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In 2011, Legal Sea Foods opened their new flagship restaurant, Legal Harborside on the Boston waterfront. [37] It was named "Best New Restaurant" by Esquire magazine. Two years later in 2013, Legal Sea Foods announced they would be opening a restaurant in the Downtown Crossing section of Boston named Legal Crossing (LXI).
Downtown Crossing is a shopping district within Downtown Boston, Massachusetts, located east of Boston Common, west of the Financial District, south of Government Center, and north of Chinatown and the old Combat Zone. It features large department stores as well as restaurants, souvenir sellers, general retail establishments, and street vendors.
Locke-Ober was a longstanding fine dining restaurant in Boston that operated between circa 1875 and 2012. Claimed to be the city’s fourth-oldest restaurant (after the Union Oyster House (1826), Durgin-Park (1827), and the Jacob Wirth Restaurant (1868)), it featured classical French cuisine and seafood.
Roughly two dozen more Red Lobster locations are scheduled to close within the coming days as part of the seafood restaurant chain’s ongoing bankruptcy proceedings.. A recent court filing shows ...
It was on Washington St., now Downtown Crossing, in Boston, Massachusetts. The building was destroyed by fire in 1711, 314 years ago. [68] Buckman Tavern was built 315 years ago in 1710 by Benjamin Muzzey (1657–1735). His license was granted 332 years ago in 1693. It was the first public house in Lexington, Massachusetts.
Currently operating restaurants in Boston include: Amrheins [1] Anna's Taqueria [2] Boca Grande Taqueria [3] Bova's Bakery [1] Caffé Vittoria [1] Charlie's Sandwich Shoppe [4] Cheers Beacon Hill; Dig; Elephant Walk [5] The Fours; Galleria Umberto [6] Legal Sea Foods [7] Mantra; O Ya; The Paramount, Boston; Regina Pizzeria [1] Santarpio's Pizza ...
A family-owned seafood company in Boston, Massachusetts, made a “one in a 100 million” find when they caught a rare albino lobster. The video shows the milky white crustacean in a tank among ...
Esquire, in 2008, named Scampo one of America's best new restaurants, saying it “defies tradition with its Italian-inspired cuisine unrestrained by borders and inspired by flavors of the Mediterranean and Middle East.” [3] In 2015, it was voted Boston's best Italian restaurant. [4]