Best Restaurants Archives - Boston Magazine https://www.bostonmagazine.com/tag/best-restaurants/ Thu, 30 Oct 2025 18:18:20 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://bomag.o0bc.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2017/10/cropped-boston-magazine-favicon-32x32.png Best Restaurants Archives - Boston Magazine https://www.bostonmagazine.com/tag/best-restaurants/ 32 32 Top 50 Restaurants in Boston https://www.bostonmagazine.com/restaurants/best-restaurants-in-boston/ Tue, 21 Oct 2025 04:00:14 +0000 https://www.bostonmagazine.com/?page_id=2043167 Edited by Rachel Leah Blumenthal with additional reporting by CELINA COLBY, MC Slim JB, AND NATHAN TAVARES. Visuals produced by Madison Trapkin S pecial occasions […]

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Lê Madeline. / Photo by Nina Gallant

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pecial occasions have gotten a lot more relaxed around here. Don’t get us wrong—Greater Boston still has those grand spots with white tablecloths, and you’ll see a few on this list. But these days, most of us are celebrating in noisy restaurants that pulse with energy—restaurants where jeans-wearing servers deliver caviar and seafood towers to barstool diners, while club beats set the mood.

That spirit runs through this year’s Top 50 Restaurants—places that genuinely feel special-occasion-worthy (regardless of tablecloth status), whether you’re commemorating a milestone or just had an amazing day at work. The criteria are pretty simple: full-service dinner, open at least a year. After that, it’s purely subjective, and we’re excited to share this year’s picks: restaurants offering dramatic omakase, several spins on New England seafood, rustic Italian, and bold Thai. (Yes, traditionalists, we’ve got your quiet corners and crisp linens covered, too.)

Also: Top 10 new restaurants; five delectable Boston-area bakeries and cafés; five can’t-miss Boston brunches; five favorite restaurants in the suburbs of Boston; and five road trip-worthy restaurants beyond Boston.

Chef/owner Cassie Piuma at Sarma. / Photo by Scott Semler

1. Sarma

Oops, did you forget to make a reservation—a near-Olympics-level challenge here? Join the line snaking down Pearl Street a half hour before service to snag a bar seat; we promise it’s worth it. Sarma is the epitome of our favorite special-occasion dining style in 2025: no pretension, just that warm, casual “you’re in our home” vibe we’ve come to love. And the Mediterranean (and Mediterranean-ish) small plates are the stuff of food lovers’ dreams. Brilliantly intriguing seasonal dishes jump on and off the huge menu—get ’em while you can—but don’t sleep on the mainstays: feta-and-honey cornbread, harissa barbecue duck shish, and the legendary passed-around fried chicken. It’s exactly why Boston’s top restaurant doesn’t need to take itself too seriously.

Somerville | Mediterranean | Read more | Reservations

Executive chef David Bazirgan prepares sushi at Uni’s garden-level bar. / Photo by Scott Semler

2. Uni

While other omakase spots stick to tradition, Uni is out here making cocktails with fish sauce. Whether you’re settled into the quiet garden-level sushi counter where it all began or the larger main-level dining room, you’re in for a spectacular feast that goes far beyond sushi. Uni more than holds its own among Boston’s flourishing omakase restaurants, but chef David Bazirgan’s fusion-forward cooked dishes take the experience to the next level, from meltingly tender carrots with finger lime and goji berry to the famous Wagyu beef dumplings spiked with tingly mala oil. The sake list is stellar, but don’t miss the cocktails featuring savory ingredients like green curry and bell pepper.

Back Bay | Japanese | Read more | Reservations

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3. Mooncusser

Carl Dooley might actually be a wizard—how else do you explain grilled swordfish adobo with pickled peppers and nectarine? His gift for creating culinary magic out of surprising ingredients draws crowds to this upstairs nook for special occasions, where a seasonal, seafood-focused, five-course prix fixe showcases his top-tier talent. Downstairs at Moon Bar offers a different but equally compelling experience: spicy small plates and eclectic cocktails that deliver Dooley’s creativity minus the fine-dining price tag and multicourse commitment.

Back Bay | Seafood | Read more | Reservations

When a hyper-regional Greek restaurant becomes one of the hottest tables in town, you know Boston dining has come of age. From the team behind hip Aegean newcomer Kaia, Bar Vlaha stands as a soulful ode to the nomadic Vlach people of Central and Northern Greece and their open-flame cooking. It’s as competitive a reservation as all the beloved Italian and seafood joints around town, and for good reason: rustic breads, spit-roasted lamb legs, and freshwater-fish dishes create dinner parties to remember, with modern cocktails providing the fuel (Hpnotiq meets the piney liqueur mastiha and lime sorbet in one stunner).

Brookline | Greek | Read more | Reservations

Comfort Kitchen. / Photo by Scott Semler

5. Comfort Kitchen

Nearly three years of nonstop acclaim could go to a restaurant’s head, but Comfort Kitchen keeps using its platform to tell the deeper stories. The Dorchester hot spot—formerly a historical comfort station—remains focused on culinary tales that traverse decades and thousands of miles. Brown-butter okra with masala-spiced yogurt; goat ragu with cassava gnudi; and coconut-based fish chowder all share a table, linked by flavors of the African diaspora. Each menu looks at that concept from a different angle: currently, a multiracial, intersectional exploration of what it means to be American. Food is the greatest connector, and Comfort Kitchen wields it expertly.

Dorchester | Global comfort food | Read more | Reservations

6. Urban Hearth

It takes serious culinary confidence to put knotweed on a menu, but chef Erin Miller has been making the unexpected irresistible for years. Her intimate space showcases a connection to the regions seasonal bounty, some of which she forages herself. When you’re served tandoori-roasted carrot brochette with ramp toum and knotweed granita, resist the urge to Google the ingredients—instead, surrender to Miller’s artistic plating and flawless technical execution. For the full experience, book the five-course tasting menu at the chefs counter.

Cambridge | Farm-to-table | Read more | Reservations

La Padrona. / Photo by Scott Semler

7. La Padrona

Restaurateurs Jody Adams, Jon Mendez, and Eric Papachristos took one look at modern Boston dining and found it lacking one thing: Golden Age Italian cinema glamour. Up a grand staircase lies their breathtaking answer—a dining room at its most opulent. With luck, you’ll snag one of the half-circle “Hollywood” booths to see and be seen while diving into executive chef Amarilys Colón’s brilliant pastas and dramatic entrées like the 40-ounce bistecca alla fiorentina. Adams oversees it all, delivering a return to form from her beloved Rialto days—regional Italian cuisine, glammed up.

Back Bay | Italian | Read more | Watch more | Reservations

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8. O Ya

Eighteen years into its reign, O Ya still makes grown adults weep over sushi—and we’re not talking about the bill. When friends demand the ultimate omakase blowout, this Leather District legend remains the first name on every sushi lover’s lips. Set in a converted firehouse, the restaurant literally cranks the heat with dishes like torched goldeneye snapper doused in umeboshi vinaigrette, all part of a nightly 20-course menu that changes on the chef’s whim. How do owners Tim and Nancy Cushman manage to keep diners breathless night after night? It doesn’t hurt when your plates feature banana-pepper-mousse-topped hamachi and absolutely sinful Wagyu.

