Farm-to-Table
The Best Brunch in the Hudson Valley
The Saturday and Sunday morning spots worth the drive — big portions, outdoor seating, relaxed pace, and the kind of menu that holds up for a slow meal.

Photo by Malcolm Garret on Pexels
Brunch in the Hudson Valley operates on a specific rhythm: arrive by 10:30 to beat the wait, expect to be there for two hours regardless, order at least one thing you didn't plan to. The scene is strong, dense with farm-sourcing kitchens running menus that work equally well with coffee or a bloody mary, and this is our working list of where to go.
The anchors
Shindig (Hudson). The platonic Hudson Valley weekend brunch. Big rooms, longer waits, a menu built around local eggs and whatever the farms are sending that week. The corned beef hash is the signature; the seasonal vegetable plates are quietly excellent. Outdoor seating in warm months. Book ahead or arrive early.
Phoenicia Diner (Phoenicia). A destination brunch that happens to be housed in a diner. The menu is the Catskills condensed, farm eggs, local bacon, rotating specials that take the diner form seriously. Weekend waits can run 90 minutes. Worth it.
Oriole 9 (Rhinebeck). The Rhinebeck brunch standard. A mixed menu (breakfast classics plus lunch-adjacent small plates) that means groups with different appetites all get what they want. Outdoor seating in good weather is among the best in the Valley, you're on a side street with morning sun.
Calico (Rhinebeck). Tiny, buzzy, egg-forward. Not a full three-hour brunch experience, more of a serious breakfast, but the quality is as high as anywhere in the Valley. Seating is limited; expect to wait.
Beacon
Beacon's weekend brunch scene has grown significantly over the past three years, partly on the back of the day-tripper crowd staying overnight and wanting a proper Sunday morning.
Bank Square Coffeehouse. The locals' spot. Coffee first, pastry second, full menu for those who need it. The vibe is the point.
The Vault. Sunday brunch program with rotating specials, the kitchen leans Mediterranean. The bar makes mocktails and cocktails equally seriously, so it's a venue that works whether or not you're drinking. See our mocktail programs guide.
Homespun Foods. Bakery-café hybrid with serious breakfast plates. Less expansive than Shindig but more reliable for a quick weekend morning.
New Paltz and Ulster County
Huckleberry (New Paltz). The standout. Farm eggs, house bread, serious drink program that extends to brunch. The outdoor patio is underrated. Weekend crowds are real; weekday brunch (they run a full breakfast menu most days) is the insider move.
Sticky Bun Cafe (New Paltz). Coffee shop turned brunch destination. Breakfast sandwiches are the house specialty; the menu is short and executed well.
Ric's Place (New Paltz). Classic diner brunch, eggs, pancakes, home fries, served with zero pretense. The antidote to the farm-to-table precision of Huckleberry.
Sweet Sue's (Phoenicia). Further west but worth the drive, pancakes are the draw, and the plant-based pancakes are as good as the regular ones. Strong vegan brunch option in a category that's usually thin.
Kingston
Kingston's brunch density has grown slower than Hudson's or Beacon's, but a few spots have become reliable weekend anchors.
Outdated (Kingston). A café with a legitimate small-plate brunch menu. Adaptogen-forward drink program if you're experimenting with the functional-beverage category (see our adaptogen guide).
Rondout Area spots. Several Rondout-neighborhood restaurants run weekend brunch — Ole Savannah being the most consistent. The waterfront setting compensates for a somewhat by-the-numbers menu.
The Crafted Kup (Poughkeepsie, technically Dutchess but close). Breakfast sandwiches and serious coffee. Weekday-and-weekend.
The cannabis-lifestyle brunch
We'll be honest about what this means: brunch after a morning wake-and-bake is a real Valley genre, and a few venues are particularly compatible.
What makes a spot cannabis-friendly for brunch:
- Generous portions. Sounds obvious; matters more than people admit.
- Outdoor seating. The post-consumption version of yourself often does better with fresh air than with a noisy dining room.
- Relaxed pacing. A server who doesn't turn tables aggressively. Shindig and Oriole 9 both pass this test.
- A drink program that works either way. If the spot runs a serious mocktail program alongside its bloody marys, you can mix a table without awkwardness.
Our top picks for this specific use case: Huckleberry (New Paltz), Oriole 9 (Rhinebeck), The Vault (Beacon).
Note: some consumers describe heightened flavor perception in ways that reward dishes you'd already be curious about. The corned beef hash at Shindig, the seasonal vegetable plate at Huckleberry, a Phoenicia Diner breakfast, these meals hit harder when your attention is there. Not a medical claim; just a pattern worth noting.
Seasonal notes
Summer Valley brunch is outdoor brunch. Every venue listed here has better weekend energy when the patios are open. Winter brunch compresses the options, indoor seating becomes the limiting factor, waits get longer, and the best-run kitchens (Shindig, Oriole 9, Phoenicia Diner) become crowded enough to require serious advance planning.
Shoulder seasons (May, September, October) are the sweet spot.
Related: Best Farm-to-Table Restaurants · Restaurants with Outdoor Seating · Best Mocktail Programs