Thursday, January 19, 2023

Superiority Burger, now with coming-soon signage on Avenue A

Superiority Burger appears to be closer to an opening in its new home at 119 Avenue A between Seventh Street and St. Mark's Place... "coming soon" letters are now on the marquee here outside the former Odessa Restaurant. (The under-wraps signage arrived on Dec. 2.)

As previously reported by Grub Street, owner Brooks Headley, who called the Odessa his "dream space," will start with a dinner service and then open for lunch and breakfast inside the dining room that has retained much of its diner-ish vibes.

The SB Instagram account has highlighted some new dishes and desserts in recent weeks... such as!

No word on an official opening date (please don't ask!). Per a December-time IG post: "Not open yet. But one day it will just *poof* erupt when you least expect it." 

The popular all-vegetarian quick-serve spot opened in the East Village on Ninth Street in June 2015

Odessa Restaurant opened in this space in April 1995 before a July 2020 closure. The original Odessa, the longtime favorite that dated to the mid-1960s, closed next door in August 2013.

17 comments:

  1. Can't wait! Fully expect Superiority to be mobbed when it opens.

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  2. Yay! Can't wait for the opening!

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  3. Nothing can adequately replace Odessa.

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  4. I disagree with Anon 10:37 AM, and would re-word that statement to "Nothing can replace Odessa". To go from a place with a gigantic menu for meat-eaters and vegetarians alike, with all different kinds of foods and price points, to what will be one with much more limited options that cost much more - that's a loss to the neighborhood.

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  5. if this place were any more overrated it would be a Marvel movie.

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  6. Talk about a place that the whole neighborhood can get behind. I've missed Superiority Burger a lot, but we're getting something even better in a space that will rightly remain diner-ish. win/win/win, please open soon!

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  7. I'd rather Superiority Burger than another *(*&(^&*&@#@ "exotic snacks shop." I'm a huge fan of diners, but don't make the perfect the enemy of the good.

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  8. Hopefully they'll actually open soon.

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  9. just adding to the Hell Yeahs!!! Yay! can't wait to chow there
    superiority wasn't unreasonable in price and soooooo tasty! Odessa though hadn't eaten there in decades was a comfort knowing it was there i just thank Brooks for saving this space from being another sports bar for bros and woos

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    1. You're right, it WASN'T unreasonably priced. Emphasis on WASN'T.
      But someone will have to pay for this bigger space and its renovation. And that someone will be us...

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  10. Love the food… but always felt they run the place with a certain superiority complex and snobbery that leaves customers feeling inferior.

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  11. Other people's superiority complex doesn't make me feel inferior. Laugh it off and enjoy your food.

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  12. Please, just not vegan cheese!

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  13. It’s not like they forced Odessa out. The owner of Odessa chose to close it and instead rent the space to Superiority, a place that a lot of people seem to have liked. And there’s no reason that meat eaters can’t enjoy a meatless meal, especially a burger that is pretty close to a meat burger. It’s not like someone is forcing you to eat your spinach.

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  14. Just…sad. From a real New York-style community spot where even…gasp!…older folks on fixed incomes could get a nice bowl of soup and hang regularly (which they did), to a trendoid, overpriced pseudo-diner gimmick.

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  15. I totally get what @5:48 says. Perhaps ‘infuriated’ for me. Yet there I was dutifully standing in their lines on their appointed days, week after week. Amazing what we New Yorkers suffer for a great meal.

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  16. I agree that nothing will replace Odessa, ever. No place for the regular people of the neighborhood anymore, putting a flower next to a grilled cheese it’s still a grilled cheese.

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