A New Kosher Restaurant in Midtown Will Sell a $175 Gold-Plated Burger

    93
    Kosher restaurateur Naftali Abenaim at his newest establishment, Mocha Burger Lux in Midtown. (David Beyda)

    NEW YORK (JTA) – Dining out in New York City is expensive — especially at a kosher restaurant. But Mocha Burger Lux, a forthcoming Midtown restaurant, is upping the ante with its “24K Gold Plated Golden-Burger,” which has an eye-popping price: $175.

    Join our WhatsApp group

    Subscribe to our Daily Roundup Email


    The 12-ounce short-rib burger is wrapped in leaves of real, 24-karat gold. It’s grilled and topped with black Australian truffle, crunchy onions and chips, house-made sauce and pickles. The dish is brought to the table in a custom hand-carved wood treasure chest, which will be opened at the table, triggering a smoke show and illuminating its contents.

    “You’re not paying for the piece of meat,” proprietor Naftali Abenaim told the New York Jewish Week. “You’re paying for the experience.”

    Kosher restaurants have undergone a renaissance over the past 15 years or so, according to Elan Kornblum, founder of the 80,000-member Great Kosher Restaurants Foodies group on Facebook. Social media has upped the ante, he said, and kosher diners — like all diners — have higher expectations than years past. “The palate of consumers is more educated and sophisticated, demanding more,” Kornblum said. “Everyone has a phone, is a blogger, and likes to post.”

    Mocha Red, for example, has featured guest DJs, Broadway performers who serenade diners at their tables, and even fire dancers, who adroitly spiral through the room while maneuvering flaming props. The nightclub-like decor is anything but boring, too: Guests dine under portraits of movie stars, which are offset by murals by Miami street artist “Mr. Exclusive” depicting the likes of the Pink Panther, Scrooge McDuck and Monopoly’s Rich Uncle Pennybags.

    And now, with his latest restaurant, which is expected to open later this month, Abenaim is aiming to draw diverse crowds to the 3,500-square-foot, two-story space at 4 East 46th Street. Here, patrons are greeted by a life-size “Companion” figure from popular graffiti artist KAWS, who stands at attention in front of a highly Instagrammable pink floral wall. With its focus on hamburgers and steaks, Abenaim hopes that Mocha Burger Lux will be a destination for Midtown workers for lunch as well as happy hour. “We’re the only kosher restaurant with a real happy hour,” he claims. “There is nothing in the area to go to — we’re gonna have the Jewish and the non-Jewish crowd.”

    When asked who he thinks will order the new restaurant’s 24K Gold Plated Golden-Burger, “people who want to be seen,” Abenaim said. “We live in a world where everybody wants to be different. Everybody wants to be seen, to feel special.”

     

    Abenaim knows a thing or two about generating buzz. Being a restaurateur was a later-in-life switch for the 47-year-old, who took a circuitous route to the restaurant industry, acquiring skills as a sofer (scribe), a mashgiach (kosher supervisor), a shochet (ritual slaughterer) and a cantor. He was also a one-time dental student, an accomplished spin instructor and, perhaps most notably of all, a hatmaker to the stars.

    As the proprietor of Naftali Millinery, his creations were available at Saks Fifth Avenue and Bergdorf Goodman’s, and customers included Eva Longoria, Pink, Charlize Theron and Sharon Stone, among others. He received a “Milli Award” in 2004 and 2006, naming him Hat Designer of the Year in an industry-wide international design competition.

    The successful business had unlikely origins: When he was a junior at Yeshiva University, Abenaim’s father, a Montreal-based furrier, sent him to the garment district on an errand. While there, Abenaim — who was the costume designer for YU’s Dramatics Society, having learned to sew from his father — purchased 18 unadorned “hat bodies” and some bows and ribbons, with the intention of creating a selection of fedora hats for his wife.

    He was pleased enough with his creations to set up a rack in his father’s booth at a Javits Center trade show. He hoped for a little interest from the Orthodox community, thinking that observant women might favor his stylish chapeaus. Much to his surprise, he was approached by a cruise line, which purchased the entire collection, placing a six-figure order, and his hat business took off from there.