Leather District | Japanese | Read more | Reservations

9. Field and Vine

If Martha Stewart designed a rustic barn and let Yotam Ottolenghi loose in the kitchen, you’d get this Union Square standout. Chef Andrew Brady rotates through the seasons with a cornucopia of local produce—peak summer tomatoes, corn, sweet peppers, and stone fruits—alongside seafood like oysters, fluke, green crab, and monkfish, with the occasional nod to land animals, all plated for easy sharing. A thoughtful, modestly priced beverage program and swoony desserts complete this paragon of New England farm-to-table dining.

Somerville | Farm-to-table | Read more | Reservations

10. Brassica Kitchen + Café

Jeremy Kean and Philip Kruta prove that James Beard semifinalists can still have punk-rock souls. The co-chefs’ Forest Hills standout delivers fine-dining finesse with rebellious energy, and their recent move to bigger digs next door isn’t changing the team’s love of fermentation or the staff’s knowledgeable, affable air. The koji risotto alone is worth the trip, alongside the deservedly popular brunch and a nightly multicourse tasting menu that’s somehow still a steal at $115. The new space brings a pizza oven, and we’re dying to see what these two do with it.

Jamaica Plain | New American | Read more | Reservations

11. Nightshade Noodle Bar

Rachel Miller’s uni brûlée involves torching sea urchin with cinnamon, which should tell you everything. What reads as a Vietnamese- and French-inspired tasting menu on paper becomes a journey through seafood from near and far, prepared in ways you’d never expect. This is mostly a blind tasting, with each dish more surprising than the last, unfolding in a darkly glamorous dining room punctuated by tropical plants. If you consider yourself a daring food enthusiast, this is a bucket-list destination. 

Lynn | Vietnamese/French | Read more | Reservations

The chef’s counter at Lenox Sophia, set up for a duck press dinner. / Photo by Scott Semler

12. Lenox Sophia

Some chefs need massive kitchens to show off, but Shi Mei just needs 16 seats in Southie. This slip of a space dazzles with clever influences (like echoes of Indonesian rendang in grass-fed beef), umami amplification (thanks to months-long fermentation), and occasional avant-garde flourishes (like impossibly airy milk curd in a Caprese salad) on the compact mulitcourse tasting menu. Food geeks vie for reservations at the coveted four-seat counter for a ringside kitchen view, while oenophiles take advantage of BYOB, enjoying special bottles without the typical 300 percent markup.

South Boston | New American | Read more | Reservations

Mahaniyom. / Photo by Scott Semler

13. Mahaniyom

This Brookline Thai standout has cracked the code to making everyone leave feeling happy: deliver region-hopping small plates in an effortlessly casual, lively space (including the blacklight-mural-decorated restroom). Whether you’re wooing a first date, entertaining out-of-town guests, or courting a potential client, everyone leaves full of crispy chicken skin and crab curry, and maybe a bit tipsy on Thai tea–infused Sazeracs. While the food speaks for itself, why not go for the one-two punch by following up dinner with a stop at Mahaniyom’s nearby sibling bar, Merai, for “Thai nachos” and a nightcap?

Brookline | Thai | Read more | Reservations 

Somaek. / Photo by Scott Semler

14. Somaek

Jamie Bissonnette teaming up with his Korean mother-in-law sounds like a recipe for success—and it is. Their collaboration, Somaek—named for the Korean combo drink of soju plus beer—has become one of the biggest attention-grabbers of 2025. Sure, Bissonnette’s culinary rep helps lure crowds, but the draw transcends celebrity. What he and consulting chef Soon Han are serving is truly special, including homestyle dishes like kkaennip-jeon, beef-and-tofu-stuffed sesame leaves you’re unlikely to see elsewhere, plus dozens of intricately prepared banchan that speak to deep tradition. With respect to Boston’s old guard of Korean restaurants—which we also love!—this is an exciting peek into the future.

Downtown | Korean | Read more | Reservations

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15. Asta

Alex Crabb is the kind of inventive chef who sees onion and thinks “flan.” The chef-owner’s seasonal tasting menus, going strong for 13 years, lure diners with luxe trimmings—French flourishes from his L’Espalier days, Scandinavian savoir from staging at Noma—but now is the perfect moment to see how a master chef balances seasoned plates brightened by herbs and foraged rose petals with the deeper wisdom of being truly, er, seasoned. Only Crabb could dream up such harmonious surprises, somehow still finding ways to delight after all these years.

Back Bay | New American | Read more | Reservations

Spoke. / Photo by Scott Semler

16. Spoke

You’ll get a better wine education here than at any nearby lecture hall—and have way more fun doing it. This pint-size Davis Square space feels trendy and modern as studious staff walk you through the well-curated international list, which leans into small producers and natural winemakers. Pair your pour with dynamic small plates from mad-scientist chef duo Paul Butler and Kelcey Rusch, whose creativity bursts beyond the bounds of their tiny kitchen. Think enoki cakes with sausage spice and pineapple sauce, or those ever-popular sunchoke doughnuts with XO gouda that they can probably never take off the menu.

Somerville | Wine bar | Read more | Reservations

Chris Willis (center) and his team in the Pammy’s kitchen. / Photo by Scott Semler

17. Pammy’s

Chris Willis makes a Bolognese so iconic you’ll want to order it six times—but resist the urge. Yes, the choose-three-dishes menu format allows you to carbo-load entirely on the gochujang-spiked lumache at this New-American-but-kinda-Italian-inspired restaurant, and we certainly won’t judge. But you’d miss out on other creative wonders, like 48-hour beef tongue with avocado, buttermilk, and sesame leaf. With namesake Pam Willis as your consummate host inside this lovingly designed space, start with one Bolognese and let the journey from Italy to who-knows-where begin.

Cambridge | New American/Italian | Read more | Reservations

Krasi. / Photo by Mia Andreoli of Stay Gold

18. Krasi

The name says it all: Krasi means “wine” in Greek, and this spot lives up to the promise. The extensive bottle list and made-to-share mezze make it perfect for celebratory group outings—try a bold, complex xinomavro from northern Greece while dipping crisp cucumbers into fresh tzatziki prepared tableside, spreading honey butter across hot bread oozing with halloumi, and sampling meats and cheeses sourced from Corfu to Macedonia. End with an otherworldly nightcap downstairs at Hecate, the dark and mysterious sibling cocktail bar.

Back Bay | Greek | Read more | Reservations

19. Oleana

A quarter-century later, Ana Sortun still treats her menu like a love letter to the Levant—and keeps finding new things to say. Her Cambridge landmark stays fresh with an oft-changing menu that maps a well-loved trip across the region: broccolini with baba ghanouj, cut with zippy pomegranate vinaigrette; earthy lamb buoyed by lemon-spiked cacık; a behemoth lemon chicken with crisp, za’atar-coated skin. The packed itinerary of plates begs for slow and chatty evenings, ideally on the seasonal romantic patio. Your last stop should include at least two desserts: Getting everyone’s favorite Baked Alaska is practically compulsory, but don’t ignore the rest.

