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    Restaurant in New York City, United States

    Hometown Bar B Que New York

    350pts

    Michelin-recognised smoke worth the Red Hook trek.

    Hometown Bar B Que New York, Restaurant in New York City

    About Hometown Bar B Que New York

    Hometown Bar-B-Que in Red Hook, Brooklyn holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand and three consecutive Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats rankings. Walk-in only, counter service, $$ pricing. The brisket and house-made jalapeño sausage are the reasons to make the trip from Manhattan. It is the most credentialed barbecue in New York City at this price point.

    Should You Make the Trip to Red Hook?

    Getting to Hometown Bar-B-Que takes commitment. The restaurant sits at 454 Van Brunt St in Red Hook, Brooklyn, a neighbourhood that requires deliberate effort from Manhattan: a subway ride plus a walk, or a direct cab. There is no phone number for reservations, no online booking system, and no waitlist to join in advance. You walk in, join the counter-service queue, and order. On busy Friday and Saturday evenings, that queue can stretch. The reward for the effort is barbecue that has earned a Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024) and back-to-back Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in North America rankings: #135 in 2023, #216 in 2024, and #174 in 2025. At the $$ price point, this is among the most decorated casual dining experiences in New York City.

    What Makes the Smoke Worth Chasing

    The Opinionated About Dining listing for Hometown is unusually descriptive, and it reads like a sourcing brief: wood smoke, spice-rubbed brisket, jalapeño sausage enriched with melted cheese, collard greens cooked with smoked pork. Every item on that list signals a kitchen that treats its raw materials as the point, not a backdrop. The brisket is described as tender with a vivid smoke-ring, which is a direct measure of pit discipline: achieving that ring requires sustained low-temperature smoking over quality hardwood, and you cannot fake it. The jalapeño sausage is house-made, enriched with melted cheese, and is the kind of item that separates a place that takes its craft seriously from one that simply serves smoked meat. The collard greens include smoked pork, meaning even the sides are built around the smoke programme rather than bolted on as afterthoughts.

    For a first-timer, the ordering logic is direct: anchor your tray around the brisket and the jalapeño sausage, add collard greens and the cold potato salad, and finish with the banana pudding topped with crumbled vanilla wafers. That combination covers every element the restaurant has been publicly praised for, and at $$ pricing, the total outlay for two people will be modest relative to what the same level of recognition costs elsewhere in New York.

    The setting is a warehouse space with communal tables. Expect an industrial, unfussy room. The wood smoke smell arrives before you reach the door, which is not an ambient detail but a signal: the pit is working, and it has been working for hours. For a first visit, that scent is probably the leading advance indicator that you have arrived at the right place.

    Timing and Logistics

    Hometown is closed Mondays. Tuesday through Thursday it runs noon to 10 pm; Friday and Saturday noon to 11 pm; Sunday noon to 10 pm. The practical window for a lower-stress first visit is a weekday lunch, ideally Tuesday through Thursday, when the queue is shorter and the communal tables are easier to navigate. Weekend evenings are the peak period; the room fills, the queue grows, and popular cuts can sell out. If your schedule only allows a weekend visit, arriving close to the noon opening gives you the leading shot at the full menu and a seat without a long wait.

    Booking difficulty is rated Easy: there is no reservation system, so the commitment is simply showing up. The trade-off is that you carry the timing risk yourself. Come early or accept the queue.

    Know Before You Go

    • Address: 454 Van Brunt St, Brooklyn, NY 11231
    • Hours: Tue–Thu 12–10 pm | Fri–Sat 12–11 pm | Sun 12–10 pm | Mon closed
    • Price: $$
    • Service style: Counter service, communal seating
    • Reservations: Not available — walk-in only
    • Booking difficulty: Easy (no system to navigate, but expect queues on weekends)
    • Awards: Michelin Bib Gourmand 2024; OAD Cheap Eats #174 (2025)
    • Google rating: 4.5 from 4,234 reviews

    How It Compares in the NYC Barbecue Category

    Within New York City barbecue, Hometown sits above Dinosaur Bar-B-Que and Hill Country on award recognition. Mighty Quinn offers a more accessible Manhattan location and shorter queues, but has not accumulated the same critical credentials. If proximity to Manhattan is the deciding factor, Mighty Quinn wins on convenience. If you want the most credentialed barbecue in New York at a $$ price point, Hometown is the clearest answer. The Red Hook location is not incidental: the warehouse space and the room to run a serious pit programme are part of what makes the sourcing and smoking approach viable here.

