In the News

 

Hudson Malone has been featured between the pages of some of America’s most esteemed publications. You can find our classic, comforting menu and our first rate cocktails lauded in The New York Times, Eater, Imbibe, the WSJ, and many more.

 
Willie Geist interviewed Andy Samberg
 

Upstairs in our Siren Room, Andy Samberg sat down with NBC’s Willie Geist for an interview on what to expect from season 6 of ‘Brooklyn Nine-Nine’ and more.

 
Hudson-Malone-Ny-Joint_0000_Screen+Shot+2018-01-22+at+1.50.33+PM.pngMidtown’s Best Bar for Drinks
 

Have Your Own Cheers Moment at Midtown’s Best Bar for Drinks After Work.

 
Bartender Doug Quin
 

Doug Quinn's Rules of Etiquette

Bartender Doug Quinn explains his approach to hospitality and the deeper truth behind the “Quinn’s Laws.”

 
Bartender
 

The Bartender of Your Dreams

You need to see him in action, not least because his 126-year-old stage is one of the city’s classic bars, what he calls “the Vatican of saloons,” a living diorama of a certain era and sensibility, with its penny-tile floors, carved mahogany bar, tin ceiling and stained-glass transoms.

 
The Revenge Pub on East 53rd Street
 

The Revenge Pub on East 53rd Street

The draw at Hudson Malone is its owner. Depending on whom you ask, Mr. Quinn’s firing from P.J. Clarke’s was either an outrage or totally justified. There was a heated dispute between two patrons, and Mr. Quinn was not hesitant about picking sides and stating his case. P.J. Clarke’s did not respond to a call seeking comment.

 
Bow Tie
 

Hudson Malone, Doug Quinn's Tribute to Old NYC

Bartender Doug Quinn, formerly of P.J. Clarke's, soft opened his new Midtown East bar and restaurant Hudson Malone earlier this month. The tavern, named after Quinn's two sons, was designed to look like an old-timey saloon. A massive mahogany bar is the star of the room, while a classic jukebox, old pictures, and a chalkboard listing "Quinn's Laws" add some vintage charm. 

 
Hudson Malone's Doug Quinn
 

Hudson Malone's Doug Quinn Probably Knows Your Name

The first time I met Doug Quinn, he took me on a whirlwind tour of his Upper East Side space, Hudson Malone – named after his two sons, Hudson and Malone Quinn. The floors were creaky, the coffered tin ceiling appeared to be reclaimed from elsewhere, there was even a chalkboard emblazoned with Quinn’s Laws. Among them, “Listening is an art few come to master.” No surprises in this tried-and-true bar formula perhaps but it seems to be working, human traffic-wise for the barman turned owner.

 
 

“I'd rather die on my feet than live on my knees”

— Quinn's Laws