A Hell's Kitchen bakery known for its alpaca-mascot 'llama' and cube-shaped viral croissants, which The Infatuation ranks among the city's viral-croissant spots even as it notes the shop's lines persist despite the trend's saturation.
No camera at Bibble & Sip yet — these are the closest live lines we cover.
damnlines hasn't pointed a lens at Bibble & Sip yet. The most-wanted lines get a camera first.
Bibble & Sip is one of the longer-running names in NYC's viral-pastry scene, and The Infatuation's viral-croissants roundup treats it as a proven draw rather than a flash-in-the-pan: the guide notes flavors rotate monthly and that 'the lines are still long' for its signature alpaca-shaped ('llama') and cube croissants, even as newer copycats have crowded the category. In its full review, The Infatuation separately calls Bibble & Sip 'one of our longest-standing all-time favourite bakeries in NYC' — language dessert-trend aggregator Dessert Correspondents echoed, writing it's 'one of the few bakeries actually worth the hype.'
No outlet publishes an official wait-time figure or reservation policy for the shop, and neither The Infatuation review nor the venue's own site describes a booking system — the operation is counter-service in a small storefront. Customer reports gathered from the shop's Yelp page (not independently verified by press) describe weekends as the most packed stretch, with the space so full there's often nowhere to sit and popular shapes selling out; treat that as directional rather than confirmed, since no journalist outlet has published hard wait-time or capacity data for this location.
Patterns as reported by press and regulars — not measured by damnlines.
Reservations: No reservations reported; walk-in counter service only.
Walk-ins: Yes — walk-in counter service, no booking system found.
No outlet has published an exact minute figure, but The Infatuation's viral-croissants guide reports that 'the lines are still long' for the shop's signature llama and cube croissants even with monthly-rotating flavors keeping demand fresh. Customer reports (via Yelp) point to weekends as the most crowded time, when the small space fills up and popular shapes can sell out.
No press coverage or the venue's own site describes a reservation system; it operates as a walk-in counter-service bakery and cafe.
Yes — it's a walk-in counter-service shop with no booking system reported anywhere, though The Infatuation notes the lines for its viral croissants can be long, especially on busier days.
It's best known for its shaped viral croissants — an alpaca-faced ('llama') croissant with gingery cream filling and a cube-shaped version — plus its cream puffs and macarons; The Infatuation calls it 'one of our longest-standing all-time favourite bakeries in NYC.'
Yes — per The Infatuation's viral-croissants guide, Bibble & Sip's flavors rotate monthly, which is part of why the shop keeps drawing lines rather than seeing interest taper off.
Sources: The Infatuation (viral croissants guide) · The Infatuation (Bibble & Sip review) · Dessert Correspondents