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    Restaurant in New York City, United States

    Peasant by Marc Forgione

    405Pearl Points

    Low booking friction, credentialed Italian worth returning to.

    Peasant by Marc Forgione, Restaurant in New York City

    About Peasant by Marc Forgione

    Peasant by Marc Forgione is a dinner-only Italian on Elizabeth Street with a wood-fire kitchen, a Star Wine List White Star wine program, and an Opinionated About Dining Casual North America ranking (#120, 2025). Booking is easy relative to comparable Manhattan tables. Return visitors should push further into the wine list and time a visit around the seasonal menu shift.

    Verdict

    If you've already been to Peasant by Marc Forgione once, you should go back — and you should time it deliberately. This NoLIta Italian has earned consistent recognition from Opinionated About Dining (ranked #110 in North America in 2024, climbing to #120 in 2025) and a White Star from Star Wine List, which tells you the wine program is worth taking seriously. It opens for dinner only, Tuesday through Saturday until 10 pm (closing at 9 pm Monday and Tuesday), which makes it a considered choice rather than a casual drop-in. Booking is relatively easy compared to the city's most contested tables, and that accessibility is part of the case for it.

    About Peasant

    Peasant has been operating on Elizabeth Street long enough to have survived multiple cycles of NoLIta hype, which is its own form of credential. The cooking is Italian in the traditional sense: wood-fired, ingredient-focused, and built around the kind of food that changes with the season rather than the menu designer's calendar. That seasonal rotation is the core reason to return if you've visited before. What worked on a winter visit — heavier braises, richer pastas, shifts considerably by spring and summer, when the kitchen's sourcing logic points toward lighter preparations. If your first visit was in colder months, a return trip in late spring or early autumn will give you a materially different experience.

    The wine list is where Peasant genuinely separates itself from comparable Italian rooms in the city. The Star Wine List White Star recognition (2023) is not given to lists that simply stock recognizable labels, it signals depth, curation, and a point of view. For a regular returning diner, this is where to push further than you did on the first visit. Ask for guidance rather than defaulting to what you know; the list rewards engagement. Pair that approach with whatever is driving the kitchen's seasonal focus and you'll get closer to what the restaurant does at its finest.

    The address puts it in the middle of a strong Italian dining corridor. Via Carota is the obvious neighbour in spirit, similar commitment to Italian simplicity, similar neighbourhood energy, though Peasant runs warmer and more formal in register. Babbo and Ai Fiori operate in related territory but at different price points and with different room energies; Altro Paradiso skews lighter and more modern if that direction appeals. For something closer to Italian in an international context, 8½ Otto e Mezzo Bombana in Hong Kong and cenci in Kyoto show how far the tradition travels.

    Google reviews sit at 4.4 across 710 ratings, which for a dinner-only restaurant in a competitive Manhattan neighbourhood is a reliable signal of consistent execution rather than viral buzz. Peasant is not generating Instagram traffic the way a new opening does; it's retaining repeat guests, which is a different and harder thing to sustain over time.

    For special occasions, it works well for parties of two who want a proper dinner rather than a performance. The wood-fire kitchen gives the room its atmosphere without turning the dining experience into a spectacle. Groups of four or more should enquire directly about table options; contact details are not listed publicly, but reservation platforms should be the first point of call. Ammazzacaffè nearby is worth knowing as a follow-on option if the evening calls for it.

    Peasant is closed Sundays. If your schedule is flexible, a Thursday or Friday booking gives you the full kitchen window (until 10 pm) without the Saturday premium on availability. The ease of booking is a genuine advantage over comparable-quality rooms in this city, and it should not be taken for granted.

    Quick reference: Dinner only, Tuesday–Saturday (Monday until 9 pm, closed Sunday). Booking difficulty: easy. Wine program: Star Wine List White Star. OAD Casual North America: #120 (2025). Google: 4.4 / 710 reviews.

    Ratings & Recognition

    • Opinionated About Dining, Casual North America: #110 (2024), #120 (2025)
    • Star Wine List White Star (2023)
    • Google Reviews: 4.4 / 710 ratings

    Booking & Practical Details

    Booking difficulty at Peasant is low relative to other recognised Italian restaurants in Manhattan. Reserve through standard reservation platforms. The restaurant does not publish a phone number or website in its current public listings, so online booking is the primary route. Dietary restriction enquiries are leading handled at the time of reservation given the kitchen's Italian, wood-fire format, some flexibility is likely, but this is a meat-and-fire-forward kitchen by nature, and guests with complex restrictions should confirm in advance. The address is 194 Elizabeth St, New York, NY 10012. Hours run Monday 5:30–9 pm, Tuesday through Wednesday 5:30–9 pm, Thursday through Saturday 5:30–10 pm; closed Sunday.

