Showing posts with label Gooey On the Inside Cookies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gooey On the Inside Cookies. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 18, 2025

The openings, reopenings and temp closures on one stretch of 1st Avenue

Photos by Steven 

With Banshee now open at 143 First Ave., let's reset the storefront scene on the west side of the avenue between St. Mark's Place and 10th Street.

In just the past few months, this short stretch has seen a flurry of new openings, closings and reopening-soon signs. Here's a quick rundown. 

Rowdy Rooster has been "temporarily closed" all this fall at 149 First Ave. There is no word on a reopening date for the quick-serve restaurant from the Unapologetic Foods team, which opened in February 2022.
Next door, Gooey on the Inside Cookies debuted in early October. Background here.
To the south, Kikoo Sushi, located between St. Mark's Place and Ninth Street, reopened after a months-long renovation...
And next door, Surprise Scoop, billed as "the world's first flavor roulette ice cream shop," has been closed since the DOH paid a visit on Sept. 13...
The posted notices and the DOH website mention operating without a permit, as well as other sanitary violations.

While the shop's Instagram account notes a temporary closure, the interior doesn't look so promising...
 
The shop's Instagram account mentions "TEMP CLOSED due to permit issues."

Wednesday, September 10, 2025

Cookie alert: Gooey On the Inside to open on 1st Avenue

Photo by Steven

Gooey On the Inside Cookies is opening an East Village outpost at 149 First Ave. between Ninth Street and 10th Street on Oct. 1. 

This will be the brand's second shop. Kafi Dublin — who began baking and selling cookies as a kid — opened Gooey's first storefront on Chrystie Street in 2017 after leaving her job as a clinical analyst with the city. Since then, her gooey-centered cookies have been shipped nationwide. 

To mark the First Avenue debut, the shop will be giving away cookies on Oct. 1 from 2-6 p.m. 

The space at No. 149 was previously home to a deli and smoke shop.