The Greatest Delis in America (Yes, Even Outside of New York)
Better Than Bubbie's
Overstuffed pastrami and towering Reubens. Deep bowls of rich, hearty soup. Massive pickles by the barrel. If you're looking for something in between fast food and a traditional sit-down restaurant, a great deli is more than just a shop for outstanding sandwiches — it's an oasis in the desert. It all started in 1888 when the first Jewish delicatessen opened in New York City. By the 1920s, the neighborhood deli was a cornerstone of Jewish-American culture that was in some ways, according to author Ted Merwin, as important to the community as the local synagogue. Today, the delicatessen is no longer the bastion of a single ethnic group but a staple of American cuisine — and amazing delis can be found not just in the crowded boroughs of New York City, but in every corner of America.
Katz's
City / Town: New York City
Address: 205 E. Houston St.
Phone: (212) 254-2246
Website: katzsdelicatessen.com
Before the arrival of Willy Katz in 1903, America's most famous Jewish deli was called Iceland Brothers after the siblings who founded it. It was established in 1888 on Ludlow Street on Manhattan's Lower East Side, although what would become Katz's Delicatessen later moved across the street to its current location to make way for a new subway line. While Katz's has long been famous just for being Katz's, the New York City institution is still best known for its pastrami, corned beef, and brisket, which Katz's meat masters cure for up to 30 days, as opposed to the industry standard of 36 hours. Katz's is also a famous movie location.
Slyman's
City / Town: Cleveland
Address: 3106 St. Clair Ave.
Phone: (216) 621-3760
Website: slymans.com
Like Katz's in New York City, Slyman's in Cleveland is hardly a secret. From Rachael Ray to former President George W. Bush, bigwigs of all stripes have joined the common Clevelander in making a visit to Slyman's a must-do deli pilgrimage. Known for bread-topped walls of meat they call sandwiches — most famously the corned beef — Slyman's also supplements its menu with a few entrees it refers to as "hearty dinners."
Famous 4th Street Delicatessen
City / Town: Philadelphia
Address: 700 S. 4th St.
Phone: (215) 922-3274
Website: famous4thstreetdelicatessen.com
A landmark in the food mecca of South Philly since 1923, the Famous 4th Street Delicatessen was run by the same family for 80 years. Although it was featured in movies such as 1993's "Philadelphia," the traditional corner deli is most famous for its food. Its overstuffed sandwiches are available in regular, which is huge, or "zaftig," which is not even really a sandwich anymore.
Schlesinger's
City / Town: Philadelphia
Address: 1521 Locust St.
Phone: (215) 735-7305
Website: schlesingersdeli.com
Although it doesn't have the word "famous" in its title like its neighbor to the south, Center City Philadelphia's Schlesinger's is well known among locals as arguably the best deli in the City of Brotherly Love. Joseph Schlesinger opened his first deli in West New York, New Jersey, in the 1930s after becoming one of the 2 million Jewish people who immigrated to the United States from Eastern Europe between 1881 and 1924. Schlesinger's specialty sandwiches are the crown jewel of the hefty menu, which also includes combos such as brisket served between two potato pancakes with gravy.
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Mitchell Delicatessen
City / Town: Nashville, Tennessee
Address: 1306 McGavock Pike
Phone: (615) 262-9862
Website: facebook.com/MitchellDeli
Far from the iconic Northeastern spots where America's deli culture was born is Mitchell Delicatessen in Nashville. Mitchell puts a modern twist on the old-school deli, but is no less serious about its sandwiches than the old-timers. Although it has been in business only a little more than a decade, Mitchell has cemented its claim to some of the best lunch fare in Music City, particularly the artisanal sandwiches, in-house-cured meats, handmade sausages and an impressive selection of vegan and vegetarian offerings including seitan and tofu sandwiches.
Kenny & Ziggy's Deli
City / Town: Houston
Address: 1743 Post Oak Blvd.
Phone: (713) 871-8883
Website: kennyandziggys.com
Ziggy Gruber, a third-generation deli man who ran successful delicatessens in New York City and Los Angeles, was featured in a 2015 documentary about America's Jewish deli culture. His partner, Kenny Friedman, has roots dating back to New York's famous Carnegie Deli. Their operation, Kenny & Ziggy's, is now the premier deli in Houston, with two locations featuring menus as big as their sandwiches — and many of the 200 offerings can be customized to order.
Zingerman's Deli
City / Town: Ann Arbor, Michigan
Address: 422 Detroit St.
