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    Restaurant in New York City, United States

    Astoria Seafood

    130Pearl Points

    OAD-ranked seafood market you should book.

    Astoria Seafood, Restaurant in New York City

    About Astoria Seafood

    Astoria Seafood is a market-style Middle Eastern seafood restaurant in Long Island City with back-to-back Opinionated About Dining recognition and a 4.3 rating from over 1,600 Google reviewers. The counter-forward format rewards returning visitors who know to let the day's market display guide their order. Easy to book, casual dress, and well below Manhattan pricing for comparable seafood quality.

    Verdict: Book It — Especially If You've Already Been Once

    With a 4.3 rating across 1,620 Google reviews and back-to-back recognition on Opinionated About Dining's Casual North America list (ranked #628 in 2024, #639 in 2025), Astoria Seafood at 37-10 33rd St in Long Island City has the kind of sustained credibility that earns a second visit. If you went once and weren't sure what to order, this portrait is for you.

    What You're Actually Booking

    Astoria Seafood operates as a Middle Eastern seafood market-restaurant hybrid under chef Spyro Christakos. The format is distinct from a conventional sit-down: you select your fish from the market display, then it's cooked to order. That process is where the counter and open kitchen experience becomes central. Watching your selection move from ice to grill or pan gives you a read on the kitchen's approach that a standard table service meal rarely offers. The smells from the grill — charred fish, warm spice, the salt-forward air of fresh seafood , arrive before the food does, and they orient you quickly toward what's worth ordering.

    For a returning visitor, the move is to lean into that interactive format more deliberately. If you sat at a table last time, try positioning yourself closer to the counter or market display this visit. You'll get a better sense of what looks freshest that day, which is the single most useful piece of information at a market-style seafood restaurant. The OAD ranking, consistent across two consecutive years, suggests the kitchen maintains its standard regardless of season , but what's on display will shift with supply, so treat the current selection as your menu.

    Right Now: What to Expect This Season

    The OAD Casual North America list rewards consistency and value over spectacle, and Astoria Seafood's placement in the 600s (across a list that spans the continent) puts it in credible but not rarefied territory. That's appropriate: this is a neighbourhood-anchored venue with a loyal local following, not a destination tasting-menu operation. The draw is honest, well-executed seafood with Middle Eastern preparation at a price point well below what comparable quality would cost in Manhattan. For context, a meal at Le Bernardin , New York's benchmark for formal seafood , runs several hundred dollars per head. Astoria Seafood delivers a different kind of experience, but the seafood quality and Middle Eastern preparation make it a serious option for the category at a fraction of the cost.

    If you're coming from Manhattan, factor in a short trip into Long Island City. The address at 37-10 33rd St is accessible by subway, and the journey is part of why this place has stayed under the radar for visitors who don't venture beyond the island. For New York City's broader dining options, see our full New York City restaurants guide.

    How It Compares in the Middle Eastern Category

    For Middle Eastern dining in New York City, Astoria Seafood occupies a specific lane: seafood-forward, market-style, with an OAD credential that none of its direct neighbourhood competitors match. If you want more traditional Middle Eastern without the seafood focus, Al Badawi and Kubeh are the names to know in Manhattan. Ayat skews Palestinian and has built a strong following in Brooklyn. Mamoun's is the accessible, fast-casual benchmark, and Mesiba leans Israeli with a livelier bar program. None of them do what Astoria Seafood does with fish.

    Internationally, if you've eaten at Baron in Doha or Bait Maryam in Dubai, you'll recognise the flavour register Astoria Seafood works within , though the New York format is considerably less formal.

    Booking and Practical Details

    Booking difficulty is rated Easy. Walk-ins are viable, though weekends draw a loyal local crowd and waits can build. There's no published phone or website in our current data, so check Google listings for current hours before you go. Dress code is casual , the market setting makes anything more formal feel out of place.

