West Village
27½ Morton StNew York, NY 10014
Closed Mondays
Worth the line down Morton Street.

A family recipe Chris Phelps has made since he was four years old. Crisp lacy edges, a soft custardy middle, one square of cinnamon butter — and never, ever syrup.

Chris Phelps has been making these griddle cakes since he was four years old, standing on a chair at his mother's stove. “Mama Salty” never served them with syrup — family legend says she simply refused to mop up after two sticky boys — and it turned out she was right. The molasses in the batter and a melting square of cinnamon butter are all these cakes have ever needed.
They hit the menu at Salt's Cure in 2010, and the lines started wrapping around the corner. By 2017 the griddle cakes had earned their own restaurant. They've been the reason for the wait ever since.
“No syrup. Never syrup.”
Every table gets the same question: cakes, eggs, and which of the house-butchered meats? Build yours and we'll print the ticket.

Salt's Cure opened in 2010 on a West Hollywood corner — chefs Chris Phelps and Zak Walters doing whole-animal butchery and stubbornly Californian cooking. Jonathan Gold called the pork chop “a tour de force.” But it was weekend brunch that broke the place: a family oatmeal griddle cake recipe that drew lines around the block.
In 2017, the original storefront was reborn as Breakfast by Salt's Cure — a diner devoted to one perfect morning meal. Santa Monica followed, then the West Village, then Brooklyn twice over. In June 2026 the original WeHo counter served its last griddle cake and the team fired up a new flat-top in Silver Lake the very next morning.
Sixteen years in, the plate hasn't changed: cakes, eggs, house-cured meat. Morning light. No syrup.
Phelps & Walters open a tiny nose-to-tail Californian kitchen at 7494 Santa Monica Blvd. The weekend-brunch griddle cakes start a line that never really ends.
Salt's Cure relocates to 1155 N Highland Ave, Hollywood — nearly three times the seats, plus a full bar and dinner service.
The original WeHo storefront is reborn on May 8 as Breakfast by Salt's Cure — griddle cakes, eggs, and house-butchered meats, morning hours only.
Montana Avenue opens in March. In November, the griddle crosses the country to 27½ Morton St in the West Village.
Carroll Gardens joins at 368 Court St.
Prospect Heights opens on Vanderbilt Avenue's restaurant row.
After 16 years, the original WeHo counter closes June 24 — and the same crew opens Silver Lake at 4348 Fountain Ave on June 25. The griddle never cooled. Days later, the family announced the original Salt's Cure on Highland is becoming a Breakfast by Salt's Cure too.
The whole table
Two & two
The sandwich
Hash, crispedWorth the line down Morton Street.
The friendliest griddle in Brooklyn.
House-cured picnic ham worth crossing the borough for.
Sixteen years of WeHo mornings, now firing on Fountain Ave.
Tiny counter, big reputation, a mile from the beach.
The Oatmeal Griddle Cake Mix — molasses oats and the cinnamon sugar included, exactly like the counter makes them. Your kitchen, Mama Salty's rules: butter square, no syrup.
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