    For broader context on eating and staying in New York, see our full New York City restaurants guide, our full New York City hotels guide, our full New York City bars guide, our full New York City wineries guide, and our full New York City experiences guide.

    Compare Hometown Bar B Que New York

    Hometown Bar B Que New York in Context: Awards and Value
    VenueAwardsPriceValue
    Hometown Bar B Que New YorkOpinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in North America Ranked #174 (2025); You'll know you're close to Hometown Bar-B-Que when you smell the wood smoke drifting through Red Hook. Set in a sprawling warehouse with communal tables and an industrial feel, it's a bit of a trek from Manhattan, but the counter-service lineup of expertly smoked meats makes it worthwhile. The spice-rubbed brisket remains essential: tender, juicy, with a vivid smoke-ring, and the homemade jalapeño sausage enriched with melted cheese is a standout. Sides like collard greens with smoked pork and tangy cold potato salad are must-haves. Save room for the banana pudding topped with fresh crumbled vanilla wafers.; Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in North America Ranked #216 (2024); Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024); Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in North America in Ranked #135 (2023)$$
    Le BernardinMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best$$$$
    AtomixMichelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best$$$$
    Per SeMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best$$$$
    MasaMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best$$$$
    Eleven Madison ParkMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best$$$$

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is lunch or dinner better at Hometown Bar B Que New York?

    Lunch is the safer bet. Counter-service venues like this tend to have fresher smoked meat earlier in the day before popular cuts sell out. Hometown runs noon to 10 pm Tuesday through Thursday and Sunday, noon to 11 pm Friday and Saturday, giving you a wide lunch window. Arriving mid-afternoon on a weekday is a practical way to avoid peak crowds in a communal warehouse space.

    Does Hometown Bar B Que New York handle dietary restrictions?

    The menu is built around smoked meats, and the OAD listing specifically highlights sides like collard greens cooked with smoked pork — so fully plant-based eating is difficult here. This is a barbecue-first kitchen at a $$ price point, not a venue that pivots easily around dietary needs. If avoiding meat is a priority for your group, this is not the right call.

    Is Hometown Bar B Que New York worth the price?

    At $$ per head, yes. Hometown holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024) and has ranked in Opinionated About Dining's Cheap Eats in North America list three years running, hitting as high as #135 in 2023. For smoked brisket and sides at this quality level, you would pay significantly more at white-tablecloth barbecue-adjacent restaurants in Manhattan. The value case is clear.

    Can I eat at the bar at Hometown Bar B Que New York?

    Hometown operates counter service inside a warehouse-style space with communal tables, so there is no traditional bar seating. You order at the counter, find a seat, and the format is deliberately casual. If you are looking for a bar-stool-and-cocktail setup, this is not that — it is a sit-down-with-a-tray operation.

    What are alternatives to Hometown Bar B Que New York in New York City?

    Mighty Quinn is the most accessible alternative, with multiple Manhattan locations and no trek to Red Hook required, though it lacks Hometown's award recognition. Dinosaur Bar-B-Que and Hill Country are larger, more tourist-facing operations that sit below Hometown on OAD's rankings. If you want the quality ceiling without the logistics, Hometown is the harder choice that pays off more; if convenience matters more, Mighty Quinn is the practical substitute.

    How far ahead should I book Hometown Bar B Que New York?

    Hometown is counter service, so there are no reservations to make — you show up and queue. The practical booking question is timing: the trip to Red Hook at 454 Van Brunt St requires planning transport, and arriving early in the service window reduces the risk of popular cuts running out. A weekday lunch is the lowest-friction option.

    Is Hometown Bar B Que New York good for a special occasion?

    Only if the occasion is 'serious barbecue with people who mean it.' The warehouse space, communal tables, and counter-service format make this a poor fit for a formal celebration. For a milestone dinner, look elsewhere. For a casual group food experience built around genuinely awarded smoked meat, it works well — the Michelin Bib Gourmand gives it a credible story to tell.

    Hours

    Monday
    Closed
    Tuesday
    12–10 pm
    Wednesday
    12–10 pm
    Thursday
    12–10 pm
    Friday
    12–11 pm
    Saturday
    12–11 pm
    Sunday
    12–10 pm

    Recognized By

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