant. Eating at  Karczma is like visiting a historical reenactment site. Not like Civil War reenactments, those are just weird. Once inside the decor and costumes do their best to convince you that you’ve somehow made a wrong turn and ended up in 18th century Poland. Traditional polish food, live polish folk music, and waitresses dressed in traditional peasant garb all combine to create the illusion of dining in a rustic country side inn. Peasant style lard is easily one of the most amazing appetizers we’ve ever had. Mixed with bacon and spices and served with warm rye bread, it’s probably a good thing that lard isn’t that easy to find. We’d put it on everything. Grilled blood sausage, pierogis, hunter’s stew, and spicy beef goulash are all damn near perfect. They also have a full bar and a pretty sweet happy hour on Thursdays. $3.50 Żywiec every Thursday from 5pm – 9pm is some of the cheapest beer offerings in town.

This list is by no means comprehensive. There are dozens of delis, bakeries, and cured meat spots peppered throughout Greenpoint. Visit one, be adventurous, and eat something with a name you can’t pronounce. Chances are it’s going to be something you’ve never had before and wouldn’t be able to get anywhere else.

Join the Conversation

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  1. Northside Bakery: best chicken cutlet.

    Lomzynianka: I’m Polish, and everyone hates me when I call the place overhyped and bland — worst stuffed cabbage.

    Notably absent from this list: Christina’s, which has the best breakfast.

    Best “Polish” food outside Greenpoint: Veselka, the only place that makes stuffed cabbage as delicious as my grandma’s. I totally know the secret ingredient.

    1. Right on. Yes blintzes for breakfast at Christina’s rule! I love Lomzynianka for the decor, the soup and the BYOB! Northside also rules – great pierogis and it’s so damn cheap! This round-up rules!

      1. That’s why I put “Polish” in quotes. The restaurant also serves dishes considered more Polish than anything else, including pierogi and bigos. The one dish I can think of that Vesleka does that’s 100% Ukraine is kutya.

  2. Relax Restaurant on Newel @ Nassau is an unfortunate omission here. Their Bigos, Pierogis, Soups and meatloaf are top notch. Not much on ambiance, but every time I go, I’m the only non-Polish person there out of many, so that must count for something.

      1. I’m sure if you go to any of these places on the wrong night you could potentially get food poisoning. Plus, in most cases, when people think they have food poisoning it’s something else entirely different. I’ve been to Relax on many occasions and never had any problems besides overeating.

        1. Why would the wrong night give you food poisoning? What does that mean? I need to know when the wrong night is! And if it isn’t food poisoning – what is it???

          1. My point being that any time you eat out, there is a chance you’ll get food poisoning. But this chance is usually so small that to not go to a restaurant because you heard an anecdote about someone contracting foodborne illness this one time a decade ago is about as smart as refusing to get on an airplane because a particular airline once crashed a plane. I’ve seen so many irrelevant reviews on Yelp! documenting one person’s bout with “food poisoning” when all I really want to know is how the food tasted going down (and perhaps how it was coming back up). Thanks, but I’ll leave the rest up to the health department.

          2. plane crash = great metaphor! some place i have gotten consistently sick from and think it isn’t bacteria but rather an issue with the fry oil – since i only eat deep fried food i have been able to develop a good sense of this… i will definitely try relax either way!

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