Skip to main content

    Restaurant in New York City, United States

    Xi’an Famous Foods

    100pts

    Fast, regional, low-cost — go hungry.

    Xi’an Famous Foods, Restaurant in New York City

    About Xi’an Famous Foods

    Xi'an Famous Foods delivers technically precise Xi'an-style Chinese cooking — hand-ripped noodles, cumin lamb, serious chili heat — at a price point that few New York kitchens match. Ranked on Opinionated About Dining's Cheap Eats list in both 2023 and 2024, this is the counter-service call for regional Chinese depth without a reservation, a dress code, or a bill above $20 per head.

    Still Worth It on the Second Visit

    If you came to Xi'an Famous Foods once and left thinking the hand-ripped biang biang noodles were worth the trip, you were right. The question on a second visit is whether anything has changed. The short answer: not much — and that consistency is the point. In a city where restaurants chase trends, Xi'an Famous Foods has spent roughly two decades doing one thing with technical precision: Xi'an-style Chinese cooking, a northwestern regional tradition built on hand-pulled noodles, cumin-heavy lamb, and chili oil heat that most New York kitchens do not attempt seriously. That focus is why Opinionated About Dining — a highly regarded peer-review system that tracks serious eaters across North America , ranked Xi'an Famous Foods #129 on its Cheap Eats list in 2023 and #148 in 2024. Staying ranked across consecutive years in that competition is a better indicator of sustained kitchen quality than a single review spike.

    The location at 139 4th Ave in the East Village gives you the most accessible branch for visitors staying in Lower Manhattan or the Village. Walk in, order at the counter, and expect a fast, no-ceremony meal. There is no dress code, no reservation system, and no booking difficulty , this is one of the easiest feeds in the city to execute. The Google rating sits at 4.7 across 146 reviews, which holds up well for a counter-service format where expectations are clear and the kitchen rarely misses what it promises.

    What Xi'an Famous Foods Does Technically Well

    The cuisine here is rooted in the Shaanxi province of northwestern China, a tradition that New York has very few kitchens doing with any depth. The hand-pulled and hand-ripped noodle work , the kind that requires consistent dough hydration and repetitive technique , is the core technical differentiator. You are not getting approximations of Xi'an food adapted for a broader palate. The lamb dishes lean on cumin, dried chili, and vinegar in proportions that read as distinctly regional rather than generically Chinese-American. That specificity is what earned the OAD rankings and what keeps a loyal return audience. For a first-timer, this is the correct framing: you are booking a specialist, not a general Chinese restaurant, and the menu rewards people who order into the kitchen's strengths rather than looking for variety across regional styles.

    Jason Wang, who runs the business and has been publicly associated with its growth from a single Flushing stall into a multi-location operation, has spoken about keeping the Xi'an tradition central to the brand. The expansion across New York has not diluted the core offering at the East Village location, which remains the format most visitors should default to.

    Who Should Book and When

    Xi'an Famous Foods is the right call for solo diners, pairs, or small groups who want a fast, filling, low-cost meal with genuine regional Chinese cooking behind it. It is not a special-occasion venue and does not try to be. If you are looking for a sit-down dinner with table service, this is the wrong choice , consider the broader options in our full New York City restaurants guide for that. But for a lunch that delivers real kitchen craft without a reservation, a dress code, or a bill that requires planning, this is as reliable as New York counter dining gets.

    Groups can manage here, though the format is self-serve and seating can be tight at peak hours. Arrive before noon or after 2 PM on weekdays to avoid the longest waits. For anyone exploring Chinese cooking across the city's boroughs, pairing a visit here with spots like Big Wong in Chinatown or Chongqing Lao Zao gives a useful cross-regional comparison. Other Chinese options worth knowing in the city include Alley 41, Asian Jewel Seafood Restaurant, and Blue Willow. For Chinese cooking with a fine-dining angle elsewhere in the US, Mister Jiu's in San Francisco and Restaurant Tim Raue in Berlin show how the tradition scales upward in ambition.