Phone: (734) 663-3354
Website: zingermansdeli.com
Farmhouse cheeses, Black Angus pastrami and corned beef, homemade chopped liver, and estate-bottled oil with varietal vinegars are among the key ingredients that help Zingerman's rank consistently as one of America's top delis. The deli dates back to the early 1980s but has since grown into a self-perpetuating mini-empire — Zingerman's Bakehouse also has a grocery division and a café.
Kramarczuk's Sausage Co.
City / Town: Minneapolis
Address: 215 E. Hennepin Ave.
Phone: (612) 379-3018
Website: kramarczuks.com
You'll take a step back in time to yesteryear Eastern Europe when you enter Kramarczuk's in Minneapolis. Kielbasa and head cheese are Old World delights, and the handcrafted sausages, some of which you'll see hanging from the ceiling, are available in more than 40 traditional varieties, including tea sausage, mettwurst, jaternice, kishka, and linguica. The in-house bakery churns out bread, pastries, sweetbreads, tortes and more using preserved traditional baking methods.
Wise Sons Jewish Delicatessen
City / Town: San Francisco
Address: 3150 24th St. and other locations
Phone: (415) 590-7955
Website: wisesonsdeli.com
Founded in San Francisco's Mission District, Wise Sons brings East Coast Jewish comfort food to the Bay area, but insists on using fresh California ingredients. Virtually everything it serves is made in-house, including the brisket-derived corned beef and seven-hour hickory-smoked pastrami, which is first saturated in a proprietary brine. Its Jewish rye is double baked throughout the day, and the handmade bagels are boiled in malt-inflected water before baking.
Weiss Deli and Bakery
City / Town: Henderson, Nevada
Address: 2744 N. Green Valley Parkway
Phone: (702) 454-0565
Website: facebook.com/p/Weiss-Restaurant-Deli-Bakery-100039310941600/
When you think of the country's best delis, Henderson, Nevada, might not come to mind, but from TripAdvisor to DoorDash, it's hard to find anything short of a 4.5-star review of Weiss Deli & Bakery. The chicken noodle soup is better than grandma's — yes, your grandma's, too — and the Mother of All Hash is as epic as the name implies.
Mile End Delicatessen
City / Town: Brooklyn, New York
Address: 97 Hoyt St.
Phone: (718) 852-7510
Website: mileenddeli.com
Although Mile End has spread its goodness to the American South, the apex of the franchise will always be the original location in Brooklyn, New York. While New York has been exporting deli culture for more than a century, Mile End actually imported its unique delicatessen style from, of all places, Canada. Modeled after the delis made famous by Montreal's Mile End neighborhood, the Brooklyn hotspot represents a unique fusion of classic Jewish fare and modern Canadian cuisine. Try the pierogies, the maple mustard-infused Hoyt dogs in a blanket, or the outrageously good matzo ball soup.
Kenny and Zuke's
City / Town: Portland, Oregon
Address: 3808 N. Williams St. #125
Phone: 503-222-DELI (3354)
Website: kennyandzukes.com
Kenny and Zuke's, which also owns Bagelworks in Portland, was founded on the idea that there simply wasn't a pastrami sandwich in Portland that the owners deemed fantastic. Whether or not that's true, owner Ken Gordon brought some truly amazing meat to the City of Roses. The oak-smoked pastrami has reset the bar in Portland, and locals and tourists alike flock to Kenny and Zuke's for not just the sandwiches, but the handcrafted pickles, rye, bialies, bagels and challah.
Jake's Deli
City / Town: Milwaukee
Address: 1634 W. North Ave.
Phone: (414) 562-1272
Website: jakesdeli1.com
A Milwaukee staple since 1955, Jake's Deli still operates in a building with a long, proud history in the city, starting with a butcher shop that held the space as early as 1903. Corned beef is king at Jake's, and it's got the towering Reubens to prove it. Those massive Reubens are always topped with what just might be the best sauerkraut in the city and perhaps the country — oh, and if you're feeling lazy, there's delivery.
Roasters 'N Toasters
City / Town: Miami Beach, Florida
Address: 525 Arthur Godfrey Road and other locations
Phone: (305) 531-7691
Website: roastersntoasters.com
Since 1984, Roasters 'N Toasters has brought a little taste of New York City to South Florida. The bagels are made in-house, as is the schmear. Standard deli fare — corned beef, pastrami, and brisket sandwiches — is complemented by outrageously hearty and huge specialties such as smoked fish platters and comfort food entrees like meatloaf and stuffed cabbage.
