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FallGuide2009

Eatin’ good in Boston’s ’hoods

15 joints, pubs, and bistros worth the trip
By MC SLIM JB  |  September 20, 2007

070921_diner_main

Still hungry? More neighborhood options. By MC Slim JB.

Part of the backbone of any urban neighborhood is its small, independent restaurants. That little joint on the corner serves the critical need of humans to occasionally socialize over a casual meal and forsake home cooking after a long workday. They’re the core of every city dweller’s restaurant rotation: a tiny pizza pad, a bare-bones Thai storefront, a local tavern with a good burger.

Neighborhood restaurants are the Kevin Youkilises and Alex Coras of the dining scene: unflashy, everyday contributors who are just as critical to a team’s success as its big-ticket superstars. Serious diners treasure these modest, unsung venues as much as the ones with Food Network–show chefs on their marquee.

So what makes a great neighborhood restaurant? First, it must cater primarily to locals, not expense-account types, tourists, or destination diners. It has to deliver good value for the money: dinner can’t feel like a splurge on a weeknight. The place should reflect the character of its neighborhood and make sense in its local context. Finally, a real neighborhood joint must transcend casual-dining-chain genericism — we all know that chain outlets aren’t really “eatin’ good in the neighborhood.”

But we Bostonians have a tendency to get mired in a rut, rarely venturing outside of our own few square blocks. “I live in the South End,” says one of my typically slothful pals. “Why would I ever leave to eat out?” How many times have you shuffled through that same stack of take-out menus for places you could hit with a rock? That’s almost criminally lazy: it’s not like you live in LA, where crossing neighborhood boundaries usually requires a car. Yours is a compact, walkable city with decent public transportation and a passel of great neighborhoods, each with its own string of culinary pearls.

Uncovering worthy local places beyond your own locality isn’t that hard. Like any good chowhound, you have to follow your nose, dig a bit, maybe find a pack of like-minded dogs with whom to run. But above all, you have to get roving, Rover. Get off your tether, get off your block, and get out exploring Boston’s many fine, high-value neighborhood restaurants, starting with the following list of standouts. You’ll be glad you busted out of that well-worn circle in your own backyard.

cantinho
O Cantinho | 1128 Cambridge Street | 617.354.3443

EAST CAMBRIDGE
O Cantinho

If a neighborhood place should reflect its environment, an East Cambridge attempt must be rooted in Portuguese-speaking culture. Among many excellent Portuguese and Brazilian restaurants clustered here, the Azorean-leaning O Cantinho is the one I’d patronize weekly if I lived closer. With a rustic-looking room, amiable service, and entrées under $19, it’s a useful reminder of how Portuguese cookery beautifully showcases our local seafood. And oh, does O Cantinho know how to make sea animals sing, as in pastéis (fritters overloaded with chopped salt cod and shrimp), porco a alentejana (pork and clams sautéed in garlic and white wine, plus that wonder of Portuguese kitchens: pan-fried potatoes), and marisco a bela vista (a stew of clams, mussels, squid, and shrimp in a piquant, gingery broth). Swoon-worthy three-bite pastries, including pastel de nata (brûléed custard tartlets), are served for dessert. Given the historical significance of Lusophone immigrants to New England’s fishing industry, it’s ironic that, when they crave seafood, locals don’t think of East Cambridge first. You now know how to rectify this mistake.

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Related: Venice Restaurant, Mamma Luisa, Bin 26 Enoteca, More more >
  Topics: Features , Beacon Hill, Jamaica Plain, Chris Douglass,  More more >
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Comments
Eatin’ good in Boston’s ’hoods
Doesn't the Phoenix write for working class and low-income folks anymore? This article picked some of the most expensive restaurants in each neighborhood, not necessarily the best. For example, in David Square, Gargoyles is the most expensive restaurant in Davis Square. A better choice might have been Blue Shirt, which offers up innovative and great tasting wraps for less than $7. That's great value for the money. And while the ambience may not be like Gargoyle's, there is seating. How about an article on places to eat (and do other things) for people who don't have the disposable income of a young yuppie (no ageism intended).
By lavendarotter on 09/20/2007 at 10:20:00
Eatin’ good in Boston’s ’hoods
What happened to the North End? We don't count as a neighborhood anymore? Locals are always on the hunt for a place where tourists (and red sauce) are nowhere to be seen (not that the Phoenix is always where we look...) Thanks for thinking of us and our wasted clicks.
By shoestringmag on 09/20/2007 at 4:55:45
Eatin’ good in Boston’s ’hoods
cool article. O Cantinho is a favorite of mine. Looks like I may have to take a few road trips to some neighboring hoods to check some of the others out.
By kktwo on 09/21/2007 at 6:59:13
Eatin’ good in Boston’s ’hoods
While I appreciate that some of these restaurants are great some are not even in "boston hoods" for instance Central Square which is locate in Cambridge Ma. I find it Ironic that places such as Jevelis in East Boston was left out which I might add IS one of Boston hoods and since the article is inluding place NOT in Boston hoods what about Kelly's on Revere Beach or Kowloons up in Saugus way?
By snappa on 09/30/2007 at 2:08:43
Eatin’ good in Boston’s ’hoods
Sadly, O Cantinho is no more. It closed a couple of months ago. Nice article, though. I love Grotto and Chez Henri, and the Biltmore and the Ashmont Grill are good, too, in my opinion. Perhaps it would have been nice to put a few really good low-to-mid level joints in the article (Waterfront Cafe in the North End, Cronin's in Quincy, etc.), but maybe for another day....
By hiddenboston on 12/07/2007 at 3:32:46

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