Travel video guide
Where to Eat in Pleasantville, New York: Lox
This guide turns Mark Ambor Thinks Gluten Free Bagels Taste the Same from Jeremy Jacobowitz into a practical travel map with 2 saved spots around Manhattan and Pleasantville. The mapped places include a bagel shop. Use it to understand the places, food notes, and trip context before saving the map in Varedelo.
What the creator captured
Jeremy Jacobowitz interviewed musician Mark Ambers while trying a fully loaded gluten-free lox bagel from Bagel Pub. Although Jeremy admitted to deducting points because the bagel was gluten-free, he awarded it a 5.0, noting it was the highest score he had given in that category. He ultimately appreciated the classic nature of the order but maintained that it couldn't beat a traditional egg everything bagel.
What this map is good for
- Planning a bagel shop stop or short itinerary in Manhattan.
- Seeing where the mapped places sit together before choosing what to visit first.
- 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
- Grand Central Bagel Cafe
Bagel Shop in 441 Bedford Rd, Pleasantville, NY 10570, USA, Mount Pleasant, Pleasantville, New York, United States
Hours: Hours available - Tompkins Square Bagels | East Village Bagels
Bagel Shop in 184 2nd Ave, New York, NY 10003, USA, Manhattan, New York, United States
Price level: Cheap
Hours: Hours available
Food notes from the video
- gluten-free everything bagel
- scallion cream cheese
- lox
- capers
- onions
- tomatoes
Experiences captured
- interviewed musician Mark Ambers
- discussed Westchester and Irvington roots
- talked about Coldplay's discography and vinyl
- visited Bagel Pub
- rated a gluten-free bagel order
- discussed the New York open mic scene
Planning notes for New York
New York City, located at the mouth of the Hudson River, was established as a Dutch trading post named New Amsterdam in 1624. Control transferred to the English in 1664, at which time the settlement was renamed New York. The city served as the first capital of the United States under the Constitution from 1789 to 1790. The architectural landscape includes 19th-century brownstone rowhouses, Gilded Age mansions, and a high concentration of Art Deco skyscrapers.
Must-try foods nearby
- Pastrami on Rye
The quintessential New York deli staple, featuring beef brisket that is salt-cured, seasoned with a secret spice rub, smoked, and steamed until it melts in your mouth. - The New York Slice
A wide, thin-crust pizza slice that is foldable yet crispy, characterized by a high-gluten bread flour crust, light tomato sauce, and full-fat dry mozzarella. - Bagel with Lox and Schmear
A dense, chewy, and malt-boiled bagel topped with a generous layer of cream cheese (schmear) and silky translucent slices of salt-cured salmon (lox). - Halal Chicken and Rice Platter
The ultimate street food fuel, consisting of yellow basmati rice topped with chopped grilled chicken, a side of iceberg lettuce and pita, and the legendary. - Chopped Cheese
Originating from Upper Manhattan and Bronx bodegas, this cult-favorite sandwich features ground beef, onions, and melted American cheese grilled together on a flat-top.
When to go: The best time to visit New York is during the shoulder seasons of May to June and September to October.
Local tips
- Treat sidewalks like highways by staying to the right and pulling over to the side before stopping to check maps or take photos.
- Tipping is essential in full-service restaurants, where a gratuity of 18% to 22% of the total bill is the standard expectation.
- When using the subway, always let passengers exit the train completely before you attempt to board.
- Use the OMNY contactless system to pay for public transit by simply tapping your credit card, smartphone, or smartwatch at the turnstiles.
What travelers are noticing
- Shaver Hall: A massive new 35,000-square-foot food hall in the former Lord & Taylor building featuring the first U.S. location of London’s Pick & Cheese and the Japanese spot Mako.
- Somssi: A viral new Greenwich Village opening from Ahris Kim (NA:EUN Hospitality) featuring social media-famous dishes like the 'Potato, Potato, Potato' and White Rabbit candy ice cream.
- Noury: A modern Parisian-style izakaya in SoHo from the acclaimed Kiko team, trending for its reimagined futomaki and extensive sake program.
Official tourism resource
The official destination marketing organization and visitor guide for the five boroughs of New York City, including Manhattan.
Planning questions
What are the best spots in Pleasantville, New York from this video?
This guide maps all 2 spots featured in the video, with names, addresses, and neighborhoods, so you can plan your trip to Pleasantville, New York.
What are the must-try foods in Pleasantville, New York?
Creator picks from the video include gluten-free everything bagel, scallion cream cheese, lox, capers. Open the map in Varedelo to see which spot each one is at.
Can I save these spots to use on my trip?
Yes. Open the map in Varedelo to save every spot, get directions, and revisit the guide from your phone while you travel.
Use it on your trip
Save this travel 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.