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Home > Restaurants > Trestle on Tenth

Trestle on Tenth

Critic's Pick Critics' Pick

242 Tenth Ave., New York, NY 10001
at 24th St.  See Map | Subway Directions Hopstop Popup
212-645-5659 Send to Phone

  • Critics' Rating: star Price Range: $$-$$$
  • Reader Rating:

    8.0 out of 10

    3 Reviews | Write a Review

  • Cuisine: American Nouveau, French
Photo by Mark Peterson/Redux

Hours

Mon, 5:30pm-10pm; Tue-Thu, 11am-3:30pm and 5:30pm-10:30pm; Fri-Sat, 11am-3:30pm and 5:30pm-11pm; Sun, 11am-3:30pm and 5:30pm-10pm

Nearby Subway Stops

C, E at 23rd St.; 1 at 23rd St.

Prices

$18-$24.25

Payment Methods

American Express, Diners Club, Discover, MasterCard, Visa

Special Features

  • Hot Spot
  • Notable Chef
  • Outdoor Dining

Alcohol

  • Full Bar

Reservations

Recommended

Profile

At his modestly sized, discreetly satisfying new restaurant in Chelsea called Trestle on Tenth, the chef and owner, Ralf Kuettel, indulges his particular tastes to an almost extreme degree. In the manner of other homegrown gourmet outposts around town, the restaurant occupies a utilitarian, brick-walled space, with a snug, boxy bar in the front of the room and a small garden out back, where you can dine under the shade of cherry and locust trees. The tabletops in the dining room are made of unadorned dark wood, and the row of pendulum lamps hanging from the ceiling look like they've been affixed there by Kuettel himself using a somewhat erratic staple gun. Kuettel grew up in Zurich, and it's his mellifluous accented voice you hear on the restaurant's answering machine. And it's his particular brand of earthy, down-home cooking on the menu, like "pizokel" (small, gnocchi-like dumplings) drizzled with melted Gruyere, crépinettes made with braised pork shoulder, and servings of knobbly veal kidneys doused in a creamy sauce made with Trappist ale.

Among the first appetizers to hit our table were copious platters of cheeses (mostly Swiss) and cured meats (speck, soppressata), a toss of Boston lettuce drizzled with a nice buttermilk dressing and many salty nuggets of bacon (good), and a generous slab of oxtail-and-pigs-foot terrine seized in a pinkish, overly rubbery gelée (not so good). The best item on the appetizer menu by far, however, is the pork crepinette, which is composed of pulled pork shoulder, savoy cabbage and spices, bound together in a fat little package, propped on a mound of spinach, and finished with a rich pork reduction.

Ideal Meal

Pork crépinette, stuffed veal breast, gratinéed pizokle, Nusstorte

Related Stories

New York Magazine Reviews

8.0 "Recommended"
Average Reader Rating
on a Scale of 10
Write Your Own Review

not bad. not bad at all.

bnsracing from 10009 | Posted on 4/14/08

Overall Reader Rating: 8 (Recommended)
Food: 8
Service: 7
Décor: 8
Value: 8

I ate at Trestle a few nights ago; my only regret is not having been hungrier upon arrival. The only thing I ordered was a bottle of Barbera and a roasted chicken with winter greens in broth; my friend was not...Read More

Worth It

dwallack79 from 11106 | Posted on 10/19/07

Overall Reader Rating: 8 (Recommended)
Food: 8
Service: 9
Décor: 9
Value: 9

Planned a date here with my fiance. I made a reservation (and I'm glad I did) because we showed up and the place was PACKED. Which made it even cooler that they were able to accomodate us and seat us...Read More

Read All 3 Reviews >>

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