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A Modern Ukrainian Restaurant Replaces the Legendary Pegu Club

Borscht cocktails, BEC pierogi, and more at this lavish new spot from the team behind Pineapple Club

A dark bar with a mural of a woman and hanging lamps.
Slava is a new Ukrainian restaurant and speakeasy bar with borscht cocktails and BEC pierogi.
Slava

Slava, a new Ukrainian restaurant, and bar, appears to be opening tomorrow, Thursday, November 3, at 77 West Houston Street, near West Broadway, according toits Instagram. The new Eastern European spot apparently comes from the team behindPineapple Club, a tropical cocktail bar that opened in the East Village during the pandemic. While the bar itself was not a particularly splashy one in New York City, Slava may certainly put the team on the map: The new venture is taking over the former acclaimed Pegu Club space, whichshutteredin 2020 after 15 years in operation.

According to the website, the second-floor establishment resides“next to and above”Dos Caminos, perhaps carrying on Pegu Club’s speakeasy feeling. An online menulistsimaginative dishes like BEC pierogi, potato pancakes with creamed mushroom and braised beef tongue, steamed trout with pumpkin cream, and chicken Kyiv with parsnip puree. For desserts, find sour cream panna cotta with cherry syrup and sunflower brittle, as well as a hazelnut crunch cake with toasted caraway seeds. For drinks, needless to say, vodka flows plenty. But it appears in unlikely forms: in a borscht-style cocktail with heavy cream and beets, in a cardamom espresso martini, and in an Aperol drink with sour cherry and lemon.

Beverage director Nazar Hrab (who also designed Pineapple Club’s drinks and has worked atseveral Jean-Georges restaurants) and executive chef, Alex Scherbyna were both born in Ukraine,according to the Slava website.

It’s a meaningful time to open a Ukrainian restaurant in New York City. Since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in early 2022, restaurants like Veselka have become arallying pointto show solidarity for Ukraine. Meanwhile, bars have been dumping Russian vodka and swapping out bottles forUkrainian-owned ones. At the same time, Russian restaurants in New York Cityhave faced backlash, vandalism, and loss of business, despite standing in support of Ukraine.

Slava joins the ranks of other Eastern European restaurants that have opened over the course of the past year, taking a modern look at the cuisine from a decidedly New York vantage point, in company withEdith’s Eatery and Groceryin Williamsburg, as well asAgi’s Counter, in Crown Heights — though seemingly more lavishly geared towards Manhattan primetime dining, than its colleagues in Brooklyn.

餐廳會也有空間hosting events for the holiday season in its 127-person dining room,according to its website. Reservations are now live onResy.

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