Cambridge | Mediterranean | Read more | Reservations

20. No Relation

Some of the best sushi in Boston comes with a Johnny Cash soundtrack and smiling-cat sake cups. At this hidden, nine-seat omakase alcove, chef Colin Lynch’s expert team slices and seasons fish to perfection, but the 17-course experience is far from stuffy. Delightful details turn this top-tier sushi journey into a rollicking adventure—and it helps that you enter through sibling tropical bar Shore Leave. The eclectic soundtrack sets the mood while you choose your ochoko and study the magnetic world-map backdrop showing the sources of tonight’s fish. Want to make it really feel like a party? Splurge for the caviar supplement. 

South End | Japanese | Read more | Reservations

Moëca. / Photo by Scott Semler

21. Moëca

In a seafood-saturated town, Moëca doesn’t just stand out—it’s total escapism, serving up globetrotting fare that will have you booking your next trip mid-meal. A yellowfin tuna dish beckons to Thailand with chili, peanut, and mint, while Spanish mackerel with green-tomato tapenade and pine nuts whispers of the Mediterranean. This isn’t your typical New England fish house—it’s fusion at its best, the kind of unique approach that sets the standard for what modern seafood restaurants should aspire to become.

Cambridge | Seafood | Read more | Reservations

22. Talulla

Talulla’s consistently executed, finely wrought menu could earn the restaurant all sorts of future awards—and has already earned chef Conor Dennehy, who operates the restaurant with his wife, Danielle Ayer, a James Beard Award nomination. At this charmingly wee, unpretentious Observatory Hill room, he continues to serve some of the most inventive New American cuisine in the region. We especially appreciate his penchant for bolder flavors, as in his ricotta-parsnip ravioli with kimchi and fried garlic, or his gourmand’s version of mapo tofu.

Cambridge | New American | Read more | Reservations

Lê Madeline. / Photo by Nina Gallant

23. Lê Madeline

Crawfish noodles meet New England influences in chef Peter Nguyen’s edible autobiography, where Vietnamese tradition mixes deliciously with influences from everywhere the Dorchester native (and Houston restaurant alum) has been. His lusciously garlicky Vit-Cajun crawfish noodles, shrimp and banana-leaf-wrapped grits with pork floss, and an ever-evolving Vietnamese-inspired lobster roll currently slathered in calamansi ginger aioli and tobiko tell the story. Sunshine-yellow décor and cocktails infused with flavors like lychee and pandan complete the package at this vibrant south-of-Boston winner.

Quincy | Vietnamese | Read more | Reservations

La Royal. / Photo by Scott Semler

24. La Royal

The open flames at La Royal aren’t just for show—they’re firing up the boldest Peruvian food around. Watch as one cook deftly juggles multiple cast-iron pans, turning out serving after serving of the classic Peruvian-Chinese (chifa) stir-fry tallarín saltado. Then comes the tart citrus of ceviches (we love the hearty blue cod) and the bracing herbal flavor of Andean elixirs in several cocktails. Every dish here is bold, matched by hospitality that’s lovingly born from owners Maria Rondeau and JuanMa Calderón’s legendary dinner parties (and their first restaurants, Celeste and Esmeralda). Up next? A big Back Bay project, Rosa y Marigold, opening soon.

Cambridge | Peruvian | Read more | Reservations

25. Tonino

Twenty-six in-demand seats and a pan pizza that explains the crowds—this is the type of place that captures the vibe of its neighborhood perfectly. The candlelit space is packed nightly with diners enraptured by Roman-inspired fare, led by that focaccia-adjacent pan pizza. The rest of the menu makes for glorious sharing—beautiful salads and bowls of clams in piquant broth alongside pastas like a deep-flavored rigatoni amatriciana. A short, sharp beverage program rounds out a perfectly cozy, date-friendly night out.

Jamaica Plain | Italian | Read more | Watch more | Reservations

26. Wa Shin

Minimalist omakase-only experiences are flooding the city, but Sky Zheng’s approach to Boston’s sushi scene is purely his own. His samplings of exotic local and Japanese seafood are presented with Buddhist temple solemnity. The affable Zheng is also a great storyteller and enthusiastic hype man for the 18 courses he slings nightly with dazzling precision knifework. The intimacy of his 10-seat counter creates an unusually convivial and fun evening despite the formal tranquility of the room.

Bay Village | Japanese | Read more | Reservations

27. Giulia

Chef Michael Pagliarini handrolls pasta every morning, which helps explain why getting a table here—particularly at the big table in back, where the luscious regional-Italian pasta dishes take shape each day—can feel harder than getting into an Ivy. Every inch of the pastas’ reputation here is earned, but Giulia also delivers a warm, rustic brick-and-wood trattoria atmosphere and luxurious small bites like chicken-liver crostini, sexed-up antipasti, and big, bold secondi like Tuscan-style lamb sausage with white beans. Plan ahead you must, but go you should.

Cambridge | Italian| Read more | Reservations

Baleia. / Photo by Scott Semler

28. Baleia

This sunset-sleek dining room and seafood-focused menu transport diners straight to the Iberian coastline. Take the crisp-skinned, flaky whole-roasted branzino: charred lemon and umami-rich XO sauce made with anchovy and presunto let the fish’s natural flavors shine—a less-is-more philosophy that runs throughout the menu. It’s exactly this kind of restraint that has the latest from the Coda Restaurant Group (SRV, Gufo) snagging national attention.     

South End | Portuguese | Read more | Watch more | Reservations

29. Umami Omakase

When Hokkaido uni and Kaluga caviar arrive as just an early bite in your 18-course omakase journey, you know Umami isn’t playing around. The restaurant masters something most high-end spots fumble: being celebratory without taking itself seriously. Between that opening indulgence and your rare A5 Miyazaki Wagyu topped with Italian black truffles, friendly staff conversations drive home that this is as much about fun as it is about excellence. You’ll probably encounter a few unfamiliar fish along the way, but that’s the whole point—unpretentious luxury served with a smile and a slice of yuzu cheesecake.

Cambridge | Japanese | Read more | Reservations

30. Szechuan Mountain House

Boston’s Sichuan scene was missing something until Mountain House showed up from Queens with blood-red chili sauces and serious heat. First-timers will be wowed by the serene dining room, though chatty crowds keep the ambiance lively. The big draw here is the smack and savor of real-deal Sichuan cuisine, like punchy, mala-intense dumplings and arrays of boneless beef ribs for wrapping in bao with hoisin, cucumber, and scallion.

Allston | Chinese | Read more

31. Grill 23 & Bar

All it took was one dirty martini to put a 42-year-old steakhouse on the cutting edge of cool again. Served in an icy glass, Grill 23’s dirty martini has become the perfect social media catnip for twentysomethings. Come for that photogenic after-work drink, then plan a full dinner here for your next special occasion: Dry-aged steaks, lobster mac ‘n’ cheese, and truffle-oil tots await, not to mention a 124-page drink list for when you’re ready to venture beyond that martini.

