Boston Restaurants

In a city synonymous with tradition, Boston chefs have spent recent years rewriting culinary history. The stuffy, wood-paneled formality is gone; the endless renditions of chowdah, lobster, and cod have retired; and the assumption that true foodies better hop the next Amtrak to New York is also—thankfully—a thing of the past.

In their place, a crop of young chefs has ascended, opening small, upscale neighborhood spots that use local New England ingredients to delicious effect. Traditional eats can still be found (Durgin-Park remains the best place to get baked beans), but many diners now gravitate toward innovative food in understated environs. Whether you're looking for casual French, down-home Southern cooking, some of the best sushi in the country, or Vietnamese banh mi sandwiches, Boston restaurants are ready to deliver. Eclectic Japanese spot o ya and iconic French restaurant L'Espalier have garnered widespread attention, while a coterie of star chefs like Barbara Lynch, Lydia Shire, and Ken Oringer have built mini-empires and thrust the city to the forefront of the national dining scene.

The fish and shellfish brought in from nearby shores continue to inform the regional cuisine, along with locally grown fruits and vegetables, handmade cheeses, and humanely raised heritage game and meats. But don't expect boiled lobsters and baked apple pie. Today’s chefs, while showcasing New England’s bounty, might offer you lobster cassoulet with black truffles, bacon-clam pizza from a wood-burning oven, and a tomato herb salad harvested from the restaurant’s rooftop garden. In many ways, though, Boston remains solidly skeptical of trends. To wit: the cupcake craze and food truck trend hit here later than other cities; the Hawaii-inspired poke movement has only recently arrived. And over in the university culture of Cambridge, places like the Harvest and Oleana espoused the locavore and slow-food movements before they became buzzwords.

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  • 1. Antico Forno

    $$$ | North End

    Many of the menu choices here come from the eponymous wood-burning brick oven, which turns out surprisingly delicate thin-crust pizzas simply topped with tomato and buffalo mozzarella or complicated combos like pistachio pesto, fresh mozzarella, and sausage. While the name, which translates to "old oven," gives the pizzas top billing, Antico excels at a variety of Italian country dishes that harken back to the Old Country, like veal parmigiana, osso buco with pork shank, chicken saltimbocca, and handmade pastas; the specialty, gnocchi, is rich and creamy but light. The joint is cramped and noisy, but also homey and comfortable—which means that your meal will resemble a raucous dinner with an adopted Italian family. Its rustic decor of large tiles, huge rectangular bar, and imposing brick archway add even more authenticity as you fill your belly.

    93 Salem St., Boston, Massachusetts, 02113, USA
    617-723–6733

    Known For

    • Wood-fired, brick-oven pizza
    • Italian country classics
    • Casual, jovial atmosphere
  • 2. Deuxave

    $$$ | Back Bay

    At the corner of two avenues (Commonwealth and Massachusetts), which is how this restaurant got its name (deux is French for "two"), you'll find this snazzy, dark-wood enclave serving sophisticated dishes like spice-crusted ahi tuna and braised pork belly, pan-seared Atlantic halibut, and organic chicken with parsnip and foie gras agnolotti. Make sure to pair your meal with a bottle from the thoughtfully crafted and surprisingly affordable wine list served by an attentive staff.

    371 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, Massachusetts, 02115, USA
    617-517–5915

    Known For

    • Modern French food
    • Nine-hour French onion soup
    • Reasonably priced wine list
  • 3. Fox & the Knife Enoteca

    $$$

    Chef-owner Karen Akunowicz steps up with hearty, traditional Italian food inspired by her time as a chef and pasta maker in Italy. Locals love it so much that in order to score a table, especially on the weekends, you have to book a reservation about a month or so out. But once you get in, you'll realize it was worth the wait to dig into this James Beard Award–winner's carb-heavy fare, like warm focaccia, handmade pasta, pork Milanese, braised lamb, or whole fish. Plates are on the smaller side, so make sure to order with abandon, although your wallet won't thank you for it. At the bar, order the flight of Amaro varieties. 

