Delivery: Yes Take-out: Yes Accepts Credit Cards: Yes Good for Kids: Yes Good for Groups: Yes
Price range.
$ Price range Under $10
2 reviews
Sharon Rashid
Updating my review to add a tip: don't have their lasagna. Stick to their pizza, salads and hummus which is really good. I had their lasanga the other day and I was REALLY disappointed. It was super greasy. I don't know what the sauce was. It was supposed to be marinara sauce but it was just a greasy mess that made my stomach turn.The salad I had with it was awesome as their salads always are.
This is the old-fashioned, classic kosher pizza joint in Crown Heights; the decor is dank, and there is nothing exquisite about this place, but it's a classic neighborhood establishment with very good prices. $4.50 was a very reasonable price for lunch last week; the falafel was delicious, with the clerk freshly scooping and frying the falafel balls, and there were at least 5-6 nice-sized falafel balls in the sandwich, along with hummus and copious amounts of Israeli salad, sauerkraut, pickles, and other fixings. The cashier expertly arranged the sandwich, which I had to deconstruct with a fork and knife in order to eat. Tehina comes in a side cup, which allows for easy pouring, bite-by-bite. This is my to-go spot now for a falafel when I work in this neighborhood and need a quick bite for lunch.
Updating my review to add a tip: don't have their lasagna. Stick to their pizza, salads and hummus which is really good. I had their lasanga the other day and I was REALLY disappointed. It was super greasy. I don't know what the sauce was. It was supposed to be marinara sauce but it was just a greasy mess that made my stomach turn.The salad I had with it was awesome as their salads always are.
This is the old-fashioned, classic kosher pizza joint in Crown Heights; the decor is dank, and there is nothing exquisite about this place, but it's a classic neighborhood establishment with very good prices. $4.50 was a very reasonable price for lunch last week; the falafel was delicious, with the clerk freshly scooping and frying the falafel balls, and there were at least 5-6 nice-sized falafel balls in the sandwich, along with hummus and copious amounts of Israeli salad, sauerkraut, pickles, and other fixings. The cashier expertly arranged the sandwich, which I had to deconstruct with a fork and knife in order to eat. Tehina comes in a side cup, which allows for easy pouring, bite-by-bite. This is my to-go spot now for a falafel when I work in this neighborhood and need a quick bite for lunch.