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The Cheapest Blocks in New York City - Cheap Eats 2005
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West 38th Street
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Between Seventh and Eighth Avenues
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(Photo: James Leynse)
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1. Lazzara’s Pizza Café, No. 221, second floor: Undersung thin-crust Sicilian pizza baked in old soot-black pans. Plus exemplary heros, crisp salads, and pretty good pastas, all of it served in an old-fashioned tin-ceilinged dining room. 2. Djerdan, No. 221: The best Balkan cooking in Manhattan, including bureks (giant slices of phyllo pie stuffed with spinach and cheese or ground beef) and cevapi (grilled Bosnian veal sausages). 3. Veronica Cafe Inc. (Italiano), No. 240: New ownership, a less “Italiano,” more something-for-everyone menu, and a renovation have rid this garmento favorite of its shabby-cafeteria charm, but the pasta is still good, especially considering it’s served from a steam table. 4. Pick-a-Pita, No. 247 (located in the back, past the elevators and a loading dock): The best falafel you’ll find at the end of a loading dock. 5. Rong Bao Fast Food, No. 270: Gives competitor 38th St. Restaurant a run for its money with comparatively posh premises and its own $3.75 three-item steam-table special (available all day). 6. 38th St. Restaurant, No. 273: Like the name, the décor and the level of cleanliness leave much to be desired. But the $3.75 steam-table lunch specials, the Hong Kong–style barbecued pork, and, especially, the sweet and savory Chinese pastries make up for the decrepit surroundings.
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West 47th Street
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Between Fifth and Sixth Avenues
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1. Diamond Dairy No. 4: Landmark lunch counter on the shopworn mezzanine of the National Jewelers Exchange, renowned for classic kreplach, dense latkes, cylindrical blintzes, and no-nonsense waitresses.
2. Diamond Garden No. 41: Taam-Tov owners expand their kosher domain across the street with a third-floor aerie serving kosher Chinese, sushi, and Mexican. 3. Berger’s No. 44: It may not be Katz’s or the Carnegie, but this bustling Jewish deli covers all the belly-busting basics, from knockwurst to corned beef. 4. Sabor Latino No. 46, third floor: Single men hunker over Styrofoam containers heaped with hearty, filling Ecuadoran fare: tender chicken stew, pork skin and potatoes, and four kinds of seviche on Fridays. Don’t miss the hot sauce or the cold oatmeal drink called, aptly enough, Quaker. 5. Taam-Tov No. 46, fourth floor: Packed with Central Asian Jews lunching on lamb shish kebabs, oil-slicked Bukharan rice pilaf, and deliciously dense hummus with thick, crusty bread.
NYC for Free
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Can't decide which Broadway show to see? Attend Broadway on Broadway (888/BROADWAY, 212/302-4111), a free concert in the beginning of September featuring musical numbers from nearly all of the current Broadway shows as well as previews of upcoming shows courtesy of the Times Square Business Improvement District.
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Catapult into the future at the Sony Wonder Technology Lab, where high-tech interactive exhibits thrill kids of all ages. New York City has many of the world's most recognizable buildings and some of the world's most celebrated architecture. Some notable buildings to seek out:
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