    28 W. Broadway, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
    617-766–8630

    Known For

    • Award-winning chef
    • Focaccia
    • Excellent service

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Mon.
  • 4. Giulia

    $$$ | Harvard Square

    With exposed-brick walls and soft lighting, the heart and soul of this charming Italian restaurant is its communal pasta table at which chef Michael Pagliarini spends hours hand-rolling superlative pastas for dishes like buckwheat pizzoccheri and pasta alla Bolognese. Plates such as house-made lamb sausage, monkfish piccata, warm semolina cakes, grilled barramundi, and Sardinian flatbread are original, generous, and, of course delicious. Known for its romantic nature, it's the perfect place for lovers to linger over a chocolate terrine and cappuccino.

    1682 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02138, USA
    617-441–2800

    Known For

    • Excellent Italian food
    • Silky pastas
    • Warm, softly lit space

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun.
  • 5. haley.henry

    $$$ | Downtown

    Charcuterie, tinned fish, ceviche: You can eat well at this excellent Downtown wine bar that's small in size but big in reputation. Definitely make a reservation before showing up; it can be busy, even on a Wednesday night. The owner and her staff are incredibly well educated on wines, and they can lead you through the curated wine list.

    45 Province St., Boston, Massachusetts, 02108, USA
    617-208–6000

    Known For

    • Wine from small, independent producers
    • Staff knows their stuff
    • Incredible service

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun.–Mon.
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  • 6. Helmand

    $$$ | Kendall Square

    The area's first Afghan restaurant, named after the country's most important river, welcomes you into its cozy Kendall Square confines with Afghan rugs, a wood-burning oven, and exotic, yet extremely approachable food that reflects the motherland's location halfway between the Middle East and India. Standouts, beyond the chewy warm bread, include magical names from a faraway land like aushak (leek-stuffed ravioli over yogurt with beef ragu and mint), chapendaz (marinated grilled beef tenderloin served with cumin-spiced hot pepper–tomato puree), and a vegetarian baked pumpkin platter. The warm atmosphere, courtesy of a small fireplace and a woodburning oven that provides heat for the restaurant's famous flatbread, gives off the comforts of home while maintaining a world's away vibe.

    143 1st St., Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02142, USA
    617-492–4646

    Known For

    • Excellent Afghan fare
    • Enveloping atmosphere
    • Incredible breads

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Reservations essential
  • 7. Kava Neo-Taverna

    $$$ | South End

    This sweet little white-washed taverna serves authentic Greek cuisine, with many ingredients imported directly from the Mediterranean, such as the feta, fish, and octopus. Order some crisp white wine off the hard-to-find Greek wines and liquors list to sip with a parade of home-style dishes, from tasty meze plates to entrées like grilled lamb chops. The tables may be tight and the wait a bit long without a reservation, but you'll forget about these tiny inconveniences once dinner arrives.

    315 Shawmut Ave., Boston, Massachusetts, 02118, USA
    617-356–1100

    Known For

    • Authentic Greek favorites
    • Taverna feel
    • High-quality ingredients

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No lunch weekdays
  • 8. Neptune Oyster

    $$$ | North End

    This piccolo oyster bar, the first of its kind in the neighborhood, has only 22 chairs, but the long marble bar adorned with mirrors has extra seating for 15 more patrons, who can watch the oyster shuckers deftly undo handfuls of more than a dozen different kinds of bivalves to savor as an appetizer or on a Neptune plateau, a gleaming tower of oysters and other raw-bar items piled over ice that you can order from the slip of paper they pass out listing each day's crustacean options. Daily specials run the gamut, from lobster spaghetti to scarlet prawns to sea urchin bucatini. Dishes change seasonally, but a couple of year-round favorites include the spicy North End Cioppino (fish stew) and the signature Maine lobster roll that, hot or cold, overflows with meat. Service is prompt even when it gets busy (as it is most of the time). Go early to avoid a long wait.

    63 Salem St., Boston, Massachusetts, 02113, USA
    617-742–3474

    Known For

    • Casual setting
    • Italian-style seafood
    • Generously packed lobster roll

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Reservations not accepted
  • 9. Oleana

    $$$ | Central Square

    With two restaurants (including Sofra in Cambridge) and two cookbooks to her name, chef-owner Ana Sortun continues to bewitch area diners with her intricately spiced eastern Mediterranean mezes (small plates) made with fresh-picked produce from her husband's nearby Siena Farms. Oleana's menu changes often, but look for the hot, crispy-fried mussels starter and Sultan's Delight (tamarind-glazed beef with smoky eggplant puree) along with large plates of Iskender lamb kebab and lemon chicken. The Chef's choice is a delightful vegetable meze, complete with a rich dessert. When the weather is inviting, the cozy atmosphere of this tucked away spot spills out into a peaceful back patio garden.