    For solo diners, the counter and market-facing setup works in your favour: you can interact with the display, ask questions, and eat without the awkwardness of a table-for-one. Groups of four or more should arrive with a plan, as the informal format rewards decisiveness at the counter.

    If you're building a full day in the area, pair the meal with a look at our New York City bars guide, hotels guide, or experiences guide. For comparable OAD-recognised casual dining in other cities, Smyth in Chicago and Providence in Los Angeles operate at different price points but share the same credentialling rigour.

    Quick reference: Market-style seafood with Middle Eastern preparation, Long Island City, easy to book, casual dress, OAD Casual North America listed (2024 and 2025), 4.3/5 across 1,620 Google reviews.

    Pearl Picks Nearby

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Astoria Seafood good for solo dining?

    Yes — the market-style format at Astoria Seafood suits solo diners well. You pick your fish at the counter and eat at your own pace, without the pressure of a formal tasting structure. OAD's Casual North America ranking reflects the kind of low-friction, high-quality environment where a solo visit makes sense.

    How far ahead should I book Astoria Seafood?

    Booking difficulty is rated Easy, so same-week reservations are generally fine. Weekends draw a loyal local crowd, so waits can build if you walk in on a Saturday. Midweek visits carry the least friction.

    What are alternatives to Astoria Seafood in New York City?

    For upscale seafood, Le Bernardin is the formal-dining counterpoint — more expensive, more structured, and Michelin three-starred. For Middle Eastern food without the seafood focus, options like Balaboosta or Shukette serve a different part of that category. Astoria Seafood holds its own specifically for market-style seafood at a casual price point with a verifiable OAD credential.

    Can I eat at the bar at Astoria Seafood?

    Astoria Seafood operates as a market-restaurant hybrid, so seating is informal rather than structured around a conventional bar. The format favors counter-style ordering rather than a seated bar experience — walk-ins are viable, and the setup rewards those comfortable with a relaxed, self-directed flow.

    Is Astoria Seafood good for a special occasion?

    It depends on what kind of occasion. Astoria Seafood's market-restaurant format under chef Spyro Christakos — ranked on OAD Casual North America in both 2024 and 2025 — makes it a strong pick for a low-key celebration where quality matters more than ceremony. For a milestone that calls for tablecloths and a wine list, Per Se or Eleven Madison Park fits that brief better.

    Location

    37-10 33rd St, Long Island City, NY 11101, United States

    New York City, United States

    Compare Astoria Seafood

    Value Check: Astoria Seafood and Peers
    VenuePriceBooking Difficulty
    Astoria SeafoodEasy
    Le Bernardin$$$$Unknown
    Atomix$$$$Unknown
    Per Se$$$$Unknown
    Masa$$$$Unknown
    Eleven Madison Park$$$$Unknown

    Comparing your options in New York City for this tier.

    Also Consider

    How It Compares

    Astoria Seafood and the $$$$ Manhattan dining circuit are solving different problems. Le Bernardin is the city's formal seafood benchmark, technically flawless, with service depth that Astoria Seafood doesn't attempt to match. If the goal is the most technically precise seafood meal in New York, Le Bernardin wins on every formal metric. But if the goal is honest seafood with Middle Eastern preparation at a fraction of the cost, Astoria Seafood is the more practical answer, and its OAD Casual North America ranking gives it real credibility within that value tier.

    Atomix, Per Se, Masa, and Eleven Madison Park all operate at the $$$$ tier with tasting-menu formats, weeks-out booking difficulty, and formal service structures. None of them are direct alternatives to Astoria Seafood, they serve a different diner intent entirely. If you're weighing a special-occasion splurge, those venues are the reference points. If you want a well-regarded, low-friction seafood meal with Middle Eastern character, Astoria Seafood is the call.

    Within the Middle Eastern category specifically, Astoria Seafood's seafood focus makes it the only venue of its kind in the New York City peer set. For diners who've already worked through Al Badawi, Ayat, and Mamoun's, Astoria Seafood fills a gap none of them address. It's the practical next booking if Middle Eastern food in New York is your area of focus.

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