There won’t be any chestnuts roasting around the famous Dyker Heights Christmas display this year.

Or any other kind of food, after the City Council passed legislation banning food vendors from setting up in the glittering neighborhood that draws up to 150,000 visitors between Thanksgiving and New Year’s Day, the Brooklyn Paper reported.

The neighborhood complained for years that the pack of vendors was making life miserable by generating too much trash, taking up parking spaces and sending fumes from their trucks wafting through the air for 12 or more hours a day.

In a recent community board survey, 99 percent of locals said their lives had been disrupted in various ways by vendors.

Councilman Justin Brannan introduced the bill in August.

“The vendors were making our small neighborhood feel like a 40-day street festival,” said Josephine Beckmann, District Manager of Community Board 10. “Can you imagine living in that? Ultimately, this is a place where people live.”