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    Restaurant in New York City, United States · Inside The Ludlow Hotel

    Dirty French

    700Pearl Points

    Serious wine list, bold bistro, book ahead.

    Dirty French, Restaurant in New York City

    About Dirty French

    Dirty French is the Lower East Side French bistro that earns repeat visits on the strength of its wine list alone — 2,700 bottles deep, with particular force in Burgundy, Rhône, and Loire. At $$$ per head, it sits well below the prix-fixe tier but above casual dining, with consistent Opinionated About Dining recognition and a Star Wine List White Star to back the value claim.

    Should You Book Dirty French?

    If you've already been to Dirty French once, the question on a return visit isn't whether it still delivers — it's whether you've worked through enough of the wine list to justify coming back. The answer is almost certainly yes. With 2,700 bottles in inventory, a Burgundy and Rhône program strong enough to earn a Star Wine List White Star, and an Opinionated About Dining ranking that has climbed consistently (from a 2023 recommendation to #430 in 2024 to #619 in 2025's casual North America list), this is a room that rewards repeat visits more than most French bistros in New York.

    For the food-and-wine explorer, Dirty French is one of the few spots in Lower Manhattan where the wine program genuinely drives the meal rather than supporting it as an afterthought. Wine Director John Slover and sommeliers Richar Gonzalez and Robert Ferretti oversee a list priced at the $$$ tier — expect many bottles above $100, with corkage at $95 if you bring your own. The list leans heavily French: Burgundy, Bordeaux, Rhône, and Loire are the strengths. If your interest runs to Old World depth over cocktail-bar novelty, the list here outpaces most comparable bistro programs in the city. For a broader survey of French dining options in New York, see our full New York City restaurants guide.

    The room is inside The Ludlow Hotel on the Lower East Side, and the atmosphere skews lively rather than hushed. Expect a certain level of ambient energy , this is a Major Food Group production from Jeff Zalaznick, Mario Carbone, and Rich Torrisi, and the room is designed to feel like an occasion without demanding formal restraint. The New York Times called it a place that "makes your head spin in a wonderful way," which is an accurate shorthand for the tone: high energy, deliberately theatrical, French bistro as interpreted through a New York lens. If you want a quieter room for conversation-first dining, consider Mimi or Fulgurances Laundromat instead. If you want the Major Food Group energy but with a different format, db Bistro Moderne is worth comparing.

    Cuisine is priced at $$$ , a typical two-course meal runs $66 or more before drinks and tip. That positions Dirty French clearly in the upper tier of casual-fine French dining in New York, but well below the $$$$ prix-fixe territory of Le Bernardin or Eleven Madison Park. For similar price-point French bistro comparisons outside New York, Republique in Los Angeles and Au Cheval in Chicago offer useful reference points, though neither carries a wine program of this depth. If you're planning a broader trip around serious dining, see also The French Laundry in Napa, Alinea in Chicago, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, Providence in Los Angeles, and Emeril's in New Orleans for context on what serious American dining looks like at this level.

    Hours run Monday through Thursday 7 am to 10 pm, Friday and Saturday to 11 pm, and Sunday to 10 pm , lunch and dinner are both served, which is useful if you want to approach the wine list at a lower price point during the day. The Google rating sits at 4.3 across 849 reviews, a solid signal for a busy hotel-adjacent restaurant that handles significant volume.

    Know Before You Go

    • Address: 180 Ludlow St, New York, NY 10002 (inside The Ludlow Hotel)
    • Hours: Mon–Thu 7 am–10 pm | Fri–Sat 7 am–11 pm | Sun 7 am–10 pm
    • Cuisine pricing: $$$ (two-course meal $66+, before drinks and tip)
    • Wine list: 460 selections, 2,700 bottles in inventory; $$$ pricing tier; corkage $95
    • Wine strengths: Burgundy, Bordeaux, Rhône, Loire
    • Booking difficulty: Easy
    • Awards: Star Wine List White Star (2023); Opinionated About Dining Casual North America #430 (2024), #619 (2025)
    • Google rating: 4.3 (849 reviews)
    • Wine team: Wine Director John Slover; Sommeliers Richar Gonzalez and Robert Ferretti
    • See also: New York City hotels guide | New York City bars guide | New York City wineries guide | New York City experiences guide

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Does Dirty French handle dietary restrictions?

