Restaurant in New York City, United States
Hupo
250ptsLegit Sichuan. Michelin-recognised. Easy booking.

About Hupo
Hupo brings Michelin Bib Gourmand-recognised Sichuan cooking to Long Island City at $$ pricing, with a focused menu of regional dishes including mapo tofu, cold noodles, and Chungking spicy chicken. The sleek, narrow room books easily and delivers strong value compared to Manhattan equivalents. Best for food-focused diners willing to make the cross-borough trip for credible, well-priced cooking.
Who Should Book Hupo — and When
If you're planning a dinner that needs to justify a cross-borough trip, Hupo is one of the cleaner cases in Long Island City's dining options. This is the restaurant for the explorer who wants Sichuan cooking done with enough focus and precision to earn a Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024) — and who would rather spend $$ per head than $$$$ on the same night out. It works equally well for a two-person weeknight dinner as it does for a small group looking to share plates across a focused, regionally grounded menu. If you're organizing a group meal and debating between a splashy Manhattan address and something with more culinary credibility per dollar, Hupo makes the case for Long Island City.
The Room and the Atmosphere
The first thing you notice at Hupo is the sound. Sizzling from the kitchen carries into the dining room , not as ambient noise to tune out, but as something that orients you toward what's actually happening behind the pass. The space is narrow and long, with dark hardwood floors and lofty ceilings, which creates a particular acoustic quality: conversations stay contained, the room has energy without tipping into the chaotic register that makes Chinese restaurants in busier Manhattan neighbourhoods feel overwhelming on a Friday night. The atmosphere sits at a point useful to know before you book: it's sleek enough for a considered dinner, relaxed enough that you won't feel the pressure of a formal room.
For groups, the narrow layout is worth thinking through before you arrive. Hupo is not a sprawling space built for large party logistics. A table of two or four fits the room's geometry well; if you're bringing six or more, confirm table availability in advance. There's no dedicated private dining room flagged in the venue's current setup, which means the main room is your experience regardless of group size. That's a trade-off: you get the full atmosphere of the dining room, but without the separation a private space provides. For a milestone dinner or a group celebration where privacy matters, factor that in. For a dinner where the food is the focus and the shared-plates format does the conversational work, the main room is entirely sufficient.
The Menu and What It Delivers
Hupo's menu is small and regional, built around Sichuan dishes rather than a pan-Chinese sweep. Mapo tofu, house-made cold noodles in chili oil, Chungking spicy chicken, and stewed fish fillet in hot chili soup represent the kind of cooking where the complexity is in layered umami and aromatics , garlic-forward, chili-present, but calibrated rather than aggressive. The Bib Gourmand recognition signals good cooking at an accessible price point, which is precisely what the $$ tier here delivers. This is not a venue where the menu stretches across eight cuisines or where you're paying for tableside theatre. It's a focused kitchen doing regional work well.
One practical note for spice-forward diners: the heat register at Hupo is measured. Dishes like the stewed fish fillet arrive with complexity and depth, but the kitchen isn't pushing maximum Sichuan heat. If your benchmark for Sichuan cooking is the kind of experience that produces physical discomfort, Hupo sets a more approachable threshold. That's a feature for some diners, a limitation for others , and worth knowing before you build expectations around a certain kind of heat.
Getting There and Booking
Hupo sits at 10-07 50th Ave in Long Island City, accessible from Midtown Manhattan in under 20 minutes by subway. Booking is rated easy, which makes it a lower-pressure reservation than anything comparable in Manhattan's Sichuan options. The $$ price range means a dinner for two lands well below what you'd spend at any of the higher-format Chinese restaurants in the city. For a first visit, the combination of accessible booking, reasonable price, and Michelin recognition makes the calculus simple: this is a low-risk, high-return dinner.
For context on how Hupo fits within New York City's Chinese dining options, our full New York City restaurants guide covers the broader field. If you're planning the full LIC evening, our New York City bars guide and hotels guide cover what's around.
How Hupo Sits in the Chinese Dining Category
Long Island City is not the first borough address that comes up in conversations about Chinese dining in New York. That distinction belongs to Flushing and parts of Manhattan's Chinatown, where venues like Asian Jewel Seafood Restaurant, Big Wong, and Blue Willow have held ground for years. Hupo operates in a different register , sleeker room, tighter menu, Sichuan-specific rather than broad Cantonese or dim sum , and the Bib Gourmand puts it in a different conversation entirely. For Sichuan specifically, it's worth comparing against Chongqing Lao Zao and Alley 41, both of which bring their own regional credibility. Hupo's case is the combination of Michelin recognition, $$ pricing, and a room that works for both focused two-person dinners and small groups sharing plates.
For those interested in how Chinese cooking gets handled in fine-dining formats elsewhere in the US, Mister Jiu's in San Francisco is the clearest peer in terms of approach , Chinese regional cooking in a considered room with critical recognition. Restaurant Tim Raue in Berlin shows what the cuisine looks like at the leading of the format scale, though at a price point and formality level that bears no resemblance to what Hupo is doing. If you're building a longer list of ambitious dinners across the US, Alinea in Chicago, The French Laundry in Napa, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Providence in Los Angeles, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, and Emeril's in New Orleans each represent a different category and price tier. Hupo is not competing with any of them , it's solving a different problem, and solving it well.
