Indiscutivelmente uma das melhores maneiras de conhecer a cultura local, os mercados oferecem uma fantastica experiencia sensorial de aprendizado. Se voce quer percorrer as bancas em busca de artesanato local, conferir a secao vintage ou escolher lembrancinhas exclusivas para quem ficou em casa, voce vai se surpreender com o que pode encontrar. De feiras de antiguidades a mercados de comida e bebida, preparamos uma lista completa de alguns dos nossos lugares favoritos para voce conferir. Basta continuar lendo!
Saboreie a cidade
Amantes da gastronomia – prestem atenção! Se passear por corredores de doces deliciosos e mel de origem local parece uma boa ideia, então o Union Square Greenmarket pode ser exatamente o seu estilo. Realizada quatro vezes por semana, esta divertida experiência cultural é conhecida por apresentar uma ampla variedade de vegetais orgânicos, carnes tradicionais e queijos artesanais. Não deixe de conferir as atividades animadas realizadas no mercado, incluindo feiras de livros de culinária, demonstrações gastronômicas e, felizmente, degustações!
Quando se trata de mercados de comida ao ar livre, nada supera o Smorgasburg. Atraindo milhares de pessoas para o Brooklyn e Manhattan, este local foi reconhecido como a ‘’Woodstock da Comida’’. No evento, você poderá experimentar pratos de mais de 100 vendedores diferentes, que servem uma grande variedade de iguarias deliciosas e exclusivas. Mergulhe na multidão, saboreie a cidade e admire as vistas da East River Waterfront. Ei, como não amar? Um dos mercados mais antigos de Nova York – fundado em 1818 – é também um dos pontos gastronômicos mais queridos da cidade e um pilar do Lower East Side. Quem busca a melhor experiência gastronômica vai adorar o Essex Street Market por seu sorvete gourmet, massas frescas feitas à mão e bentôs japoneses. Haveria maneira melhor de passar a tarde do que saboreando as delícias de um dos destinos gastronômicos mais lamber os beiços da cidade?
Explore as barracas
Em busca de móveis antigos atraentes ou de uma jaqueta vintage estilosa para adicionar à sua coleção? Então este espaço movimentado é o lugar ideal para você. Realizado todos os domingos, o ano todo, o Grand Bazaar Market é conhecido por oferecer uma grande variedade de peças exclusivas, raras e de edição limitada. Enquanto exploram, os visitantes podem saborear bratwurst recém-saída da chapa, brownies irresistíveis de flor de sal ou tomar uma cerveja gelada. Você pode encontrar eventos interessantes realizados aqui, incluindo o Made in NYC, o Handmade Bazaar e o Grand Vintage Bazaar. Ah, e a melhor parte? Parte da renda é destinada a escolas públicas locais.
Outro de nossos mercados favoritos para uma tarde de sábado relaxante na cidade é o Brooklyn Flea Market. Funcionando o ano todo nos finais de semana, este lugar é conhecido por vender de tudo, desde artigos domésticos vintage e itens colecionáveis até produtos artesanais e obras de arte originais. Os visitantes também podem desfrutar de comidas e bebidas deliciosamente frescas enquanto fazem compras. Como há muito para ver e absorver, recomendamos reservar um dia livre para este passeio. Gostamos especialmente deste lugar por sua incrível atmosfera boêmia e preços justos. Mergulhe na cultura da cidade com o próximo item da nossa lista. Situado em Chinatown, o Canal Street Market oferece uma experiência emocionante e única para você e seus acompanhantes. Ao entrar, você pode explorar as barracas em busca de produtos de beleza, roupas e design. Na área de alimentação, você pode saborear uma tigela reconfortante de ramen, tomar um chá de boba e comprar ingredientes raros e artesanais para sua despensa. Não deixe de conferir os eventos especiais incríveis daqui, incluindo música ao vivo, shows de comédia e atividades de fornecedores pop-up.
