Tribeca, Manhattan, New York
Atera
A subterranean counter where Ronny Emborg turns foraged, fermented, and frozen technique into a two-star tasting menu with no menu on the table.
FlightLogic expert score: 9.1/10 · ££££ · American , Contemporary
★★ Michelin Stars Photo: Lou Stejskal / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY 2.0
Quick answer
Is Atera worth visiting? FlightLogic assigns an expert score of 9.1/10 based on editorial research. The 4.8/5 star figure is an editorial composite for guide comparison — not a verified consumer aggregate. It has 2 Michelin stars. Best for special occasion dinners, adventurous tasting menus, impressing out-of-town guests.
About Atera
Atera doesn't hand you a menu, and it doesn't want to negotiate — you sit at the basement counter, watch the pass, and eat what the kitchen decided to cook that week. Ronny Emborg runs the room around Nordic-derived technique bent toward something more theatrical: liquid-nitrogen work at the table, fermentation stations built into the counter itself, courses that arrive as much as objects as food. The tasting menu changes with enough frequency that a regular from three months ago is eating a different restaurant, and the wine and non-alcoholic pairings are built course-by-course rather than poured from a fixed list. It's dinner as a two-hour performance for sixteen guests, and the second star is for the discipline underneath the theater, not the theater itself.
Menu highlights
Editorial rating breakdown
Published reviews
Sorted by date (newest first). We do not reorder by rating or “helpfulness”. Review integrity policy
- 5.0Editorial sample
The nitrogen course alone is worth the seat — I've eaten at a dozen tasting counters and never watched a dish get built to order like that. Two hours felt like forty minutes.
Response from Atera
Thank you, Priya — that course changes with the season, so the version you had won't be on the counter again. Come back for the next one.
- 4.0Editorial sample
Technically the most interesting meal I've had in the city this year, though a couple of the more conceptual courses read better than they ate. The duck course was worth the trip alone.
Submit a verified dining review
Consumer reviews require on-site geolocation verification or transaction proof before publication. See our review integrity policy.
How far in advance should I book a table at Atera?
Reservations release on a rolling basis about a month out and the sixteen-seat counter sells through quickly for Friday and Saturday nights, so book as soon as the window opens — same-week availability is rare.
Is there a set menu at Atera, or can I choose courses?
There's no à la carte option — every guest at the counter eats the same fixed tasting menu, which the kitchen rewrites in full every few months, so what you order is really just the date you book.