Click Here!

NYC Indian Restaurants, Movies, Lexington Avenue
New York Indian Community Guide
Click here
 Advertise Cinnamon Lexington Ave NYC Review NJ Reviews
NY Indians
Movie Showtimes
Movie Reviews
Blogs
Indian CPAs Indian Tax Preparer
220 V Appliances
Arts
Indian Associations
Astrologers
Indian Attorneys
Banks
Beauty Parlours
Business
Catering
Chinatown Bus Cheap Bus Service
Chiropractors
Churches
Indian Consulate
Dentists
Doctors
Employment/Jobs
Entertainment
Indian Events
Bridal Sarees
Fast Food
Grocery Stores
Gurdwaras
Handicrafts
Hindu Funerals
Hindu Priests
Hindu Temples
Immigration  Attorneys
Jackson Heights
Indian Jewelry
Long Island
Mandaps Mandap Decoration
Media
NYC Pictures
Photography
Indian Restaurants
Rest.Inspections
Closed Restaurants
Sex Museum
Indian Sweets
Indian Travel Agents
Vendy Awards
Weddings Mandap Decoration Services
Yoga Centers

Click Below for
Movie Showtimes
Events
Jackson Heights
Long Island
Oak Tree Road
New Jersey
Utsav NYC Indian Restaurant - Below Average Food

Lexington Ave
Down Town
East Village
MidTown West
MidTown East
Upper West
Upper East
Queens
Long Island
Outside Manhattan
Cinnamon NYC
Lexington Avenue

(Scroll down to read the review)
Indian Restaurants in NYC
Mehfil Mehfil Jackson Heights Review
Indian Taj 74th St Indian Taj Jackson Heights Review
Indus Valley Indus Valley NYC Review
Nanking Nanking NYC Review
Indus Express Indus Express Review
Aaheli
Andaz
Ayurveda Cafe
Baluchi's W. 56th St
Bawarchi
Bhojan
Biryani Cart
Bombay Palace
Brick Lane Curry House
Bukhara Grill
Chennai
Chinese Mirch
Chola
Copper Chimney
Darbar
Darbar Grill
Delhi Heights
Delhi Palace
Dhaba
Diwan
Dosa Cart,(W. 39th St)
Dosa Delight
Dosa Diner
Dosa Hutt
Ganesh Temple Canteen
Ganesh Temple Canteen 2
Hot Clay Oven
House of Dosas
Indian Taj
Jackson Diner
Jewel of India
Karahi
Madras Mahal
Madras Woodlands
Maharaja Sweets
Minar
NY Dosas
Rajbhog
Royal Tangra Masala
Salaam Bombay
Sapphire
Saravanaas
Saravanaa Bhavan
Shake Shack
Surya
Taj Tribeca
Tangra Masala
Tawa Tandoor
Tiffin Wallah
Utsav
Yuva

Address:
Cinnamon NYC
106 Lexington Ave
New York, NY 10016
Closed
Reviewer's Summary: Nice Food, OK Service; Good Value for Money

If like us you are a habituè at Indian restaurants in Manhattan, it’s hard to ignore the Curry Hill stretch on Lexington Avenue in NYC.

You can’t walk two steps in the neighborhood without tripping over an Indian restaurant – some good, some ugly and some horribly ugly.

So off we headed to NYC.

Shadowed by the watchful eyes of a dark-skinned Indian thug with simian features and porcine eyes, hired presumably by a no-good merdivorous pimp, we dined yesterday at Cinnamon, a newly opened Indian restaurant at 106 Lexington Ave (between 27th St and 28th St) in New York City.

Boy, did we strike gold with Cinnamon NYC.

Folks, for $9.95 the lunch buffet at Cinnamon is a steal. Not in the Copper Chimney league (you get a glass of wine too for the same price at Copper Chimney) but good nevertheless.

There was a slight drizzle in the air and the crowds had all gathered outside Saravana Bhavan, the South Indian vegetarian restaurant a block down the road. So Cinnamon was quiet with only one table occupied as we made our way inside.

Manna for Carnivore Desis
While there were a few vegetarian dishes on the buffet table, the place is more a manna for meat-lovers on the prowl for a decent Indian meal on the cheap.

From the small cubes of the Chicken 65 appetizer to the spicy-but-not-obscenely-spicy Chennai Chicken that had us returning for a second helping to the tangy Gobi Manchurian and flavorful Chicken Tikka Masala, Cinnamon is that rare Indian restaurant on the Lexington Ave strip in Murray Hill with a chef who knows his way around the kitchen.

Thank God. We are so tired of eating bad Indian food.

Oh, we almost forgot to tell you about the second appetizer – minced chicken and lamb patties.

Who needs crack cocaine with such juicy, heavenly patties!


We heaped Chicken Biryani on our plate and with Lamb Vindaloo on the side, we set to work gorging. No complaints with either.

Soon, our friendly waiter brought us fresh Naan bread to the table. A sign for us to get a helping of the Chicken Tikka Masala, that staple of Indian restaurants in the West.

The chicken was tender and the tomato sauce creamy and tangy. Cinnamon’s Naan bread and Chicken Tikka Masala – you can’t go wrong with that combination, guys.

After gobbling a few chunks of the delicious Tandoori Chicken and Lamb Kebab, we edged over to the green side where we spotted a rather forlorn looking Channa Saag.

Forlorn it might look but delicious was the taste of Channa Saag as we wrapped some of it into the Naan for the short trip to our mouth.

Soon after it was time for Dal Tarka (seasoned with onion and tomato) with Saffron Rice.

Yummy.

What a relief that the Dal item did not get short shrift at Cinnamon as it usually does at most Indian restaurants.

For desserts, we got both Gulab Jamun and Seviya Kheer.

Given our sweet cravings and gargantuan appetite for all things Indian, we tried ‘em both. The Jamun syrup was a bit on the too-sweet side but still decent enough for us not to raise our complaint eyebrows too high.

Some Gripes
Sure, we do have a few gripes with our meal. We wouldn’t be we if we didn’t, right?

Our main gripe was the menacing thug glaring at us from outside the restaurant through the glass panel. Wonder if the Cinnamon management is aware of unsavory elements hanging around outside their restaurant. Maybe, they ought to look into which SOB is behind such activities lest other diners be the center of similar intimidating and unwelcome attention.

The other irritation of our meal was on the service side.

Our waiter, a friendly, polite young man, didn’t care to put labels for all the dishes leaving vegetarian diners flummoxed as to which of the dishes were meat-laden.

The empty water glasses on our table encountered the two molecules of hydrogen and one molecule of oxygen more than five minutes after our meal began. And since the weather was a bit chilly the food on the buffet table could have been a tad warmer.

But don’t get us wrong.

Except for the hostile looking element lurking outside, the service issues inside were minor overall.

Big Bang for Your Small Bucks
Given the good quality, quantity and variety of what one gets for a mere $9.95, the weekend lunch buffet at Cinnamon is a nice, value-laden deal if you are in the Lexington Ave area scouting for a good Indian meal.

Folks, go for it.

As for us, we can’t wait to get back. - © NYIndia.us

Cinnamon NYC Related Stories:
Wow! Cinnamon NYC Gets A Grade on Hygiene
Cinnamon on Lexington Ave NYC has Mice Issues
Cinnamon Passes Health Inspection with Flying Colors
Click below for more Indian Restaurant Reviews
New York   New Jersey   Oak Tree Rd   Chicago   Philadelphia
Pittsburgh   Delaware   Maryland   Virginia   Las Vegas   Wisconsin

Advertise   Disclaimer   Contact Us   Privacy   © 2012, All Rights Reserved