Aproveite a atmosfera
Localizado no Meatpacking District, o próximo item da nossa lista é perfeito para passar o tempo com amigos enquanto saboreia uma refeição deliciosa. Unindo gastronomia, arte e cultura, o Chelsea Market oferece uma experiência recompensadora para todas as pessoas. A grande estrela é a movimentada e sofisticada praça de alimentação do mercado, que abriga restaurantes, fornecedores e lojas que vendem pratos e ingredientes de todo o mundo. Além das suas ofertas culinárias tentadoras, o mercado também conta com ótimas lojas e barracas. Encontre uma garrafa de vinho fantástica, peça um belo buquê de flores personalizado ou assista a uma instalação de arte imersiva no Artechouse.
Os melhores mercados da cidade trazem um pouco de tudo para a mesa. Um dos nossos favoritos é o Astoria Market e, embora fique um pouco mais afastado do centro da cidade, prometemos que a visita vale muito a pena! Reunindo artistas, padeiros e designers de todas as vertentes, este lugar é um verdadeiro deleite para os sentidos. Compre antiguidades exclusivas, saboreie um autêntico churrasco coreano e relaxe enquanto aproveita a atmosfera. Embora não possamos prometer que você encontrará exatamente o que procura, ficará intrigado e encantado com o que o mercado reserva. O DeKalb Market é o lugar perfeito para fazer uma refeição enquanto explora o Brooklyn. Um verdadeiro paraíso para o Instagram, este lugar reúne muitos dos favoritos locais em um só ponto — acredite em nós quando dizemos, você não vai querer perder! Celebrando a originalidade e a diversidade por meio da gastronomia, o mercado oferece uma ampla variedade de culinárias deliciosas do mundo todo. Com suas comidas saborosas, energia vibrante e atmosfera underground, este seria um ótimo lugar para experimentar algo novo. Não há maneira melhor de aproveitar a atmosfera da cidade do que visitando seus fantásticos mercados, que são muitos. Diferente de uma visita típica ao shopping, os mercados oferecem uma experiência vibrante e envolvente para proporcionar um verdadeiro sabor da cidade. Seja para apenas dar uma olhada, caçar pechinchas ou experimentar algumas das melhores comidas da cidade, é impossível ficar entediado! Além de ser um deleite total para os sentidos, a ideia de descobrir uma cadeira antiga peculiar ou uma jaqueta vintage incrível para levar para casa é tentadora demais para resistirmos! Explore a cidade ao máximo com o Passe Tudo Incluído ou o Passe Explorar da Go City®. Se você quiser saber mais, conecte-se conosco em Instagram e Facebook.
Chelsea Market
Chelsea Market
In the heart of the Big Apple’s Meatpacking District, Chelsea Market is a bustling hub for foodies that's set, appropriately enough, inside a converted biscuit factory. Urban explorers who follow their noses to this foodie mecca are met with industrial-style interiors – all atmospheric exposed brick, steel girders and fairy lights – and intoxicating wafts of freshly baked bread, farmhouse cheeses, sizzling seafood and just-brewed coffee.
Hungry? You’ve come to the right place. You could spend day after gluttenous day munching your way through the artisan eats offered in here. Hit up stalwart Friedmans for steak and eggs, cheddar waffles, fried chicken and French toast. Or grab the nosebag of kings at El Donkey: their giant breakfast burrito will keep you going on day (and possibly even longer than that). Then there’s Saxelby Cheesemongers, the kind of place cheese dreams are made of, and the Fat Witch Bakery, with brownies so gooey you’ll swear they are indeed the product of some sort of witchcraft.
What’s next? Walk it all off with a tour of the High Line, or mosey over to the Whitney Museum of American Art to feast your eyes on Hoppers, Pollocks, O’Keeffes and more.
Smorgasburg
Smorgasburg
Warm-weather weekends are for Smorgasburg, Brooklyn’s epic outdoor food market – nicknamed ‘the Woodstock of eating’ – which runs April through September, calling at Williamsburg’s Marsha P. Johnson State Park on Saturdays and Prospect Park Sundays.