The Verdict
Book Hupo if you want a Michelin-recognised Sichuan dinner at $$ pricing, in a room that has more design consideration than most of its LIC neighbours, with easy reservations and a menu focused enough to tell you something real about what the kitchen can do. Skip it if you need private dining infrastructure for a group event, or if you're chasing extreme heat levels as a Sichuan benchmark. For a food-focused dinner where the cooking justifies the trip across the borough line, it earns the visit.
Ratings
- Google: 4.5 / 5 (505 reviews)
- Michelin: Bib Gourmand 2024
Practical Details
- Address: 10-07 50th Ave, Long Island City, NY 11101
- Price range: $$ (accessible, well below Manhattan equivalents)
- Booking difficulty: Easy
- Chef: Sergio Ortega
- Cuisine: Sichuan Chinese
- Leading for: Focused Sichuan dinners, groups of 2–4, food-curious diners, cross-borough evenings
Compare Hupo
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hupo | Chinese | $$ | Sometimes you can hear the sound of sizzling woks in the kitchen of this Sichuan dining venture. It’s a good omen in Long Island City, which isn’t known for its Asian cuisine but may be soon, thanks to Hupo. The sleek space is narrow and long, with dark hardwood floors and lofty ceilings.Such a quaint setting is an apt pairing for the small, focused menu that features regional favorites like spicy mapo tofu, house-made cold noodles slicked in a sweet and spicy chili oil, as well as Chungking spicy chicken. Nothing blasts of heat here, so spice junkies are unlikely to break a sweat. Still, dishes like stewed fish fillet in hot chili soup arrive chock-full of minced garlic and channel the kind of fiery, umami-driven complexity we crave from this cuisine.; Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024) | Easy | — |
| Le Bernardin | French, Seafood | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Atomix | Modern Korean, Korean | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Eleven Madison Park | French, Vegan | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Masa | Sushi, Japanese | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Per Se | French, Contemporary | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at Hupo?
Start with the house-made cold noodles in chili oil and the mapo tofu — both are cited in Hupo's Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition and represent the menu's strengths. The Chungking spicy chicken and the stewed fish fillet in hot chili soup round out the core Sichuan lineup. Note that the heat levels here are measured rather than aggressive, so if you want face-numbing spice, calibrate expectations accordingly.
What should a first-timer know about Hupo?
Hupo is a narrow, focused room in Long Island City — not a sprawling Chinese restaurant with a hundred-item menu. The menu is small and regional, built around Sichuan dishes, so come with that in mind rather than expecting a pan-Chinese spread. Booking is rated easy, and the $$ price point means the bill won't sting. It holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024), which is the guide's marker for quality cooking at accessible prices.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Hupo?
Hupo does not operate a tasting menu format — the kitchen runs a small, à la carte Sichuan menu. If a structured multi-course progression is what you're after, venues like Atomix deliver that at a significantly higher price point. Hupo's value case is built around ordering several dishes at $$ prices in a Michelin Bib Gourmand-recognised room.
Does Hupo handle dietary restrictions?
Hupo's menu is Sichuan-focused, which means dishes frequently involve chili oil, garlic, and meat-based broths — the kitchen's core format doesn't bend far toward vegan or allergy-specific needs. check the venue's official channels before booking if you have serious dietary restrictions, as the menu is small enough that substitutions could be limiting. The cold noodles and mapo tofu are the most likely candidates for vegetarian-adjacent ordering, but confirmation is on you.
Is Hupo worth the price?
At $$, Hupo is one of the cleaner value cases for Michelin-recognised cooking in New York City. The Bib Gourmand designation specifically flags good food at prices the guide considers reasonable, and the Sichuan menu delivers the kind of umami-driven complexity that usually costs more in Manhattan. If you're cross-referencing against a trip to Flushing for comparable cuisine, Hupo's LIC location adds a transit consideration — but the quality-to-price ratio holds up.
Can I eat at the bar at Hupo?
The venue database does not confirm a bar seating option at Hupo. The room is described as narrow and long, which may limit counter or bar configuration. Call ahead or check availability when booking if bar or walk-in seating is a priority — the easy booking rating suggests you're unlikely to be shut out entirely.
Recognized By
More restaurants in New York City
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- AtomixAtomix is the No. 1 restaurant in North America (50 Best, 2025) and one of the hardest reservations in New York: 14 seats, one seating per night, three Michelin stars. Junghyun and Ellia Park's Korean tasting menu pairs precision-sourced ingredients with Korean culinary heritage, explained course by course through hand-designed cards. Book months ahead or plan around a cancellation.
- Eleven Madison ParkEleven Madison Park is the definitive case for plant-based fine dining in New York City: three Michelin stars, a 22,000-bottle wine cellar, and an eight-to-ten course tasting menu in a landmark Art Deco room. Book it for a special occasion with a plant-forward appetite and three hours to spare. Reservations open on the 1st of each month and go within hours.
- Jungsik New YorkJungsik is the restaurant that put progressive Korean fine dining on the New York map, and over a decade in, it still holds that position. With two Michelin stars, a 2025 James Beard Award for Outstanding Chef, and a seasonally rotating nine-course tasting menu in a quietly formal Tribeca room, it earns its $$$$ price point for special occasions and serious dining. Book well in advance.
- DanielDaniel is the benchmark for classic French fine dining in New York: three Michelin stars, a 10,000-bottle cellar, and formal Upper East Side service that has stayed consistent for over 30 years. Book four to six weeks out minimum. At $$$$, it is a genuine special-occasion restaurant, but the wine program alone — 2,000 selections with particular depth in Burgundy and Bordeaux — makes it the strongest wine-and-food pairing destination in its category.
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