25 Restaurant Dishes We Couldn’t Stop Thinking About This Year
As you watch the plate being cleared, you think: That was so good. What made that so good? Why isn’t there just a little more? Months later, your mind still glances back. I need to get back there.
In 2022, these were some of the dishes that did that for us.
In reporting our annual list of 50 favorite restaurants in the United States, our writers and editors ate hundreds of meals all over the country. They meticulously cataloged menus, and took notes on tastes and ingredients. In many cases, the restaurants mentioned here were excellent overall, but at the very least these dishes make them well worth a visit. BRIAN GALLAGHER
The shaobing at CY Chia and Shane Stanbridge’s restaurant Lion Dance Cafe changes a little every week, but it’s always delicious.Credit…Emma K Morris
Shaobing at Lion Dance Cafe
Oakland, Calif.
There might be preserved vegetables, homemade pickles, tofu nuggets or slabs of fried tofu. There might be vegan mayonnaise modeled on Kewpie, or crunchy slaws. The distinct and idiosyncratic sandwich changes every week, but you can always expect something thoughtful and hefty, held together in the restaurant’s own beautiful, sesame-scented bread. TEJAL RAO
Sonoran Pretzel at Valentine
Phoenix
Forget everything you know about pretzels. In this version, a crisp, crackled crust gives way to a toasty, slightly tangy and nutty interior. Swiped with honey and whipped butter made from hen fat, the pretzel is the most unforgettable part of the meal. PRIYA KRISHNA
Grilled Oysters at HaiSous
Chicago
Dolloped with mở hành and cooked on charcoal-fired clay pot grills called lo dat, these bivalves are then singed and splashed with nuac cham. Such juicy evocations of Vietnamese street cooking pair well with the Dos Amigos, a citrusy, mezcal-tequila cocktail. BRETT ANDERSON
Mushrooms With Butter and Garlic at Izakaya Seki
Washington, D.C.
If a description-versus-deliciousness matrix existed, this slippery medley of shimeji, sliced shiitakes and bits of king oyster would occupy the corner where “sounds unassuming” and “can I drink a sauce in public?” meet. The pool of earthy, buttery broth that reveals itself underneath can distract from even the most luxurious fatty tuna sashimi. TANYA SICHYNSKY
Breakfast Tacos at Maria’s Cafe
San Antonio
The handwritten menu sprawls across the walls of Maria’s, and you can’t go wrong with any filling wrapped in the restaurant’s buttery flour tortillas. But might I recommend the Minion, which comes with smoky shreds of brisket and creamy-crunchy migas? PRIYA KRISHNA
Palacsinta at Agi’s Counter
New York City
These Hungarian crepes come with a Post-it note of salty butter in the middle. Beneath that slab is even more flavor: A warm, jewel-tone compote ensures that each forkful of tender, airy and deeply golden pancake is slicked with seasonal fruit. TANYA SICHYNSKY
Celeriac Schnitzel at Apteka
Pittsburgh
Escorted by vegetable preparations — jammy beets, apple-leek salad — that toe the line between side dish and condiment, these delicately crisp schnitzels prove Apteka’s guiding principle: Eastern European cuisine is an underused vehicle for delicious plant-based cooking. BRETT ANDERSON
Pistachio Flatbread at Al Badawi
New York City
It may not be a pizza in the classic sense, but it has a crust, it’s covered in cheese and I would buy it by the slice if possible. NIKITA RICHARDSON
Crab Claws at Mosquito Supper Club
New Orleans
This dish changes with the seasons, but in October, it was simply dressed with drawn butter, salt, pepper and red pepper flakes. But it’s all about the succulent blue crab from Higgins Seafood down in the bayou — a taste that truly can’t be found anywhere else. BRIAN GALLAGHER
Oxtails at Sambou’s African Kitchen
Jackson, Miss.
