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How to Have a Romantic Weekend in NYC

Posted: 11/03/11 06:21 PM ET

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If it's romance you're after, polish off the city's old gems. And throw in a few precious new ones.

Though midtown is not considered to be the most charming part of the city, it is home to some of the grandest restaurants. Get dressed up for fancy cocktails at one of the classic joints: The Four Seasons, Bemelmans Bar, King Cole Bar, the lounge at Le Bernardin.

If you are splurging on dinner, then Daniel is incredible, knock-your-socks off delicious. As is Eleven Madison Park (in the Flatiron District). Both have four NYT stars and are made for special occasions.

Old-fashioned romance can be found downtown, where the buildings are historic, the neighborhoods are smaller, and the streets are paved with cobblestone. Il Buco is an old Italian standby and quite possibly the coziest spot in Manhattan. It's filled with locals who take their time drinking nice bottles of wine and admiring the rustic decor. Catch a show at Joe's Pub (an intimate cabaret space) and a nightcap at Minetta Tavern (a buzzed-about Greenwich Village restaurant).

If you are feeling intrepid, there's a molto charming Venetian wine bar and restaurant below a sidewalk in Chinatown. It's called Bacaro, and the cellar space reminds us of the tiny, winding streets of Venice (complete with dripping candelabras and fresh pastas). From there, take a midnight walk over the Brooklyn Bridge.

Want more? Fall head over heels as you walk The High Line (do it early in the morning before it gets too crowded and touristy). The entrance is at West 30st Street between 10th and 11th Avenues and it ends at Gansevoort Street in the Meatpacking district, but you can pick it up every few blocks along the way. (Here's a map of access points.) You almost won't believe you're in NYC. Finish with a buzzy breakfast at the Standard Hotel. Not strictly romantic in the red roses sense but romantic in the I-Heart-NY sense.

Have lunch at Jean-Georges. Go for the late seating when the sun streams in from Central Park. It's a three-Michelin star meal, and the two-course prix fixe is $38. An impossible bargain given the quality of the food.

Seal your weekend with a kiss and Carnegie Hall, opera at The Met, and a visit to Neues Galerie for Austrian art and silver tea service at Cafe Sabarsky. We know, we know: It's love.

There are more answers to all of your travel dilemmas at fathomaway.com.

Photo: Courtesy of Danielle Lurie

 
 
 
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09:49 PM on 11/04/2011
Give her some Junior's Cheesecake (the cheap one), have a streetvendor kebab and bang er at the "CARTERS", hows romantic for that