    “The best chefs have started in their grandmas’ kitchen,” said Abenaim, recalling how his grandmother taught him to cook “hamburguesas” as a boy. He credits his Mémé with inspiring his passion for food and the culinary arts. As a young man, he had worked as a busboy at a French pastry shop in Quebec, advancing quickly to apprentice, and since then, he said, he dreamed of having his own place. Of course it had to be strictly kosher.

    Abenaim’s first foray into the kosher restaurant business was in 2009, when he opened a bistro and patisserie in Teaneck, New Jersey, near where he lives. He named the dairy restaurant Mocha Bleu, after the blue and brown jacquard wallpaper that adorned the walls.

    Since then, Abenaim has focused exclusively on the fleishig (meat) side, opening Mocha Burger in Soho in 2015. At the time, kosher restaurants in Manhattan were clustered uptown, so his restaurant was something of a rarity. Other Mocha restaurants followed, including the Upper East Side’s 18-seat Mocha Burger Express, which has since closed.

    Abenaim told the New York Jewish Week that he imports his beef from Uruguay, because he cannot source kosher hormone- and antibiotic-free, free range, grass-fed cattle within the U.S. He spent nine months experimenting to come up with the special short rib blend he uses for his burgers, and his restaurants also grind their own meat.

     

    Abenaim’s establishments are also embracing the trend of offering what appears to be the unkosher combination of milk and meat. They don’t: All of Abenaim’s restaurants are certified by the Orthodox Union, but he’ll pair meat with accompaniments like mock cheese, made of coconut or almond milk, or bacon made from lamb or beef. Although such combinations are technically kosher according to Jewish law, they are not universally embraced by observant Jews.

    Kornblum points out that people often want what they cannot have — and therefore many kosher diners are intrigued by something that so closely resembles that which is forbidden to them. “We’ll all go because we want to try it and see what’s the appeal,” he said.

    “There’s a transition of mentalities that’s happening in today’s world and it’s going to take time,” Abenaim said. “The fact that it’s a ‘no-no,’ that’s disappearing. People want it.”

    Kornblum sees Abenaim’s newest establishment as a prime example of how newer kosher restaurants want to see themselves within the larger New York City culinary community. They want to say “We’re not just a great restaurant, we’re a great restaurant that happens to be kosher,” he said.

    Abenaim concurs. When patrons leave Mocha Burger Lux, he said, “I expect them to say, ‘When can I come back?’”


    Listen to the VINnews podcast on:

    iTunes | Spotify | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | Podbean | Amazon

    Follow VINnews for Breaking News Updates


    Connect with VINnews

    Join our WhatsApp group


    93 Comments
    Most Voted
    Newest Oldest
    Inline Feedbacks
    View all comments
    Yitz
    Yitz
    10 months ago

    I would consider myself a foodie and extremely open minded but this is going to far disgusting this isn’t what we yidden are meant to strive for even in a kosher cuisine environment

    Hayim
    Hayim
    10 months ago

    Considering the meet probably comes from a calf…perhaps we should call it “The Aigel HaZahav Burger”. Not meant to be funny, rather quite tragic.
    ה’ ירחם עלינו

    Turn gold into excrement?!
    Turn gold into excrement?!
    10 months ago

    Can this senseless consumerism and showoff culture get any worse?! These imbecilic money worshippers have to be ridiculed, with as much cruel cynicism as necessary, in order to make this kind of consumerism uncool. If not stopped now, these money-worshipping fools will eventually peer-pressure the rest of the tzibur into even more wasteful spending, which already happens to be bad enough.

    Hayim
    Hayim
    10 months ago

    “We’re the only kosher restaurant with a real happy hour,” he claims. “There is nothing in the area to go to — we’re gonna have the Jewish and the non-Jewish crowd.”

    That is exactly what the Jewish crowd needs…the non-Jewish crowd!?!

    I’m sorry….am I the only one who is appaled?
    I wish the owner well and I pray he makes a ton of money….but not in the kosher restaurant business.

