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    Restaurant in New York City, United States

    Mile End

    310Pearl Points

    Montreal smoked meats, Brooklyn prices, no reservations needed.

    Mile End, Restaurant in New York City

    About Mile End

    Mile End in Boerum Hill is Brooklyn's most consistently awarded cheap-eats deli, earning Michelin Plate recognition and three consecutive OAD Cheap Eats North America rankings for its Montreal Jewish smoked brisket and poutine. No reservation needed, single-dollar-sign pricing, and a sidewalk takeout window make it the easiest high-quality meal to access in the borough. Arrive weekday mornings for the best chance at counter space.

    Who Should Book Mile End — and When

    If you are visiting Brooklyn for the first time and want one meal that justifies the subway ride, Mile End at 97 Hoyt Street in Boerum Hill is the call for anyone who takes cured meat seriously. This is not a place for a special-occasion dinner — it is a place for a mid-morning weekday visit when the counter has room, the smoked brisket is freshly sliced, and you have nowhere to be for an hour. At a single-dollar-sign price point, it is also the rare New York deli where the quality clears the bar set by its Montreal source material rather than coasting on nostalgia alone.

    What Mile End Does Better Than Other New York Delis

    The technical case for Mile End starts with the smoked meats. Montreal Jewish deli tradition differs from New York's in a specific, non-trivial way: the beef brisket is cured and then cold-smoked, producing a texture and bark profile closer to Quebec smokehouse craft than the steam-table pastrami you find at most Manhattan delis. According to Opinionated About Dining's Cheap Eats rankings, Mile End has held a position in their North America list in 2023, 2024 (ranked #183), and 2025 (ranked #220), and carries a Michelin Plate (2024). Those are not the credentials of a gimmick , they reflect a kitchen that has maintained technical consistency across a competitive category for multiple consecutive years.

    The cured and smoked beef brisket served on rye with mustard is the anchor order. It is not a sandwich that needs ornamentation; the discipline is in the cure and the smoke, and the rye-and-mustard delivery is the correct format for the tradition. Beyond the brisket, the side program is worth taking seriously: poutine finished with cheese curds and gravy, potato latkes, and knishes round out a menu that treats Montreal comfort food as a primary subject rather than an afterthought. The poutine variations , including options with eggs and chicken schnitzel , give the menu range without drifting from its identity.

    Google reviewers rate it 4.4 across 1,343 reviews, which in the deli category, where expectations are specific and regulars are vocal, signals genuine repeat satisfaction rather than tourist novelty.

    First-Timer Logistics: What to Expect

    Mile End is a small space. The OAD description notes a counter and a trio of communal tables , this is not a room where you seat a party of six without a wait. For a first visit, arriving at opening (8 am weekdays, 9 am weekends) gives you the leading shot at counter space and the freshest preparation of the day. If the room is full, the sidewalk takeout window is a genuine option rather than a consolation: the food travels well and Boerum Hill has parks nearby.

    Hours run 8 am to 9 pm Monday through Friday and 9 am to 9 pm on weekends, which means this works as a breakfast stop, a lunch destination, or an early dinner. The price range is single-dollar-sign, meaning a full meal with sides will cost a fraction of what you would spend at any of the city's tasting-menu restaurants. Booking is not required and walk-ins are the norm , this is one of the easiest high-quality meals to access in Brooklyn without any advance planning.

    Dress expectations are zero. Come as you are. The communal seating means you will be seated next to strangers, which is part of the format rather than a downside.

    How It Compares

    Mile End occupies a completely different tier and purpose than New York's marquee restaurants. Le Bernardin, Atomix, Eleven Madison Park, Masa, and Per Se are $$$$ tasting-menu destinations where the investment is in time, occasion, and technical ambition at a completely different price tier. Mile End answers a different question: where do you eat well in Brooklyn without a reservation, a dress code, or a three-figure bill? In that specific category, it is one of the most consistently recognized cheap-eats options in the country. If you want a peer comparison within the deli format, Josh's Deli in Surfside operates in a similar Jewish deli tradition on the other coast , useful context if you are comparing regional interpretations of the form.

    Within New York's broader dining scene, covered in our full New York City restaurants guide, Mile End sits at the intersection of accessible and awarded in a way that is harder to find than it sounds. You can also explore the city's bars, hotels, wineries, and experiences through Pearl's New York City guides. For high-investment dining elsewhere in the US, Alinea in Chicago, The French Laundry in Napa, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, Providence in Los Angeles, and Emeril's in New Orleans serve different occasions. For international fine dining context, Alain Ducasse at Louis XV in Monte Carlo represents the other end of the price spectrum entirely.

