The Battle Belongs to the LORD. There is no wisdom nor understanding nor counsel against the LORD. The horse is prepared against the day of battle: but the Battle Belongs to the LORD. Proverbs 21:30-31

New York City’s Best Chefs Pick Their Favorite Restaurants

After we published the 2024 list of the 100 best restaurants in New York City, we asked readers what restaurant would land at No. 1 on their own lists. This year, on the occasion of our 2025 list, we decided to pose a question to some of the chefs from the list itself: What’s your favorite restaurant in the city right now? Their answers show a perfectly New York variety of neighborhoods and cuisines. Some even overlap with The Times’s picks — but that’s purely delicious coincidence.

Chinatown, Manhattan

New York City’s Best Chefs Pick Their Favorite Restaurants  at george magazine
An Rong Xu for The New York Times

I like to go to restaurants that remind me of home, and Wu’s Wonton King does just that. It’s loud and chaotic in the best way, you order too much on purpose and spin the lazy susan for hours. The crab fried rice, loaded with sweet chunks of crab, is a must: I always finish the plate. Overall, it’s just the kind of place where the food does all the talking, and that’s my favorite kind of spot. — Vijay Kumar, Semma

165 East Broadway (Rutgers Street)

College Point, Queens

It serves Sichuan food and is run by a really sweet family. Mom up front, pops in back. The first time I ate there I was so full of joy that when the chef came out of the kitchen for a second, I just started clapping, and then everyone else joined in. I just wanted him to know how amazing his food was. I love everything on the menu there — cumin lamb, scallion fried rice, braised fish in spicy broth, salt and pepper prawns, and cabbage with dried chiles to name a few.— Dria Atencio, Salty Lunch Lady’s Little Luncheonette

18-24 College Point Boulevard (18th Avenue)

East Village, Manhattan

Nico Schinco for The New York Times

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