Back Bay | Steakhouse | Read more | Reservations

32. Toro

Two decades of serving tapas, and Toro still feels like the South End’s best-kept secret that everyone knows. Sure, a few things have changed since 2005—the (thankful) addition of reservations, a larger patio to handle the enthusiastic hordes—but what remains constant is the boisterous energy of this neighborhood stalwart, where newcomers and lifelong South Enders alike toast over glasses of sherry, fancy Spanish hams, heaping pans of paella, and caviar-topped tortilla Española

South End | Spanish | Read more | Reservations

33. Bab Al-Yemen

At Boston’s only Yemeni restaurant, the razzle-dazzle isn’t about party tricks—it’s about time and care, showing that special-occasion meals can feel like a birthday dinner at home that Mom spent the whole day preparing. That devotion shows in dishes like fahsah, slow-simmered lamb stew, paired with tanoor-oven-baked flatbread for sopping up rich tomato-and-onion sauce. The icing on the cake? Since you already feel like family, stay as long as you want—even on bustling nights, the waitstaff won’t rush you out the door.

Fenway/Kenmore | Yemeni | Read more | Reservations

34. Saigon Babylon

The climb to Saigon Babylon is worth it—and not just for the views. Five floors above Central Square, the duo behind Vietnamese spots Cicada and the Eaves have opened their most ambitious project yet. Vincenzo Le and his wife, Duong Huynh, know how to create a vibe, and here they’ve outdone themselves, from the vintage furniture refurbished by Le himself to the modern Vietnamese cuisine: squab with turmeric rice and lemongrass Wagyu carpaccio. Wash it down with a gin-based cocktail featuring salted lime and tingly pepper.

Cambridge | Vietnamese | Read more | Reservations

Overhead view of a salad with chunks of lobster, big croutons, bibb lettuce, and a swoosh of herby white sauce, next to a cocktail.

Chilled lobster salad at Row 34 Kenmore. / Photo by Rachel Leah Blumenthal

35. Row 34

While many restaurant chains dilute their magic with each new location, Row 34 just keeps getting stronger. The newest outpost in Kenmore Square—taking over the space once occupied by Row’s former sibling Island Creek Oyster Bar (talk about full circle)—continues delivering a primer in New England seafood. The formula remains flawless: classics like clam chowder balanced against must-order seasonal creations.

Fort Point and other locations | Seafood | Read more | Watch more | Reservations

36. Bar Volpe

Scene-stealing pastas like the handmade culurgiones, plump goat-cheese-stuffed dumplings, are just the warmup at chef-restaurateur Karen Akunowicz’s southern Italian spot. The spotlight hits A-list entrées next, like a Sardinian paella studded with spicy ’nduja. Even the rotisserie chicken here—easily a forgettable dish elsewhere—is award-worthy, enhanced with black truffles. With stars in your eyes, toast with Negroni flights and porcini-infused Old Fashioneds.

South Boston | Italian | Read more | Reservations

37. Puritan & Company

Thankfully, this Puritan leans into culinary indulgence, not buckled hats and self-deprivation. From hometown hero Will Gilson, the Inman Square favorite brings New England history and local ingredients into the modern era—with some global flair. Apologies to baked scrod, but we much prefer Atlantic cod with grits and prized Jimmy Nardello peppers, Gilson’s spin on the regional classic. Top it off by slathering fresh Parker House rolls with cultured butter for the full experience.

Cambridge | New American | Read more | Reservations

38. Grace By Nia 

Grace by Nia doesn’t just serve dinner—it serves up an entire era. Step through the broad blue doors into restaurateur Nia Grace’s vibrant homage to the jazz age, where you’ll find soul food—comforting bites like oxtail and grits alongside easy-drinking cocktails—and soulful tunes in equal measure. It’s all accompanied by glamorous gold-accented décor that completes the time-travel experience.

Seaport | Soul food | Read more | Reservations

A rare steak is sliced and served with potatoes, creamed greens, a carafe of red wine, a lemon, and a bouquet of fresh herbs.

Prima’s 32-ounce, 45-day dry-aged porterhouse. / Photo by Mike Diskin

39. Prima

Caviar everywhere isn’t always a good sign, but Prima makes excess feel essential. Here, fresh mozzarella arrives fried and topped with caviar. You can add caviar to any crudo dish, of course. How about the oyster-vodka martini? Also topped with caviar, naturally. The rest of the dishes at this gorgeously decorated spot are standouts, too: Don’t miss the spicy handstretched pici and the huge steaks.

Charlestown | Italian steakhouse | Read more | Reservations

40. Mistral

In an era of small plates, Mistral serves up a duck on white tablecloths and doesn’t apologize. Nearly 30 years in, the restaurant remains timeless with warm, crusty bread, top-flight service, and French-Mediterranean entrées that are simultaneously elegant and hefty. The signature grilled thin-crust pizza appears on most tables, from business-casual regulars to tourist groups. That universal appeal explains why Columbus Hospitality Group launched their restaurant empire here—and why this remains la crème de la crème.

South End | French-Mediterranean | Read more | Reservations

41. Moona

The buzz at this Inman Square spot got so loud, owner Mohamad El-Zein had no choice but to find a bigger space. He and executive chef Scott Ryan venture far beyond Levantine cuisine’s greatest hits at this hive of mezze set to expand into a larger Cambridge space later this year. Sure, there are the expected savory pitas with bright dips of eggplants and legumes and spiced lamb, fish, and kofta. But Moona also delivers novel accents like mushrooms and grilled squid, anchored by generous platters of grilled chicken thighs and whole branzino.

Cambridge | Eastern Mediterranean | Read more | Reservations

42. Via Cannuccia

Stefano Quaresima’s handcrafted pasta doesn’t just taste like Rome—it tastes like his Roman childhood. Every flake of croissant, every strand of noodle at this trattoria carries those sweet memories, whether you’re lingering over morning pastries and espresso or diving into evening plates of paccheri paired with Italian wine. Still, Quaresima isn’t afraid to add local and seasonal twists: His “revised clam chowder pizza” featuring pancetta and fried clams makes the point perfectly.

Dorchester | Italian | Reservations

Several Uyghur noodle dishes and a dish with hot chili oil are spread on a colorful carpet with a copper pot of tea and a glass of wine in view.

A spread of dishes at Jahunger. / Courtesy photo

43. Jahunger

Boston’s tiny Uyghur food scene went into overdrive when Jahunger showed up with fresh-made noodles and something to prove. The chili-slicked twists of handpulled strands and plump, lamb-stuffed dumplings at this bustling restaurant—the second location of a Providence hot spot—deliver a win for representation and for taste buds, especially if you like spicy Sichuan peppercorn. Despite the casual ambiance, this feels like a special night out: Bring hungry friends to linger over half a dozen noodle plates and sweet honey layer cake.