    134 Hampshire St., Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02139, USA
    617-661–0505

    Known For

    • Eastern Mediterranean menu
    • Mouthwatering small plates
    • Deft use of spices

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Reservations essential
  • 10. Row 34

    $$$

    Emphasizing oysters and local craft beers, this contemporary seafood restaurant has a boisterous energy contained only by its soaring ceilings. A neighborhood crowd comes for the excellent menu devoted to raw things, fried seafood, a variety of "rolls," and fish-based entrées. With 24 taps, beer plays a big role in the experience, enticing regulars to work their way through European-inspired American craft beers; there are also more than 50 by the bottle, ranging from ciders to sours and more.

    383 Congress St., Boston, Massachusetts, 02210, USA
    617-553–5900

    Known For

    • Local oysters fresh from restaurant's own oyster farm
    • Seafood—carnivores and vegetarians should head elsewhere
    • Excellent selection of American craft beer
  • 11. Saltie Girl

    $$$ | Back Bay

    Step into this Back Bay raw bar specializing in snappy cocktails and luscious preparations of all things seafood and you'll fall hook, line, and sinker for everything on the menu, including platters of fresh-shucked oysters on crushed ice, torched salmon belly with charred avocado, smoked fish that would make a New York deli owner proud, seafood-topped toasts, and a butter-drenched warm lobster roll overflowing with fresh meat. Rounding out the menu are tins of domestic and imported gourmet shellfish and fish (including caviar) served in all their oily goodness with bread, butter, smoked salt, lemon, and sweet pepper jam.

    279 Dartmouth St., Boston, Massachusetts, 02116, USA
    617-267–0691

    Known For

    • Creative seafood dishes
    • Large tinned seafood selection
    • Hip crowd
  • 12. Toro

    $$$ | South End

    Chefs Ken Oringer and Jamie Bissonnette's tapas joint, which now has an outpost in Manhattan, is a lively, popular spot where the Barcelona-inspired small plates, such as the jamon and queso, salt cod croquettes, and grilled corn with cotija cheese, are hefty enough to make a meal out of a few. The traditional or vegetarian paella is also perfect for sharing with a hungry crowd. A predominantly Spanish wine list complements the plates. Crowds have been known to wait it out for more than an hour for dinner, which is on a first-come, first-served basis. Aim to go for lunch during the week for a less hectic, but just as satisfying, experience.

    1704 Washington St., Boston, Massachusetts, 02118, USA
    617-536–4300

    Known For

    • Excellent traditional tapas
    • Cozy, small dining room
    • Cult following

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Reservations not accepted
  • 13. Alcove

    $$$ | West End

    A mix of New England seafood dishes, European-style charcuterie, and an international flair to most everything else describes what you'll see on the menu at this West End restaurant with a view; you're meant to share plates with your guests, but you can also order solo if that's your preference. Meals here are comfortable, with coastal vibes and spectacular views of the Zakim Bridge.

    50 Lovejoy Wharf, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
    617-248–0050

    Known For

    • Tasty weekend brunch
    • Fantastic, small-producer wine program, with hands-on customer approach
    • Fantastic views
  • 14. Alden & Harlow

    $$$ | Harvard Square

    This boisterous subterranean restaurant with a 30-seat bar and industrial-chic design specializes in rustic, seasonal snacks and small plates layered with flavor. Whether it's brunch or dinner, start with an expertly made cocktail before you dig into a menu that includes little dishes like seared bluefin crudo, chicken-fried local rabbit, and sweet corn pancakes. Desserts are limited, but brunch is hearty with options like New York strip steak and eggs Benedict and pickled corn biscuit and gravy with Thai sausage. For a quieter spot best for easy conversing, ask for a table in the Greenhouse, a small space to the right of the entrance with a foliage-filled wall.

