Posts Tagged ‘bars’

After tragedy, Bostonians gather ‘where everybody knows your name’

Thursday, April 18th, 2013

After Monday’s bombings near the Boston Marathon’s finish line, part of Boylston Street in the city’s Back Bay remained cordoned off from pedestrians and traffic. But outside the crime scene perimeter, while some restaurants saw cancellation after cancellation, other eateries and bars kept their doors opened Tuesday, providing hospitality and respite, and donating part of their profits to a local charity. Cheers

At Cafeteria on Newbury Street only a couple of blocks away from where the second explosion took place, patrons–many of whom were from out of town–stopped by for a bite to eat. “Business is as usual for us,” Demetri Tsolakis, director of operations at Cafeteria, told NBC News. In fact, Tuesday was even “a little busier.” He said that the restaurant sees “more and more tourists every year” and that these international visitors, often from Canada or Europe, were out “enjoying the day” rather than huddling indoors.

“People are still scared,” said Tsolakis. “But it has united people. You can tell that everyone is feeling for Boston.”

Cafeteria and more than 20 other restaurants donated a portion of Tuesday night’s proceeds to the Greg Hill Foundation to benefit victims of Monday’s unfortunate events. Elsehwere, strangers and a pizza shop fed Boston’s first responders and victims.

Manager Moulay Guessous works at Scoozi, also on Newbury Street, “right behind where the tragedy happened.” As a result, business slumped slightly, though “we were expecting even less, to tell you the truth,” he said. Of those who did dine in, Guessous said, “Everyone is trying to be here on a positive note and support businesses in the best way possible.”

He pointed out, though, that among the diverse clientele of tourists, college students, and locals, the mood had changed.

“There are emotional scars. People are sad for all the people who lost their lives,” he said. “But everyone in our staff has been very helpful. Some have already donated blood.” Guessous and his team are looking for other ways to help out. “We saw New York go through it and pull together. And I think we’ll do just as well in Boston and put our city back right where it belongs.”

At the neighborhood fixture Thornton’s Fenway Grill, Marty Thornton felt less upbeat. His crowd consists mainly of locals with close ties to the city and to the marathoners. When he kept his establishment open on Monday night after the tragedy, the place was busier than usual.

“We’re a neighborhood bar, and a lot of people needed somewhere to go,” said Thornton.

Besides drinks, the bar offered its electrical outlets to people who needed to charge their phones after a day of busily trying to call missing loved ones while the cellphone networks in the area were overwhelmed. It was also a place where customers could gather and console each other.

“A lot of people were still in shock,” said Marty. “No one wants to sit home when something like that happens.” As patrons called it a night, “They thanked me for being open,” he said. “They wanted to get together with their friends. It was a relief for people.”

On Tuesday, some establishments including Mexican eatery Boloco and Italian restaurant Vapiano even offered free food and drink to emergency responders.

At one of Boston’s most famous bars, Cheers, manager Dennis Pinto said the restaurant was more crowded than usual. He said, “The marathon is one of our busiest days of the year. We get all the ‘blue and yellow jackets,’” people wearing the official jackets of the 2013 Boston Marathon. “Partly because we’re so close to where it happened, and those restaurants are closed, people came here.”

By Grace Bello, NBC News Contributer- Reposted from NBCNews.com

 

If Running 26.2 Isn’t For You, Drink It Instead: A Guide to Bars Along the Marathon Route

Friday, April 12th, 2013

Boston Marathon Route

Another year, another Boston Marathon — and you’re not running in it. That’s for the better, I say. The Boston Marathon route is among the most difficult marathon routes in the world, challenging runners to 26.2 miles of grueling hills, aggressive winds and hordes of drunk college kids. You may not be in college anymore, but if you have Marathon Monday off, take the opportunity to enjoy a little imbibing yourself. We’ve created a do-it-yourself pub crawl along the last few miles of the Boston Marathon route for you to take full advantage of on Monday (and so you’re not driving while drinking the first 20 miles). Start early, end late, and remember, it’s a marathon, not a sprint. Enjoy!

Mile 22:  Cleveland Circle

Take the C Line out to Cleveland Circle, and do it up like the college kids do. The first runners will be through here in the 10 a.m. hour, fresh off of Heartbreak Hill, so they’re going to need your enthusiasm. Snag a spot at CitySide’s roof deck and wish them well from your cozy seat high above the course, beer in hand.

Mile 23: Washington Square

Make two pit stops in Washington Square. Jimmy’s Bar and Oven has outdoor seating, stellar pizza and a stocked bar. Across Beacon Street, The Publick House offers a huge selection of craft beer, and killer mac and cheese for some last-minute carbo-loading.

Mile 24: Coolidge Corner

Then, head on down Beacon Street to Coolidge Corner. This is one of my favorite spots to watch the marathon – the runners are in the final stretch, and the energy is so thick you could cut it with a knife. Cheer them on, then go off the beaten path to Regal Beagle to sip the “Rosie’s Green Mile” cocktail, which features Toms Barrel Aged Gin, Green Chartreuse, Bittermans Hiver Amer and fresh lemon.

