Travel video guide
Best Bakeries in Manhattan, New York From Eater | Varedelo
This guide turns World's No. 1 Pizza Chef Anthony Mangieri's NYC Food Crawl — Chef's Day Off from Eater into a practical bakery & cafe map with 5 saved spots around Manhattan, Borough Park, and Long Island City. The mapped places include a bakery stop, a restaurant stop, and a grocery store. Use it to understand the places, dishes, and trip context before saving the map in Varedelo.
What the creator captured
Anthony Mangieri for Eater highlights the deep historical roots of New York City's food scene, specifically praising the 30-year consistency of Veniero's Sicilian cheesecake. He considers the nutrient-dense variety burger at Hearth to be one of the best meals in the country, transcending the category of a simple burger. His journey emphasizes that the passion and repetition of family-run institutions like Di Palo and Sons are what make the city's culinary landscape irreplaceable.
What this map is good for
- Planning a bakery stop or short itinerary in Manhattan.
- Comparing food stops from a creator or saved local map before you commit time in the city.
- Saving 5 mapped spots into Varedelo so the list stays usable on the ground.
- Using the original video as context, then turning it into a clean place-by-place map.
Featured spots on this map
- Veniero's Pasticceria & Caffe
Bakery in 342 E 11th St, New York, NY 10003, USA, Manhattan, New York, United States
Price level: Moderate
Hours: Hours available - Una Pizza Napoletana
Pizza Restaurant in 175 Orchard St, New York, NY 10002, USA, Manhattan, New York, United States
Price level: Medium
Hours: Hours available - D. Coluccio & Sons
Grocery Store in 1214-20 60th St, Brooklyn, NY 11219, USA, Borough Park, New York, United States
Price level: Medium
Hours: Hours available - Hearth
Fine Dining Restaurant in 403 E 12th St, New York, NY 10009, USA, Manhattan, New York, United States
Price level: Moderate
Hours: Hours available - Casa Enrique
Mexican Restaurant in 5-48 49th Ave, Long Island City, NY 11101, USA, Long Island City, New York, United States
Price level: Medium
Hours: Hours available
Food notes from the video
- Sicilian cheesecake (Cassata al Forno)
- Variety burger (heart, liver, brisket, chuck, bone marrow)
- Beet borscht (sippable soup)
- Beef fat double-fried fries
- Italian sodas
Experiences captured
- Went for a morning bike ride
- Visited Veniero's Pasticceria in the East Village
- Met with Chef Marco Canora at Hearth
- Visited Di Palo and Sons in Brooklyn
- Interviewed multi-generational Italian food importers
- Explored a 100-year-old marble pastry slab
Planning notes for New York
New York City, located at the mouth of the Hudson River, was established as the Dutch trading post of New Amsterdam in 1624 before coming under English control in 1664. The city’s historical heritage is preserved through landmarks such as the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island, which served as the primary federal immigration station from 1892 to 1954. The architectural landscape of the city includes a variety of historical styles. The 18th-century English Georgian influence is visible in public buildings.
Must-try foods nearby
- New York Style Thin-Crust Pizza
The ultimate city icon, characterized by large, hand-tossed thin crusts that are crisp yet flexible enough to be folded in half. - Everything Bagel with Scallion Cream Cheese and Lox
A quintessential NYC breakfast consisting of a malt-boiled, hand-rolled bagel encrusted with garlic, onion, poppy seeds, and salt. - Bacon, Egg, and Cheese (BEC) on a Roll
The undisputed king of the New York bodega. This sandwich features fried eggs, crispy bacon, and melted American cheese on a soft kaiser roll. - Pastrami on Rye
A Jewish deli classic featuring piles of hand-carved, spice-rubbed, and smoked brisket served on seeded rye bread with spicy brown mustard. - The Chopped Cheese
Originating in Upper Manhattan and Bronx bodegas, this cult favorite consists of ground beef, onions, and melted cheese chopped together on a grill and served with lettuce, tomato.
When to go: The best times to visit New York are during the shoulder seasons of late April to early June and September to October, when the weather is mild and the city is most walkable. While summer (July–August) is peak for tourism despite high humidity.
Local tips
- Download the OMNY app or use a contactless credit card to tap-and-go for all subway and bus fares.
- Walk on the right side of the sidewalk and step to the side if you need to stop or check your phone.
- Expect to tip between 18% and 22% at sit-down restaurants as it is a standard social requirement.
- Stay aware of your surroundings and keep your belongings secure, especially in crowded tourist hubs and transit stations.
What travelers are noticing
- Charlotte Patisserie Chelsea: The viral Greenpoint bakery's first Manhattan outpost, trending for its 'Duet' hazelnut crunch cake and old-world French confections.
- Sourdough Pastry Innovation: A surge in 'sourdoughnuts' and fermented viennoiserie, with bakeries like Radio Bakery and the new Bar Ferdinando leading the trend of using long-fermentation for sweet pastries.
- Mangia NYC Spring Tart Collection: A viral seasonal launch featuring experimental flavor mashups like Peach Earl Grey Pistachio and Pistachio Matcha Raspberry.
Extra place context
- Veniero's Pasticceria & Caffe
An East Village landmark since 1894, essential for classic Italian cheesecakes, biscotti, and traditional pastries in a historic setting.
food
Planning questions
What is this video map?
It is a crawlable guide to the mapped places from World's No. 1 Pizza Chef Anthony Mangieri's NYC Food Crawl — Chef's Day Off, with the creator video, a static map preview, and selected spots from the trip.
Can I save these spots?
Yes. Open the map in Varedelo to save the places, keep planning notes, and revisit the guide from your phone.
Does this replace watching the video?
No. The video remains the source, and the map makes the places easier to scan, compare, and save while planning.
Use it on your trip
Save this bakery & cafe map before you go
Keep the mapped spots, creator context, food notes, and planning details together. Varedelo turns the page into a phone-friendly map you can revisit when you are choosing where to go.