Kosher in Phoenix

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  • 613 Grill

    6219 N 7th St. Central Phoenix

    602-274-4444

    Seeking a plain old classic burger and fries? Head to the Seventh Street dining corridor, where 613 Grill offers diners the chance to stay kosher during a quick lunch break. 613 also serves a 16-ounce prime rib steak that’s been aged for 30 days. There's also a robust list of vegetarian options and some out-of-this-world falafel. Event catering and Shabbat takeout is also available.
    1 article
  • Cafe Chenar

    1601 E. Bell Rd., Suite A-11 North Phoenix

    602-354-4505

    The Bukharian food plated, bowled, and served hot and doughy in lidded bamboo baskets at Café Chenar is Bukharian — the food of a Jewish minority of Uzbekistan. This is the native country of the Uvaydov family, whose matriarch, Mazel, presides over the cooking of Café Chenar. The family also runs LaBella Pizzeria and Kitchen 18 in Scottsdale, but Café Chenar is where the Bukharian wonders live. This central Asian restaurant of soups, dumplings, kebabs, and Cornish hens is a return to family roots after catering to other palates. Diners sit in a spare, sleek modern dining room chatting softly over porcelain teapots, green tea issuing warming steam from deeply blue, gold-rimmed cups. From one angle, to eat at Café Chenar is to embrace a vast world of dumplings. Dough pockets come large and small, pan-fried and deep-fried, steamed and souped. They come as manti, pelmeni, and hanum. But this is just one angle through which to see Café Chenar. There are other enclaves of the menu, plenty of sub-categories to hungrily roam. Don't miss the extensive selection of kebabs, flat metal skewers ripe with, ideally, sweetbreads and lamb ribs. Or a section of well-priced savory hand pies, like beef-rich samsa. You can also enjoy larger-format plates, like Cornish hen and molded-rice mountains of plov. The way to best experience this food at the crossroads of European, Asian, Russian, and Jewish traditions is to order small, widely, and to share. Café Chenar is an important cog not only in our kosher restaurant scene, but in our food culture as a whole. New Normal: Seating is limited inside, but Café Chenar's kosher menu is available via takeout and third-party delivery services.
    6 articles
  • Goldman's Deli

    6929 N. Hayden Rd. North Scottsdale

    480-367-9477

    This family-owned Scottsdale eatery bills itself as a "Chicago Style Traditional Jewish Cuisine Delicatessen and Restaurant” and serves chopped liver, gefilte fish, matzoh ball soup, smoked-fish platters, and good old-fashioned pastrami-on-rye sandwiches. Bagels? Of course, there are bagels.
    20 articles
  • Imperial Market & Deli

    737 E. Glendale Ave. North Phoenix

    602-285-6999

    In 2010, this Jewish market and deli, which has served excellent imported meats since 2006, opened a dining room for sit-down table service. The large menu includes all the delicatessen favorites and many more sandwiches, including shwarma, kebabs, falafel, freshly ground burgers, and schnitzel, in addition to entree-size platters of stuffed cabbage rolls, roasted chicken, salmon, and even a $26 rib eye steak. Most of it tastes very good, and that's the good news. The bad news: The low-energy dining room can be downright stifling and the prices (most sandwiches are $10 or more) seem a bit high, given the dining experience. Your best bet at Imperial may be hitting the deli for a pastrami on rye to go.
    8 articles
  • Kitchen18

    10211 N. Scottsdale Rd. Central Scottsdale

    480-284-6001

    2 articles
  • Milk & Honey Espresso Bar & Eatery

    12701 N. Scottsdale Rd. Central Scottsdale

    480-566-9020

    1 article
  • Segal's One Stop & Oasis Grill

    4818 N. Seventh St. Central Phoenix

    602-285-1515

    Under the new ownership of the Gilkarov family and their courteous and experienced staff, this kosher deli and grill offers a full line of dry goods, frozen foods, Chalav Yisrael dairy, a Pas Yisrael Bakery, and a full-service butcher department that specializes in Glatt Kosher beef, veal, lamb and poultry and a full line of deli meats. Formerly known as Ben's Kosher Meat Market and opened in March of 1967, this longstanding favorite serves up a mean pastrami sandwich to go, too.
    3 articles