Sally Demba opened Sambou’s early this year with Joseph and Bibian Sambou, her son and daughter, to showcase the cooking of their native Gambia. The gravy in the long-simmered oxtails pulse with ginger; you’ll want to spoon it, along with the spoon-tender meat, over your side of coconut rice. BRETT ANDERSON
Pizza Bianca at Pizzeria Sei
Los Angeles
This white pizza couldn’t be simpler — cream, fior di latte mozzarella, a touch of preserved lemon and olive oil — but set on the puffed, lightly charred dough, it made me feel quite emotional about the way pizza styles are alive and overlapping, continuously developing one pie at a time. TEJAL RAO
Buttermilk Biscuit at Ihatov
Albuquerque
It’s hard not to love an enormous buttermilk biscuit. It’s even harder not to love an enormous buttermilk biscuit with a crunchy, sugared bottom and an inside that’s as soft as air. PRIYA KRISHNA
Black Sesame Passion Fruit at Lady Wong
New York City
This is the year I realized that passion fruit is my favorite of all the fruit flavors. This is the pastry that brought me to that realization. NIKITA RICHARDSON
Fried Whole Huachinango at Tet a Tet
Los Angeles
The minute we realized the deliciousness of what we were dealing with, my family turned this whole fish in a crispy fried suit of rice flakes and aromatics, lounging in a pool of green curry and fish sauce caramel, into a cleaned cartoon spine on an empty plate. TEJAL RAO
Seaweed Doughnuts at Corvino Supper Club
Kansas City, Mo.
These savory beignets, delivered with a side of thick cream studded with trout roe, are an inspired pairing of texture, hot and cold temperature and subtle oceanic flavor. One bite and you’ll see why they’re a required order at the sleek bar and live jazz venue attached to chef Michael Corvino’s tasting-menu restaurant. BRETT ANDERSON
Kouign-Amann at Yellow
Washington, D.C.
Who knew that the center of a puffed-pastry crown was such a natural bed for the honey-lacquered walnuts that pack Greek styles of baklava? The crunchy, crushed pistachio-dusted topping gives way to thin, flaky layers for a treat that’s just right amount of sweet. TANYA SICHYNSKY
Won Ton in Brodo at Zitz Sum
Coral Gables, Fla.
This marriage of Chinese and Italian cuisine comes alive in its luscious, dashi-Parmesan “tea.” There’s a reason the dish, enriched with a swirl of olive oil, is the only savory item that never comes off Zitz Sum’s menu. BRETT ANDERSON
Suya Fried Chicken at Yum Village
Detroit
The fried chicken at the West African restaurant’s flagship location is a vivid thrill, thanks to deeply seasoned meat (the chicken is roasted before it’s fried) and the tension between suya pepper spices and agave-based syrup on its sticky-crisp exterior. That, and a side of Senegalese maafe stew, warrant a return visit to Yum Village. BRETT ANDERSON
Parisian Egg Tart at Grand Opening
San Francisco
Every cake, tart, cookie and pie is a standout at this pop-up bakery, but all year I’ve been dreaming of picking up another mahogany-brindled egg tart, and spending just a little more time with the flaky pastry and meltaway cloud of wobbly pastry cream. TEJAL RAO
Fried Chicken Skins at Leah and Louise
Charlotte, N.C.
Hot and crunchy and piled high on a platter, with seasoning that approximates the Cajun-y vinegar and jalapeño hit of Zapp’s Voodoo chips, these come tempered with a drizzle of creamy ranch dressing blended with green onion. You swear you can’t eat that many fried chicken skins until you’re looking at an empty platter. KIM SEVERSON
Baby Shrimp “Gunpowder” at Camphor
Los Angeles
There are many kinds of podi, the South Indian spice mixture sometimes called gunpowder. This one, used to dust a heap of tiny, super-crisp shrimp, and full of fried curry leaves and mustard seeds, is particularly satisfying and habit-forming. TEJAL RAO
Fried Green Tomato BLT at the Tomato Place
Vicksburg, Miss.
Your first question will be: Are the fried tomatoes the “T” in the BLT? No, they are marvelously in addition, and achieve the perfect balance of salty breading and acidic bite. On white bread with an ample wipe of mayo, this sandwich is surplus to requirements — in the best way. BRIAN GALLAGHER
The Omelet at Lucian Books and Wine
Atlanta
The presentation could not be more simple: A spoonful of salty caviar crowns the tender, creamy fold of egg, and an herb-specked quenelle of crème fraîche rides alongside. A simple but sophisticated balm. Impeccable. KIM SEVERSON
Khichdi at Vrindavan
Frisco, Texas
The daily changing thalis at Vrindavan always include khichdi — for a reason. Deeply perfumed with whole, warming spices, cozy with soft grains of rice and lentils and enriched with ghee, this tastes like the best home cooking. PRIYA KRISHNA
Kakigori at Locust
Nashville
This shaved-ice dessert hides bits of crunchy honeycomb inside a dome of fluffy snow flavored with passion fruit, covered with a soft meringue and topped with a sugared egg yolk. KIM SEVERSON
Follow New York Times Cooking on Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, TikTok and Pinterest. Get regular updates from New York Times Cooking, with recipe suggestions, cooking tips and shopping advice.