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Tender Crush opens in SoHo, elevating NYC-style chicken tenders with two profiles, city-branded sauces, and a nostalgic corner-store vibe.
Photo by Tyson
Tender Crush lands at 529 Broome Street, marking its first standalone New York City outpost and signaling a dedicated home for the brand’s city-flavored concept. The SoHo storefront sits beside the flagship Black Tap Craft Burgers & Beer, a pairing that feels like a conversation between craft and whimsy. The space nods to the street-level culture that defines the neighborhood, a design vocabulary that asks food and mood to share the same air. This opening reads like an overture: a quiet assertion that New York will be more than a stage for the brand—it will be its living room.:
At the core, the menu presents two tender profiles: crunchy fried tenders brined in club soda and buttermilk, and grilled tenders marinated in lemon and spices. The accompanying sauces—buttermilk dill, sweet chili pop, and lime honey mustard—are crafted to elevate without overpowering, inviting guests to explore a spectrum of textures and brightness. The city-inspired cast shows in staples like Williamsburg Waffle fries and the Staten Island Crunch, a sandwich layered with Staten Island hot sauce, pickled banana peppers, brine, parmesan cheese, and roasted garlic. To cap the experience, vanilla custard soft serve hums alongside local beers from Coney Island Brewery and Brooklyn Brewery, plus a boozy Coney Island Cooler slushie crowned with custard. A fast-casual moment that tastes of streets, subway tiles, and late-night windows.>
Julie Mulligan and Chris Barish, the married minds behind Black Tap Craft Burgers & Beer and the celebrated CrazyShakes, imagined Tender Crush as a bridge between a beloved fast-food staple and elevated craft. Mulligan’s words crystallize the mission: “We're taking a menu item that has probably most been enjoyed in a fast-food setting and add in a layer of quality and ‘chef-iness’ to it. It's an ode to New York as a melting pot with cultures represented from all over the world. You know about Southern fried chicken and Korean fried chicken, but we're kind of trying to make New York flavor a thing because it's the blend of all these different elements that exist in in one place that I think makes the city so special.” The statement anchors a broader strategy: leverage Black Tap’s reputation to translate a New York concept into both locals’ and visitors’ vernacular, while staying faithful to a city’s storytelling. The SoHo stage is a deliberate act in a larger arc of growth that extends beyond one neighborhood.
The SoHo opening sits within a broader growth thread—the brand’s ability to move from Las Vegas’ food-hall energy to Manhattan’s brick-and-mortar rhythm, and eventually to transit hubs. Black Tap and its collaborators have designed a portfolio that can travel, and Tender Crush’s path has already included Las Vegas’ Canteen Food Hall at the Rio before arriving in New York. The leadership describes a model that blends hospitality partnerships with scalable, asset-light expansion, aiming to bring a distinctly New York flavor into multiple markets while keeping the core story intact.
Tender Crush began as a pandemic-era ghost kitchen conceived for delivery, then matured into tangible spaces as restrictions eased. The brand found a first real-world home at the Canteen Food Hall in the Rio in January 2024, a staging ground that translated a New York–themed concept from a Las Vegas setting into a Manhattan brick-and-mortar. Mulligan’s reflection on the journey is a wink to the city: “It's clearly such a New York story, and really was designed to be this New York brand, so we wanted to find a way to bring it here sooner rather than later, and make sure it had a home.” The next chapter, they hint, will include a smaller footprint in Terminal 8 at JFK Airport in Queens, an ambition paired with ongoing plans to expand into Dallas, Miami, and Nashville.
The arc is not merely about geography; it is a dialogue about how branded experiences inhabit spaces: food halls, standalone stores, and travel hubs all become canvases for a New York-flavored narrative. The JFK plan, while publicly described, remains to-be-confirmed in timetables, underscoring both the brand’s momentum and the practical frictions of real estate and partnerships. As Tender Crush moves forward, the story is less about a single dish and more about a scalable method: keep the New York identity intact while letting the concept acclimate to different kinds of venues and audiences.