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  Nearby: 20, Boston: 89, Massachusetts: 112

 
1
 • (617) 654-9900
Boston:Image:OYa
Restaurant
Cross Street(s):Atlantic Ave.
Cuisine:Japanese
Pricing:$$$$
Dress:Business Casual
Corkage Fee:Not Allowed
Hours: T-Th 5 - 10pm
M-Th 6-10pm (Last seating 9:30pm)
Friday-Saturday 5 - 11pm (Last seating 10:00pm)
Closed Sunday and Monday
Dinner:Yes
Parking:Valet
www:Image:Accessible Sign
www:Image:Visa Logo
www:Image:American Express Logo
www:Image:Mastercard Logo
Menu
Zagat-Rated
Make reservations:
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Named #1 New Restaurant in America by New York Times Critic Frank Bruni[1].
Excerpt below:
With the possible exception of a certain turbulent campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination, there may be something to these husband-and-wife tag teams.
At O Ya Tim and Nancy Cushman successfully divvy up the emotional impact they want their restaurant to have on you.
Running the kitchen, he takes charge of dazzling, and does so with intricate, stunningly creative dishes grounded in, but not restrained by, Japanese tradition.
Running the front of the house, she takes charge of soothing, and I saw an example of that the moment I arrived.
Two women ahead of me approached the hostess stand and asked her if she had any unreserved tables. She didn’t.
So she gave them a detailed rundown of the restaurants nearby. Then she called the ones that interested the two women. She made them a reservation, gave them walking directions. And off they went — to dine at one of her competitors.
The Cushmans don’t have any children other than O Ya, a fussed-over, tightly clutched baby that Tim Cushman, 55, dreamed about over the decades that he worked as a restaurant consultant, helping other chefs realize their ambitions.
In Los Angeles in the 1980’s, he dined in Nobu Matsuhisa’s restaurant and even, for a few days, worked beside him. Later he traveled to Japan, gathering new ideas.
Nancy, 34, has been there with him and on her own, and is the architect of the impressive sake list at O Ya, whose name is a Japanese expression of curiosity.
The restaurant, plotted with excellence more than profit in mind, reflects extraordinary pride. Although it has just 37 seats, 17 of them at an L-shaped sushi counter, there are as many as five chefs in addition to Mr. Cushman working on a given night. They execute a menu with about 80 savory dishes, few of them simple, and just as many sauces and dressings a night.
The front side of the menu is devoted to sushi and sashimi ($8 to $28 for two or three pieces), almost all of it given embellishments much more elaborate and unexpected than wasabi and shiso.
A raw oyster was crowned with minuscule scoops of ponzu-marinated watermelon and diced cucumbers. It was an ideal palate primer at the start of the meal.
A fried oyster shared its rice bed with a house-made yuzu aioli, a julienne of Japanese leek and “squid bubbles,” a froth of oyster juice, squid ink, olive oil and milk. It was a one-bite affair, but what a bite — briny, creamy, alive with different textures and flavors.
Mr. Cushman’s idea of what belongs on a pedestal of rice isn’t limited to salmon, tuna, eel and uni, though O Ya has all of that. It extends to seared foie gras, which he bathes in balsamic vinegar, chocolate and raisins. I ordered a second piece as soon as I finished the first. There was no way I was leaving O Ya with the memory of just one.
The flip side of the menu has such categories as pork (kurobuta), beef (wagyu) and chicken (poulet rouge), the last of which yielded a “ballotine of chicken wing” ($12) that exemplified the kitchen’s painstaking efforts.
The boned wing had been brined overnight in a mixture including tea and yuzu juice; stuffed with a pâte of ground chicken, shiitake mushrooms and Napa cabbage; and deep-fried. Then it was placed over tangy house-made kimchi and drizzled with scallion ginger oil, fresh yuzu zest and toasted sesame seeds.
My companion marveled, “It’s like a chicken bone just melted in my mouth.”
At the risk of putting my credentials as a carnivore in doubt, I must say that the best dish on the menu — maybe the best dish of my entire journey — came from the menu’s vegetable category.
Called “grilled sashimi of chanterelle and shiitake,” ($18) it seemed to me to settle any and all debate over umami, which has to exist if only to explain why these thinly sliced mushrooms, brushed with soy sauce and a rosemary garlic oil, have such a full, magnificent taste. Sesame gets some credit. In fact sesame gets a lot of credit, contributing to both a froth of porcini and milk that covers the so-called sashimi and to a brittle that’s sprinkled on the froth.
The desserts at O Ya don’t live up to what precedes them. It doesn’t matter.
You might end up spending $125 a person on the restaurant’s modestly portioned dishes. It’s worth it.
The quality of the ingredients, the warmth of the service and the coziness of the setting — a dark, weathered, brick-walled room that was built as a firehouse a century ago and rejects clichéd sushi-bar sleekness — will convince you of that.
And you’ll walk out the restaurant’s inconspicuous front door, off a cobblestone alley in an oddly somnolent neighborhood near the main train station, wondering whether you should keep this little secret or shout it out loud.
 
