Recently I was so happy to be able to revisit a two-block stretch of Grand Street. It's one of my favorite places for good snacks - let's call this Lower East Side strip the Walk of Nosh.
Doughnut Plant

First up: Doughnut Plant at 379 Grand. At this eight-year-old landmark, the doughnuts, made fresh daily, are much more intensely (and often unusually) flavored than the much more boring options elsewhere. Think grapefruit, peanut butter and jelly, even marzipan, and not just vanilla or chocolate. Lavender and blueberry were options the day I went, but I went for the tres leches, a takeoff on the Latin cake of the same name. Covered in a crisp, pale-white frosting, this doughnut had been soaked in sweet milk, making for a gooey interior. A tip: if you do head here, don't go too late in the day: when the day's allotment are gone, they're really gone.
Kossar's Bialys

A couple doors down from Doughnut Plant, at 367 Grand, is a much older and traditional carb-seller: Kossar’s Bialys. Although you can get bagels at this bakery, the real reason for coming is the bialy, a flatter, denser bagel variant that comes with a mass of smashed onions in the center. It addition to being delicious, those bialys are also a reminder of the area's heritage. At one time, Grand Street, like most of the L.E.S., was intensely Jewish. The neighborhood has changed in many ways since then, but Kossar's and many other kosher and Jewish places remain in and around Grand Street.
Pickle Guys

With your dougnut and bialy needs taken care of, there are lots of other places nearby worth checking out. If you're seeking something salty and sour, head to nearby Essex Street for the Pickle Guys, where its pickled vegetables of all sorts are stored in large open tubs. Sure, the pickles are great, but I also love the giardinera, a heavily brined mix of carrots, cauliflower, red pepper, and celery that's very good at a picnic.
Isabella's Oven

If pizza's on your mind, Isabella’s Oven, at 365 Grand, makes a tasty, albeit somewhat pricey, option -- bonus points for the charming small garden in back. Farther east, at 409 Grand, is the laidback Roots and Vine cafe, serving wine and beer as well as coffee. Either place is a good spot for plotting and planning your next NYC destination.
A few days ago I took the subway up to Harlem as part of research for a New York City travel guide I'm working on. Although 125th Street is the first Harlem stop for most tourists, much of it is too crowded, with lots of shopping but not always enough excitement. The same couldn't be said of my ultimate destination: 116th Street near St. Nicholas Avenue. The area's sometimes called Le Petit Senegal because of the large number of immigrants it attracts from that West African country. 
It's important for travelers, even those in their own city, to have priorities. Mine happened to be lunch, so I walked straight ftoor Amy Ruth's, one of the best-known soul food restaurants in Harlem. Here the dishes are named for notable African Americans. I got the "Reverend Al Sharpton" -- the classic combination of chicken and waffles. You can get the chicken either fried (my favorite) or "smothered" (covered in gravy). The chicken, prepared immediately before it arrived on my plate, was juicy and tender, and I ate it in the traditional way, with lots of maple syrup covering the chicken and soaking into the ridges of the waffles. Delicious. I also got "sweet tea"-- ice tea with as much sugar as can possibly be dissolved in it. You know what to expect when something's called "sweet tea," but Amy Ruth's version took the concept to new levels of syrupiness. I actually considered watering it down to make it just excessively sweet.  Looking out Amy Ruth's picture window, I checked the progress of one of the many condominiums going up in Harlem. This 16-story example was built in partnership with its next-door neighbor, the Malcolm Shabazz Mosque -- the new building actually cantilevers out over its roof. 
The mosque, originally a casino, is hardly the most beautiful thing in town -- a major architectural guide calls it "vulgar" -- but what it lacks in sleekness it may make up for in historical interest. When it first became a house of worship in the 1960s, it was part of the Nation of Islam, and Malcolm X preached there. Later, after he was assassinated, the mosque was renamed for the name Malcolm took soon before his death, and its ties with the Nation of Islam were cut. The congregation these days includes many Senegalese. 
Now, fortified by fried food and a whole lot of sugar, it was time to hit the road again. I walked a few blocks west to one of my favorite bakeries, Make My Cake. For me the only choice here is the Red Velvet Cake, an otherwise fairly straightforward classic that gets its lurid hue from huge amounts of food coloring and much of its flavor from the tangy cream-cheese frosting. Sadly I was too full of chicken and sweet tea to get anything then. Like me, you'll have to be satisfied with just a picture until you can find your own way up to 116th Street.
 Photo by Dominik Huber
Open since 1991, the East Village Bed & Coffee is now one of the area’s old-timers, but it’s still easy to walk past this guesthouse without even knowing what it is. There’s no sign—just two doors on the street, one painted bright red with the street number,the other one covered with stickers and graffiti but no handle.  The Mexican Room
Its 12 rooms, all of varying sizes but none of them enormous, are divided equally among three floors, with the top two reached by staircases narrow enough to be worthy of Amsterdam. The rooms, which have either queen or double beds, each have their own theme—for instance, the Mexico Room has Latin American knick-knacks on the wall, and that includes a sombrero that a guest mysteriously left there one day. Rooms all have their own air-conditioning—a must for late spring and summer in New York. All the bathrooms are shared—there’s one on every floor.

