New York City restaurant Healthalicious serves up food for the fitness-focused. Dishes sport names like “Hard Core” and “Get Ripped.” But what the calorie-conscious eatery may end up ripping up is U.S. Rep. Michael Grimm’s political career.
The counter-serve café, nestled between an Italian restaurant and a children’s toy store on the Upper East Side, is at the center of a brewing storm for the Republican, who was indicted on fraud charges in connection with Healthalicious, which Grimm partly owned and oversaw from 2007 to 2010.
Federal prosecutors allege that Grimm failed to report more than $1 million in sales and wages, paid workers off the books in cash — many of them did not have legal status to work in the U.S. — to avoid paying taxes, and lied about it under oath in 2013 while he was a member of Congress. Prosecutors also say Grimm used an AOL email account to run the restaurant and discuss the off-the-books transactions with an employee during the time he was campaigning.
If you weren’t aware of Healthalicious’ dicey history, you wouldn’t get any clues after visiting the eatery — which has the slogan “better than delicious.” Four tiny tables with lime green booths line the walls, which are empty save for a giant menu pushing items like “healthalicious eggplant schnizel,” “nemo tuna” and “distance runner.” During a recent lunch hour, foot traffic was slow — but deliverymen on bikes frequently buzzed in and out to pick up orders. It’s a pretty normal-seeming restaurant.
When asked about Grimm, the man behind the counter – eager to initially help and even fix a wobbly table — clammed up. He insisted that he didn’t have names or contact information for any current managers or owners and that they rarely, if ever, come in.
Customers too were unaware of Grimm — many had no idea that he was even a congressman — or that the restaurant could be his downfall. Nor did they seem to let it get in the way of their “gym plates” and “baked not fried chicken cutlets.”
“It has nothing to do with me. I look at as if I’m hungry and I don’t have a lot of time and it’s in the area, then that’s what I’m going to do,” said John Feliciano, 24, who works nearby and comes to “Healthalicious” about once a week. Liz Henriquez, 28, a first time customer who tried the falafel, echoed that sentiment. “I’m totally fine with shopping here again.”
The Yelp reviews certainly haven’t been as kind, with the restaurant garnering a mediocre 3 star average based on 44 reviews – some of which were written after Grimm left. Gripes include poor quality ingredients, expensive dishes and sanitation concerns.
“The guy who was preparing my salad was using one hand to prepare it and the other hand to pick his nose,” wrote one unhappy diner back in February. “This place put me in the hospital with the worst food poisoning I ever had … The establishment is dirty, the employees are rude and the food is not worth the days of agony I endured” another wrote in 2011.









