

The Queen of Soul Food
328 Malcolm X Blvd, New York, NY, 10027Harlem’s Home for Soul Food and Family For more than 60 years, Sylvia’s Restaurant has been serving up more than just food. We’ve been serving love, legacy, and Harlem hospitality. When Sylvia Woods opened her restaurant on Lenox Avenue in 1962, she couldn’t have imagined that her fried chicken and collard greens would draw guests from all over the world. What started with a handful of tables and a whole lot of heart quickly became the heartbeat of Harlem – a gathering place for families, friends, leaders, and legends. Where Food, Family, and History Meet. Over the decades, Sylvia’s has welcomed a long list of notable visitors – from President Bill Clinton, who made Harlem his post-White House home, to President Barack Obama, Senator Kamala Harris, Senator Bernie Sanders, Mayor Eric Adams, and Reverend Al Sharpton, who still holds leadership meetings in our dining room. We’ve hosted Aretha Franklin, Quincy Jones, Patti LaBelle, Beyoncé, Fat Joe, Jay-Z, Denzel Washington, Whoopi Goldberg, and Magic Johnson, just to name a few. But whether you’re a superstar or a Sunday regular, when you sit down at Sylvia’s, you’re treated like family. That’s the Harlem way. From our golden fried chicken and slow-simmered collard greens to our mac & cheese and peach cobbler, every dish carries Sylvia’s signature – a taste of home, made with soul. Honoring a Queen, Continuing a Legacy Sylvia Woods earned her crown as the “Queen of Soul Food,” and her restaurant remains a monument to her spirit. She received countless honors, including the Merit Award from Mayor Michael Bloomberg, citations from President Bill Clinton and Governor George Pataki. Sylvia’s Restaurant has received recognition from institutions such as The James Beard Foundation, which in 2024 named Sylvia’s one of America’s Classics for its historic contribution to American dining culture. Sylvia Woods and the restaurant have been featured on Good Morning America, The Today Show, The Food Network, BBC, Japan TV, and countless others – as well as in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Ebony, Elle, Newsweek, and Better Homes & Gardens. Even with all those accolades, Sylvia remained grounded – focused on faith, family, and feeding her community.
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