Burmese dishes like coconut chicken noodle soup & palata
























"Operating as a Vogue-endorsed stall inside the Queens Center Mall food court, this Burmese stand drew crowds for its hit halal food before closing on Thursday, January 1, with the team now searching for a new sit-down location in either Manhattan or Astoria." - Tierney Plumb
"The Southeast Asian food stand inside the Mona Kitchen food hall closed sometime in October; chef and owner Myo Lin Thway’s Queens Mall location in Elmhurst remains open." - Nadia Chaudhury
"Known for its noodles and beef curry rice, this Southeast Asian food stand closed its location inside Midtown East food hall Mona Kitchen (which opened in 2024), while chef and owner Myo Lin Thway’s other location at Queens Mall in Elmhurst, which debuted in 2022, remains open." - Nadia Chaudhury
"Started by a Burmese immigrant who showed up as a first-time vendor and served his homemade palatas on that inaugural April evening in 2015, this vendor began in a parking-lot stall and later used the market as a springboard to open a permanent restaurant location. The vendor’s origin story — a first-time food seller in an enormous setup — exemplifies how the market allowed home cooks to test recipes and audiences before committing to brick-and-mortar operations." - John Tsung
"For anyone who works (or lives) in Midtown East, Burmese Bites is the lunch option you’ve been waiting for: an answer to the prayers you whispered over sad salads under even sadder fluorescent lighting (just us?). But it’s more than just a convenient neighborhood go-to. The stellar, fish paste and pickled mustard green-fueled food from Myanmar—a cuisine that’s in New York City—makes it a worthwhile destination for anyone, even if it means transferring trains before hustling nearly all the way down to the East River. Burmese Bites’ small, serene booth in the Mona Kitchen & Market food hall serves just four $15 dishes from 11am-3pm on weekdays. Even in this streamlined, ultra-efficient format, their flavor profiles are larger than life—with subtle, thrumming heat and surprising layers of salty, funky, and bright that hit your palate one after the other, like notifications pinging your phone nonstop when the group chat is really going off. There’s limited seating in the food hall, so consider this more of a solo venture than a group excursion, or plan on taking your order to go. And we mean no disrespect to culinary grand dame Auntie Anne, but as regular visitors to Queens Center Mall, we can vouch for the best mall food in America being at the Burmese Bites there. But with this outpost, the long-time Elmhurst favorite may have also claimed the title of best quick lunch in Midtown. And after having lunch here, you’re going to want to try the full menu at that main location in Queens. " - Molly Fitzpatrick