Just in time for its 10th birthday this month, jm Curley celebrates the return of noted Boston barman Kevin Mabry, whose spirited inventiveness first helped put the joint on the map. The cozy (and cash-only!), dark-wood-filled barroom, meanwhile, is always warmed by friendly folks slapping backs, singing to trad sessions, and generally having a great craic. It stays covered during cold winter months, and if the perfectly poured pints of Guinness don’t get you toasty, the heaters will.
Photo by Emily Hagen Beer BarsĪt a time when every neighborhood local was hanging on by a thread, J.P.’s beloved Irish pub managed to become an even bigger, better version of itself by adding an adorable brick-and-stone patio. Seafood hot spot Row 34 has one of the coolest beer lists in town.
But if that wasn’t reason enough to get away here, chef Colin Lynch recently accented his Pacific Rim–inspired snacks ( okonomiyaki tater tots!) with similarly playful sashimi and sushi, such as the lobster roll tossed in brown butter and yuzu kosho mayo. Together, they’re a rock-solid foundation for Brick & Mortar to stand tall.Įver since this subterranean spot dropped anchor in 2018, its long and winding bamboo-fronted bar, captained by cocktail expert Ryan Lotz, has been a first-class escape for tropical drinks like the Palm Thief: rum with sweet vermouth, Cognac, and coconut. You taste the latter, meanwhile, in the meticulous preparation of citified-boho cocktails-like the Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test, a trippy tipple of Mezcal, amontillado, agave, and strawberry syrup-poured at the horseshoe-shaped bar. You see the former in the “Graffiti Alley” exterior that owner Gary Strack offered as a canvas to street artists, and hear it in the vinyl records DJs spin inside. This now-decade-old Cambridge institution builds its rep on equal parts art and craft. Preparing Duan’s Whip, white rum with pineapple soft serve, at Blossom Bar.