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Home > Restaurants > Pio Maya

Pio Maya

Critic's Pick Critics' Pick

40 W. 8th St., New York, NY 10003
nr. MacDougal St.  See Map | Subway Directions Hopstop Popup
212-254-2277 Send to Phone

Photo by Carmen E. Lopez and AJ Wilhelm

Hours

Daily, 11am-11pm

Nearby Subway Stops

A, B, C, D, E, F, V at W. 4th St.-Washington Sq.

Prices

$2.25-$12.95

Payment Methods

MasterCard, Visa

Special Features

  • Delivery
  • Lunch

Alcohol

  • No Alcohol

Reservations

Not Accepted

Delivery Area

Spring St. to 21st St., Broadway to West Side Highway

Profile

There’s one thing about restaurant design they probably don’t teach you in cooking school: If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. Clearly, that was the guiding construction principle behind places like Blaue Gans (né Le Zinc), the new Les Deux Gamins (né Metropol), and, on a much smaller scale, Pio Maya, a tiny taquería that opened surreptitiously in a Greenwich Village storefront previously and briefly occupied by an Indian-wrap shop. With the exception of a couple of Mexican artworks, the layout is identical, down to the leftover diorama-like displays of beans and grains. All the energy and resources have wisely been focused on the food—a selection of cheap, filling Mexican fare that’s freshly prepared, subtly seasoned, and a very welcome addition to a culinarily blighted block (Gray’s Papaya the lone exception). Tasty double-tortilla tacos have the perfect ratio of flavorful pork or chorizo to shredded lettuce and pico de gallo. The oval-shaped masa cakes called sopes are slicked with earthy refried beans and sprinkled with salty cotija, and the same comforting masa goodness permeates both versions of tamales—corn-husked and the banana-leaf-wrapped. But those Mexican antojitos are only part of the Pio Maya equation. If they weren’t so tasty, you’d think the joint was a rotisserie-chicken shop masquerading as a taquería. Juicy, burnished birds spin on a spit and end up in combination platters (with either seasoned rice and beans, dense, vinegary yucca, fried tostones, or caramelized plantains) or carved up and tucked into tortas and strewn atop tostadas. The extremely gracious owner happens to be the brother of the guy behind Los Pollitos, a burgeoning Brooklyn roast-chicken empire, and you can taste the family resemblance.

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8.0 "Recommended"
Average Reader Rating
on a Scale of 10
Write Your Own Review

Unfortunately, they are now closed

Neil_Glassman from 10011 | Posted on 8/15/08

Overall Reader Rating: 8 (Recommended)
Food: (NA)
Service: (NA)
Décor: (NA)
Value: (NA)

The storefront is not empty. RIP.

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