Bar in New York City, United States
The Butcher's Daughter
100Pearl PointsPlant-forward brunch spot, skip for dinner.

About The Butcher's Daughter
The Butcher's Daughter on Kenmare Street is a plant-based café and juice bar that works well for a casual Nolita brunch or light lunch — no reservation needed for most visits. The drinks program leans toward cold-pressed juices rather than wine depth, so if a serious by-the-glass list is the priority, look elsewhere. Book here when you want something fresh, affordable, and walk-in friendly in lower Manhattan.
Should You Book The Butcher's Daughter?
If you're looking for a plant-forward café and juice bar in Nolita that works for a relaxed brunch, a post-shopping lunch, or a light dinner without committing to a full restaurant experience, The Butcher's Daughter at 19 Kenmare Street earns its place on the shortlist. It is not a cocktail-forward bar, and it is not trying to be. If a deep by-the-glass wine list or a serious spirits program is your priority, look elsewhere — Amor y Amargo or Angel's Share serve that need far better. But for value-conscious diners who want something fresh, ingredient-led, and approachable in one of Manhattan's busier pedestrian neighbourhoods, this address makes sense.
What to Expect Right Now
The Butcher's Daughter operates as a plant-based eatery and juice bar — the name is a deliberate provocation, positioning it as a butcher's shop reimagined around produce rather than meat. The menu leans on cold-pressed juices, smoothies, and vegetable-centric dishes. The drink program skews toward wellness rather than wine depth: expect house juices, light cocktails, and a modest wine list rather than the kind of by-the-glass selection you'd find at a dedicated wine bar. For a neighbourhood where Nolita's foot traffic runs high through brunch and early afternoon, arriving before noon on weekends keeps waits short.
The Kenmare Street location is the original and most established of the brand's outposts. Nolita's compact blocks mean you are within walking distance of Little Italy and the southern edge of SoHo, making it a practical stop if you are already in the area. No reservation is typically required for small parties, though weekend brunch draws a queue. The room skews bright and social rather than intimate, which affects how well it works for different occasions.
The Drinks Program: Honest Assessment
Butcher's Daughter is not primarily a wine bar, and measuring it against one would be unfair to both. The by-the-glass selection is limited and functional, enough to accompany a meal, not enough to anchor a dedicated drinks evening. If wine depth is the draw, New York City's bar scene offers far stronger options. Where the drinks program genuinely delivers is in its juice and smoothie offering: cold-pressed, produce-focused, and consistent with what a value-seeker wants when paying for something healthier than a cocktail at a comparable price point. For anyone exploring New York City's broader food and drink experiences, this sits firmly in the daytime-casual tier.
Practical Details
| Detail | The Butcher's Daughter | Amor y Amargo | Angel's Share |
|---|---|---|---|
| Address | 19 Kenmare St, Nolita | East Village | East Village |
| Booking difficulty | Easy, walk-in friendly | Easy | Moderate |
| Leading for | Brunch, juice, light lunch | Spirits & bitters focus | Classic cocktails |
| Wine depth | Limited | Limited | Moderate |
| Price tier | $ – $$ | $$ | $$ |
Who Should Book This
Butcher's Daughter works well for daytime visits: brunch with friends, a solo lunch, or a juice stop between neighbourhood errands. It is a poor fit if you want a serious cocktail program, a deep wine list, or a quiet date-night atmosphere. For those occasions, Attaboy NYC or Superbueno serve the brief better. If you're planning a broader New York trip, it's worth cross-referencing our full New York City restaurants guide and bars guide to see how it fits your itinerary. For hotels nearby, the New York City hotels guide covers the SoHo and Nolita corridor.
For reference on what strong bar programs look like elsewhere in the US, Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu, Jewel of the South in New Orleans, and Julep in Houston each show what a focused drinks program looks like when it is the main event. The Butcher's Daughter is not competing in that space, and knowing that helps you book it for the right reasons. Also worth exploring: New York City wineries if wine is your priority for the trip.
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the signature drink at The Butcher's Daughter?
The juice and smoothie program is the main draw here, not the alcohol list. Cold-pressed juices and blended drinks are the reason most regulars return. If you're after a cocktail list, this is the wrong address — Amor y Amargo on East 6th is a far better call.
Do I need a reservation at The Butcher's Daughter?
For a weekday lunch or solo visit to the Kenmare Street location, walk-ins are generally fine. Weekend brunch is a different story — expect a wait without a reservation. Book ahead if you're coming with two or more people on a Saturday or Sunday morning.
What's the crowd like at The Butcher's Daughter?
Nolita regulars, people on a plant-based diet, and the kind of daytime diner who's more interested in a good cold-press than a wine list. The room skews younger and casual. It's not a scene venue — it's a neighbourhood spot that happens to photograph well.
Is the food good at The Butcher's Daughter?
For plant-based café food in Manhattan, it holds up well — particularly at brunch and lunch. The premise is a butcher's shop reimagined without meat, which keeps the menu grounded rather than gimmicky. Don't come expecting fine dining; do come expecting something fresher and more considered than most casual spots at a similar price point.
Is The Butcher's Daughter good for a date?
A low-key daytime date, yes — the Nolita setting on Kenmare Street does a lot of the work. For an evening date where you want a full drinks program and a proper dinner format, Dirty French on Ludlow Street is a stronger choice with more room to linger.
Does The Butcher's Daughter have outdoor seating?
Outdoor seating has been part of the Kenmare Street setup, though availability shifts seasonally. Confirm directly before visiting if a specific table outside is the plan — the interior is compact enough that it matters.
Is The Butcher's Daughter good for groups?
Small groups of two to four work fine, especially at brunch. Larger parties will find the space tight and the format — mostly café-style service — less suited to a group dinner. For a group meal with more flexibility, Superbueno in the West Village handles bigger tables with a fuller food and drinks offering.
Location
19 Kenmare St, New York, NY 10012
New York City, United States
Compare The Butcher's Daughter
| Venue | Awards | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|
| The Butcher's Daughter | Easy | |
| The Long Island Bar | World's 50 Best | Unknown |
| Dirty French | Unknown | |
| Superbueno | World's 50 Best | Unknown |
| Amor y Amargo | World's 50 Best | Unknown |
| Angel's Share | World's 50 Best | Unknown |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Also Consider
- The Long Island Bar, Notable alternative
- Dirty French, Notable alternative
- Superbueno, Notable alternative
- Amor y Amargo, Notable alternative
- Angel's Share, Notable alternative
Against the bar-focused venues in its Nolita and Lower East Side orbit, The Butcher's Daughter occupies a different lane entirely. Amor y Amargo is the better call if you want a genuinely considered drinks-first experience, it runs one of the city's most focused bitters and amaro programs, and the staff know their category cold. Angel's Share offers a more atmospheric evening with a classic cocktail list that The Butcher's Daughter cannot match for depth. Neither requires a complex booking process, so if drinks are the point of the outing, both are easy upgrades.
For value-seekers weighing daytime options, The Butcher's Daughter holds its own against the Nolita and SoHo casual-dining tier. Superbueno is the stronger group-friendly option with a more developed cocktail program and better capacity for larger parties. Dirty French and The Long Island Bar both operate in a different register, more evening-oriented, with more serious food and drinks ambitions, making them poor comparisons for a daytime juice-and-brunch stop.
The honest summary: if your visit is daytime, plant-forward, and price-conscious, The Butcher's Daughter is a reasonable neighbourhood pick with easy walk-in access. If your priority is wine depth, cocktail craft, or an evening-worthy atmosphere, the other venues on this list serve those needs more directly. Book The Butcher's Daughter for what it is, not what you wish it were.
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