Restaurant in New York City, United States
Bungalow
500ptsSerious regional Indian without tasting-menu prices.

About Bungalow
Bungalow earned its 2024 Michelin Bib Gourmand by doing something specific: serving technically demanding, regionally grounded Indian cooking at a $$$ price point in the East Village. Chef Vikas Khanna draws on culinary traditions from India's 28 states, and the kitchen's precision — from kataifi-wrapped dahi kabab to five-cheese kulcha — justifies booking two to three weeks ahead.
Verdict: Bungalow Is the Most Technically Ambitious Indian Restaurant in the East Village — and One of the Few That Earns Its Michelin Recognition
The misconception worth correcting upfront: Bungalow is not a neighbourhood Indian restaurant with aspirations above its station. It earned a Michelin Bib Gourmand in 2024 because chef Vikas Khanna is doing something genuinely difficult — cooking regionally specific Indian food that holds up technically against any serious kitchen in New York City, at a price point ($$$) that keeps it accessible. If you've been writing off Indian restaurants in the East Village as casual curry spots, Bungalow will reset that assumption fast.
What Makes Bungalow Worth Booking
The room sets a tone before the food arrives. Pale pink walls, colourful murals, and a bar featuring carved panels give the dining room the feel of a wealthy household in a former colonial-era hill station , somewhere between a Rajasthani haveli and a Calcutta club. It reads confidently, not decoratively, and it signals that the kitchen takes its brief seriously. For the food-focused traveller, this visual context matters: Bungalow frames its cooking as a journey through India's 28 states, and the room reinforces that the concept is considered, not cosmetic.
Cooking itself earns that framing. Khanna's technical approach is the real story here. He doesn't simplify Indian regional cuisine for a Western audience or default to familiar Mughlai dishes. Instead, he finds specific techniques , like stuffing shrimp with a Goan curry-leaf preparation and presenting it in puff-pastry cones , that demonstrate actual knowledge of India's regional culinary traditions rather than a generalised impression of them. The dahi kabab is the clearest expression of this: tart, thick yogurt encased in kataifi pastry wisps, plated with a vivid purple cabbage sauce. It's technically precise and shows genuine understanding of how to balance fat, acid, and texture , the same considerations that drive serious cooking anywhere in the world.
Five-cheese kulcha is another dish worth noting. Stuffed flatbread is not a new idea, but executing it at this level of richness without losing the structural integrity of the bread requires real kitchen discipline. These aren't trend dishes; they're demonstrations of skill applied to a specific culinary tradition. Compared to peers in New York's Indian dining scene , aRoqa leans into a more modern tasting-menu format, while Cardamom occupies a different price tier , Bungalow sits in a specific lane: serious regional Indian cooking, à la carte, at a price that doesn't require committing to a multi-course format. For a different comparison internationally, Trèsind Studio in Dubai and Opheem in Birmingham are operating in similar territory , refined regional Indian with serious technique , but both require a larger financial commitment and a tasting-menu format.
Cocktail programme is worth the detour. Turmeric-infused tequila and chili-infused mezcal are not gimmicks here; they're built into drinks with actual balance. Starting at the bar before dinner is a reasonable strategy, particularly if you're waiting for your table, which happens regularly given how busy the room runs.
Booking and Timing
Bungalow runs at high occupancy most nights. Securing a reservation is moderately difficult , plan at least two to three weeks ahead for weekend evenings. Walk-ins are possible but require patience; diners queue early specifically to take advantage of them, which tells you something about demand. For groups, booking in advance is the only reliable option. Vikas Khanna is frequently present in the dining room, moving between tables to check on dishes and engage with guests , which is either a draw or an irrelevance depending on your preference, but it reinforces that this is a chef-led operation rather than a brand extension.
The East Village address at 24 1st Avenue puts Bungalow in a neighbourhood with strong restaurant density, so combining it with a broader evening in the area is direct. For more on where to eat and drink nearby, see our full New York City restaurants guide, our full New York City bars guide, and our full New York City hotels guide. If you're planning a wider trip that includes serious restaurant experiences, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Smyth in Chicago, and Providence in Los Angeles operate at comparable technical ambition in their respective cities.
Who Should Book
Bungalow is the right call if you want serious Indian cooking , regionally specific, technically demanding , without a $300+ tasting-menu commitment. It suits food-focused diners who know the category well enough to appreciate what Khanna is doing with regional references, as well as first-timers to refined Indian dining who want a room that explains itself visually and a menu that rewards curiosity. It's less suited to anyone looking for a quiet, low-key dinner: the room is consistently full, the energy runs high, and that's part of what the restaurant is. If you want calmer Indian dining in New York, Chola offers a different register. For regional Indian with a hyper-specific focus, Hyderabadi Zaiqa and Ishq are worth knowing about. Also worth noting for broader context: Emeril's in New Orleans, The French Laundry in Napa, and Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg all demonstrate what chef-driven, regionally grounded cooking looks like at the leading of its category , Bungalow is making a comparable argument for Indian cuisine in New York.
Book it. The Michelin Bib Gourmand is not a consolation prize here; it's an accurate read on a kitchen doing technically demanding work at a price that makes the decision easy. At $$$, with a 4.3 Google rating across over 1,200 reviews, Bungalow has the receipts. The only question is whether you book ahead or gamble on a walk-in queue.
Practical Details
| Detail | Bungalow | aRoqa | Chola |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cuisine | Contemporary Indian (28 states) | Modern Indian | Pan-Indian |
| Price range | $$$ | $$$$ | $$$ |
| Booking difficulty | Moderate (2–3 weeks ahead) | Moderate–High | Lower |
| Awards | Michelin Bib Gourmand 2024 | , | , |
| Walk-ins | Possible, queue early | Limited | More accessible |
| Address | 24 1st Ave, East Village | Manhattan | Midtown |
FAQ
Can Bungalow accommodate groups?
