The best BBQ restaurants on Long Island
Everybody has an opinion on what makes great barbecue — the balance of smoke, heat, sauce and spice. Whether you're seeking St. Louis-style spareribs or brisket sandwiches piled on Texas toast, Long Island's top barbecue spots stand ready to dish it up. Here are the top picks from Newsday's restaurant critics:
Smok-haus
7 12th St., Garden City
Manny Voumvourakis' Garden City barbecue joint consistently turns out some of the finest brisket on the Island, along with excellent baby back and spare ribs, and juicy pulled pork. But Smok-haus' best-kept secret may well be its weekends-only pastrami — brined in-house, delicately flavored, and better than you’ll find than at many delis specializing in it. (Get there before they sell out.) Other favorites include smoked chicken thighs, velvety brisket or carnitas tacos, a brisket cheesesteak sandwich and a pork belly-on-potato-roll sandwich that’s just as decadent as it sounds, served with coleslaw and pickle chips. Barbecued meats are served a la carte as well, as are the porchetta and smoked shrimp. Ever-popular mild, medium and hot wings are smoked before being fried and are a key component of the lively after-work bar scene here. In warmer weather, an outdoor patio beckons. More info: 516-400-7100, smok-haus.com
Swingbellys
909 W. Beech St., Long Beach
Having weathered the wrath of Superstorm Sandy, personnel changes and the revival of Long Beach's West End, Swingbellys is swinging harder than ever. Dan Monteforte's rollicking restaurant starts with the basics — pulled pork, brisket, chicken, ribs — and spins them into dozens of inventive dishes such as the "mac & Pete" (burned ends tossed with macaroni and cheese), the smokehouse cheesesteak sandwich or the smoke-pit tacos. Stop by on a Tuesday night for the terrific fried chicken. More info: 516-431-3464, swingbellyslongbeach.com
Laura’s BBQ
76 Shore Rd. in Glen Cove
Lloyd Adams’ absolute mastery of Texas-style barbecued beef brisket comes as a happy consequence of his many years standing sentry over a smoker. It starts with his wife Laura's top-secret rub, followed by 14 low-slow hours spent orbiting a firebox thick with hickory, cherry and mesquite smoke. At journey’s end is simple, tenderized perfection of the sort that makes sauce almost sacrilegious. Equally fine is a pound of his lean yet succulent pork ribs, or a juicy half-pound of chicken capable of single-handedly erasing memories of incinerated birds past. The couple conducted business out of a faux-log cabin trailer for several years before opening a brick-and-mortar restaurant that has indoor space, plus a large, heated open patio adjacent to Glen Cove Creek. More info: 516-715-1500, laurasbbq.com
Stuey’s Smokehouse BBQ
50 Birch Hill Rd., Locust Valley
This take-out-mostly spot is a labor of barbecue love for owners Carrie and Terry Morabito, successful Manhattan restaurateurs who are also local residents. The menu is short and sweet, and when the meat is sold out, customers are out of luck—so come early or call first. Feast on baby back ribs, brisket, pulled pork and smoked sausage and, this being Long Island, smoked salmon. The exceptional sides include not-too-sweet cornbread and bracing coleslaw. Stuey’s also has a lovely garden for fair-weather gluttony. More info: 516-277-2202, stueysbbq.com
Old Fields
15 New St., Huntington
It's a little bit Texas and a little bit Brooklyn at Old Fields Barbecue. Meats include brisket, St. Louis-style pork ribs, smoked chicken, pulled pork and housemade sausage. Diners can chose from five sauces as well as a la carte sides that include mac-and-cheese, collard greens, watermelon salad and mashed sweet potatoes — plus Hawaiian rolls and cornbread for sopping up the juices. Old Fields’ cocktail menu also sticks to the classics, such as a Moscow Mules, a banana-infused Old Fashioned, and a tea-based Dragoon Punch that is laced with rum and brandy and is based on an 1850s recipe. More info: ofbarbecue.com
TownLine BBQ
3593 Montauk Hwy., Sagaponack
Think the Hamptons can’t produce good barbecue? Then you’ve never been to this humble outpost straddling the tony enclaves of Sagaponack and Wainscott. Well-sourced meats, careful smoking and rich housemade sauces are the secrets behind the success of TownLine’s pulled pork and brisket (available in both plates and sandwiches), not to mention the popular St. Louis-style spareribs. Robust cocktail and beer selections are best enjoyed when dining in, while takeout fans will love the four- or eight-meal combo kits composed of meat, sides and all the trimmings. Can’t decide whether to stay or go? Consider spending an evening on the deck, a riot of reclaimed barn wood tables and local bands on select nights. The experience is not to be missed, nor are the buffalo fries — christened with honeyed hot sauce and blue cheese — or the cornbread. The latter is warm, sweet, dotted with kernels and unquestionably among the Island’s finest. More info: 631-537-2271, townlinebbq.com
Smokin’ Wolf BBQ & More
199 Pantigo Rd., East Hampton
This terra cotta-hued spot is the deceptively casual setting for outrageously great barbecue from chef-pitmaster Arthur Wolf. His duck alone can evoke euphoria: Cold-smoked and rubbed with five-spice powder, the Crescent Farm bird is roasted in the rotisserie for hours until its skin is blackened and crisp, its meat fork-tender (slather this with house blackcurrant sauce for full effect). Smoked brisket, slow-cooked baby back ribs and barbecue chicken wings all fall into the same major league, as do sides such as oozy mac-and-cheese or towering hunks of cornbread. The dining room is casual but comfy, with iced tea and beers such as Montauk Wave Chase IPA at the ready. Wolf’s menu was compressed during COVID, but special sandwiches and frisbee-sized quesadillas, such as one filled with pulled pork and mango, still draw a steady crowd at lunch and dinner. More info: 631-604-6470, smokinwolfbbq.com