"

New York Magazine

Skip to content, or skip to search.

Skip to content, or skip to search.

Home > Restaurants > Centro Vinoteca

Centro Vinoteca

Critic's Pick Critics' Pick

74 Seventh Ave. South, New York, NY 10014
nr. Barrow St.  See Map | Subway Directions Hopstop Popup
212-367-7470 Send to Phone

Photo by Shanna Ravindra

Hours

Mon-Fri, 9am-2am; Sat-Sun, 11am-2am

Nearby Subway Stops

1 at Christopher St.-Sheridan Sq.; A, B, C, D, E, F, V at W. 4th St.-Washington Sq.

Prices

$14-$39

Payment Methods

American Express, MasterCard, Visa

Special Features

  • Bar Scene
  • Breakfast
  • Brunch - Weekend
  • Dine at the Bar
  • Hot Spot
  • Late-Night Dining
  • Lunch
  • Notable Chef

Alcohol

  • Full Bar

Reservations

Recommended

Profile

The dominant stylistic motif at Centro Vinoteca is a sleek, fashion-conscious black-and-white. The brick walls (and the terrazzo) have all been washed a bright, Mediterranean white. The tabletops are black and so are the chairs, and the low ceilings are adorned, here and there, with the kind of moon-shaped mother-of-pearl mobiles you see in fashion shoots dating from the sixties. If you show up for your table at 8:30 on a Friday evening, you will find the diminutive rooms filled with a boisterous and largely female clientele. The menu is an almost textbook compilation of currently trendy Italian dining styles—small plates, or “piccolini”; an eclectic selection of wines from the “enoteca” wine bar; and rustic pastas salted with an assortment of fatty pork products. The chef in charge is Anne Burrell, a former sous chef at Felidia and a protégée of the great maestro himself, Mario Batali. As is the fashion these days, the little piccolini dishes patter down on the table in endless waves. The antipasti are heftier and more carefully executed (try the good, rusticated pizza with layers of spicy sausage, stracchino cheese, and arugula). But the real reason for visiting Centro Vinoteca is the pastas. Like Batali, Burrell has a knack for taking big, potentially overwhelming flavors and imbuing them with sweetness and light. Her ravioli (one filled with a single gently poached egg, the other with broccoli rabe and Swiss chard) are models of that temperamental genre, and so are the gnocchi, which are crisped around the edges, sunk in a richly chunky lamb Bolognese, and dusted with frizzled onions.

Note

For peace and quiet, visit at lunchtime, when chef Burrell serves a good “meatball” burger (made with beef, pork, and veal) and a Cubano-style panini with pressed pork.

Kitchen Hours
The kitchen closes at midnight everyday.

Ideal Meal

Eggplant fritters, grilled pizzetta, crispy gnocchi with lamb Bolognese, lamb shank, tarallucci cookies.

Related Stories

New York Magazine Reviews

Featured In

6.8 "Mixed Reviews"
Average Reader Rating
on a Scale of 10
Write Your Own Review

Comfortable, vibrant addition to the neighborhood

linrtt from 10036 | Posted on 8/5/08

Overall Reader Rating: 7 (Recommended)
Food: 7
Service: 7
Décor: 6
Value: 6

This one hit the spot. I went after work on a Thursday, and even though we didn't have a reservation, the bar seating was immediately available for an enjoyable girls' night out. Our waitor was very attentive and accomodated to...Read More

Awful service, decent food

xsirenx from 10001 | Posted on 3/10/08

Overall Reader Rating: 5 (Mixed Reviews)
Food: 6
Service: 4
Décor: 9
Value: 7

I went on a Saturday night at 10.30pm and the service was awful and the food lackluster. We ordered a bottle of wine at the bar and when we were seated, they didn't provide the basic service of helping...Read More

Read All 8 Reviews >>

Advertising