You are reading

Sunnyside’s Salt & Fat Reviewed by The New York Times

Photo: QueensPost

April 26, 2013 Staff Report

Salt & Fat, located at 41-16 Queens Blvd, was included in the 2013 New York City Michelin Guide for its quality. It was one of just a handful of Queens restaurants.

The New York Times did a feature on the restaurant this week that can be found at the following link.

email the author: news@queenspost.com

5 Comments

Click for Comments 
43rd & 43rd

The scallops + carrot purée is one of the best things on the menu. If I could make one change out of the entire restaurant, I would use that carrot purée with the oxtail terrine, too (instead of the current onion purée).

Actually if I could make one change, it would be to bring back the shrimp ‘n’ grits . . . and bacon and slow-cooked egg and scallions. Only had it once and I’ll remember it for a long, long time.

Reply
Mayor McCheese

The first time we went there was a woman next to us complaining about a lack of vegetarian options. It’s called Salt & Fat and has a pig theme. What an idiot.

Reply
Krissi

LOVE Salt and Fat! So proud they are doing well!

EXCEPT I did not like this from the article: “There are misjudgments, like a plate of scallops that would be better off without a butterscotchy stroke of maple-carrot purée.”

This is actually one of my favorite dishes. Although at Taste of Sunnyside if I remember correctly, they replaced the scallops with the shrimp and I thought it was even tastier than the original plate.

Reply

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Brooklyn man indicted on manslaughter, DWI charges in deadly Astoria crash that killed the mother of his child: DA

A Brooklyn man was indicted by a Queens grand jury on charges of manslaughter, drunk driving and other crimes for a fatal collision in Astoria that killed his long-time girlfriend and mother of their young child in February.

Ray Perez, 27, of Caton Avenue in Flatbush, was arraigned Thursday in Queens Supreme Court on a 13-count indictment charging him with vehicular manslaughter for allegedly speeding through a stop sign in Astoria, colliding with another vehicle and slamming into two parked cars, and then driving nearly four miles away to a street in Maspeth before seeking help for his 29-year-old girlfriend Bridget Enriquez, who later succumbed to her injuries.