Travel video guide
Where to Eat in Manhattan, New York: Roast Chicken From Eater | Varedelo
This guide turns NYC's Most Famous Roast Chicken Took 50 Years to Perfect — Most-Ordered from Eater into a practical restaurant map with 2 saved spots around Manhattan. The mapped places include a restaurant stop. Use it to understand the places, dishes, and trip context before saving the map in Varedelo.
What the creator captured
Jonathan Waxman demonstrates the evolution of his signature roast chicken at Barbuto, a dish perfected over forty-five years of culinary experience. He emphasizes that the secret to the dish's success lies in high-heat roasting, frequent basting with rendered fat, and a hand-crushed salsa verde. Eater showcases how Waxman's 'plagiarized' inspiration from 1978 transformed into a quintessential New York City staple.
What this map is good for
- Planning a fine dining restaurant stop or short itinerary in Manhattan.
- Comparing food stops from a creator or saved local map before you commit time in the city.
- Saving 2 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
- Michael's New York
Fine Dining Restaurant in 24 W 55th St, New York, NY 10019, USA, Manhattan, New York, United States
Price level: High
Hours: Hours available - Barbuto
Italian Restaurant in 113 Horatio St, New York, NY 10014, USA, Manhattan, New York, United States
Price level: Moderate
Hours: Hours available
Food notes from the video
- roast chicken
- salsa verde
- kale salad
- grilled chicken with french fries
Experiences captured
- butchered a whole chicken
- basted chicken with rendered fat
- rested chicken for 15 minutes
- made European-style salsa verde in a mortar
- zested and juiced lemons
- emulsified a kale salad dressing
- massaged kale to infuse flavors
- carved chicken using a fork and knife
Planning notes for New York
Manhattan, the central borough of New York City, occupies a 22.8-square-mile island situated at the junction of the Hudson and East Rivers. Established as New Amsterdam in 1624, the area contains a concentration of historical landmarks, including Federal Hall, where George Washington was inaugurated in 1789, and Fraunces Tavern.
Must-try foods nearby
- Pastrami on Rye
The quintessential Manhattan icon, best experienced at Katz's Delicatessen. It features thick, hand-carved slabs of spice-rubbed. - New York Style Pizza Slice
A thin-crust, wide-slice marvel designed to be folded. While Joe's is the classic, 2026 trends favor the 'New-School' slice at Scarr’s Pizza. - Everything Bagel with Lox and Schmear
A traditional Jewish-style boiled bagel from institutions like Russ & Daughters. It is typically loaded with scallion cream cheese, Gaspe Nova smoked salmon, capers, and red onion. - Bacon, Egg, and Cheese (BEC) on a Roll
The lifeblood of Manhattan breakfast culture. This bodega staple consists of two fried eggs, American cheese, and crispy bacon on a buttered, toasted Kaiser roll. - Chicken over Rice (Halal Cart Style)
A legendary street food platter popularized by Adel’s Famous and The Halal Guys. It consists of yellow basmati rice, seasoned chopped chicken, a pita, and the secret.
When to go: The best times to visit Manhattan are from April to June and September to October, when mild temperatures (50°F–75°F) make the city highly walkable and parks are in bloom or vibrant with fall foliage. Peak tourist seasons occur during the hot.
Local tips
- Always walk on the right side of the sidewalk and pull over to the side if you need to stop to check a map or take a photo.
- When using the subway, let passengers exit the car completely before you attempt to board and move to the center to keep the doors clear.
- Expect to tip between 18% and 22% at sit-down restaurants, as this is the standard social expectation for service in the city.
- Stand on the right side of escalators to allow those in a hurry to pass you on the left.
What travelers are noticing
- Sirrah: A moody, maximalist French concept in the Meatpacking District that has become a viral dinner destination for its four-course prix-fixe and late-night scene.
- Or'Esh: Chef Nadav Greenberg’s new Mediterranean spot in SoHo, trending for its creative tasting menu featuring standout dishes like sliced tuna and house-made bagels.
- The Eighty Six: A speakeasy-style dining room in the West Village gaining significant buzz for its intimate atmosphere and signature tuna and caviar opener.
Planning questions
What is this video map?
It is a crawlable guide to the mapped places from NYC's Most Famous Roast Chicken Took 50 Years to Perfect — Most-Ordered, 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 restaurant 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.