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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.
Menton was a modern fine dining restaurant owned and operated by Barbara Lynch. Menton served French and Italian inspired food in the Fort Point neighborhood of Boston. [1] Alumni of the restaurant include Kristen Kish, [2] the Chef de cuisine. [3] Menton was named after a town on the Côte d’Azur, close to France's border with Italy - Menton ...
The restaurant soon drew large crowds, which required an expansion to 400 seats. A third expansion later brought the restaurant's capacity up to 1,500 seats. Giuffrida also added a butcher shop to the rear of the restaurant. [1] The Hilltop was known for its decorations outside including a 68-foot-high neon cactus and full-sized plastic cows.
Jimmy's Harborside Restaurant was a Boston seafood restaurant on the Boston Fish Pier [1] opened by Jimmy Doulos in 1924. The restaurant closed in 2005 [2] and the building was demolished in 2007. [3] For restaurants in the neighborhood, Jimmy’s was a favorite for Julia Child. [4] When it first opened, it was called Liberty Cafeteria.
No Name was opened by Nick Contos in 1917 as a stand to serve the fishermen workers on the pier but, over time, turned into a full-service restaurant. [2] The Contos family never named the restaurant. [3] Late in 2019, the restaurant filed for chapter 7 Bankruptcy. [4] [5]
Meet the Montagues and Capulets of condiments. Drop “mayonnaise or Miracle Whip” in a conversation, and people have feelings — a lot of them. Though found near each other in a grocery store ...
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).
Samuel Longley Bickford (1885–1959) began his restaurant career in 1902. In the 1910s, he was a vice president at the Waldorf System lunchroom chain in New England and, in 1921, he established his own quick-lunch Bickford's restaurants in New York.