This is a list of notable kosher restaurants. A kosher restaurant is an establishment that serves food that complies with Jewish dietary laws (kashrut). These businesses, which also include diners, cafés, pizzerias, fast food, and cafeterias, and are frequently in listings together with kosher bakeries, butchers, caterers, and other similar places, differ from kosher-style establishments, which offer traditionally Jewish foods made from non-kosher ingredients (i.e., Katz's Delicatessen is kosher-style, meaning they sell all-beef frankfurters made from non-kosher beef).
Kosher restaurants typically operate under rabbinical supervision, which requires that kashrut, as well as certain other Jewish laws, must be observed.
Name | Origin | Description |
---|---|---|
Basil Pizza & Wine Bar | Brooklyn, United States | foodie destination restaurant |
Ben's Kosher Deli | New York City, United States | Long Island and Florida locations of a chain |
Bloom's | England | Until its last branch closed in summer 2010, Bloom's restaurant was the longest-standing kosher restaurant in England. |
B&H Dairy | New York City, United States | 1930s era luncheonette and kosher dairy |
Creole Kosher Kitchen | New Orleans, United States | Was one of the only kosher restaurants in the city of New Orleans, Louisiana prior to Hurricane Katrina. It remains closed. |
Deli 613 | Dublin, Ireland | Opened in 2023, first fully kosher eatery operating in Ireland since the late 1960s.[1] |
A chain of kosher bakeries in London, England, and Toronto, Canada. | ||
Jeff's Gourmet Sausage Factory | Los Angeles, United States | Established in 1999 in a storefront in the Pico-Robertson district, Jeff's Gourmet makes and sells its own sausages, hamburgers, and delicatessen meats carrying glatt kosher certification. In 2015 the restaurant opened the first glatt kosher hot dog stand at Dodger Stadium, open for all home games except those held on Friday, Shabbat, and Jewish holidays. |
Jewish Museum Munich | Munich | Museum and kosher restaurant. |
Paris France | A kosher Middle Eastern restaurant located in the "Pletzl" Jewish quarter of the Le Marais neighborhood in Paris, France. | |
Lavana's | New York City | Fine dining kosher restaurant in New York City. Permanently closed. |
Liebman's Deli | Riverdale, New York | The last kosher deli in the Bronx. |
Masbia | New York City, United States | A network of kosher soup kitchens in New York City. |
Brooklyn, United States | foodie destination restaurant. Permanently closed. | |
Manhattan, United States | A famous Jewish kosher dairy (milchig) restaurant on the Lower East Side of New York City. | |
Manhattan | Certified-kosher delicatessen in Manhattan, New York City, it originally opened in 1954.[2] | |
Taïm[3] | Manhattan | An Israeli vegetarian restaurant located at 45 Spring Street (on the corner of Mulberry Street), in NoLita in Manhattan, in New York City.[4] |
Manhattan | A bakery, located at 137 East Houston Street (between First Avenue and Second Avenue), in the Lower East Side, Manhattan, that has been selling knishes on the Lower East Side since 1890 from its original location on Houston Street.[5] | |
Miami, United States | A kosher bakery and cafe known for sourdough bread[6] [7] and challah bread, among other items.[8] [9] Zak the Baker opened a new glatt kosher deli in January 2017.[10] | |