2
 • (617) 482-4700
GreaterBoston:Image:Consumer-united-logo-1
Better deals together? Absolutely. Consumer United is a savings-driven, grassroots group based in Boston's Leather District that’s spearheading a network of ordinary consumers, folks like you, who have joined together to identify the best service providers, negotiate better deals and simplify their lives. As a movement, their goal is to leverage competitors to lower prices on auto insurance, phone, Internet, cable, personal banking and utilities. Yes, there’s power in numbers.
The Boston Phoenix's Stuff Magazine highlighted Consumer United in its "Hot 100" list, adding that the group "helps shoppers band together to negotiate better deals on everything from utilities to health insurance."
  • Check out Consumer United's blog HERE. Also, follow them on Twitter HERE or join their Facebook group HERE.





 
3
 • (617) 330-1002
GreaterBoston:Image:AlsSouthStreet
Restaurant
Cuisine:Sandwich Shops
Pricing:$
Dress:Casual
Hours: M-F 10:30am-3:30pm
Lunch:Yes
Parking:Street
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One of the many storefront businesses emerging within the new Lincoln Plaza, Al's State Street Cafe opened up its second location (aptly called Al's South Street Cafe) on the corner of Essex and South Street in Boston's Leather District. The joint boasts a "Bag Lunch" deal which includes a 10 inch sub, a 20 oz. soda and chips for $6.50.
Here's the write up for the original State Street staple:
Al's is the Cheers (circa 1970s) of sandwich shops in Boston; where everyone knows your name (and preferences). Food is of high quality, service is efficient, value is great, and the location is convenient to Government Center, the Financial District, and the Waterfront. It gets really crowded around lunchtime but the crowd is well worth it.
 
4
 • (617) 426-0180
GreaterBoston:Image:DistrictNightclub
Restaurant
Zagat-Rated
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Officially opening June 15 at its new location at 180 Lincoln Street in Boston's Leather District, this top-notch hotspot offers South Station-area workers with an intimate destination for after-work revelry. District's new locale is in the heart of an up-and-coming area full of Internet start-ups and young professionals.

 
5

Lincoln Street

 • (617) 482-2335
GreaterBoston:Image:Themorsoncollection
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Looking for a functional piece of art? You're in luck. Opening at its new location on Lincoln Street in the up-and-coming Leather District during the summer of 2008, The Morson Collection's new showroom boasts a stunning selection of contemporary furniture and lighting fixtures. Each piece is crafted individually in design houses located in Italy and Spain.
 
6
 • (617) 426-1688
MA:Image:BeijingKyoto
Adding one more option to an area once void of after-work dinner options, a new Japanese-Chinese restaurant called Beijing Kyoto is the new kid on the block on South Street in the Leather District.
The restaurant serves up Asian-fusion cuisine seven days a week (10:30 a.m.-10 p.m. Sun.-Thu. and 10:30 a.m.-11 p.m. Fri.-Sat.).
 
7
MA:Image:Splash
Restaurant
Know more? Edit Me
Update: Restaurateur Frank De Pasquale is turning News, a seven-year-old after-work hangout located at 150 Kneeland St. in the Leather District, into an upscale, over-25 hangout called Splash. The revamped hot spot is scheduled to reopen in May.
Slotted to serve gourmet bar food ranging from burgers, appetizers and tapas, Splash will rival nearby South Street Diner as a late-night destination. De Pasquale plans to serve food until 5 a.m on Friday, Saturdays and the Sundays before holidays.
Here's the lowdown on the former News:
Popular amongst late night revelers looking for some on-the-way-home sustenance, News is open until 4AM Tuesday - Saturday. Their eclectic menu seems designed towards the late night munchies set, featuring pizzas, deli sandwiches, breakfast, and a plethora of appetizers, generally of the fried cheese and buffalo wing ilk. The prices aren't exactly cheap for grub of this nature, but when you need to eat late, you take what you can get and happily pay for it.
They've got booze, too, and offer $3 draft beers and $5 house mixed drinks. Valet parking is available.
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