This foodfest’s tagline is ‘come hungry’ and it’s fair to say they ain’t messing around. There are more than 100 vendors here at any given time, hawking eats and drinks that run the gamut from lobster mac’n’cheese to ramen burgers, gooey St Louis butter cake to head-sized donuts and craft cocktails to Vietnamese iced coffee. It’s enough to make your head spin – as well as, of course, perceptibly expanding your waistline. But how to decide which stall to go for? Our advice: go both days to supersize your NYC foodie experience. Heck, why stop there? You’ll also find Smorgasburg over at the World Trade Center on Thursdays and Fridays throughout the season. Fill your boots!
What’s next? After uploading all those foodie snaps to Instagram, go for a complete change of pace in the relaxing grounds of Brooklyn Botanic Garden. Or keep it Insta-tastic with a graffiti and street art walking tour of the borough.
Union Square Greenmarket
Union Square Greenmarket
Foodies, listen up! If strolling around stall after delectable stall of confections and locally sourced honey sounds like your kind of jam, then the Union Square Greenmarket is for you. Held Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays year-round in Union Square Park, this Manhattan market is well loved for its vast array of organic veggies, heritage meats, artisan cheeses and – as previously indicated – sweet treats.
Think of it as a real flavor of upstate farming amid the hubbub of the city. You’ll spot piles of just-picked asparagus, fragrant floral bouquets, great wheels of pongy cheese and crusty breads still warm from the oven. And you won’t want to skip the essential Greenmarket photo op: taking a bite from a big apple in the heart of… well, you get the general idea.
Pro tip: snag a hot cider in autumn or fresh berries in early summer, when they’re in their seasonal prime. There’s also local honey, maple syrup, heritage meats, pickles and specialty baked goods that make for perfect picnic spreads on the park’s lawns.
What’s next? Head north along Fifth Avenue to fulfil all your King Kong fantasies at the Empire State Building.
Brooklyn Flea
Brooklyn Flea
Equal parts treasure hunt and neighborhood hang, the Brooklyn Flea is a rummager’s paradise, bringing together sellers from across the city and beyond to hawk antiques, creative crafts and general oddities on weekends year-round. One visit might yield vintage lava lamps and that Grateful Dead vinyl record holy grail you never thought you’d find, the next you’re trying on retro denim jackets and cool handcrafted jewelry. Kitschy gifts, eye-popping wall art, ornamental bric-a-brac… you’ll find it all here, and then some.
The market takes place Saturdays and Sundays in DUMBO. No, silly, it has nothing to do with the Disney elephant; it’s an acronym for the cobbled lanes found Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Underpass. In fact, DUMBO is one of the hippest Brooklyn ‘hoods of ‘em all, with more boho waterfront cafés, chic boutiques and cutting edge indie art galleries than you can shake an artisan cronut at.
What’s next? A Brooklyn Bridge and DUMBO walking tour fits the bill if you want to take a deeper dive into what this area’s all about.
Essex Market
Essex Market
One of New York’s oldest markets – with roots reaching as far back as its open-air 1818 namesake – Essex Market (now covered) is one of the city’s most cherished food spots and a mainstay of the Lower East Side. Come for the gourmet ice cream, fresh handmade pasta and Sudanese stews, and stick around for the festive atmosphere and friendly chatter: it’s no mere cliché to say that this place is a true a melting pot of the New York food scene, and there’s a neighborly feel that you won’t really find at the city’s other markets, perhaps thanks to the smaller scale of the place (at only around 30 stalls).
Many stalls here double as tiny restaurants. Try Shopsins for inventive all-day breakfast, Riverdel for plant-based cheeses, and Ni Japanese Deli for superlative sushi. The market also hosts regular tastings and culinary pop-ups, pure manna for adventure-seeking gourmands. Grab your takeaway of choice to go or settle in at communal tables and watch the neighborhood bustle past the tall windows. There’s perhaps no better way to while away a rainy New York afternoon.
What’s next? Hop a couple of blocks west for visual feasting at the International Center of Photography, or take the Catacombs by Candlelight tour beneath the basilica of St. Patrick’s Old Cathedral.
