The Resy Hit List: Where In Boston You’ll Want to Eat Right Now
Updated:
There’s no question we hear more often: Where should I go eat? And while we at Resy know it’s an honor to be the friend who everyone asks for restaurant advice, we also know it’s a complicated task. That’s where the Resy Hit List comes in.
Consider it your essential resource for dining in Boston: a monthly-updated guide to the restaurants that you won’t want to miss — tonight or any night.
Four Things In Boston Not to Miss This Month
- New on Resy: June sees the opening of Mother’s East Tavern, a walk-ins only (for now) “neighborhood public house” in Southie from a team of local industry vets who’ve conspired to serve you clam chowder, Scotch eggs, shepherd’s pie and other pub classics. We’ve also got yet another New on Resy for you: highlights include Greek seafood temple Avra Boston and Somerville 16-seater Kush Modern Mediterranean. See the full list here.
- Shellfish Behavior: Liberty Bar is hosting Shuck & Sip Mondays each week, giving diners a half- or full bottle of wine with a half- or full dozen oysters for a set price. Elsewhere, Matria has brought back its dollar Oyster Thursdays for the summer, while Saloon offers oysters for a buck every day from 5-7 p.m.
- Island Time: So, there’s a ferry in your near future — and you’d appreciate some pointers on where to dine. If you’re Vineyard-bound, consider The Sweet Life in Oak Bluffs for Maine mussels gnocchi and rabbit roulade, or The Covington Restaurant in Edgartown for littleneck clams and sausage or a brined pork chop with griddled blue corn cakes. Nantucket, no slouch in the culinary department, shines again this summer with caviar tagliatelle and buttered lobster rolls at CRU, or grilled bavette steak and shrimp and grits at Straight Wharf Restaurant. See our full islands guide for more.
- Class is in Session: The students have left, and yet the most interesting classes are just getting started. In particular, an introductory cocktail-making course on June 13 at The Block hosted with local rum distiller Privateer; tickets here; and introductory courses on sake at The Koji Club on June 14 and June 28.
New to the Hit List (June 2026)
LoLa 42, Marcelino’s Seaport, Nightshade Noodle Bar, O Ya.
1. Sarma Winter Hill
There’s something to be said — nay, a lot to be said — about the sort of restaurant in an otherwise sleepy neighborhood that still books up weeks in advance, more than 10 years after opening. Sarma is that. Yes, the bevy of awards has helped, but that would shortchange the constant creativity of chef Cassie Piuma, whose Turkish meyhane concept still resonates. Piuma has maintained her Somerville spot as a laboratory for Mediterranean flavors, pumping out playful mezze like lentil nachos, brussels sprouts bravas, and harissa barbecue duck, while still keeping diners on their toes for whenever the Turkish fried chicken — which can only be ordered direct from the tray — comes out of the kitchen.
2. Juliet Union Square, Somerville
It’s no exaggeration to suggest that Juliet may be one of the Boston area’s most interesting places to eat. The independently owned and operated restaurant is at once a breakfast-and-lunch café serving housemade pastries and burgers, and a dinner destination focused on Niçoise cuisine (spaghetti pomodoro, pollock meunière, etc). In addition to that regular menu, it also hosts “rotating menu productions” that change throughout the year, giving diners the chance to experience prix-fixes themed around Quebecois cuisine, Persian New Year, the New England coast, and more.
3. Nightshade Noodle Bar Lynn
With a Michelin recommendation now under its belt, Nightshade Noodle Bar continues to cook up an innovative blend of French and Vietnamese flavors through a variety of tasting menu options. They range from a seven-course “Prelude” that lasts up to 90 minutes to a showstopping, 30-courser dubbed “The Ultimate” that runs over three hours. Between the extremes is its 14-course “NNB Signature Tasting,” which may include everything from grilled coconut sticky rice pops to confit garlic noodles with crab cakes.