    40 Brattle St., Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02138, USA
    617-864–2100

    Known For

    • Flavor-packed sharing plates
    • Terrific cocktails
    • Boisterous feel

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No lunch
  • 15. B&G Oysters

    $$$ | South End

    B&G Oysters' chef Barbara Lynch (of No. 9 Park, the Butcher Shop, Sportello, DRINK, and Menton fame) offers a style-conscious seafood restaurant with fresher than fresh oysters from both coasts; creative, seasonal dishes; and New England classics, including one of the best lobster rolls in the city. Designed to imitate the inside of an oyster shell, the iridescent bar glows with silvery, candlelit tiles and a sophisticated crowd that in warm weather fills the hidden outdoor patio strung with tiny white lights.

    550 Tremont St., Boston, Massachusetts, 02116, USA
    617-423–0550

    Known For

    • Excellent wine list
    • Delicate portions
    • Stylish setting

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Reservations essential
  • 16. Bar Cicchetti

    $$$ | Government Center

    Fuel up after your Faneuil Hall trip with dinner in this small yet mighty spot, just steps from the famed marketplace. A gorgeous marble bar wraps around the center, with high- and low-top tables that invite you to share the personal Roman-style pizzas thick and piled high. Seafood pasta dishes like Calabrian Chili Orecchiette and Squid Ink Lumache Frutti di Mare and entrées such as Chianti-Braised Lamb Shank and Livornese-style Local Cod satiate hearty appetites. Their wine-by-the-glass list is over 25 strong, and the craft cocktails range from smoky to fruit-forward and fun.

    54 Devonshire St., Boston, Massachusetts, 02109, USA

    Known For

    • Wine by the glass
    • Brussels and brie pizza
    • Chianti-braised lamb shank
  • 17. Barcelona Wine Bar

    $$$ | South End

    While diving right into the monumental cheese and charcuterie menu seems like a solid starter bet, save some room for the outstanding tapas at this lively wine bar. Favorites on repeat with its young sophisticated diners include blistered shishitos, patatas bravas, chorizo with figs, spicy empanadas, and sauteed mussels. The animated crowd's chatter rarely lowers below a dull roar, and with a lengthy list of mostly Spanish wines, happy glass clinking can also be heard throughout the night. The location in Brookline is equally as popular (read: packed).

    525 Tremont St., Boston, Massachusetts, 02116, USA
    617-266–2600

    Known For

    • Lively atmosphere
    • Flavorful shared plates
    • Extensive wine list
  • 18. Black Lamb

    $$$ | South End

    Black Lamb's chefs call the American brasserie "a love letter to the South End." Translation: they pour their hearts into the menu to captivate the palates of all who dine there, with dishes such as duck breast frites, lamb burger, roasted cauliflower with anchovies, and day boat scallops.

    571 Tremont St., Boston, Massachusetts, 02118, USA
    617-982–6330

    Known For

    • Inventive cocktail program
    • Flavorful takes on classics
    • Creative kids menu
  • 19. Bostonia Public House

    $$$ | Downtown

    Airy and classic in atmosphere, this modern restaurant focuses on two things: food and local history (it is, after all, situated in a historic 1902 building). The menu features elevated takes on comfort food; at lunch expect more sandwiches. Who wouldn't want to dive into a tater tot poutine or a bowl of house-made onion dip with potato chips, while chatting up your dining partners and enjoying the live music that happens on most nights? Social describes the vibe on most nights, more so later into the evening.  Bostonia gets busy, so it's a good idea to make a reservation.

    131 State St., Boston, Massachusetts, USA
    617-948–9800

    Known For

    • Fantastic weekend brunch
    • Long bar with lots of seating
    • Live music in the evenings
  • 20. Buttermilk & Bourbon

    $$$ | Back Bay

    Buttermilk & Bourbon is chef Jason Santos's take on New Orleans fare, with dishes like beignets topped with powdered sugar, buttermilk biscuits paired with house-made sausage gravy, and fried chicken and waffles brought to your table in the cool lower-level space. Weekend brunch offers banana-cinnamon French toast, duck confit hash, and s'mores bacon. Cocktails, like hurricanes and sazeracs, keep to the NOLA theme.

    160 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, Massachusetts, 02116, USA
    617-266–1122

    Known For

    • Southern cuisine
    • Fun scene
    • Buttermilk fried chicken

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