6 places
Where to Eat in Philadelphia
About the list
In 2019, when the James Beard Foundation named Zahav the best restaurant in the country, the prestigious institution was simply affirming what many Philadelphians already knew. If ever there was an appropriately named restaurant, this Society Hill gem is it. Hebrew for ‘gold’, the Israeli hotspot has certainly become the gold standard for elevated but unpretentious dining in the city. Chef/owner Michael Solomonov deftly offers diners a primer to the food of his birthplace and manages to take deceptively simple food to new heights. Small plates of salatim, like beets with tahina and Moroccan carrots, complement tender grilled duck hearts and crispy sunchokes, while a luscious pomegranate-studded lamb shoulder with chickpeas and tahdig garner the spotlight as the restaurant’s most-requested dish.
A seriously addictive menu of locally-sourced ingredients and a slew of housemade accoutrements woos diners like a persistent suitor. A roster of rustic Italian classics, hearty salads, and fresh seafood remain perennial favourites, while imaginative pizzas like the Coniglio — a delightful cacophony of rabbit-hazelnut sausage, San Marzano tomatoes, stinging nettles, and olives — serve as a reminder as to why a seat in this diminutive restaurant is coveted real estate. Bookend your meal with a starter of caciocavallo-stuffed meatballs and the lauded budino, an Italian egg pudding.
In the last decade or so, vegetarian and vegan restaurants have managed to shed their reputation as being nothing more than glorified salad bars. Stylishly modern Vedge shatters that restrictive notion with a progressive menu of tapas-style plates like smoked eggplant, cauliflower, and chickpeas a with a punched-up salsa verde. Farm-fresh vegetables can be ordered from the cheeky ‘dirt list’ and a steak-spice seared tofu with chanterelles, kabocha squash, and madeira will convince, and possibly convert, even the staunchest carnivores. Perhaps the most notable feature of this veggie haven is that it doesn’t attempt to serve knockoffs of meat-focused dishes — you won’t find vegetable 'bacon' or a tofu 'sausage' on the menu. This is a ‘vegetable-forward’ restaurant that is decidedly comfortable in its own skin.
Award-winning chef Marc Vetri has been on the radar of food lovers since he made his foray into the Philadelphia food world with his eponymous Italian eatery two decades ago, and deservedly so. A true chef, he speaks as passionately about pasta extrusion as he does the importance of selecting a proper olive oil, and he manages to convey that passion onto the plate. Vetri Cucina is undoubtedly the crown jewel in his empire of restaurants (he owns a few in the city) and enjoys its reputation as a culinary bucket list destination. The chef’s degustation menu — the sole offering — changes frequently but remains consistently indulgent with handcrafted pastas and sauces, antipasti, and velvety desserts.
The joy of Greek-Cypriot food lies in its simplicity; a few fresh herbs and a squeeze of citrus is usually all that’s needed to highlight dayboat seafood and standards like souvlaki, kebabs, and shawarma and the menu at Kanella affirms as much. The bright BYOB doesn’t seek to reinvent the wheel but opts instead to serve traditional fare that would make any yia-yia proud.
This Lebanese multi-hyphenate has been a local favourite from the outset. As an all-day specialty market and café, restaurant, and outdoor garden, Suraya is one of the tastiest jacks-of-all-trades in the city. The spacious complex’s menu guides diners through the Levant —t he area that includes Turkey, Syria, Palestine, Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq, and Israel — and offers a delicious lesson on the contrasts and complexities of the flavours of the Middle East. Hot and cold mezze — think tabbouleh and fried kibbeh — are familiar tastes while the halabi kebab of muhammara-brushed ground lamb seasoned with chilli peppers, cinnamon, coriander and paprika present a striking palate pleaser.
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