Harold's New York Deli
City / Town: Edison, New Jersey
Address: 1173 King Georges Post Road
Phone: (732) 661-9100
Website: haroldsfamousdeli.com
North Jersey boasts a huge selection of quality delis, but few can match what Harold's in Edison is cooking. The locally famous deli/restaurant claims to be home to the world's largest pickle bar. Whether or not that can be validated, the soup selection alone is worth the price of admission. If you're so incredibly hungry that hot or cold borscht with sour cream just won't fill the void, go for the gargantuan 60-ounce fluffy matzo ball soup.
Shapiro's Delicatessen
City / Town: Indianapolis
Address: 808 S. Meridian St. and Indianapolis International Airport
Phone: (317) 631-4041
Website: shapiros.com
It's hard for any deli that isn't Katz's to boast more than a century of tradition, but thanks to four generations of Shapiros dating back to 1905, the family's self-named Indianapolis deli can do just that. The Shapiro lineage can be traced directly to a little grocery that opened in Odessa, Russia, in 1795, before anti-Semitic pogroms sent many Russian Jews scrambling to the West. A little less than 200 years later in 1989, USA Today dubbed Shapiro's most famous offering "the best corned beef sandwich in the world." Some 30-plus years later, that statement is still hard to argue with, and most of the ingredients are still sourced locally, including the cabbage, tomatoes, brown eggs, corn, asparagus, and more.
Zaftigs Delicatessen
City / Town: Brookline and Natick, Massachusetts
Address: 335 Harvard Street (Brookline) and 1298 Worcester Street (Natick)
Phone: 617-975-0075 (Brookline); 508-653-4442 (Natick)
Website: facebook.com/zaftigsdelicatessen/
Zaftigs Delicatessen is so authentically Jewish that it lists its year of establishment as 5757 — that's 1997 in gentile years. The menu is filled with imaginative modern creations that are made from classic ingredients, including the barbecue brisket quesadilla, pastrami breakfast scramble, and latke piccata — although the cheese blintzes just might be the star of the show.
The General Muir
City / Town: Atlanta and Sandy Springs
Address: 1540 Avenue Place, Suite B-230 (Atlanta); 6405 Blue Stone Road, Suite 240
Phone:x (678) 927-9131 (Atlanta); (404) 255-3000 (Sandy Springs)
Website: thegeneralmuir.com
Locals rave about the atmosphere and staff at The General Muir as much as they do the food. It can no longer be called a hidden gem thanks to a visit from the Food Channel, but even before the hype, an imaginative selection of open-face bagel sandwiches, noshes, and breakfast plates kept the crowds coming back for more.
Manny's
City / Town: Chicago
Address: 1141 S. Jefferson St.
Phone: (312) 939-2855
Website: mannysdeli.com
Although the restaurant space and deli counter has undergone a major renovation in recent years, the folks at Manny's promise the Chicago landmark has the "same soul" as always. Favorites such as babka French toast and matzo brie rule the breakfast menu while during lunch and dinner, options range all the way from oxtail stew and fried smelts to tongue and mushrooms and baked whitefish, depending on the day.
Parkway Deli & Restaurant
City / Town: Silver Spring, Maryland
Address: 8317 Grubb Road
Phone: (301) 587-1427
Website: facebook.com/ParkwayDeliMD
The Parkway Deli & Restaurant was serving up authentic New York deli fare long before the Food Network profiled it as one of America's top delis. While the TV heat introduced Parkway to the world, locals have long flocked there for not just the king-sized sandwiches, burgers, and dogs, but the undeniable history. Parkway still maintains a copy of its original menu from when Lou Gurewitz founded the place in 1963 (his grandsons run it now). Back then, you could score a corned beef sandwich for $1.15.
Attman's Delicatessen
City / Town: Baltimore, Potomac
Address: 1019 E. Lombard St. (Baltimore); 12505 Park Potomac Ave. (Potomac)
Phone:x(410) 563-2666 (Baltimore); (301) 765-3354 (Potomac)
Website: attmansdeli.com
Marc Attman now holds the reins of the delicatessen that bears the name of his grandfather, Harry Attman, who established the Baltimore landmark in 1915 — Harry's son/Marc's father Seymour was the second-generation proprietor. Attman's survived a century thanks to a vast, sprawling menu that includes the deli's famous combo sandwiches as well as the classic sandwiches that Attman's promises are "fit for a king or a queen."