    My fellow Jews….we’re in Mitzrayim.

    Broodje Halfom
    Broodje Halfom
    10 months ago

    Ridiculous

    Phineas
    Phineas
    10 months ago

    This should not be who we are.

    Lgb
    Lgb
    10 months ago

    Piggish

    A concerned yid
    A concerned yid
    10 months ago

    Disgusting

    DLZ
    DLZ
    10 months ago

    If your yeshiva spot you there, or sees your post on insta, you will lose your tuition concession.

    Mr. Cohen
    Mr. Cohen
    10 months ago

    Babylonian Talmud, tractate Chullin, page 84B:

    A man should always spend less than he can afford on food and drink…

    The_Truth
    Noble Member
    The_Truth
    10 months ago

    Who is giving this place a hashgocha?
    The food may be technically kosher, but there doesn’t seem to be anything ‘kosher’ with this “Aigel-haZahov” burger at all.

    Educated Archy
    Educated Archy
    10 months ago

    It will become the in thing and anyone who wnats to feel cool will dine there.
    How will everyone pay for this now that the PPP Covid money tree is dead?
    Simple take crazy risks in ventures that don’t make sense bec you need to fund this kind of lavish lifetsyle. And when you fall on your face cry poverty

    King Kishka
    King Kishka
    10 months ago

    I am so glad Golus has finally ended. It seems like it has taken so long but we made it!! Our grandparents would be so proud of us.

    Mr. Cohen
    Mr. Cohen
    10 months ago

    Rabbeinu Yonah of Gerona,
    Shaarei Teshuvah, Shaar 3, Paragraph 82:

    We have been warned [by the Torah] to not waste even a small amount of money…

    The Guardian of Forever
    The Guardian of Forever
    10 months ago

    You can’t just eat this burger.

    You have to give it an aliyah.

    Mr. Cohen
    Mr. Cohen
    10 months ago

    Midrash Tehillim for chapter 4, Paragraph 13 of 13:

    Here is a parable of a righteous man and a wicked man who visited an inn.
    The wicked man ate large quantities of fish, meats and birds.
    The righteous man ate vegetables.

    D. B. Cooper
    D. B. Cooper
    10 months ago

    This consumerism will continue unabated until the Rabbonim and Roshei Yeshiva and Rebbes step up and take a stand. So long as this is tolerated because the people who spend this money also give to the Yeshivos and Mosdos then nothing will change. And don’t count on the Agudah to say anything about it either.

    Moshe
    Moshe
    10 months ago

    The Jewish world as we know it has come to an end…it’s all about Fressing now..our ancestors are turning over in their graves

    Bin Hakos
    Bin Hakos
    10 months ago

    This is something klal ysirael really needs and is the solution to many many criseses.

    Yossie
    Yossie
    10 months ago

    every person after 120
    will have to give a din vcheshbon on what he did with the wealth hashem showered him with

    Samuel
    Samuel
    10 months ago

    Ad asher yaitzai mayapchem

    Pinny
    Pinny
    10 months ago

    Uruguay meat is like dog food compared to US Meat

    No restaurant uses it

    Cleverisms
    Cleverisms
    10 months ago

    “The palate of consumers is more educated and sophisticated, demanding more”

    This is a lie. There’s no education or sophistication. It’s simply a perversion of eating, a holy act to partake in the blessings of HaShem to sustain our material bodies so our Nashama can enjoy a zechus in this temporary world.
    קדש עצמך במוצר לך
    What motivates such a sick idea? To promote hedonism, spending obscene amounts of money to prove exactly what?
    This is not Judaism. This is not yiddishkeit. This is not kosher.
    People, it’s time to wake up.
    Read Rambam on the etiquette of eating.
    Stop the foolishness of impressing with your nonsensical spending habits. You become a model for ridicule.
    Shame on the proprietor who capitalizes on the weaknesses of the person who makes the bad choice of indulging in so called luxuries.
    A shameful representation of our holy nation. How can anyone justify such behavior? This golus is saturated with the twisted ideas that anything that be made to appear kosher, when it’s completely and unequivocally not.

