Foodie Friday: Puritan & Company

Puritain & Company is a farm-t0-table Inman Square restaurant created by chef/owner Will Gilson, who actually grew up on a local farm. My husband and I went with friends earlier this winter, and liked it a lot—the food and the atmosphere. Unlike some other dining establishments of late, the menu, while on trend, is absolutely accessible. The food was inventive but not the least bit weird, and all of it was delicious. Between us we had a couple of different salads (the mesclun was way too salty though), raw oysters, grilled oysters (gorgeous), clam chowder (delicious and superbly presented—the creamy soup is poured over a row of clams at the table), pork belly, and more. We would definitely go again. And just might. We have friends in the neighborhood with whom we’re due for a date.

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Foodie Friday: Trina’s Starlite Lounge

Earlier this winner, Boston publicist, the ever sweet Nicole Kanner, invited me to her boyfriend Josh Childs ‘s restaurant, Trina’s Starlite Lounge. (In 2009, I blogged about his South End townhouse here.) It’s a divey kind of place (from the outside) in Somerville. Inside it was warm and inviting, with fantastic food and service.

Josh is a spirits guy, so he mixed some sort of bourbon martinis to start (not quite my thing, buy my friend Deb loved hers). Southern Wedding Soup (with alligator meatballs!) was followed by Blistered Beet Salad (delicious) and a main course of roasted duck  that included a side of sublime gnocchi. But more importantly, they served THE ABSOLUTE BEST MOST AMAZING CORN BREAD I’ve ever had or ever will have ever. Period. Heaped with so much rich butter that everyone asked, “Is that butter?” OMG. Worth going late night, if just for that.

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F O L L O W  STYLE CARROT on I N S T A G R A M 

Foodie Friday: BurgerFi

I don’t really cover food. I mean, on how many categories can a person stay current?  I do however happily report on restaurant design. In addition, I get a lot of invites to restaurant openings in Boston, some of which I accept, and it’d be nice to have a place to feature them. And let’s face it, if you follow my Instagram feed, you know I snap food and drink pics when I go out. So, here we go. Since I’m in Delray Beach this week, I’ll start with BurgerFi.

I hadn’t heard of the BurgerFi chain before visiting here a year ago, but now I’m hooked. (As are my kids, because we let them get soda from the very cool machines; normally soda is strictly a twice a year treat.) I don’t know what the other BurgerFis are like, but this one is cool. Sure, that it’s across the street from the beach and within walking distance of our condo doesn’t hurt. But the design of the space is excellent. (The all natural Angus burgers are good, though they won’t do rare, and they skimp on the bleu cheese. The buns are perfectly toasted and buttered, but they’ll wrap your meat in lettuce if you prefer; the hot dogs are delicious; the onion rings are yummy; you can get vinegar on the fries. And the custard. OMG. Plus, they sell craft beer & wine.) But enough with the food. Here are the interiors.

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Design Diary: Lineage Restaurant by Sheffield Interiors

My lovely dear friends, Alison and Stephen Sheffield of Sheffield Interiors recently redesigned the restaurant Lineage in Brookline, Mass., right on the heels of designing the new lounge-y Boston bar, The Hawthorne. (Unfortunately I don’t have photos of The Hawthorne, but it’s a great place to hang out, and if you go, you’ll probably see Alison and Steve.)

With a color palette of ocean grays, glass lanterns, faux bois fabric, and vintage nautical inspired artwork (including a vintage paint-by-numbers harbor scene), Lineage’s decor is calm, sophisticated, and comfortable. The inspiration for the space came from Chef Jeremy Sewall’s family lineage in Brookline and his hometown of York, Maine, where many of his relatives are full-time lobstermen and fishermen.

 Photos by Mike Diskin

 

Design Diary: West Bridge by Creme Design

This summer Boston-based online retailer Wayfair asked me to write a guest post on its blog.  The post, “Bring the Look Home: Industrial,” details ways achieving the sort Brooklyn hipster design vibe seen at West Bridge, a new(ish) restaurant/bar in Kendall Square, tech capital of Cambridge. Since I’m a research fiend, it’s no surprise that my piece for Wayfair ran long. Below I’ve provided more back story, quotes, and design details, along with additional photographs.

Photo: Delicious Dishings

Restaurateur Alexis Gelburd-Kimler and chef Matthew Gaudet (both formerly of Aquitaine), tapped Williamsburg-based Crème Design, led by principal Jun Aizaki, to  design the 3,600-square-foot space, located in the former Boston Woven Hose Factory (fire hose, not panty hose). Built in the early 1900s, it  has a rustic loft feel—light and airy, with 18-foot ceilings, wood floors, painted brick walls, and floor-to-ceiling windows. Its back-to-basics, crafter sensibility is prevalent in emerging neighborhoods across the country. Gelburd-Kimler says, “Matt and I are definitely inspired by a lot of things Brooklyn.”

Photo: Delicious Dishings

Gelburd-Kimler, who lives in a converted school in Somerville, aimed not just to mimic the spare, industrial chic aesthetic she cultivates at home, but take it to the next level.  She says, “I got to build beyond my home; I got to build everything I would want in my home.” She especially loves the restaurant’s wood floors and the white brick walls, saying, “I have a partial brick wall at home, but I wish it were white.” The restaurant’s amber-colored boards are reclaimed, and purposefully set at a 45-degree angle, a traditional design element often seen in old factory buildings.

Photo: designskool

Gelburd-Kimler’s main directive for Aizaki was the adage “less is more.” She says, “That was the number one rule.” She adds, “You’re not going to see a bunch of framed photos on my fireplace mantel at home. Same here.” Indeed. Artwork was kept to a minimum, with just two large-scale pieces in the upstairs space. The original artwork by Boston-based Thomas Tietjen of ASIZ Industries provides the lone slash of color in the main dining room. As for the black-and-white photo of a woman sitting on rubber hoses, Gelburd-Kimler reveals, “We found it in a magazine from 1827. It’s of the original factory. It was one-third of a page; we had it blown up to six-feet-tall and transferred to canvas.”

Photo: West Bridge

For the long dining tables, the team turned to Boston craftsperson Jamie Cumming of Loki Custom Furnitureto create the tops out of recycled bowling alley floors. Cummings credits Aizaki with the idea, and admits that although he’s used reclaimed lumber in the past, re-working bowling alley wood was a challenge. The custom-designed braided rope chandelier is by Toronto-based studio Atelier 688.

Photo: designskool

The bar is fashioned from reclaimed barn wood and topped with slate and the white x-back chairs are by Brooklyn-based Chair Factory. The guy in the picture is Bar Manager, Josh Taylor (formerly of Eastern Standard Kitchen & Drinks). Believe it or not, the stools paired with the cafe tables in the bar area are from Pottery Barn

Photo: Matt Demers | Inset: Pottery Barn

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For more about the design of West Bridge, additional photos, and tips on how to get the look at home, read my post on Wayfair’s blog.