    Know Before You Go

    • Address: 139 4th Ave, New York, NY 10003
    • Booking: Walk-in only , no reservations needed or accepted
    • Booking difficulty: Easy
    • Price: Cheap Eats tier (OAD-ranked) , budget $10–$20 per person
    • Dress code: None
    • Leading timing: Weekday lunch before noon or after 2 PM for shorter waits
    • Google rating: 4.7 (146 reviews)
    • Awards: OAD Cheap Eats North America #129 (2023), #148 (2024)
    • Good for: Solo diners, pairs, quick lunches, regional Chinese exploration
    • Not ideal for: Special occasions, table-service dinners, large groups needing reserved seating

    FAQ

    • What should a first-timer know about Xi'an Famous Foods? Order into the kitchen's regional strengths: hand-ripped noodles and lamb dishes built on cumin and chili are the technical core of what this kitchen does. Skip anything that sounds adapted for a general audience and go with the Xi'an-specific items. It is counter service, so expect to order, pay, and find your own seat. The meal will be fast, filling, and priced well under $20 per person. No reservation is needed.
    • Is Xi'an Famous Foods good for solo dining? Yes, this is one of the better solo lunch options in the East Village. Counter service means no awkward table-for-one dynamic, the menu is easy to navigate alone, and the price point keeps it low-stakes. If you want a sit-down solo meal with more atmosphere, the broader New York City restaurant scene has options , but for fast, serious regional Chinese food, Xi'an Famous Foods is hard to beat at this price.
    • Does Xi'an Famous Foods handle dietary restrictions? The menu is built around meat-heavy Xi'an tradition, with lamb and pork prominent across key dishes. Vegetarian options exist but are not the focus of the kitchen. Specific allergen or dietary accommodation information is not available in our data , contact the venue directly before visiting if this is a concern.
    • Is Xi'an Famous Foods good for a special occasion? No. This is counter-service fast-casual dining with no table service, no ambiance designed for celebration, and no booking system. For a special occasion in New York, look at venues in our full restaurants guide. Xi'an Famous Foods is the right call when you want a technically strong, low-cost meal , not when the occasion requires a room that matches it.
    • What are alternatives to Xi'an Famous Foods in New York City? For other Chinese regional cooking in New York, Chongqing Lao Zao covers Sichuan rather than Shaanxi and gives a useful contrast in regional style. Big Wong in Chinatown is a longer-established option for Cantonese. If you want Chinese cooking at a fine-dining level outside New York, Mister Jiu's in San Francisco is the clearest point of comparison in the US.
    • Can Xi'an Famous Foods accommodate groups? Small groups of 4–6 can manage here, but the counter-service format and limited seating mean larger parties will find it tight, especially at peak lunch hours. There is no reservations system, so groups cannot guarantee adjacent seating in advance. For groups needing a reserved dining room, this is not the right venue , check our New York City guide for table-service options.

    For more on eating and drinking in New York, see our full bars guide, hotels guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide. Elsewhere in the US, standout restaurants with a similar commitment to regional specificity include Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Smyth in Chicago, Providence in Los Angeles, Emeril's in New Orleans, The French Laundry in Napa, and Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg.

    Compare Xi’an Famous Foods

    How Xi’an Famous Foods Compares
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    Xi’an Famous FoodsChineseOpinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in North America Ranked #148 (2024); Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in North America in Ranked #129 (2023)Easy
    Le BernardinFrench, Seafood$$$$Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    AtomixModern Korean, Korean$$$$Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Per SeFrench, Contemporary$$$$Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    MasaSushi, Japanese$$$$Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Eleven Madison ParkFrench, Vegan$$$$Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Does Xi’an Famous Foods handle dietary restrictions?

    Dietary accommodations can vary. Flag restrictions in advance via the venue's official channels.

    What should a first-timer know about Xi'an Famous Foods?

    Order the hand-ripped biang biang noodles — that is the dish that earned Xi'an Famous Foods back-to-back spots on the Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats North America list (#129 in 2023, #148 in 2024). The format is counter-service and fast; this is not a sit-down experience. Come with a straightforward order in mind, expect a short wait during peak hours, and keep your budget low — this is one of the stronger value meals in the city.

    Is Xi'an Famous Foods good for solo dining?

    Yes, and it may be the ideal format for it. Counter-service means no awkward table-for-one situation, and a single bowl of noodles is a complete meal. Solo diners can work through the menu efficiently across multiple visits without the logistical overhead of group ordering. The 4th Ave location at 139 4th Ave, New York, NY 10003 is accessible and low-pressure.

    Does Xi'an Famous Foods handle dietary restrictions?

    The Shaanxi cuisine tradition that Xi'an Famous Foods is rooted in is heavily meat-forward — lamb, pork, and beef feature prominently across the menu. Vegetarian options exist but are limited, and the kitchen is a high-volume counter-service operation, so detailed allergen customisation is unlikely to be accommodated with precision. If dietary restrictions are a core concern, confirm specifics directly before visiting.

    Recognized By

    More restaurants in New York City

    Keep this place

    Save or rate Xi’an Famous Foods on Pearl

    Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.