The Best Restaurants in Western NY
While Buffalo’s culinary reputation rests largely on the spread of our wings around the world and the now common use of “Buffalo-style” to indicate a spicy experience ahead, the city is in fact a melting pot of diverse dishes, cuisines, and dining experiences. Old school restaurateurs who have been perfecting their menus for decades are being joined by a new generation of chefs (many of them former Buffalonians returning to their resurgent hometown) who are opening innovative restaurants that are re-defining dining in the city.
A variety of flavors
Alongside these re-pats are immigrants and refugees who are bringing a taste of places like Myanmar, Ethiopia, Cambodia and Iraq to the streets of Buffalo. If that’s not enough variety, the city has dozens of food trucks rolling around that serve everything from poutine to pierogi. Sure, come for the wings, but stay to sample one of the most dynamic food cities in the United States.
Pita Gourmet
6733 Transit Road, Suite 600
Williamsville, NY 14221
(716) 298-8015
Pita Gourmet – Orchard Park
3144 Orchard Park Road
Orchard Park, NY 14127
(716) 599-1111
Pita Gourmet – Sheridan Drive
3122 Sheridan Drive
Amherst, NY 14226
(716) 599-1111
Pizza Amore
2024 Grand Island Boulevard
Grand Island, NY 14072
(716) 775-5975
Pizza Plant Italian Pub – Canalside
125 Main Street, Ste 110
Buffalo, NY 14203
(716) 626-5566
Pizza Plant Italian Pub – Williamsville
7770 Transit Road
Williamsville, NY 14221
(716) 632-0800
Pizzeria Florian
650 Main Street
East Aurora, NY 14052
Pod City Beer Labs
125 Main Street, Ste 110
Buffalo, NY 14203
(716) 626-5566
Poize Restaurant and Lounge
2081 Niagara Street
Buffalo, NY 14207
(716) 551-6062
Poked Yoke – East Aurora
227 Main Street
East Aurora, NY 14052
(716) 902-9655
Polish Villa
2954 Union Road
Cheektowaga, NY 14227
(716) 683-9460
Polish Villa 2
1085 Harlem Road
Cheektowaga, NY 14227
(716) 822-4908
-
Essex St. Pub
Essex St. Pub
Essex St. Pub opened in 1986 in a building dating to 1886. A jukebox and pool table bar, it’s a great spot for late night shenanigans and chowing on barbecue. Don’t miss the “Macky Joe,” a sloppy Joe with mac’n cheese on top.
530 Rhode Island St., Buffalo
essexstreetpub.com
-
Eddie Brady’s Tavern
Eddie Brady’s Tavern
Eddie Brady’s Tavern is where gruff Irishmen, downtown law and finance types, and college good-times seekers collide. Of any Buffalo tavern, Brady’s feels truest to its pre-Prohibition saloon heritage. Among other nightly specials, Brady’s offers the city’s best turkey and gravy dinner—available on Mondays.
97 Genesee St., Buffalo
eddiebradys.com
-
Arty’s Grill
Arty’s Grill
Arty’s is like walking into the East Buffalo of 1972. Polka is playing over the speakers and Polish import beers are cheap and free-flowing. Prepare yourself for stories from regulars of the old neighborhood, and their visions for a revived Central Terminal—Buffalo’s vacant, iconic train station, only steps away.
508 Peckham St., Buffalo
facebook.com/ArtysGrill
-
Gene McCarthy’s
Gene McCarthy’s
My tough Irish grandmother wore out the same McCarthy’s barstools when she was my age, and I imagine this bar feeling much the same as it did then. Even as it’s evolved with the times—McCarthy’s is now a craft brewery with the best beer garden in town—it is still a working man’s tavern in the shadow of the grain elevators. The best Buffalo wings in town? Quite possibly.
73 Hamburg St., Buffalo
genemccarthys.com
-
Rohall’s Corner
Rohall’s Corner
This Black Rock tavern is a museum-piece of the Streamline Moderne Style of the 1940s. The sweeping curves of the bar, ceiling, and even the lit glass block entryway communicate a city on the move. Few places are friendlier as a neighborhood gathering spot.
540 Amherst St., Buffalo
rohallscorner.com