Cambridge | Uyghur | Read more | Watch more

44. Saltie Girl

If a place can make you rethink fried calamari—fried calamari!—imagine what else it’s got up its sleeve. Here, the classic gets chorizo bits and yuzu aioli, while lobster rolls, raw preparations, and globally inspired creations all get the same elevated treatment. Chef Matthew Gaudet (of gone-but-not-forgotten West Bridge) took over this year, and his arrival has parent company Sidell Hospitality promising “several more concepts.” Bring it on, please.

Back Bay | Seafood | Read more | Reservations

45. Abe & Louie’s

When everything else feels reinvented, Abe & Louie’s remains gloriously old-school. From the charred crust on the supremely tender rib-eye cap to the rolling trays and jacketed staff, this 60-year-old Boylston Street mainstay delivers classic steakhouse theater without irony. The power-lunchers and business-dinner crowd know what they’re getting: perfectly executed beef paired with comforting sides like creamed spinach, served in dark-wood-and-leather digs that feel timeless.

Back Bay | Steakhouse | Read more | Reservations

46. Gustazo Cuban Kitchen & Bar

This energetic Cuban restaurant delivers on its name—Spanish for “great pleasure”—and then some, celebrating Caribbean cuisine with hearty roasted meats and a mushroom-based ropa vieja that vegetarians can devour without compromising on taste. Both colorful, date-night-chic locations deliver with drinks that transport you straight to Havana (think fresh guava, smoky rum, and tobacco notes), but nothing beats a warm evening on the Waltham patio, where salsa beats complete the island fantasy.

Cambridge and Waltham | Cuban | Read more | Reservations

Yvonne’s. / Photo by Richard Cadan

47. Yvonne’s

Yvonne’s isn’t a restaurant—it’s a party that happens to serve really good food. Celebrating its 10th anniversary, COJE Management Group’s home for gilded nights out continues to attract the most dressed-to-impress, well-behaved crowd (tequila-heavy La Vita cocktail notwithstanding). You’ll rub elbows amid cheeky, stylized portraits of JFK and other luminaries as chandeliers drip gold light. COJE chief culinary officer Tom Berry pleases big groups with ease thanks to a worldwide web of plates and two-plus-person feasts, with standouts like a 32-ounce prime rib gussied up with grilled corn chimichurri leading the soiree-fare favorites.

Downtown Crossing | New American | Read more | Reservations

48. Pagu

Pagu chef-owner Tracy Chang is always up to something—cofounding community-service initiatives, collaborating with internationally renowned chefs—but cool projects aside, a restaurant needs to deliver on flavor. Pagu’s eclectic mix of Spanish and Japanese cuisines very much does. Bring a group and share DIY tuna-collar hand rolls, soft bao stuffed with braised pork belly or fried oysters, spicy knife-cut noodles, and whatever version of the irresistible miso black cod currently graces the menu.

Cambridge | Japanese and Spanish | Read more | Reservations

49. Table

Jen Royle may not be dishing up the fanciest Italian in town, but she’s definitely serving the most fun—and the most filling. “It’s a marathon, not a sprint,” one server announced to the two long communal tables as strangers settled in for six courses of hearty Italian comfort. The chef-owner’s approach is pure Nonna—if Nonna’s staff wore T-shirts reading “Come hungry, be friendly” and served baskets of focaccia (spread it with the roasted garlic), creamy stracciatella with tomatoes and melon, and other heartwarming dishes. Royle is known for being outspoken, but her food speaks loudest.

North End | Italian | Read more | Reservations

A whole lobster is cut in half and stuffed, accompanied by a side of fries.

Seamark’s lobster frites. / Photo by Paolo Verzani for Seamark

50. Seamark Seafood & Cocktails

Leave it to Michael Schlow—the chef behind dearly departed Radius and Via Matta—to show Encore’s out-of-towners and staycationers what Boston seafood is really about. His deluxe seafood tower—which includes tuna tartare and ceviche—sets the stage for elegant entrées that live up to Schlow’s reputation. Don’t miss the restaurant’s nautical  “speakeasy,” Old Wives’ Tale, where stunningly intricate cocktails—like a cachaça-and-passion-fruit drink presented with a mermaid sculpture and scattered seashells—serve up a winning time.

Everett | Seafood | Read more | Reservations

First published in the November 2025 print issue.

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The Best Steakhouse in Boston Is Grill 23 & Bar (Again!) https://www.bostonmagazine.com/restaurants/2024/06/25/grill-23-best-boston-steakhouse/ Tue, 25 Jun 2024 15:30:35 +0000 BEST STEAKHOUSE Grill 23 & Bar Chris Himmel’s earliest memories involve running around the dining room at Grill 23 & Bar, the stately Back Bay […]

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Himmel Hospitality Group president Chris Himmel has worked at Grill 23 since he was a kid. / Photograph by Ken Richardson.

BEST STEAKHOUSE

Grill 23 & Bar

Chris Himmel’s earliest memories involve running around the dining room at Grill 23 & Bar, the stately Back Bay steakhouse that celebrated its 40th anniversary last year. The second generation owner was five when the restaurant opened; 20 years later, he assumed control of the day-to-day operations, and nowadays is president of the entire Himmel Hospitality Group, which also includes Harvest, Bistro du Midi, and the Banks Fish House.

Along the way, he bartended (at around eight years old—don’t tell the licensing board), scrubbed broilers, cleaned the grout in the bathroom floors, and did just about every other front-of-house and back-of-house task imaginable at the restaurant. “I think the staff was trying to show me that restaurants are more than just putting on a suit or your chef coat,” Himmel says. “There’s a lot of blood, sweat, and tears that goes into the day-today.” Clearly, the hard work has paid off: While in 2020s Boston it seems like there’s a steakhouse on every block, Grill 23 hasn’t relinquished its standing as the best around. (In fact, it’s won this award two dozen times.)

The restaurant’s success can be attributed to a delicate balance of adapting to the modern dining scene but not changing too much. In the early days, Grill 23 inhabited the same sort of fine-dining space as restaurants like Jasper’s, the upscale waterfront seafood destination from the late Jasper White, and Seasons at the Bostonian Hotel, under executive chef Lydia Shire, explains Himmel. “But I think where we veered from those was the energy [of Grill 23],” he says. “It was the space, the high ceilings, the steakhouse vibe itself that lent a higher energy than most of the restaurants in Boston had at the time.”

COURTESY PHOTO

Over four decades, the physical space has expanded with a whole new floor, lots of room for private dining, and a sparkling new kitchen. The menu, which started out as classic meat-and-potatoes, is now broader, with extensive raw-bar options and other seafood dishes. The wine list, meanwhile—a winner of Wine Spectator’s Grand Award since 2017—is nearly 100 pages long, with a table of contents alone that takes up a whole page.

Still, some things never change. The crispy hash browns, with duck fat ladled luxuriously over them, have been the same since day one, Himmel says. Other dishes from the early days reappear as specials occasionally. And even though the team has been approached about opportunities to become a chain, they’ve always passed. “We felt as though the blueprint [for Grill 23] means enough to the city that how could you do another? What we feel is overwhelming loyalty.” 