    Sick, sick, sick, and getting sicker.

    shloime
    shloime
    10 months ago

    why not $180 already?

    Freefacer
    Freefacer
    10 months ago

    The travesty is the proprietor may actually be filling a demand for this type of gluttony.

    How many chasunas have we all been to (and may have been guilty ourselves) and seen obscenely over-the-top shmorgs pillaged by morbidly obese yidden?

    “But Jeshurun grew fat and kicked; You grew fat, and coarse. Then he forsook God who made him, And scorned the Rock of his salvation”.

    …read on in Devarim. It doesn’t end well.

    Marfern1
    Marfern1
    10 months ago

    Just in time for Parshas Korach.

    Conservative Carl
    Conservative Carl
    10 months ago

    Eating gold is not avodah zara, but it almost is. Why are you symbolically aligning yourself with greed?

    Rosalie J Lieberman
    Rosalie J Lieberman
    10 months ago

    Illustrates the warning that a person can be a glutton within the confines of halacha. And, add in the happy hour, except, does that make the wife and children at home happy, too? Doubt it.

    m shain
    m shain
    10 months ago

    i am stating a tzdaka campaign to raise funds for people who can afford this hamburger / luma nugura / all donation are NOT TAX DEDUCTIBLE

    Triumphinwhitehouse
    Triumphinwhitehouse
    10 months ago

    It’ll be the next askanim requirement

    Nekamanow
    Nekamanow
    10 months ago

    So I pay $25 for a garbage quarter pound burger at other kosher spots.

    lazerx
    lazerx
    10 months ago

    frum NY people must have too much money and not enough charities to give it to.

    hard at work yeshiva grad
    hard at work yeshiva grad
    10 months ago

    the only worse way to waste $$ would be to donate it to yaffed

    andy
    andy
    10 months ago

    is this a joke?

    Nekamanow
    Nekamanow
    10 months ago

    Here’s a thought…wish a yid success in his business. The free advertising he has gotten from this menu item has been amazing. Savvy guy. I wish him the best. Let’s face it folks, the $55 smoke burger on the regular menu ain’t cheap. Eating in Manhattan will cost ya

    Nekamanow
    Nekamanow
    10 months ago

    I do miss coffee bean where I could eat lunch for about $10 with a beverage!

    Bruria
    Bruria
    10 months ago

    Gold flakes = Symbols of Greed. Golden Calf. Materialism. Msg To owner Naftaly, this kind of buzz is not good for bizz. Change it up a bit. You can do better! Hatzlacha

    Yossi
    Yossi
    10 months ago

    So let me get this straight.
    $120 steak good.
    $175 steak bad

    Nate
    Nate
    10 months ago

    As according to many rishonim the purpose of shechita and not eating nveilah/treifah are due to minimizing pain and maximizing health respectively (eg Rambam, Ralbag, Ramban etc), the fact that this fellow is taking pains to ensure a free range and antibiotic free product makes it extremely mehudar from a kashrus standpoint and should be lauded and held up as a wonderful example of an orthodox jew and a restaurateur no less making sure animals are treated as humanely as possible while still consuming them. As far as gluttony is concerned who said theres anything wrong with trying out new items as long as it’s done with moderation. The famous Ramban is specifically discussing non stop pleasure consumption. Much hatzlacha to him.

    Charlie Hall
    Charlie Hall
    10 months ago

    Is gold kosher?

    לא להנאת גופי
    לא להנאת גופי
    10 months ago

    Can’t wait to try it this will be an epic experience. I wonder how my stomach will react. Finally a brother stepping up the kosher game….

    Kvetch
    Kvetch
    10 months ago

    Forgot the burgers, pls do a more detailed story on the fascinating owner:

    Abenaim knows a thing or two about generating buzz. Being a restaurateur was a later-in-life switch for the 47-year-old, who took a circuitous route to the restaurant industry, acquiring skills as a sofer (scribe), a mashgiach (kosher supervisor), a shochet (ritual slaughterer) and a cantor. He was also a one-time dental student, an accomplished spin instructor and, perhaps most notably of all, a hatmaker to the stars.