8 Best Restaurants in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

a.kitchen

$$$$ | Rittenhouse Square Fodor's choice
Smoke, coal, fire, and ash create a through line for the menu at a.kitchen, on the ground floor of the AKA Hotel. Attired in blond wood and Carrara marble, it looks like a spa in the Italian Alps, and its Rittenhouse address guarantees a scene, but the recent involvement of High Street Hospitality (Fork, High Street on Market) has transformed it into a "serious restaurant" with an ace sommelier and a steak tartare that cannot be missed.

Laurel

$$$$ | East Passyunk Fodor's choice
Reservations at Laurel are typically a tough get, given its cozy 22-seat dining room and chef-owner’s Nicholas Elmi’s sterling reputation. But dinner at this intimate, candlelit hideaway is worth the effort for fans of the Top Chef season 11 winner’s elegant, intelligent French-American food, presented in six- or nine-course tasting formats five nights a week. In the Valley, Elmi’s attached wine bar and cocktail lounge, offers small plates and a place to hang before or after a Laurel reservation.

Pub & Kitchen

$$ | Rittenhouse Square Fodor's choice

Pub & Kitchen has been a favorite since it opened in 2009 with a daily selection of oysters and a menu that includes everything from a sweet-and-savory fried-chicken sandwich to a kick-ass cheeseburger. But even if the food menu wasn't a star, locals would flock to this energetic saloon to unwind with friends or catch the game. In what used to be a dive bar, P&K is an unpretentious, attractive hangout with hardwood floors, exposed brick walls, tables fashioned from reclaimed floor joists, and familiar rock music playing from the speakers.

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South Philadelphia Tap Room

$$ | South Philadelphia Fodor's choice
Championing craft beer well before it was cool, this laid-back Newbold tavern set the bar for Philly’s gastropub boom way back in 2003. SPTR’s ever-rotating 14 tap selections, plus cask ales and a nice bottle selection, hit local, national, and international notes that nicely accompany a menu that reaches well beyond the expected pub grub with creative snacks, sandwiches, and seasonal specials conceived to celebrate local and organic products and produce. The kitchen pays ample mind to vegetarian, vegan, and gluten-free guests, too; it’s this accommodating spirit that makes a neighborhood bar.

Vernick Food & Drink

$$$$ | Rittenhouse Square Fodor's choice
South Jersey native, and James Beard-award winning chef, Greg Vernick spent the bulk of his career opening restaurants around the world for Jean-Georges Vongerichten. When he and his wife, Julie, wanted to do their own place, they came back to the Delaware Valley and made waves with their bustling (but intimate) modern American restaurant whose ever-changing menu features delicious things on toast (avocado, foie gras, Maryland crab), Asian influences, and large-format proteins (whole chicken or rack of lamb) cooked in a wood-burning oven. Expect it all rendered in thoughtful, joyful expressions, and served by a vivacious staff.
2031 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 19103, USA
267-639–6644
Known For
  • thoughtful toasts like pumpkin, apple and brown butter or sea scallop and black truffle butter
  • roasted meats
  • raw bar
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. No lunch

Heritage

$$$ | Northern Liberties
A spacious neighborhood hangout on bustling 2nd Street, Heritage is an industrial-style restaurant where you’ll find live music on the dining-room stage, live herbs creeping over the reclaimed ceiling beams, and lively cooking from chef Mackenzie Hilton. Regulars gravitate toward the hearty sandwiches served with crisp fries, the signature cocktails, which are largely named after classic songs, or one of the 30-plus draft-beer options.
914 N. 2nd St., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 19123, USA
215-627–7500
Known For
  • live music
  • seasonally focused menu
  • extensive draft-beer list
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No lunch weekdays

Square 1682

$$$ | Rittenhouse Square

With a deal-fueled happy hour and central location, Square 1682 at the Kimpton Hotel Palomar is a go-to spot for Center City dwellers all throughout the year. For dinner, you ascend a floating staircase to an upstairs dining room and settle into a plush banquette to sample deviled duck eggs, kale Caesar, and pea-and-carrot gnocchi scented with vanilla.

Vedge

$$ | Center City East
Less a restaurant than a roving dinner party spread among several rooms in a tony Center City brownstone, Vedge marked a shift for chefs Rich Landau and Kate Jacoby. At their longtime vegan spot, Horizons, the focus was on making non-meat look and taste like meat, but at Vedge, it's a true celebration of vegetables, many of them sourced from nearby farms. Which is not to say you won’t find tofu or seitan, but they’ll be starring as themselves, in landscapes of gorgeous produce touched by spices, smoke, and fermentation. Jacoby’s ethereal desserts are can’t-miss.
1221 Locust St., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 19107, USA
215-320–7500
Known For
  • elevated vegan cuisine
  • local/seasonable produce
  • creative desserts
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No lunch