4. 89 Charles Boston
Beacon Hill, as central as Boston gets, has long lacked a serious cocktail bar of its own. That’s changed with the welcome arrival of 89 Charles, a sultry subterranean lounge with an Art Deco touch serving drinks like the Soda Jerk with smoked pineapple, Green Chartreuse, and silver dust, or an as-advertised Filthy Martini with marinated olive brine and MSG saline. Thankfully, a menu of snacky smaller plates ranging from foie gras bratwurst to a spicy ‘nduja flatbread are on hand to help soak it all up.
5. Clery’s South End/Back Bay
A neighborhood bar that spans two ‘hoods — the South End and Back Bay, respectively — Clery’s caters to both with a homey, tile-filled interior, an extensive wood bar meant for mingling and regional comfort fare that keeps them coming back for more. Namely, North Shore-style steak tips, beer-battered fish and chips, and South Shore-style bar pizza.
6. Tonino Jamaica Plain
JP gem Tonino has a scant 28 seats — which makes the neighborhood-style Italian restaurant feel all that more homey. The menu is as tight as the dining room, focused on pizzas by the slice or whole, plus small plates like warm cabbage Caesar or countneck clams with guanciale, and climaxing with a selection of housemade pastas ranging from bucatini in anchovy chile butter to cavatelli with Italian sausage and broccoli rabe.
7. Tall Order Somerville
Joe Cammarata and Daren Swisher — the longtime industry vets behind Daiquiris and Daisies in High Street Place — have a standalone bar of their own in the form of Tall Order. Located just outside of Inman Square in what was once the Thirsty Scholar, the drink menu is bound to please cocktail nerds (take its eponymous drink, a blend of rums with Madeira, pineapple skins, and clarified coconut milk), while also catering to the low-ABV crowd and teetotalers alike. The edible offerings, meanwhile, represent pub food at its best with pork sausage rolls, karaage fried chicken sandwiches, and Denver steak frites.
8. Fallow Kin Cambridge
Fallow Kin had big culinary boots to fill as the successor to the Central Square space that once hosted Craigie on Main. It helps that the new restaurant is helmed by an all-star roster of local talent, including Talulla owners Conor Dennehy and Danielle Ayer and veteran chef Marcos Sanchez. The focus here is squarely on the local and seasonal, which manifests in a menu that puts veggies front and center, like twice-cooked sunchokes with broccoli pickles and smoky cabbage in a seaweed broth with crispy chicken skin, but doesn’t forgo meat, seafood, and pastas.
9. Cafe Sushi Cambridge
The nondescriptly named Café Sushi, ensconced in a strip mall between Central and Harvard Squares, is a textbook case of don’t-judge-a-book-by-its-cover. Because hidden in plain sight remains one of the city’s best sushi programs, now four decades old, served in a simple but artfully appointed dining room with spare wood furniture and hanging paper lanterns. You’ll be well-served with a spicy scallop hand roll over sushi selections including Japanese mackerel with poblano miso and 12-spice pineapple, or a creative house roll like the ceviche with shrimp, salmon, avocado, and pickled jicama.
10. LoLa 42 Seaport
Like its sibling establishment, Nantucket’s LoLa 41 — which now has outposts in tony vacation spots across the country, — LoLa 42 finds culinary inspiration in the countries that sit on the 41st parallel. What this means in edible terms is plates of lobster fried rice, cavatelli Bolognese, and a robust sushi program. Making the potential choices even more difficult to choose between is the existence of their namesake burger, which is slathered with foie gras sauce and served on an English muffin.
11. Cactus Club Cafe Back Bay Back Bay
There aren’t many places where you can sit down for dinner and expect hamachi sashimi, rigatoni Bolognese, or a 14-ounce rib eye in peppercorn brandy sauce to follow. But the newly opened Back Bay location of this Canadian chain is one of them. Add all of the above to a sprawling, high-ceiling dining room with a wrap-around bar, slightly trippy flowing wood décor, and modern art, and we’ll admit that the Canadians are on to something.