Nate 'n Al Delicatessen
City / Town: Beverly Hills, California
Address: 414 N. Beverly Drive
Phone: (310) 274-0101
Website: natenals.com
Nate 'n Al has been a fixture in one of America's ritziest enclaves since it opened in 1945. To this day, tourists mingle with local families and Beverly Hills big shots alike in the famous SoCal delicatessen, which is bursting with East Coast traditions. With the exception of belly lox and barbecued cod, all the deli's smoked fish products are flown in from New York, including its famous wild smoked Nova salmon.
Mudgie's
City / Town: Detroit
Address: 1411 Brooklyn St.
Phone: (313) 961-2000
Website: mudgiesdeli.com
Old World flavor meets modern style at Mudgie's, where classic deli fare is reimagined in dishes like The Barret, which pairs Sy Ginsberg corned beef with creamy coleslaw, Swiss cheese, and Thousand Island dressing on a warm onion roll. The Brooklyn piles house-roasted brisket and nitrate-free cherrywood-smoked bacon on a kaiser roll with sriracha beer cheese and caramelized onions. A fire has affected operations, but the most popular sandwiches are still available while repairs are underway.
2nd Ave Deli
City / Town: New York
Address: 162 E. 33rd St.; 1442 First Ave.
Phone: (212) 689-9000; (212) 737-1700
Website: 2ndavedeli.com
New York City is crowded with so many stellar delis that it's hard for any single establishment to stand out from the crowd, but for more than a half-century, 2nd Ave Deli has earned its place as a bona fide Manhattan institution. The deli's stature can be credited largely to the contributions of its magnanimous and magnetic founder, Holocaust survivor Abe Lebewohl, who was killed in a still-unsolved robbery/murder en route to making a bank deposit after closing one night in 1996. When Lebewohl was killed, the city came together in mourning and a Manhattan park was named in his honor. Today, celebrities, politicians, global power brokers, and average New Yorkers alike still converge on 2nd Ave Deli to get a taste of delicacies such as pastrami deviled eggs, gefilte fish, the Nova sandwich, and heaping portions of what is arguably the greatest chopped liver this side of heaven.
Sal, Kris & Charlie's Deli
City / Town: New York City
Address: 33-12 23rd Ave. in Queens
Phone: (718) 278-9240
Website: facebook.com/salkrisandcharlies
You could walk by this corner store in Astoria, Queens, without blinking. Sal, Kris & Charlie's Deli isn't as famous as its Manhattan and Brooklyn counterparts. But it has The Bomb, a sandwich that became legend thanks largely to the ConEd workers who eat it. Just some of its ingredients: ham, turkey, salami, pepperoni, mortadella, American, Swiss, provolone, lettuce, tomato, onion, roasted peppers, dressing (oil and vinegar), mustard, and mayo. It's nearly 2 feet long and as thick as a utility pole.
Rein's New York Style Deli
City / Town: Vernon, Connecticut
Address: 435 Hartford Turnpike
Phone: (860) 875-1344
Website: reinsdeli.com
Just off Interstate 84, Rein's New York Style Deli is a must-visit that offers all the delicious trimmings of a classic Jewish deli. Served hot on rye bread, the legendary and hefty corned beef is not to be missed, though some fans swear by the chicken salad club and the Reuben. Whichever you choose, you'll definitely want to take home some half-sour pickles and stop by the bakery for fresh chocolate rugelach and other sweet treats.
Morris' Deli
City / Town: Louisville, Kentucky
Address: 2228 Taylorsville Road
Phone: (502) 458-1668
Website: morrisdelicatering.com
This no-frills deli and liquor store hasn't changed much in more than four decades of business, and hopefully it won't anytime soon. For its legendary, made-to-order deli sandwiches, Morris' Deli smokes choice meats in-house, including the not-to-be-missed country ham. Be sure to get it with a side of housemade pimento cheese, and maybe grab a beverage from the walk-in cooler, a former ice house that's said to be the coldest in town at around 24 to 26 degrees. It has catering options, too.
Chick & Ruth's Delly
City / Town: Annapolis, Maryland
Address: 165 Main St.
Phone: (410) 269-6737
Website: chickandruths.com
Ownership of this famous deli may have changed hands from the family that ran it for five decades, but Chick & Ruth's Delly remains a local legend. You'll find a huge variety of sandwiches on house-baked bread (vegetables such as onions and tomatoes free on request), many named for local politicians, but the truly hungry can opt for the "Man vs. Food" challenge, featuring a 1.5-pound "Colossal" Reuben, paired with a 6-pound milkshake. Make history, deli-style.
This article was originally published on Cheapism