Top 5 Mixology Cocktail Bars in New York

Dram
177 South 4th St., Brooklyn,
NY 11211, (718) 486-3726

Ace cocktails in a lovely, amber-lit room just over the Williamsburg Bridge. Dram fills up quickly, but its small size cuts down on wait times typical at cocktail bars with excessively academic approaches to their pours. Ideal spot for a drink while you wait for a table and steak as big as your torso at nearby Peter Luger’s. Name your liquor and shakenstirred preference and let the bartenders do the rest.

Lantern’s Keep
49 West 44th St., New York,
NY 10036, (212) 453-4287

The best of several relative newcomers that have brought the nu-cocktail craze above 14th Street, Lantern’s Keep comes courtesy of Raines Law Room alum Meaghan Dorman and enjoys an enviably snug location deep within the Iroquois Hotel, where it keeps the spirit of the Algonquin Hotel bar, just shuttered next door, alive.

Painkiller
49 Essex St., New York, NY
10002, (212) 777-8454

The rare cocktail bar that doesn’t take itself at all too seriously, even though the liquor quotient in the cheeky tiki drinks is no joke. The Polynesian decor that immediately whisks you away from a somewhat forlorn Lower East Side street is worth it even before you and a dozen or so friends imbibe in the sharable drinks which may or may come served in hollowed-out pineapples.

PDT
113 St. Marks Pl., New York,
NY 10009 (212) 614-0386

Arguably the best of the faux speakeasies to flood the city over the past decade, PDT (for Please Don’t Tell) earns bonus points for its semi-secret location off (or through the telephone booth of) punkish frankfurter shack Crif Dogs. The taxidermy motif might seem like a dated relic from 2002, but drinks like the Benton (an extra-smoky riff on an Old Fashioned) will have you thinking only of the present.

Pegu Club
77 West Houston St., New York, NY
10012, (212) 473-7348

Just off Houston Street, Audrey Saunders’ entry in the cocktail craze feels a bit more polished and grownup than most of its peers. That could be thanks to its vaguely colonial Southeast Asia vibe, the relatively large space or the decidedly adult pricing. But the cost is justified by cocktails consisting of the best and rarest ingredients–you can buy your own aromatic bitters here–and one of the better food menus of the cocktail bar’s new class.