161 Berkeley St., Boston, grill23.com

First published in the print edition of the July 2024 issue as part of the Best of Boston 50:Dining package.

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Best of Boston 2023: Dining https://www.bostonmagazine.com/best-of-boston-2023/dining/ Tue, 27 Jun 2023 14:00:18 +0000 The post Best of Boston 2023: Dining appeared first on Boston Magazine.

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Your Guide to Boston’s Top 50 Restaurants in 2019 https://www.bostonmagazine.com/restaurants/2019-boston-best-restaurants/ Tue, 22 Oct 2019 11:03:50 +0000 To everything there is a season—especially in dining. Ingredients shift to reflect what’s fresh. Menus change with the weather. (Goodbye, summer salads. Hello, soups and […]

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Photo by Brian Samuels Photography

To everything there is a season—especially in dining. Ingredients shift to reflect what’s fresh. Menus change with the weather. (Goodbye, summer salads. Hello, soups and stews!) And when it comes to our annual list of the 50 top restaurants in Boston, we see a similar evolution: Some star chefs who once helped define the city’s dining scene are no longer, or only sparingly, represented. (Wherefore art thou, Michael Schlow?) Meanwhile, a new generation of culinary innovators—those who cut their teeth working under the old guard—are finally coming into their own.

But don’t get sentimental; this is a great time for local diners, as Boston’s top restaurants embrace the future with the same passion once reserved for celebrating the city’s history. Our number one pick, for instance, places a fine-dining restaurant, where one might expect white tablecloths, alongside a casual brewery; the list rounds out with a contemporary take on traditional communal feasts. And in between? Every spot reflects a unique point of view—a perspective on food that is all its own. Diners want that. We demand it. In 2019, cooking technically good food is no longer enough.

Times are changing and so is Boston. Here are the restaurants setting the pace.

Pansotti with goat cheese is among the handmade pastas at SRV, a Venetian-style hot spot in the South End. / Photo by Morgan Ione Yeager

How Did We Pick the Best Restaurants of 2019?

You might be surprised by some of this year’s picks.

At Tasting Counter, guests get a front-row seat to chef Peter Ungár’s culinary magic. / Photo by Peter van der Warker

50 Best Restaurants in Boston

With new restaurants popping up on every street corner from Somerville to Southie, it’s getting harder than ever to know where to spend your Saturday night. Need a little help? Dig into our all-new, delightfully subjective ranking of the city’s best places to eat right now. 

Photo by Diana Levine

Boston Chefs Uncensored

What they really think about Yelp reviews, the cost of doing business, and your phone-at-the-table habit. 

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Top New Restaurants in Boston 2017: The List https://www.bostonmagazine.com/restaurants/2017/10/22/best-new-restaurants-boston-2017-list/ Sun, 22 Oct 2017 09:45:50 +0000 https://www.bostonmagazine.com/?post_type=bm-chowder&p=2346648 URBAN OASIS 25. Publico 11 Dorchester St., South Boston, 617-622-5700, publicoboston.com. Southie hangout or chic tropical lounge? You may find yourself asking that question as you […]

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From #14 on our list: House-made rigatoni with lobster-and-oxtail Bolognese. / Photograph by Toan Trinh

URBAN OASIS

25. Publico

11 Dorchester St., South Boston, 617-622-5700, publicoboston.com.

Southie hangout or chic tropical lounge? You may find yourself asking that question as you nibble on tobiko-topped ceviche served with crisp plantain chips in the vine-draped atrium, open year round. Given that Publico would attract a well-heeled afterwork crowd on the merits of that open-air bar alone, the menu from chef Keenan Langlois is surprisingly strong, combining Latin-leaning flavors with street-food tropes in unexpected ways (see the crunchy tacos filled with rib-eye tartare).

THE SAUCY SOPHISTICATE

24. Sulmona

608 Main St., Cambridge, 617-714-4995, sulmonacambridge.com.

“Chicken Parm” and “hip Cambridge restaurant” aren’t typically uttered in the same sentence, but in the case of Sulmona, it’s not an oxymoron. The unapologetically red-sauce-forward restaurant slings upgraded renditions of Italian classics—rigatoni amatriciana, succulent lamb skewers with grilled lemon, and, yes, the aforementioned pollo parmigiano, here crowned with a hefty slice of fresh mozzarella. But that doesn’t mean you won’t find moments of creativity on chef Delio Susi’s menu: a pizza special on the night we visited showcased peach, Calabrian chilies, and duck confit nestled atop creamy béchamel—a balanced harmony of sweet, spicy, savory goodness.

SOUTHERN HOSPITALITY

23. Buttermilk & Bourbon

160 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, 617-266-1122, buttermilkbourbon.com.

It’s a perpetual party at this New Orleans–flavored spot from chef Jason Santos, where pitchers of hurricanes flow freely under the blue glow of the Voodoo Lounge. Just order up the warm honey-glazed biscuits (served with smoked cinnamon butter and pimiento cheese spread, naturally); the juicy, crisp buttermilk-fried chicken thighs; and the fluffiest beignets north of Bourbon Street, and let the good times roll.

RAW TALENT

22. Puro Ceviche Bar

264 Newbury St., Boston, 617-266-0707, purocevichebar.com.

First they brought us the stellar Kava Neo-Taverna just as Greek cuisine was starting to crest in Boston. Now, with their new Latin-tinged raw bar, these under-the-radar restaurateurs are once again proving they have a knack for nailing how we want to eat now. Find fresh red snapper awash in ají amarillo–amped passion-fruit juice in one tiradito; chili-laced sea bass cooled down by silky coconut milk and cilantro in another. For the diners who eschew raw seafood—there must be some among the tourists and shoppers on Newbury Street—there are bites such as smoked chicken anticuchos (skewers) doused in a garlicky chimichurri you’ll want a spoon to finish.

DESTINATION MEXICAN

21. Yellow Door Taqueria

2297 Dorchester Ave., Dorchester, 857-267-4201, yellowdoortaqueria.com.

Yellow Door’s tacos won’t necessarily sway critics who argue that Boston lacks “authentic” Mexican fare. But with their bold flavors and vibrant colors, these Mexi-Cali morsels bring something new to the scene. Twenty-seven-year-old chef Colton Coburn-Wood, who formerly cooked at Ken Oringer’s La Verdad and Hamersley’s Bistro (since closed), combines crispy pork belly with fluffy goat cheese, roasted beets, and prickly-pear jam; salty papas con chorizo with a sunny fried quail egg; and the ubiquitous “catch of the day” with chili-infused crispy batter and calabaza (squash) purée. The eclectic shabby-chic décor from HGTV star Taniya Nayak only adds to the spot’s one-of-a-kind feel, making it well worth the trek to Lower Mills.

