
Brooklyn underwent a transformation that took time. A child eating a dollar pizza on the curb, a couple arguing between a new Thai restaurant and the old Italian restaurant three doors down, and a queue of diners outside a small empanada shop are all visible when you go along Smith Street in Cobble Hill on a Saturday night.
Perhaps from the Haitian bakery that opened last month, or perhaps from one of the three new coffee roasters that have appeared in what was once a laundromat, the sidewalks smell like charcoal, garlic, and something somewhat sweet. It’s likely that Brooklyn has been working for years to reach a gastronomic tipping point, but outsiders are only now beginning to take notice.
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Borough | Brooklyn, New York City, NY |
| Population | Approx. 2.7 million |
| Area | 69.4 square miles |
| Food-Related Businesses | ~8,100+ (approx. 1 in 6 of all Brooklyn businesses) |
| Largest Food Hall | DeKalb Market Hall (Downtown Brooklyn) |
| Iconic Food Inventions | Hot dog in a bun, egg cream, Sweet’N Low |
| Notable Seasonal Market | Smorgasburg |
| New Restaurant Permits (2021, JanβApr) | ~250 (30% of citywide total) |
| Key Dining Neighborhoods | Williamsburg, Fort Greene, Cobble Hill, Red Hook, Carroll Gardens, Crown Heights |
A portion of the plot is revealed by the numbers. Food is the second largest industry in Brooklyn after healthcare, accounting for almost one in six firms in the borough. For the first time in recent memory, Brooklyn accounted for over 30% of all new restaurant permits in New York City in 2021, almost matching Manhattan’s percentage. Manhattan’s share, which had previously been close to 40%, fell to 32%.
In the meantime, there was a noticeable increase in openings in Brooklyn’s residential neighborhoods, such as Carroll Gardens, Prospect Heights, and Fort Greene. This was caused in part by the pandemic era trend of eating nearby and in part by landlords who were suddenly open to negotiating with small businesses that would not have had a chance prior to 2020.
Data can only capture so much. Brooklyn’s culinary identity seems to go beyond the hip eateries and seasonal markets that garner media attention. Dutch settlers who cultivated along the coastline and made do with local foods are the origin of the borough’s approximately 400 year old culinary heritage. That drive adaptation, creativity, and a readiness to blend customs never truly subsided. It simply continued to layer.
Germans established the beer garden as a social institution and constructed breweries. New York style pizza and the corner bakery were created by Southern Italians who tweaked their recipes using American ingredients and appetites, rather than just importing them. Jews from Eastern Europe invented the bagel, founded the deli, and invented whole new food categories. Every wave left behind sediment, which served as the basis.
Then Caribbean families arrived in Flatbush and Crown Heights, bringing curry goat and jerk seasoning. Sunset Park became home to Fujianese people, creating a Chinatown apart from Manhattan’s original Cantonese neighborhood. Bay Ridge and Kensington became home to Middle Eastern and South Asian grocers and cooks.
The subway arc that curves around the borough, known as the “Brooklyn Horseshoe,” turned into a corridor of flavors that could not be listed in a single guidebook. It’s difficult to ignore how effortlessly different customs mixed at the periphery: a Haitian cook using Latin ingredients from a seller two blocks away, an Italian bakery taking a method from a Jewish neighbor. Before anyone dubbed it that, it was called fusion.
But the artisan revival that started in the early 2000s was what truly attracted attention. The abandoned factories and Navy Yard warehouses did not remain vacant when production moved out of Brooklyn. They developed into microbreweries, pickling businesses, artisanal chocolate stores, and small batch hot sauce factories. With dozens of vendors selling everything from Moroccan crepes to ramen burgers under one tent, Smorgasburg, the outdoor food market that began in Williamsburg, became a sort of weekly proof of concept for Brooklyn’s culinary ambition.
Similar reasoning was used at DeKalb Market Hall, which is currently the largest food hall in the borough: put a hundred different varieties under one roof and let people graze. For now, these markets attract huge crowds and continue to launch new food businesses who might not otherwise be able to afford a storefront. However, it’s still unclear whether these markets are a sustainable model or a novelty that fades once the Instagram appeal wears off.
Contrary to popular belief, the pandemic might have sped up Brooklyn’s ascent. Brooklyn’s residential fabric provided a sort of buffer as thousands of Manhattan restaurants closed over 4,500 throughout the city, according to some estimates. Individuals who worked from home had to eat, and they preferred to eat close by. During the worst part of the pandemic, entrepreneurs like Kim Meyer, who operated Kimpanadas in Cobble Hill, discovered that vacant shops and negotiable rents presented opportunities that had not before existed.
Meyer called her gourmet empanada store “COVID proof” designing it exclusively for takeout. She was thanked by her neighbors simply for turning on the lights. There’s a feeling that this wasn’t just survival it was a reshuffling that favored small, gritty, neighborhood rooted operations against the big budget Manhattan institutions that depended on office workers and visitors.
All of this does not imply that Brooklyn has overthrown Manhattan or even that it ought to. Brooklyn cannot compare to Manhattan’s concentration of Michelin starred restaurants, including Le Bernardin, Per Se, and Daniel. In fact, San Francisco outperforms all of New York City in terms of culinary diversity when measured by density and variety per square mile, according to a recent research by the Escoffier cooking school.
An estimated 1.6 million New Yorkers suffer from food insecurity, with a disproportionate number of them living in central Brooklyn districts where access to reasonably priced fresh food is still severely restricted. Brooklyn continues to face significant issues. Speaking in Brooklyn in late 2025, House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries stated unequivocally that the lack of access to wholesome food had killed more people in his community than gun violence.
It’s difficult to avoid the conclusion that something truly noteworthy is taking place when observing Brooklyn’s culinary sector develop during the last ten years. The borough is building on centuries of immigrant creativity, adjusting to economic turbulence, and creating a food culture that feels less controlled and more natural than that of other American cities. It’s not just opening new restaurants.
Depending on how you use the term, Brooklyn may or may not become America’s food capital. Manhattan and San Francisco will probably maintain their position if it means having the most Michelin stars or the highest earning restaurant chains. Brooklyn’s claim is already more compelling than most people realize if it refers to the location where food is most deeply ingrained in daily life where a corner bodega, a jerk chicken stand, and an artisanal pickle maker all share the same block and none of them feel out of place. For four centuries, the borough has been preparing for this duty. Perhaps the rest of the nation is only now catching up.
i) https://www.timeout.com/newyork/news/new-york-apparently-isnt-americas-most-diverse-food-cityheres-what-beat-it-052725
ii) https://www.linewaitersgazette.com/2026/02/10/brooklyns-food-landscape-is-changing/
iii) https://www.thecity.nyc/2021/05/19/brooklyn-restaurant-renaissance-cooking-manhattan/
iv) https://www.brooklyneagle.com/13522/brooklyn-eats-shows-off-why-brooklyn-may-be-the-foodie-capital-of-america/
