Restaurant in New York City, United States
Hart's
100ptsSmall-Kitchen Mediterranean Precision

About Hart's
A slate-blue facade off the Franklin Avenue subway stairs marks one of Crown Heights' most quietly consistent neighbourhood restaurants. Hart's runs a tight Mediterranean menu from a compact kitchen, with Chef Nick Perkins drawing on escabeche technique, bitter greens, and well-sourced fish to produce cooking that rewards repeat visits. Google reviewers rate it 4.6 across nearly 400 responses — a signal of durable local loyalty rather than one-time curiosity.
The Room That Earns Its Regulars
The approach to Hart's tells you something about what to expect inside. The Franklin Avenue stop deposits you at street level in Crown Heights, and the slate-blue facade — easy to walk past on a first visit — sits close enough to the subway stairs that the address functions almost like a password. Once inside, the physical logic of the room becomes clear: whitewashed brick, blonde wood tables, a skylight that pushes daylight further than the footprint should allow, and a marble counter with a handful of seats that face directly into the open kitchen. The format is closer to a neighbourhood trattoria in Palermo or a small mezze spot in Thessaloniki than anything Brooklyn's more media-saturated dining corridors tend to produce.
That physical restraint sets the social temperature. Hart's earns a 4.6 rating across 386 Google reviews , a number that reflects years of accumulated neighbourhood trust rather than a viral surge. The people returning here are not chasing a press cycle. They are working through a menu that rewards familiarity: knowing which dishes anchor the kitchen, which preparations shift with the season, and when to sit at the counter if you want to watch the kitchen's economy of movement up close.
Mediterranean Cooking at the $$-Tier: What That Actually Means in Brooklyn
Brooklyn's Mediterranean dining has fragmented considerably over the past decade. At the upper end, you have more formal tasting environments. Below that sits a larger group of casual-leaning spots where the cuisine functions as a loose umbrella , olive oil on everything, some preserved ingredients, pita or flatbread in rotation. Hart's occupies neither of those positions comfortably. Its price point sits at the moderate tier, but the technique running through the menu is more considered than the room price might suggest.
Across the wider New York Mediterranean category, the distance between a $$ neighbourhood place and a $$$$ destination like Le Bernardin (French, Seafood) is not just cost , it is format, occasion, and the implied relationship between kitchen and diner. Hart's is the kind of place where you eat twice a month, not twice a year. That frequency shapes what the kitchen optimises for: coherent, repeatable execution over showmanship. Comparable Brooklyn spots operating in the same register include Meadowsweet and Sami & Susu, both of which share the neighbourhood-anchor logic even if their specific culinary references differ. For a fuller view of where Hart's sits within the city's wider dining picture, our full New York City restaurants guide maps the category in more detail.
What the Kitchen Actually Produces
Small kitchens that punch above their physical size are a specific discipline. The instinct in cramped operations is to simplify toward safety , fewer proteins, fewer preparations, menus that can be executed cleanly under pressure. Chef Nick Perkins pushes the other direction. The kitchen at Hart's runs escabeche technique on mussels (a preparation that requires acid balance and timing across multiple components), produces poached fish served alongside anchovies and bitter greens with the confidence of something from a much larger brigade, and plates a Pork Milanese with cucumber and shaved fennel that uses textural contrast rather than sauce-heaviness to carry the dish.
The heirloom tomato salad, dressed with olive oil and dried red chili, reads simply on paper. In practice, pairing it with the escabeche-style mussels shifts the dish toward something with more acid architecture than a standard summer salad. These are the choices that separate a kitchen working at the edge of its format from one that is coasting on the category's broad permission. The poached hake with anchovies and bitter greens follows the same logic: rustic framing, but the component relationships are deliberate. Bitter greens against anchovy salt against the neutrality of well-poached white fish is a combination with enough internal tension to hold attention across several bites.
For Mediterranean cooking at a different scale , with tasting formats and greater ceremony , La Brezza in Ascona and Arnaud Donckele & Maxime Frédéric at Louis Vuitton in Saint-Tropez represent what the cuisine looks like when ceremony and setting become part of the proposition. Hart's makes a different argument: that the same culinary tradition works equally well without the apparatus.
The Unwritten Logic of a Neighbourhood Restaurant
The regulars at Hart's have figured out what first-timers take a visit or two to learn. The counter seats are the leading seats, not because they offer the closest view of the kitchen for its own sake, but because they put you inside the rhythm of service rather than outside it. The room is small enough that the energy of the kitchen reaches every table, but the counter removes the last layer of distance.
Neighbourhood anchors like this one develop a kind of institutional memory that destination restaurants cannot replicate. A table of four who has eaten here thirty times has navigated the menu in ways that no review captures: they know the combinations that work across courses, they've tracked how dishes evolve, they've learned the kitchen's seasonal tells. That accumulated knowledge is the actual product of a place with Hart's consistency record. The 4.6 rating held across nearly 400 reviews suggests the kitchen performs to a standard reliably enough that new visitors are landing close to the experience regulars expect , not an easy thing to maintain in a space this size.