Obviously, it’s not the sort of place where you’ll get a mint on your pillow. What you will get are lots and lots of thoughtful touches to help you see as much of the city as possible. Every floor’s largish common area has a computer available for guest use, as well as free Wi-Fi and a dedicated phone line for receiving phone calls. Large subway maps are mounted on the walls to help with planning, and a long photocopied list of personally recommended restaurants is available for the taking. 
Free-trade coffee and tea are available in the kitchens on every floor, as are filtered water and a refrigerator with food staples, for those who want to do a little cooking. There’s also a small backyard with a koi pond—this acts as the de facto smoking lounge when the weather’s good.
Rooms (double occupancy, with all taxes included) start at just $115 for the smallish “Dutch room” on up to $140 for larger front rooms that look out onto Avenue C. With prices like that, it’s not unusual for many rooms to fill up as long as eight months in advance. (There’s a waiting list available on the website for cancellations.) All in all, this low-key guesthouse is a great place for feeling a little more like a temporary neighbor and less like someone just passing through town. East Village Bed & Coffee; 110 Avenue C, New York
Find more hotels in New York.
Lots of visitors to New York would love to stay close to the clubs and restaurants of the Lower East Side and other nearby neighborhoods, but until fairly recently there were just not many rooms available here, outside of a few scattered guesthouses and very small hotels. It wasn’t until 2004, when The Hotel on Rivington went up, that a more luxurious option became available. At the time, THOR got a huge amount of press for its looks—this light-blue glass tower made no attempt to blend in with the five-story tenements and other 19th-century buildings that were its neighbors. (Since then, it doesn’t stick out quite as much as it once did. A handful of other glassy buildings have arisen nearby, and more are on their way.) 
Don’t come here if your idea of luxury requires a lobby the size of the one in Grand Hotel—THOR makes its priorities clear by using its ground floor for a lounge and restaurant. To get to the actual lobby, you have to go up a story, to what Europeans call the 1st floor but what we Americans insist on calling the 2nd floor. Whatever floor you claim it’s on, the tiny lobby is little more than a way station toward yet another lounge, this time one with an impressive pool table and floor-to-ceiling windows that look out onto Rivington and one of my favorite places for empty calories, Economy Candy. (A visit here is never wasted.). 
Those floor-to-ceiling windows turn up again—they’re in every room, even in the bathrooms. It’s almost as if the city itself serves as the rooms’ “art.” Again, THOR is not a place for people whose idea of luxury is a lot of frills. The flatscreen TVs and closets, for instance, are built into the walls, and what little furniture there is (a coffee table, armchairs covered in dark velour) has only a smidge of color and pattern. 
None of this high design and understated luxury comes cheap. It never does. THOR’s rooms start at around $500 for double occupancy in high season, but you may be able to swing a slight deal during the heat of summer. Hotel on Rivington; 107 Rivington Street; New York Find more hotels in New York
There are several Chinatowns throughout New York City, but for most
tourists, the one in Manhattan is the best to head to. This is the one
with all the knockoff handbags and other glittery objects for sale --
an attraction that leaves me cold. Instead, I'd say to head here for
the food shops and markets, the restaurants, and the sheer excitement
of walking along some very frantic, very old streets. Chinatown is big, but not so big that you can't wander through
most of it in an afternoon. But if you're into streamlining, center
your walk on Mott Street, which is sort of the neighborhood's "Main
Street" -- if you're heading south, the Chinatown portion starts near
Mott's intersection with Kenmare Street. Below are a few of the many
stops worth making. 
Ten Ren, at 75 Mott, carries a large, almost overwhelming, supply of high-end teas as well as teapots and other accessories. The cheapest loose tea here is about $9 a pound ($20 a kilo), and prices increase drastically for anything better. The store also runs a tea shop a few doors north, at 79 Mott -- it's a good bet for bubble tea and people-watching. 
There are lots of decent-to-excellent restaurants in and around Mott Street. One standout is the accurately named Amazing 66, which opened a couple years ago at 66 Mott and has quickly gained a loyal following. The Cantonese dishes here tend to be simple, without anything too fussy. I like the congees, savory rice porridges that are very filling and especially comforting on a chilly day.
 If your sweet tooth is acting up, make a slight detour at Bayard Street and walk half a block to #65, home of the Chinatown Ice Cream Factory. Here the list of flavors are divided into two groups. Options like the subtle almond cookie, green tea, and red bean are all called "regular flavors," and much more common choices like vanilla fudge, pistachio, and coffee are the "exotics." Whichever category you choose, the ice cream's great (and so is the blog, by the way). 
A few blocks farther south is another good stop for sweets. Aji Ichiban, a branch of a Hong Kong chain of confectionary stores, sells candy, dried fruit, and some savory options. Most items are sold by the 1/4 pound, and with such a big variety, it's a good place to putting together a thank you gift or a snack bag for a trip. Samples of most of the fruits are available, but if you're completely flummoxed, go for the hazelnut nougat or anything in an appealing wrapper. Go further: Read Frederique's guide her favourite places in Amsterdam's Chinatown.
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