12. Marcelino’s Seaport Seaport Waterfront
The covered patio at Marcelino’s Seaport gives diners a front-row seat to Boston Harbor. But they may feel like they’re patronizing a white-hot island party spot somewhere in the Mediterranean, thanks to a thumping oonce-oonce soundtrack and a menu that features Lebanese-spiced whole branzino, beef kebab skewers, and traditional caviar service. The cocktail menu, meanwhile, takes freewheeling inspiration from around the globe with creations like a briny oyster shell martini balanced with a hit of lemon oil and an oat-clarified Boston tea milk punch that pays tribute to a certain historical event with rum, Champagne, and a trio of teas.
13. Little Sage North End
Before its closure in 2009, Sage was a North End mainstay beloved for its housemade pastas. Now it’s back in a slightly smaller, 50-seat dining room as Little Sage, under the auspices of original chef Tony Susi. What hasn’t changed is the emphasis on scratch-made pasta like ricotta gnocchi with Maine lobster and brick oven-baked entrees including head-on Argentinian shrimp in an artichoke puttanesca.
14. O Ya Leather District
Long before “omakase” was a household word in Boston, or anywhere really, Tim and Nancy Cushman were serving their eclectic take on the experience from a narrow, brick-walled room in the Leather District. Almost 20 years on it remains clear-your-calendar occasion dining, with a chef’s tasting menu (also available vegetarian or vegan) that unfolds over the course of two to three hours in singular bites of nigiri and sashimi that incorporate eccentric, experimental components like housemade potato chips, squid ink, or panang curry.
15. Lanner Noodles – Seaport Boston
Lanner Noodles, originally of Cambridge, has touched down in the Seaport with a second location serving … noodles. But that word barely does justice to the variety of piping-hot bowls flying out of the kitchen, often made with hand-pulled noodles and served in aromatic broths made from braised beef, lamb shank, and more. And contrary to the name, non-noodle offerings are available too, including barbecue lamb skewers seasoned with a house spice mix and a spicy chicken and potato stew.
16. Kahaani South Boston
The old Worden Hall space on West Broadway has been transformed into Kahaani, a new gastropub with bold Indian flavors and flower-festooned walls. Specializing in Hyderabadi cooking, which incorporates Turkish and Arabic flavors, signature dishes here include slow-cooked chicken biryani and Haleem meat stew.
17. Umami Crudo Boston
Cambridge’s Umami Omakase has touched down in Boston proper with a sister restaurant, Umami Crudo. While the former — as the name would imply — is omakase only, Umami Crudo delivers an a la carte experience utilizing the same top-shelf seafood, resulting in dishes like oyster sashimi with a grapefruit granita, toro caviar rolls, and lobster somen.
18. Willie’s Beacon Hill
Jamie Bissonnette’s latest ventures (see Somaek, Temple Records, etc.) have a funny way of expanding into adjacent spaces. Now the same has happened with Zurito, whose next-door neighbor — formerly a pizzeria — is now Willie’s, an intimately sized new restaurant serving chewy, thin-crust pizzas and housemade pastas with influences from Spain or Asia. For instance: the P.C.T. pie, essentially a large-scale pan con tomate, and spaghetti carbonara made with yuzu kosho and Parmesan dashima.
19. Retroroom Boston
“That ‘70s vinyl lounge,” could be an alternate title for Retroroom, a groovy new hideaway on Boylston that features DJs on the weekends but invites patrons to pull records from its extensive house collection anytime. All while enjoying of-the-decade treats like onion ring towers, cheese fondue and “super-size” large-format cocktails including the Back Bay Killa made with pineapple-infused vodka, orange juice, and dark rum, served in a kidding-you-not disco ball.
20. Perch South End
Even by South End standards, Perch is cozy: the space features just eight seats around an open cooktop and kitchen where diners have a front-row seat to the preparation of their meal. On Fridays and Saturdays that takes the form of a monthly changing five-course dinner made from seasonal ingredients, while Wednesdays are witness to Perch’s “3-2-1 @102,” which provides three small plates and a glass of wine for just $40 (tickets for both weekly event series can be booked exclusively on Resy).