- Groups are possible but require advance booking , walk-in groups are unlikely to find space given how consistently full the dining room runs. Contact the restaurant directly to arrange larger tables. For group dinners in New York City, see our full restaurants guide for additional options at varying price points.
Can I eat at the bar at Bungalow?
- The bar at Bungalow is a genuine option, not just overflow seating. The cocktail programme , turmeric tequila, chili mezcal , is worth sitting for on its own. If the dining room is full, the bar is a reasonable alternative for the full menu in a more casual register. This is contemporary Indian cuisine in the East Village, so bar dining fits the energy of the room.
What should I order at Bungalow?
- Based on verified data: the dahi kabab (yogurt in kataifi pastry with purple cabbage sauce) and the five-cheese kulcha are the dishes most frequently cited as standouts. The cocktails , particularly the turmeric and chili-forward options , are worth ordering before you eat. The menu draws on culinary traditions from across India's 28 states, so ask staff which regional dishes are current; the kitchen changes emphasis seasonally.
Is Bungalow worth the price?
- At $$$, yes , this is one of the clearer value cases in New York's serious Indian dining scene. A Michelin Bib Gourmand specifically recognises restaurants offering good cooking at moderate prices, so Bungalow is not priced like a fine-dining destination even though the technique is at that level. Compared to aRoqa at $$$$, Bungalow gives you equivalent ambition at lower spend.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Bungalow?
- Bungalow does not operate as a tasting-menu-only restaurant based on available data , it is an à la carte format, which is part of why the Michelin Bib Gourmand applies rather than a star. If a structured multi-course Indian experience is your priority, Trèsind Studio or the tasting format at aRoqa may suit better. Bungalow's strength is in ordering intentionally à la carte.
How far ahead should I book Bungalow?
- Two to three weeks ahead for weekend evenings is the safe window. The Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition in 2024 increased demand, and the room fills consistently. Walk-ins exist but require arriving early and queuing , not a reliable strategy for a group or a time-sensitive evening. For easier booking in New York's Indian dining scene, Chola is more accessible on shorter notice.
What should a first-timer know about Bungalow?
- The room runs at full energy most evenings , this is not a quiet dinner setting. The menu is organised around India's regional culinary traditions, so if you're less familiar with the geography behind the dishes, asking staff for context is worthwhile and fits the spirit of how Khanna has framed the restaurant. Start with a cocktail at the bar if you arrive before your table is ready. Pricing is $$$, Michelin-recognised, and the 4.3 Google rating across 1,289 reviews suggests consistent execution. See our New York City experiences guide for how to build an evening around the East Village.
Is Bungalow good for solo dining?
- Yes , the bar is the leading seat for solo diners. You get the cocktail programme, access to the full menu, and the room's energy without needing a table for one. Solo dining at the bar is a practical and genuinely good option at Bungalow, particularly at $$$, where you can eat well without over-committing. The chef's presence on the floor makes solo dining feel engaged rather than overlooked.
Compare Bungalow
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bungalow | $$$ | Moderate | — |
| Le Bernardin | $$$$ | Unknown | — |
| Atomix | $$$$ | Unknown | — |
| Per Se | $$$$ | Unknown | — |
| Masa | $$$$ | Unknown | — |
| Eleven Madison Park | $$$$ | Unknown | — |
A quick look at how Bungalow measures up.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can Bungalow accommodate groups?
Bungalow works for small groups of 4–6, but the room runs at high occupancy and reservations are competitive. Larger parties should book well in advance — 3 weeks minimum — and check the venue's official channels to confirm availability and seating configuration. Walk-in groups should expect to wait.
Can I eat at the bar at Bungalow?
Yes — the bar, which features carved panels and a full cocktail program including turmeric-infused tequila and chili-infused mezcal, is a legitimate option for solo diners or pairs who didn't plan ahead. On busy nights, early arrival is the move if you want a bar seat without a reservation.
What should I order at Bungalow?
The five-cheese kulcha and the yogurt kebabs wrapped in kataifi pastry with pickled cabbage puree and mango coulis are the dishes most cited in reviews. The cocktail list is also worth engaging before the food arrives — this is not a venue where you skip the opening round.
Is Bungalow worth the price?
At $$$, Bungalow sits in a range where the Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024) provides meaningful reassurance — that recognition signals value relative to quality, not just prestige. If you want technically ambitious, regionally specific Indian cooking in Manhattan without committing to a tasting menu at $200+, Bungalow is the cleaner call.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Bungalow?
Bungalow is not structured as a tasting-menu destination — the format here is à la carte, which is part of what earns it the Bib Gourmand rather than a full Michelin star. Come to order and share dishes, not to sit through a fixed progression. That flexibility is a feature, not a gap.
How far ahead should I book Bungalow?
Book 2–3 weeks out for weekend evenings. The room is consistently full and walk-in demand is high enough that diners line up early to claim spots. Weekday dinners are more accessible but still worth reserving in advance. Same-day bookings are unlikely to succeed unless you're flexible on timing.
What should a first-timer know about Bungalow?
Bungalow is Chef Vikas Khanna's flagship, and the menu is built around regional specificity — dishes reference India's 28 states rather than a generic pan-Indian approach. Expect a full, buzzing dining room, a serious cocktail program, and a chef who is often present on the floor. The Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024) is the most useful benchmark for what to expect: high technical quality at a price that doesn't require a special-occasion budget.
Recognized By
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