Call it a banner year for new places to eat in the Hudson Valley. Over the past 12 months, a fresh crop of restaurants, cafes, and bars has opened across the region, each adding its own flavor to the local mixโfrom design-forward dining rooms to scrappy, personality-driven newcomers. What unites them isnโt a single style but a shared sense of momentum: chefs striking out on their own, longtime operators expanding, and small-town main streets welcoming new life. For visitors, it means more options at every turnโwhether youโre planning a weekend getaway or just following your appetite from one town to the next.
Sobrino’s, Kingston
Sobrinoโs, a year-round gelato shop from the team behind Rosie General, is aiming for a March opening across the street from the bakery on Abeel Street. Named for the Spanish word for โnephew,โ the project is framed as a kid-friendly companion to Rosie. Preserved brick walls and original tile floors remain intact, accented by bright yellow and marble in the compact two-level space. The 12-flavor case (including two sorbets) will be made from scratch in an egg-free gelato style. Expect pistachio, lemon, hazelnut, chocolate, and banana gelato, as well as sundaes, milkshakes, a banana split, and baked additions like cannoli and cream puffs.
Soluna Cafe Cantina, Hudson
Opened by longtime hospitality partners Juan Carlos Granda and Gina Macias, this new Green Street cafe grows out of years running Casa Latina and reflects a shared interest in food as both comfort and cultural expression. The compact, 18-seat space offers an all-day menu that moves easily from breakfast into lunch, with egg tacos, sweet tamales, avocado toast, burritos, and a Cuban sandwich that regulars already swear by. Macias handles the baking in-house, while the coffee program leans playful, with creative lattes alongside straight espresso drinks. On Fridays, the space shifts gears with themed prix-fixe dinnersโCuban nights, anime-inspired menus, and other global riffs. A seasonal patio and full bar are planned for spring.
San Mul,โFleischmanns
Run by Madalyn Warren of East Branch Farms, San Mul is part Korean kitchen, part farm stand, part fermentation lab, operating out of a modest storefront on Main Street. The focus is squarely on food with a point of view: housemade kimchi, carefully tended banchan, deeply satisfying bibimbap, and seasonal prepared dishes built from produce grown biodynamically at Warrenโs farm and sourced from nearby partners. Shelves double as a retail outlet for fermented goods and pantry staples, blurring the line between meal and market. On Tuesdays, San Mul leans into its community ethos with a pay-what-you-can model for prepared foods. Itโs informal, purposeful, and subtly radicalโa place where good farming, good cooking, and mutual aid intersect in the heart of Fleischmanns.
Roxyโs Saloon,โSaugerties

Opened by Roxanna Guerra in the former Catskill Mountain Moonshine space, Roxyโs Saloon brings a dose of Western swagger to Market Street, pitched as โWestern charm, Hudson Valley heart.โ The room leans hard into the themeโanimal skulls, vintage signage, and frontier-era bric-a-bracโwhile the menu keeps things squarely in comfort-food territory: burgers, fried chicken sandwiches, tacos, and crowd-pleasers like bang bang shrimp and corn ribs. Thereโs also a canny โGirl Dinnerโ specialโsmall plates, a pasta option, and a cocktailโthat nods to after-work appetites and a no-judgment barstool ethos. Early buzz has been strong, with packed nights and Guerra herself working the room, signaling a hands-on operation and a welcome new anchor for the Saugerties bar-and-grill scene.
Half Rats,โGreat Barrington, MA
Half Rats, Great Barringtonโs new natural-wine bar, brings a scrappy, raw edge to a business district better known for its polish. From the wine selection to the vintage art and exposed brick, thereโs a confident chillness inside the recently restored building. The boho, vintage look; endearingly sketchy rodent iconography; and openhearted, unpretentious approach to sharing uncommon wine is the direct expression of the jointโs local Gen Z owner, Abby Pendergist, who learned about natural wine through six years at local behemoth Prairie Whale. Pendergist encourages people to order by the glass so they can try new things. Prices range from $11 to $18 for a generous pour. Beyond signature corn nuts, the small snacks menu includes mixed olives, truffle chips, Spanish goat cheese with figs and honey, and gildas, the classic Basque skewer with anchovy, olive, and a long hot pepper.
Downstate Cafe,โNewburgh