THE FOOD LOVER’S BAR

20. The Automatic

50 Hampshire St., Cambridge, 617-714-5226, theautomaticbar.com.

Strong, straightforward drinks, such as a gin martini dirtied with lemon-thyme brine, are the main draw at this retro-styled, vinyl-record-spinning cocktail joint. But co-owners Chris Schlesinger (the original East Coast Grill) and Dave Cagle (B-Side Lounge) have been around long enough to know that the accompanying food should never be an afterthought. Their salty, spicy, snackable menu is the perfect complement to an evening of imbibing, with never-boring fare such as plantain chips doused in a Doritos-inspired spice blend; noodles with crispy Chinese sausage, pine nuts, and ginger; and a Cubano inspired by the late neighborhood favorite Chez Henri.

NOT-SO-FLASHY FINE DINING

19. Mooncusser Fish House

304 Stuart St., Boston, 617-917-5193, mooncusserfishhouse.com.

From bar programs to bathroom wallpaper, these days some restaurants seem to be obsessing about everything but the food. It’s quite the opposite inside this third-floor Back Bay space, where the über-minimalist white-table-clothed ambiance keeps the attention right where it should be—on chef Carolyn Johnson’s refined cuisine. The 80 Thoreau team’s first city project takes an elegant approach to the seafood category Bostonians love so much, with dishes such as lobster-stuffed skate and caviar-topped monkfish bourride. Even the U-shaped Moon Bar downstairs (serving up a more-casual menu but with the same stark look) boasts high-test touches, including Loire sparklers by the glass and a must-order Mars bar–like frozen dessert that’s topped with warm chocolate upon arrival.

MAUI MEETS CAMBERVILLE

18. Manoa

300 Beacon St., Somerville, 617-945-1042, manoa.fish.

Schools of poke shops have swum into town recently, but the Manoa experience feels less like just another fast-casual fish joint than it does a funky roadside snack shack with really tasty food and a finger on the local pulse. There’s pristine fish, of course, much of which comes from up and down the Northeast corridor (don’t miss the velvety Maine hiramasa bathed in citrus and coconut). But there’s also Kalua pork with bark as thick as Texas brisket, batter-fried chicken thighs, and fresh juices that taste like they’re straight from the tropics.

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Top New Restaurants in Boston 2017 https://www.bostonmagazine.com/restaurants/2017/10/22/best-new-restaurants-boston-2017/ Sun, 22 Oct 2017 09:45:25 +0000 https://www.bostonmagazine.com/?post_type=bm-chowder&p=2346163 Communal tables are in, tasting menus are out, and if it ain’t fast-casual, it’s so very last year.

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Photographs by Toan Trinh

In a city where new spots pop up faster than you can say “crudo,” it isn’t easy picking the top restaurants in town. So we spent months twirling pasta and knocking back sake cocktails to see what we could find. The result? Communal tables are in, tasting menus are out, and if it ain’t fast-casual, it’s so very last year. Showcasing openings before September 1, our highly opinionated list is all you’ll need to dine in style. Well, that and a healthy appetite, of course.

Edited by Jenna Pelletier
Photographs by Toan Trinh
With additional reporting by Liz Bomze, Jacqueline Cain, Jolyon Helterman, and Brittany Jasnoff


See the List »


— PLUS —

Sign of the Times

A breakdown of Café du Pays’ of-the-moment details.

A Roaring Success

A by-the-numbers look at Terra’s show-stopping wood-fire grill.

Time to Make the Ramen

A peek at the labor-intensive, 18-hour cooking process at Ruckus.

Namesake Pour

Mix up your own Parisian repast with a cocktail recipe from Les Sablons.

Table Talk

The dos and don’ts of communal dining.

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Top New Restaurants in Boston 2016 https://www.bostonmagazine.com/restaurants/2016/10/30/best-restaurants-in-boston-2016/ Sun, 30 Oct 2016 10:00:10 +0000 https://www.bostonmagazine.com/?post_type=bm-chowder&p=2163614 Presenting our road-tested, thoroughly vetted, highly subjective guide to the upstart-rookie tables most deserving of reserving right now.

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best new restaurants boston uni omakase

Scenes from the omakase chef’s-tasting menu at Uni. / Photographs by Nina Gallant

Two…neighborhoods…away. That was the mantra our team of testers kept in mind as we set about whittling this year’s bumper crop of restaurant newbies down to an elite 25. Meaning: Would we send a discerning foodie not one but two neighborhoods away to eat there?

While it took strength of conviction to let sparkling new neighborhood gems fall away in the same curatorial purge as the fledgling messes, even tougher was ranking the ones still standing. Defining “new” as opening between September 1, 2015, and September 1, 2016, meant pitting seasoned one-year-olds like Yvonne’s against gurgling newborns like Waypoint. How to be fair but, more important, how to be useful ?

To that end, we took a page out of the pro-sports playbook, approaching the rookies the way a scout might size up draft prospects—in our case, numerical scores assigned to food, drink, service, and ambiance. But we also factored in a host of intangibles, from staffing pedigree to how well the player might fill gaps in our city’s diningscape for the upcoming season.

Is there a chance we got it wrong? You bet. Even the sharpest scout can leave a Brady languishing in the sixth round. But if we had to guess which new eateries have the X-factor to take it all the way to the playoffs (i.e., Best of Boston 2017), these are the 25 we’d put our money on.

Edited by Jolyon Helterman
Photographs by Nina Gallant
With additional reporting by Elizabeth Bomze, Jacqueline Cain, and Brittany Jasnoff


See the List »


Plus:

menu 1

COPPER PINEAPPLES
2016: The Year of the…?
Five trends that took the city by storm this year.

 
 
 

menu 2

HOT INGREDIENT
Addicted to Lobe
We’re calling it: This season’s ‘it’ ingredient is…sea urchin.

menu 3

DINNERWARE
A Sense of Plates
Three sets of beautiful dishes that caught our eye.

 
 
 

menu 4

OEUF HOUR
Moony Side Up
It’s 8 p.m. Do you know where your omelets are?

menu 5

A CLOSER LOOK
How Tiger Mama Reversed the Curse
Tiffani Faison took a risk on Boylston at Kilmarnock.

 
 
 

menu 6-2

CHEERS!
Nine Eye-Catching Drinks from Mamaleh’s
This is not your bubbe’s soda fountain.

menu 7

ETHNIC DINING
All Over the Map
Xinjiang noodles, Moldova tortes, Sapporo ramen… Mmm…

 
 
 

menu 8

FUSION FARE
The Splice Is Right
Matzo-ball ramen, Indian-Belgian frites, and more.

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Best New Restaurants in Boston 2015 https://www.bostonmagazine.com/restaurants/2015/10/27/best-restaurants-in-boston-2015/ Tue, 27 Oct 2015 10:10:24 +0000 https://www.bostonmagazine.com/?post_type=bm-chowder&p=2026663 Our guide to Boston’s most exciting new dining destinations.

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All nine courses of the tasting menu at Tasting Counter. / Photograph by Nina Gallant

These days, a truly memorable restaurant experience is no longer defined merely by luxurious trappings, squeeze-bottle flourishes, and an endless parade of demure small plates. Instead, it’s about the details. Think Sam Cooke’s “Night Beat” crackling on vinyl or a design-savvy restaurateur who commissions a one-of-a-kind mural. It’s a beverage program helmed by a progressive somm stashing rare beers alongside the Rhônes and Burgundy.