    The kitchen at Dirty French is a full-service French bistro operation under Major Food Group, so staff are accustomed to fielding dietary requests. Call ahead rather than noting it in an online reservation — at $$$ per head, it's worth confirming directly. The menu leans meat and fish-forward in classic bistro tradition, so vegetarians should ask about current options before booking.

    What should I wear to Dirty French?

    Dirty French sits inside The Ludlow Hotel on the Lower East Side — the setting is polished but the neighbourhood keeps it grounded. Think put-together casual: a blazer or a neat outfit works; trainers and shorts do not fit the room. It's less formal than Per Se or Le Bernardin, but more dressed than a neighbourhood spot.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Dirty French?

    Dinner is the stronger booking. The room hits its stride at night, and the 2,700-bottle wine list — strong in Burgundy, Bordeaux, Rhône, and Loire — makes most sense with an evening pacing. Lunch works if you want the kitchen's French bistro cooking at likely lower energy, but for a first visit the full dinner experience is what the OAD ranking reflects.

    How far ahead should I book Dirty French?

    Book at least one to two weeks out for weeknights; aim for two to three weeks if you want a Friday or Saturday slot. Dirty French is an OAD Casual North America ranked venue (ranked #430 in 2024, #619 in 2025) inside a hotel, which keeps demand consistent year-round. Don't leave it to the week of if your date is fixed.

    Can I eat at the bar at Dirty French?

    Bar seating is an option worth considering if you can't secure a table — the wine list alone ($95 corkage, 460 selections, 2,700-bottle inventory) makes a bar visit worthwhile as a standalone experience. Check current bar walk-in policy directly with the restaurant, as hotel-based venues sometimes reserve bar space differently than standalone restaurants.

    Location

    180 Ludlow St, New York, NY 10002

    New York City, United States

    Compare Dirty French

    Award Winners Like Dirty French
    VenueAwardsPrice
    Dirty French
    Le BernardinMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best$$$$
    AtomixMichelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best$$$$
    Eleven Madison ParkMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best$$$$
    MasaMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best$$$$
    Per SeMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best$$$$

    Comparing your options in New York City for this tier.

    Also Consider

    Dirty French sits at a different price point and format from most of its French-leaning peers in New York. Le Bernardin, Eleven Madison Park, and Per Se are all $$$$ venues with fixed or prix-fixe structures, strong dress expectations, and booking windows measured in weeks. If your priority is a formal French tasting experience with Michelin-level service polish, those rooms are the correct comparison. Dirty French at $$$ is the right call if you want French bistro cooking with a serious wine program and the freedom to order à la carte without committing to a two-hour structured progression.

    Atomix and Masa are $$$$ destinations for entirely different purposes, Modern Korean tasting and omakase sushi respectively, and only compete with Dirty French in the sense that they're all contenders for a New York City special-occasion budget. If wine depth is your metric, Dirty French's 460-selection, 2,700-bottle list outperforms what most $$$$ tasting-menu rooms offer in breadth of browsable inventory, even if those rooms may have deeper vertical allocations.

    For diners deciding between Dirty French and a quieter, more intimate French bistro experience in the city, Mimi offers a lower-energy alternative at a comparable price tier. The verdict: book Dirty French if you want energy, a deep French wine list, and a room that feels like an event. Book Le Bernardin if budget is not the constraint and seafood-focused haute French cooking is the goal. Book Eleven Madison Park only if a plant-based tasting format is specifically what you're after.

    Hours

    Monday
    7 am–10 pm
    Tuesday
    7 am–10 pm
    Wednesday
    7 am–10 pm
    Thursday
    7 am–10 pm
    Friday
    7 am–11 pm
    Saturday
    7 am–11 pm
    Sunday
    7 am–10 pm

    Recognized By

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