Grand Bazaar NYC
Grand Bazaar NYC
Looking for some talking-point antique furniture for your apartment, or a funky vintage jacket to add to your collection? Then the bustling market-tropolis that is the Grand Bazaar NYC has you covered. Running every Sunday year-round, you’ll find it just southwest of Central Park at Columbus Avenue, showcasing its wildly varied array of one-of-a-kind, rare, quirky and limited-edition pieces.
Soak up the festival atmosphere as you chow down on stuffed Turkish flatbreads or artisan donuts and browse stalls crammed with cool antique treasures, vintage (working!) radios, upcycled furniture and, well, pretty much anything else you can think of. Best of all, profits help to support local schools, so you get to do some good with your retail therapy, all while snacking and exploring like a true New Yorker.
What’s next? Take a wander into Central Park and discover yet more ancient treasures at the American Museum of Natural History.
Queens Night Market
Queens Night Market
If Flushing Meadows is the beating heart of Queens, its epic Queens Night Market is its very lifeblood. The market runs Saturdays from April through October – with a short break in September to accommodate a little event called ‘the US Open’ – and promises a sundown feast for the senses. The market kicks off around 4PM, with heady clouds of jerk chicken-scented smoke and zingy aromas of Ceylon cinnamon rolls, Colombian arepas and 100 other national and regional treats. Plate prices at the stalls here are capped: you’ll pay a maximum of $6 at each stall. Of course, one plate is unlikely to fill you up, so arrive hungry and plan to bag dishes from two or three (or, y’know, 10) different vendors. Start with Peruvian ceviche, working your way through flaming hot Korean noodles to deep-fried ice cream, via tacos, dumplings, satay skewers and more for the win.
Pro-tip: carry cash, as not all stallholders will accept card payments. NB: you can also stock up on cool retro apparel, artisan jewelry, local art and other souvenirs at this sprawling festival of a market.
What’s next? The party starts at 4PM so check out Flushing Meadows before you arrive, ticking off the iconic 12-story Unisphere sculpture and the spectacled bears at Queens Zoo.
Artists & Fleas
Artists & Fleas
The air feels positively charged with creative energy at Williamsburg’s Artists & Fleas, a blend of curated flea and indie art bazaar, that runs weekly on Saturdays and Sundays. Here, dozens of local artists, makers, designers and vintage collectors conjure up one-of-a-kind jewelry pieces, quirky apparel, fragrant candles and funky prints that your uber-dull walls will thank you for.
This is the market for design lovers and gift hunters. Plus, it’s right off the Williamsburg waterfront, making for easy exploring pre- or post-browse. Don’t miss the market’s resident barista for a specialty cold brew, and go wild for the fresh pastries (anything from Earl Grey cookies to madeleines).
What’s next? A wander over to Marsha P. Johnson State Park for sublime waterfront views and a clear sightline to the Manhattan skyline beyond.
Dekalb Market Hall
Dekalb Market Hall
We finish up in Brooklyn which, it’s fair to say, hosts the lion’s share of essential NYC markets. The Dekalb Market Hall is an Insta addict’s paradise, crammed with colorful stalls and some of the most photogenic street food you’ve ever set eyes upon. We’re talking Katz Delicatessen’s famous pastrami-stuffed sandwich, available at A Taste of Katz’s, their first Brooklyn outpost. Then there’s Baby’s Buns & Buckets, an ingenious mash-up of Thai street bites and American fast food. Donuts from The Showroom Bakehouse look almost – almost – too pretty to eat; likewise the kaleidoscope of bubble tea flavors at Tea Makers.
You’ll find this indoor food emporium set below street level in Downtown Brooklyn, in an industrial-chic space that fairly thrums with big city bustle and irresistible foodie aromas. And there’s always something brewing behind the bar if you want to pair your food with a local craft beer, frosé or cocktail.
What’s next? Check out the nearby New York Transit Museum for a hands-on history of mass transportation housed inside a 1936 subway station.
Looking for more inspiration for your New York vacation? Learn how to ride the subway like a New Yorker and get the lowdown on the city’s best art galleries.
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