Most important, it’s about the personal touches, like a chef who ventures outside the sanctuary of the kitchen—something the Barbara Lynches and Ken Oringers of the dining world have been pulling off for more than a decade. Since March 2014—our cutoff for last year’s 50 Best Restaurants issue—dozens of debuts have attempted to match those esteemed predecessors. Sometimes innovation comes from the bottom up, as in boundary-pushing food trucks, sprawling downtown markets, and craft-beer bars that think beyond frites and Buffalo wings. Several high-profile newcomers have also stormed onto the scene, from local luminaries to Michelin-starred interlopers. The most successful and passionate of this new class delivered highly tailored concepts presented with a strong sense of purpose, nailing the dining-out zeitgeist in compellingly unique ways. Herein, we profile the 25 breakout spots that inspired, challenged, and made us believers in a city that is finally, finally taking its food as seriously as its sports teams.



See the List >>>



Plus:

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Best Restaurants in Boston 2014 https://www.bostonmagazine.com/restaurants/2014/10/27/best-restaurants-in-boston-2014/ Mon, 27 Oct 2014 12:00:32 +0000 https://www.bostonmagazine.com/?post_type=bm-chowder&p=1934210 Our thoroughly researched, call-it-like-we-see-it ranking of the restaurants that make Boston a true dining destination.

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With additional reporting by Caroline Hatano, Courtney Hollands, Christopher Hughes, Brittany Jasnoff, Corby Kummer, and Janelle Nanos


50 best restaurants in boston

Cover photograph by Adam DeTour

It’s been half a decade since we last ranked Boston’s best restaurants. And in those five years, our dining landscape has dramatically transformed. To wit, 11 out of the 50 restaurants highlighted in 2009—stalwarts like Rendezvous, Pigalle, Radius, and, most recently, Hamersley’s Bistro—have closed. After 137 years, Locke-Ober was shuttered. UpStairs on the Square and Chez Henri departed as well.

But for all that we’ve lost, we’ve gained much more. A staggering 29 of the restaurants on our list opened in the past five years; about half of those arrived in the past two. Brought to you by the city’s next generation of innovative chefs and restaurateurs, these new venues feel younger and more energetic. Carefully draped tablecloths and fancy stemware are no longer requisites for a fine meal: Nowadays, inventive food and top-notch service can be found at a Sichuan restaurant in Woburn, or a pizza place in the Back Bay. Great dining, in other words, has become our evening’s entertainment—Friday, Saturday, and every night of the week.

The sheer number of candidates, however, made compiling a list such as this truly challenging. How to choose, let alone rank, our local restaurants? We began with a carefully researched lineup of more than 100 eateries that had opened before March of this year (six months before publication). Then we ate our way through the city, scoring each establishment’s food, service, ambiance, value, beverage programs, and overall “now” factor, with food being the primary focus. Finally, we convened to analyze our experiences—comparing notes, arguing, disagreeing, and at last finding common ground. At the end of the day, it all came down to one thing: going with, quite literally, our gut.

So here it is—our 2014 ranking of Boston’s 50 best restaurants, the places that make this city more dynamic, surprising, and delicious than ever before.

 


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Where to Eat. Right Now. https://www.bostonmagazine.com/restaurants/2013/10/29/where-to-eat-boston-restaurants/ Tue, 29 Oct 2013 09:00:58 +0000 https://www.bostonmagazine.com/?post_type=bm-chowder&p=1126151 A comprehensive, taxonomic, easy-reference field guide to dining out in Greater Boston, featuring: six full-color plates, 11 spruced-up street snacks, one headless annotated lamb, and 50 forward-leaning, rigorously vetted, utterly on-the-pulse restaurants worth a top spot on your feeding schedule.

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It’s a benign hazard of the job, getting hit up constantly for restaurant leads. Where should I go to find date-friendly soul food in the South End? To take my aunt for worthy Italian 45 minutes north of the city? To send my postman for affordable seafood in Cambridgeport? All of these, yes, have been real questions—with real, reasonably straightforward answers.

However, there’s one recurring query that always puts us on our toes: Where should I be eating right now? Right now, you see, is a much harder place to pinpoint than the clean, Euclidean intersection of place, situation, and cuisine. Is it an opulent fine-dining experience? Not usually, unless there’s some occasion requiring a no-holds-barred celebration. The brand-spanking-newest opening in town, then? No, as a general rule we prefer giving newbies the time and space to settle into a groove. And as fond as we are of the city’s timeless steakhouses, bistros, and brasseries, perennial simply isn’t the same as right-this-very-second.

Was it possible, we wondered, to pin down this elusive concept of culinary “nowness”? To find out, we strategically gorged our way through town in preparation for what, in the end, would be a fairly unorthodox spin on our annual restaurant spectacular: Rather than the usual straight-up ranking of the city’s best eateries, we focused instead on the 50 spots that truly nailed this modern, forward-leaning, trend-curious spirit. (As we soon figured out, however, the two lists would have had quite an impressive overlap.)

Like 19th-century naturalists observing sparrows or wildflowers in their native habitat, we dutifully recorded observations from the field right down to the tiniest detail, paying special attention to the minutiae that made an eatery feel not just in vogue and cutting-edge but—and this is key—effortlessly of-the-moment. And wouldn’t you know it: The more data we collected, the more we realized we were cataloging not just what we eat and where we eat but how we eat right now. All told, what we ended up with amounts to a user’s manual—a veritable Modern Gastronome’s Field Guide to Dining Out. So that’s how we decided to present it. For the full list, check out our quick-and-dirty roster of the 50 restaurants that, in late 2013, answer the urgent question: Where should I eat right now?

—Edited by Leah Mennies, Photographs by Bruce Peterson

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Where to Eat. Right Now. The List

Here, in list form, our compendium of where you should be eating right this very moment.

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The Vegetable Superstar

We’ve all seen a shift away from the rigid tripartite menu structure toward modular plates meant to be shared. The unexpected winner in this scenario? The veggie order.

boston-restaurants-where-to-eat-3c

The Regional Redux

Long relegated to gimmicky-tourist-food status, fading New England standards are getting a new lease on life.

boston-restaurants-where-to-eat-4

(Re)consider the Oyster

We turn our attention to “on the half shell” variants.

boston-restaurants-where-to-eat-5

The Migratory Noodle

Untethered in recent years from the conventions of Italian cookery, the modern pasta dish has become a culinary wanderer of sorts.

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The Indoor Street Snack

Let the record show: Forks are overrated, anyway.

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The Nose-to-Tail Newcomer

Cut by cut, we drill down on a wealth of empirical evidence pointing to lamb’s citywide domination.

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The Evolved Oasis

The city’s older, rarified destinations are attracting the modern diner in new ways—most notably through their amped-up bar areas.

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The Cocktail Crossover

A taxonomical breakdown of some of the finest drinks in the city.

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