    For more on where to eat, drink, and stay in the city, see our full New York City restaurants guide, our full New York City hotels guide, our full New York City bars guide, our full New York City wineries guide, and our full New York City experiences guide.

    More Worth Knowing

    If Peasant appeals to you but you want to compare it against American fine dining at other price points or in other cities, see Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Alinea in Chicago, Emeril's in New Orleans, and Providence in Los Angeles for how other recognised American restaurants handle the seasonal sourcing question in their own registers.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Peasant by Marc Forgione good for a special occasion?

    Yes, and it works particularly well for occasions where you want substance without the formality of a tasting-menu room. Peasant has held a consistent OAD Casual North America ranking — #110 in 2024, #120 in 2025 — which gives it genuine credibility without the ceremony of a starred fine-dining format. The Italian focus and wood-fired cooking style suit a celebratory dinner for two more than a large group milestone.

    What are alternatives to Peasant by Marc Forgione in New York City?

    For casual but credentialed Italian in NYC, Lilia in Williamsburg and Don Angie in the West Village operate in a comparable register and are OAD-tracked comparisons worth considering. If you want to step up to a more formal Italian format, Marea on Central Park South is the natural next rung. Peasant's advantage is lower booking friction and a neighbourhood feel that the more prominent rooms don't offer.

    How far ahead should I book Peasant by Marc Forgione?

    Booking difficulty is low relative to other recognised Manhattan Italian restaurants — a week out is typically enough for most nights, though Thursday through Saturday (open until 10pm) may need a few more days' lead time. The restaurant is closed Sunday, so plan accordingly. Reserve through standard platforms; no phone number is publicly listed.

    Does Peasant by Marc Forgione handle dietary restrictions?

    The venue database doesn't document specific dietary accommodation policies. For a wood-fired Italian kitchen, plant-based or gluten-free requests can be limiting depending on the menu, so check the venue's official channels before booking if restrictions are a concern. This is especially relevant for larger parties where one guest's restrictions can affect the whole table's order.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Peasant by Marc Forgione?

    Dinner only — Peasant opens at 5:30pm every operating day and does not offer lunch service. Thursday through Saturday extend to 10pm, making them the better options if you want a later, less rushed sitting. Monday through Wednesday close at 9pm, which suits an earlier weeknight dinner.

    What should I order at Peasant by Marc Forgione?

    Specific menu items aren't documented in Pearl's venue record, and the menu at a wood-fired Italian kitchen changes with availability. What the OAD ranking and Star Wine List White Star recognition do signal is that the wine program is a genuine focus — order from the list deliberately rather than defaulting to the obvious choices. Ask staff for guidance on whatever is coming out of the wood oven that night.

    Can Peasant by Marc Forgione accommodate groups?

    Peasant is a neighbourhood Italian on Elizabeth Street in NoLIta — the format suits parties of two to four more naturally than large group bookings. Private dining or large-format group seating policies aren't documented in Pearl's record, so check the venue's official channels for parties of six or more. For a group celebration that needs a dedicated private room, a venue with documented private dining infrastructure would be a safer choice.

    Location

    194 Elizabeth St, New York, NY 10012

    New York City, United States

    Compare Peasant by Marc Forgione

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    Also Consider

    Peasant by Marc Forgione operates at a different tier and price point than most of the city's headline fine dining rooms. Against Le Bernardin, Atomix, Eleven Madison Park, Masa, and Per Se, all of which sit at the $$$$ level and require advance planning of several weeks, Peasant offers OAD-recognised quality at a lower booking friction and almost certainly a lower per-head spend. If your priority is a serious, recognised dinner without the ceremony or the reservation difficulty of New York's top-tier rooms, Peasant makes a strong case.

    For diners deciding between Peasant and the $$$$ tier, the honest comparison is this: Le Bernardin and Per Se deliver a level of technical precision and service formality that Peasant does not attempt. Atomix and Eleven Madison Park are tasting-menu experiences where the format is as much the point as the food. Masa is a category apart. Peasant's value is in doing something different, Italian, wood-fire, wine-serious, approachable in register, rather than competing on the same axis as those rooms.

    Within the Italian category specifically, Peasant sits above the casual neighbourhood trattoria but below the white-tablecloth formality of Ai Fiori. It's the right call for diners who want a kitchen with a point of view, a wine list worth exploring, and a table they can actually get on a week's notice.

    Hours

    Monday
    5:30–9 pm
    Tuesday
    5:30–9 pm
    Wednesday
    5:30–9 pm
    Thursday
    5:30–10 pm
    Friday
    5:30–10 pm
    Saturday
    5:30–10 pm
    Sunday
    Closed

    Recognized By

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