    Practical Details

    DetailMile EndTypical NYC DeliNYC Fine Dining ($$$+)
    Price tier$$–$$$$$$
    Booking requiredNoNoYes (weeks–months out)
    Opening time8 am weekdays / 9 am weekendsVariesTypically dinner only
    AwardsOAD Cheap Eats 2023–2025, Michelin Plate 2024Rarely awardedMichelin stars, James Beard
    Seating formatCounter + communal tablesMixedFull-service tables
    Takeout optionYes (sidewalk window)UsuallyRarely

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I order at Mile End?

    Start with the cured and smoked beef brisket on rye with mustard — that is the core of what Mile End does, and it is the reason OAD has ranked it in their North America Cheap Eats list three consecutive years. Poutine is a serious side dish here, finished with cheese curds and gravy, and available with additions like chicken schnitzel or eggs. Potato latkes and knishes round out the menu if you are building a full spread.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Mile End?

    Lunch is the stronger call. The smoked meat format suits midday eating, the small counter and communal tables are easier to snag outside peak dinner hours, and the $ price point means a full meal costs less than most NYC lunch specials. Mile End opens at 8 am on weekdays, so an early arrival sidesteps the crowd entirely. Dinner works fine, but there is no evening-specific menu reason to hold out.

    What should a first-timer know about Mile End?

    The room is small: a counter and three communal tables. Walk-ins only, so arriving at an off-peak time matters more than planning. The takeout window on the sidewalk is a genuine alternative if the inside is full. Mile End holds a Michelin Plate (2024) and an OAD Cheap Eats ranking (#220 in 2025), which for a $ deli in Brooklyn is meaningful external validation — this is not a tourist trap.

    Does Mile End handle dietary restrictions?

    The menu is built around cured and smoked meats, so carnivores are well served. Specific dietary accommodation details are not documented in Mile End's available records, so if you have strict requirements — gluten-free, vegetarian, or allergen-specific needs — call ahead or check directly before visiting. The Jewish deli format by tradition centres meat and dairy-adjacent sides, which limits flexibility.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Mile End?

    Mile End does not offer a tasting menu — this is a deli, priced at $, where you order from the counter. If you are looking for a multi-course format or a chef's tasting experience, Atomix or Eleven Madison Park serve that purpose in New York. Mile End's value case is the opposite: maximum flavour per dollar, no ceremony required.

    Location

    97 Hoyt St, Brooklyn, NY 11217

    New York City, United States

    Compare Mile End

    Mile End vs. Similar Venues
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking Difficulty
    Mile EndDelicatessen, Deli$Easy
    Le BernardinFrench, Seafood$$$$Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    AtomixModern Korean, Korean$$$$Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Eleven Madison ParkFrench, Vegan$$$$Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    MasaSushi, Japanese$$$$Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Per SeFrench, Contemporary$$$$Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown

    A quick look at how Mile End measures up.

    Also Consider

    Comparing Mile End directly to Le Bernardin, Atomix, or Masa misses the point, these are $$$$ tasting-menu destinations requiring advance reservations and three-figure per-head spend. Mile End exists in a completely separate use case: no booking, no dress code, no bill that requires budgeting. If your trip to New York includes a tasting-menu dinner at Eleven Madison Park or Per Se, Mile End works as the practical counterweight, a daytime meal that is as technically serious in its own tradition as those rooms are in theirs, at a fraction of the cost.

    Within the cheap-eats category specifically, Mile End's three consecutive OAD North America rankings (2023, 2024, 2025) and Michelin Plate put it in a tier above most Brooklyn casual spots. The Montreal Jewish deli format, cold-smoked brisket rather than New York steam-table pastrami, gives it a specific identity that distinguishes it from generic deli competition. If you are deciding between Mile End and a higher-priced Brooklyn dinner, the honest answer is that they are not competing: book the dinner for the occasion and book Mile End for the lunch or early meal around it.

    For anyone building a New York itinerary around value-driven eating, Mile End is one of the clearest recommendations in the borough. Easy to access, no booking friction, and a 4.4 Google rating across over 1,300 reviews confirm that the quality holds at volume. The only genuine downside is the small room, if you are a group of four or more, manage expectations around seating and lean on the takeout window as a backup.

    Hours

    Monday
    8 am–9 pm
    Tuesday
    8 am–9 pm
    Wednesday
    8 am–9 pm
    Thursday
    8 am–9 pm
    Friday
    8 am–9 pm
    Saturday
    9 am–9 pm
    Sunday
    9 am–9 pm

    Recognized By

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