Crown Heights as a dining neighbourhood has developed in ways that reward exactly this kind of venue: mid-format, technically serious, without the table-turn pressure of higher-traffic Manhattan dining rooms. Spots like Dagon and Theodora operate in adjacent registers across the borough, each building their own version of the neighbourhood-anchor proposition. The category is competitive, which makes Hart's sustained rating more meaningful rather than less.
For planning a wider Brooklyn or New York trip around dining, drinking, or staying, our full New York City hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide cover the full picture. Those planning a broader US dining circuit can also compare Hart's neighbourhood-anchor format against destination formats at Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Alinea in Chicago, The French Laundry in Napa, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, Providence in Los Angeles, and Emeril's in New Orleans , all of which represent a different relationship between kitchen ambition and occasion.
Planning Your Visit
Address: 506 Franklin Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11238 , a short walk from the Franklin Avenue subway stop on the C line. Budget: $$ , moderate pricing that reflects neighbourhood positioning rather than tasting-menu economics. Reservations: Booking details are not confirmed in our current data; check directly with the venue for current policy. Dress: No dress code on record; the room's casual-warm register suggests relaxed neighbourhood attire is appropriate.
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the must-try dish at Hart's?
The escabeche-style mussels served alongside an heirloom tomato salad dressed with olive oil and dried red chili represent the kitchen's approach in concentrated form: direct ingredients handled with enough acid technique to produce something more composed than the description implies. The poached hake with anchovies and bitter greens follows the same logic and is the kind of dish that reads rustic but depends on precise component balance to hold together. Both dishes reflect what Chef Nick Perkins does consistently well from a physically compact kitchen , and both are the kind of preparations that give regulars a reason to return rather than sample and move on. For additional context on Hart's cuisine within the wider New York Mediterranean restaurant scene, see our full city guide.
Recognized By
More restaurants in New York City
- Le BernardinLe Bernardin is one of the most consistently awarded seafood restaurants in the world — three Michelin stars, 99.5 points from La Liste, and four New York Times stars held for over 30 years. At $157 for four courses at dinner ($225 for the tasting menu), it is the right call for a formal occasion or a serious seafood meal in Midtown Manhattan, provided you book well in advance.
- AtomixAtomix is the No. 1 restaurant in North America (50 Best, 2025) and one of the hardest reservations in New York: 14 seats, one seating per night, three Michelin stars. Junghyun and Ellia Park's Korean tasting menu pairs precision-sourced ingredients with Korean culinary heritage, explained course by course through hand-designed cards. Book months ahead or plan around a cancellation.
- Eleven Madison ParkEleven Madison Park is the definitive case for plant-based fine dining in New York City: three Michelin stars, a 22,000-bottle wine cellar, and an eight-to-ten course tasting menu in a landmark Art Deco room. Book it for a special occasion with a plant-forward appetite and three hours to spare. Reservations open on the 1st of each month and go within hours.
- Jungsik New YorkJungsik is the restaurant that put progressive Korean fine dining on the New York map, and over a decade in, it still holds that position. With two Michelin stars, a 2025 James Beard Award for Outstanding Chef, and a seasonally rotating nine-course tasting menu in a quietly formal Tribeca room, it earns its $$$$ price point for special occasions and serious dining. Book well in advance.
- DanielDaniel is the benchmark for classic French fine dining in New York: three Michelin stars, a 10,000-bottle cellar, and formal Upper East Side service that has stayed consistent for over 30 years. Book four to six weeks out minimum. At $$$$, it is a genuine special-occasion restaurant, but the wine program alone — 2,000 selections with particular depth in Burgundy and Bordeaux — makes it the strongest wine-and-food pairing destination in its category.
- Per SePer Se is one of New York's two or three most complete special-occasion restaurants: three Michelin stars, Central Park views, and two nine-course tasting menus that change daily at $425 per person. Book exactly one month out — the window fills fast. The salon accepts walk-ins for à la carte if you miss the main dining room.
Similar venues by awards
Related editorial
- Best Fine Dining Restaurants in ParisFrom three-Michelin-star icons to the next generation of Parisian chefs pushing boundaries, these are the restaurants that define fine dining in the world's culinary capital.
- Best Luxury Hotels in RomeFrom rooftop terraces overlooking ancient ruins to Michelin-starred hotel dining, these are the luxury hotels that make Rome unforgettable.
- Best Cocktail Bars in KyotoFrom sleek lounges to hidden speakeasies, Kyoto's cocktail scene blends Japanese precision with global influence in ways you won't find anywhere else.
Save or rate Hart's on Pearl
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.


