5 Best Restaurants in Boston, Massachusetts

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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.

Myers + Chang

$$ | South End Fodor's Choice

Pink and orange dragon decals cover the windows of this all-day Chinese café, where Joanne Chang (of Flour bakery fame) taps her familial cooking roots to create shareable platters of creative dumplings, wok-charred udon noodles, and stir-fries brimming with fresh ingredients and plenty of hot chili peppers, garlic, fresh herbs, crushed peanuts, and lime. The staff is young and fun, and the crowd generally follows suit. On Monday through Wednesday nights from 4 to 9 pm, the Great Date Night prix fixe menu for two is a bargain. Weekends are packed for the Dim Sum brunch menu.

Blossom Bar/Sichuan Garden

$$

In 1997, Ran Duan’s parents opened Sichuan Garden, and today their award-winning–bartender son has added the Blossom Bar inside, where wildly creative cocktails with ingredients like avocado and toasted coconut bring in rave reviews. Longtime restaurant fans will be happy that all their favorite classic dishes, like kung pao chicken and dan dan noodles, are still on the menu. In addition, there is a section of "American Comfort" dishes offered, like crab rangoon and General Tso's chicken.

295 Washington St., Brookline, MA, 02445, USA
617-734--1870
Known For
  • A mix of classic and American Chinese dishes
  • Cocktails you won't find anywhere else
  • Knowledgeable staff

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Great Taste Bakery & Restaurant

$ | Chinatown

Just before you reach the Chinatown Gate, this bakery offers you red bean buns, milk cake, fruit puffs, custard tarts, and fresh dessert cakes, among other sweet and savory baked goods. There's also a dim sum menu, rice soup, woks, and Hong Kong--style noodles, and a few places to sit. The prices are a bargain.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Ten Second Yunnan Rice Noodles

$$ | Chinatown

This small corner spot in Chinatown serves up the signature rice noodles of Yunnan, China. Try them in tomato soup with or without meat, or with different preparations, like the pickled pepper rice noodles and the kimchi beef rice noodles. Staff is friendly, and service is quick.

60 Beach St., Boston, MA, 02111, USA
617-654–8220
Known For
  • Flavorful, hot broths
  • Tomato noodle soup
  • Friendly service

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Yunnan Kitchen

$$ | South End

This small South End spot might be unassuming, but its chef-founder, Yisha Sua, earned herself a James Beard Foundation Award Best Chef Northeast nomination in 2023. Enjoy classics like spring rolls, garlic shrimp, and General Gao’s chicken, or try authentic Dian dishes found nowhere else in Boston, such as wood ear mushroom salad, Grandma’s Potatoes, mint beef, and the sharable Xishuangbanna lemongrass tilapia. It has a sister restaurant, South of the Clouds, in Brighton, known for its Yunnan rice noodles.

1721B Washington St., Boston, MA, USA
617-936-4123
Known For
  • Grandma’s Potatoes
  • Only Yunnan cuisine in Boston
  • James Beard Foundation Award Best Chef nominee

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