In December, Downstate reopened in a freshly painted, butter-yellow brick building. The cafe debuted its new digs last week to an overjoyed crowd of regulars who had missed its former Lander Street location since the previous Lander Street closed in August. The expanded design-driven space offers standing room plus 17 indoor seats and 36 outdoor spots for when the warm weather returns. In addition to an espresso program anchored by Parlor Coffee and a suite of teas and tonics, in the kitchen, Chef Fernando Cordova turns out Mexico City-style eats. The all-day menu ranges from composed dishes like tamales, chilaquiles, and pozole to tortas, burritos, and blue-corn gorditas with a choose-your-own protein lineup that includes carnitas, achiote chicken, vegan mushroom chorizo, chorizo, and barbacoa.
Cornerstone,โPawling
Cornerstone is a new fine-casual restaurant from Chef Harris Mayer and the Tomassetti family, longtime locals. Under Chef Harris, the restaurant blends refined American cooking with subtle Italian influences, offering dishes from wood-fired pizzas to Hudson Valley duck. With a strong commitment to the Hudson Valleyโs agricultural community, the seasonal menus highlight ingredients sourced directly from a network of regional farms and purveyors, including onion rings made with the prized Black Dirt onions grown in nearby Pine Island. The beverage program focuses predominantly on New York State producers. The space features a welcoming dining room with a stone fireplace, outdoor patio seating, and a second-floor private dining area perfect for events. Cornerstone is currently open for dinner Wednesday through Sunday, with weekend brunch coming soon.
Dinaโs Italian Cafeteria,โNewburgh

For Bivonaโs Simply Pasta, chef-owner Chuck Bivona initially envisioned a takeaway spot offering fresh pasta, sauces, meatballs, and prepared foods. But fans rapidly bullied him into offering all manner of sandwiches, and the pasta shop turned into a lunch counter. So, in mid-November, Bivona opened Dinaโs Italian Cafeteria (a nod to his grandmother, her recipes, and her days as a lunch lady), where he intends to divert lunch traffic so he can return the pasta shop to its original vision. The menu at Dinaโs reads like a Bivonaโs greatest hits list with all manner of sandwiches including meatball and chicken parm sandwiches; salads; cannoli, and house-made pastas. For now, Dinaโs offers to-go orders, but come late spring, it will be a relaxing spot to sit down and enjoy a meal, complete with a bar and outdoor dining.
Loomieโs Luncheonette,โCatskill

Loomieโs Luncheonette brings breakfast and lunch back to the heart of Catskill with a menu thatโs equal parts comfort and cleverness. The new Main Street spot marks the return of Josie Grantโformerly of Moxie Cupcake, Redstart Coffee, and Boardโto brick-and-mortar life, this time with grilled-cheese โfat cat melts,โ fresh sandwiches, tomato soup, and baked goods made with local bread from Cairoโs See & Be Kitchen. Expect espresso drinks, cupcakes, Pop-Tarts, and a neighborly vibe shaped by Grantโs years in the Hudson Valley food scene and her recent deep dive into Catskillโs small-business community.
Shake Shack,โPoughkeepsie
Now open at Hudson Heritage, Shake Shack Poughkeepsie offers a reliable, crowd-pleasing stop for travelers cruising Route 9 or touring nearby Marist College, the Culinary Institute of America, and Walkway Over the Hudson. The beloved chainโborn as a Madison Square Park hot dog cartโserves up its signature Angus beef ShackBurgers, crinkle-cut fries, hand-spun shakes, and frozen custard concretes in a modern, easygoing setting. Itโs a convenient refuel between sightseeing stops, with broad appeal for families and groups. In a region known for farm-to-table dining, Shake Shack adds a familiar, high-quality fast-casual option to the mix.
Nonninaโs House,โWappingers Falls

Opened at the end of November on Main Street in Wappingers Falls, Nonninaโs House is an Italian restaurant from local hospitality vets Brendan McAlpine and Marjorie Tarter (Wonderbar, Bird and Bottle Inn, Cooperโs). The name nods to the Italian word for great-grandmother, and the menu reflects that cozy, homecooked spirit with soulful, carefully executed classics. Handmade pastas anchor the offerings, including crowd-pleasers like cacio e pepe ($22), lasagna bianca ($27), and pappardelle with slow-simmered boar ragu ($28), while starters such as burrata with seasonal accompaniments ($19) and prosciutto carpaccio ($21) set the tone. Entrees lean hearty and nostalgic, from brick chicken with parmesan polenta ($30) to a rich New York strip steak ($44), balanced by bright salads and thoughtful sides. In the intimate, candlelit space, blue leather banquettes and dark wood paneling are offset by a colorful array of mismatched vintage plates, with motifs ranging from morel mushrooms to handpainted flowers; framed photos of grandmothers; and vivid wallpaper.









