NYCReview
photo credit: Kate Previte
Top saved spot this month
Included In
One of the Upper East Side's most important relics isn't found in any of the galleries on Museum Mile. Le Veau d’Or opened in 1937, and the small bistro changed hands a few times, and changed scenes—from Orson Welles and Audrey Hepburn in the middle of the century, to just a small crowd of diehard regulars before it closed in 2019. One thing that never seemed to change was the rich, classic French cuisine: frogs’ legs in garlic butter, tripes à la mode in a “peasanty” sauce. As longtime owner Robert Tréboux once told the New York Sun, diners could go elsewhere if they wanted “the plate with the little bit of food in the middle.”
photo credit: Kate Previte
photo credit: Kate Previte
photo credit: Kate Previte
Now revived by the Frenchette team, who bought Le Veau from Tréboux’s daughter, the restaurant with iconic red banquettes is once more a destination for Escoffier-esque indulgence, drenched in brown stock and butter. The tripe is still available, the $125 prix-fixe menu still has a few entries in red ink (inexplicably highlighted among the navy blue), and the food comes to your table looking like a deleted scene from Ratatouille. In most contexts, we'd find fussy flourishes like roasted chanterelles arranged like the hours of a clock on top of a corn soup pretty silly, no matter how delicious. At Le Veau, it's charming.
video credit: Britt Lam
photo credit: Kate Previte
Also charming: the calf-shaped, porcelain vases on each gingham tablecloth, including one golden calf that graces one lucky table each night—a small thrill. No table seats more than four, two-tops sit side-by-side, and the bathroom would make an ordinary broom closet look like a Tribeca loft. Come here for a special occasion or a date night when you want to forget all your responsibilities—other than paying attention to the people you’re with. With a mirror-map of France reflecting the lamplight, and pink jacketed waiters pouring French wines, Le Veau d'Or is the kind of place, with the kind of food, that makes you want to skip the glass, go straight for the bottle, and not get up until long after you’ve drunk the last drop.
Food Rundown
Prix Fixe
photo credit: Kate Previte
Bread Course
photo credit: Kate Previte
Pâté en Croûte
photo credit: Kate Previte
Tête de Veau Ravigote
photo credit: Kate Previte
Frogs' Legs Persillade
photo credit: Kate Previte
Duck Magret aux Cerises
Gigôt of Lamb with Coco Beans
photo credit: Kate Previte
Soupe de Melon
photo credit: Kate Previte