Photo courtesy of Lovestruck Wine Bar

The Hit ListBoston

The Resy Hit List: Where In Boston You’ll Want to Eat Right Now

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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

  • Brunch Bunch: Easter, Mother’s Day, college graduations … we’re about to enter peak brunch season. A couple pointers: Contessa for the scene, accompanied by smoked salmon carpaccio and carbonara scrambles; Myers + Chang for a different sort of dim sum as expressed by Reuben egg rolls and Korean fried chicken bao; and Cafe Luna for standards like surf and turf eggs Benedict and lemon ricotta pancakes. And for more, there’s always our guide to Boston’s essential brunch spots.
  • What’s New: Willie’s, the new sibling restaurant to Zurito, is now open in the adjacent space (formerly Upper Crust Pizza) serving pepperoni alla vodka pizzas, cold cut grinders, and other more casual delights. Relatedly, we’ve also got a brand-new edition of New on Resy with ‘70s inspired vinyl lounges, new-wave seafood shacks and more. Check it out.
  • Counter Offer: Each Wednesday chef Joseph Carli of A Tavola in Winchester is inviting patrons to his chef’s counter to partake in a five-course pasta tasting menu. Get your tickets here for the April 8 edition, and here for April 15, and as always, keep an eye out for the full slate of Resy Events on deck for the month 
  • Take it Outside: After what’s been a very long winter — to put it mildly — it feels as if Bostonians are finally returning to the streets. Which means it’s only a matter of time before the return of outdoor dining, too. Parla and the Piers (Pier 6 Boston Waterfront and Woods Hill Pier 4 at the Seaport) always have our hearts on this, along with Gufo, Barra, and so many others. Consult our handy patio guide here and get the jump on the crowd.

New to the Hit List (April 2026)
Juliet, Kahaani, Little Sage, Tall Order.

1. Sarma Winter Hill

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Photo courtesy of Sarma

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.

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Photo courtesy of Sarma

2. Juliet Union Square, Somerville

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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.

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3. The Smoot Standard Central Square

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There’s truly no wrong way to use the Smoot Standard, a new Cambridge third space that functions as an all-day café and restaurant by day and turns over for dinner service and cocktails by night. So, depending on the timing of your visit, you may find yourself at the counter for a pulled pork breakfast burrito and a cortado in the a.m., a fried green tomato sandwich around noon, or a chicken Milanese and a rum-based espresso martini after the sun goes down.

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4. 89 Charles Boston

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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.

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5. Lovestruck Wine Bar Cambridge

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Photo courtesy of Lovestruck Wine Bar

Harvard Square’s Lovestruck is a new bookstore focused squarely around romance, which also features a café and wine bar — what’s not to love? During the daytime you’ll find brews and pastries from George Howell Coffee, while the evening sees a transition into a wine bar focused on female-led winemakers and less common varietals, buttressed by cheese and charcuterie boards provided by Formaggio Kitchen.

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Photo courtesy of Lovestruck Wine Bar

6. Tonino Jamaica Plain

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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.

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7. Tall Order Somerville

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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.

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8. Fallow Kin Cambridge

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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.  

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9. Cafe Sushi Cambridge

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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. 

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10. Qiao Lin Hotpot Boston Boston

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Photo courtesy of Qiao Lin Hotpot Boston

A Chicago import, Qiao Lin understands that nothing beats the winter blues quite like spicy hot pot. The spicy Chongqing-style broth is made 32 aromatic spices and six different kinds of chile peppers, and proves the perfect canvas for cooking everything from strips of Japanese A5 wagyu beef to New Zealand lamb shoulder.

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Photo courtesy of Qiao Lin Hotpot Boston

11. Cactus Club Cafe Back Bay Back Bay

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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.

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12. Oleana Cambridge

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Oleana is now 25 years old — and still a competitive spot for a reservation. You can chalk that up to chef Ana Sortun’s well-spiced menu of Middle Eastern mezze, which manifests in now-classic dishes like spinach falafel with beet tzatziki and pickles, fried mussels with hot peppers and Turkish almond tartar sauce, and the “Sultan’s Delight” composed of tamarind beef in a smoky eggplant puree. And while not strictly Middle Eastern in inspiration, there’s no missing the renowned baked Alaska with coconut ice cream and passion fruit caramel.

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13. Little Sage North End

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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.

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14. Field & Vine Union Square

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The farm-to-table Union Square standby’s whole M.O. is making the most of seasonal ingredients from local farmers and producers. As you might have heard, it’s summer, and that means a fresh menu with the likes of spicy king oyster mushroom salad, Wellfleet clams in green crab curry with housemade focaccia, and a bavette steak with a brown butter parsnip puree and kale salsa verde 

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15. Lanner Noodles – Seaport Boston

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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.

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16. Kahaani South Boston

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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.

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17. Umami Crudo Boston

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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.

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18. La Padrona Back Bay

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La Padrona can now bask in its status as one of Michelin’s Boston recs, but its value to the local scene was evident since its 2024 opening. The swanky, bi-level spot within the Raffles Hotel has allowed Jody Adams to fully play in the sandbox of regional Italian cooking, represented by dishes as diverse as lobster and uni risotto, charred eggplant Milanese, and a scene-stealing 40-ounce bistecca alla Fiorentina served with bone marrow and grilled focaccia. Rounding out the experience is a cocktail menu with dedicated sections to Negroni and martini variants, plus a wine list sourced liberally from Italy, France, and California.

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19. Mestizo Modern Mexican Cambridge

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Oaxacan fare is the thing at freshly opened Mestizo in Kendall Square, where the airy, agave-filled space is the perfect venue for dipping into the state’s authentic flavors. Namely: housemade corn tetelas stuffed with chorizo, Oaxacan cheese and avocado mousse, chicken tamals swimming in mole negro sauce, and a 14-ounce grilled rib eye with crispy yucca. Also of note: Sundays after 4 p.m. sees an all-you-can-eat taco offering, where $27 buys theoretically unlimited tortillas topped with pork carnitas, barbacoa beef, grilled swordfish, and more.

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20. Perch South End

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Photo courtesy of Perch

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).

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Photo courtesy of Perch