Mile 25: Kenmore Square

Runners eye the Citgo sign as the 25 mile marker; you eye it as the final stretch on your bar crawl. Stop in to The Hawthorne for some classy cocktails, or drop by their neighbors at Eastern Standard for patio dining with a view. Warning: after the Red Sox game ends, Eastern Standard gets pretty packed, so get in the right mindset for shoulder-to-shoulder crowds.

Mile 26: Boylston Street

You can do it! The crowds are roaring as you round the corner on Boylston Street (just kidding, they’re cheering for the actual runners, but you can pretend it’s for you). Choose from one of several options on race day. Pour House and Whiskey’s are good bets, but I personally would opt for the margaritas at Cactus Club.

Mile 26.2: The Finish Line

Still kickin’? Round out your marathon day of drinking at Solas with cold, refreshing pints. Don’t forget to pat yourself on the back for making it through.

Boston Marathon signsWhere will you be drinking on Marathon Monday?

By Lisa DeCanio, Re-posted  from BostonInno.com

Boston St. Patrick’s Day Pub Crawl Dominates St. Patrick’s Day Weekend

Monday, March 11th, 2013

Four upcoming events are set to be the ultimate Irish celebrations for Boston St Patrick’s Day. Boston St. Patrick’s Day Pub Crawl has events that span the entire weekend of March 15 thru the 17th.

Boston, MA — (SBWIRE) — 03/08/2013 — Since Boston has such a large Irish-American population, it should come as no surprise that St Patrick’s Day is widely celebrated all over the city. Boston St Patrick’s Day Pub Crawl (http://tiny.cc/StPatsBarCrwlBoston) is set to be one of the biggest events of the weekend.

The list of events includes a kickoff party, an after party and 2 Boston St Patrick’s Day Pub Crawls on separate days.  Bars participating in the festivities include Kitty OSheas Boston, where the Kickoff party takes place from 5pm -2am on the 15th, Rumor Bar which is one of the various  registration points for the pub crawls on the 16th and 17th and Underbar Boston which will host the Boston St Patrick’s Day Pub Crawl 2013 after party on Saturday night.

Three day passes, which start at $20, entitle the ticket-holder access to the kickoff party at Kitty O’Sheas, a wristband, a St Patrick’s Day mug, a Bar Crawl Map and the Boston St Patrick’s Day Pub Crawl on both Saturday and Sunday.  Appetizers at Kitty O’Sheas Boston will be half off for participants wearing the wristband. VIP passes are also available which gives the ticket-holder access to the kickoff party, the 2 bar crawls and the after party at Underbar Boston. The after party, appropriately called Paddy Fest, will take place at Underbar Boston from 10:30p.m. Till 2a.m. Saturday night March 16th. Well known for its ambiance and great DJs, Underbar is sure to appease the party goers who just want to relax, enjoy good music and sip delicious drinks.

Regardless of the part of town Boston St Patrick’s Day enthusiasts live, there is a nearby Boston St Patrick’s Day Pub Crawl registration point. Boston neighborhoods encompassed in the bar crawl include Back Bay, Faneuil Hall, Fenway, Leather District and Theater/Chinatown. Registration ticket pricing is different depending upon the location where the bar crawl is started. All 7 starting registration points have various spans of time to check in so it is best to double check the schedule before arrival. The official website includes a detailed list of registration locations, times and map of party area.

Since there are so many Bar Crawl locations spread throughout several Boston neighborhoods and people changing venues often, overcrowding should not be an issue but as always, admission to a bar is based on capacity. Now You Know Events provides more detailed information about the Boston St Patrick’s Day Pub Crawl on their review page. Ticket purchases can be made on the following website. http://tiny.cc/StPatsBarCrwlBoston.

Re-posted from SBWire.com

Boston bars warm up locals during storm

Tuesday, February 12th, 2013

Lincoln Tavern & Restaurant

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Lincoln Tavern & Restaurant, South Boston

They became like sledding hills for grown-ups, places where unburdened workers and friends gathered to have a good time on a day when a powerful storm swept away many people’s daily responsibilities. Bars and restaurants throughout the Boston area were packed Friday with revelers who treated the approaching blizzard like a grade school snow day, except they sat on stools instead of toboggans and sipped pints of beer rather than mugs of cocoa.

Gerry Burke, owner of Doyle’s Café in Jamaica Plain, likened the high spirits to the glee in his neighborhood during the blizzard of ’78, when he and his buddies romped outside for days.

“Everybody’s in a really good mood,” Burke said. “It sounds kinda weird, but people are psyched up.”

Early in the evening at Flann O’Brien’s on Mission Hill, patrons huddled next to a fireplace in the bar, trying to warm up over their favorite drinks.

“I wouldn’t be here if it wasn’t for the storm,” said Allison Joyce, 38, a social worker at Boston Children’s Hospital. On a normal Friday, she probably would have just gone home after work.

But Joyce and her friends said there was something exciting about being out in the storm, and it was an excuse to linger in town and share the moment. “It took a blizzard to get us to come for a pint,” said her co-worker, Noel Comer.

Many establishments closed early, citing dangerous roadways and a shuttered MBTA system that halted transportation for employees and patrons. But some, especially those in walkable urban areas, remained open or even expanded their hours, positioning themselves as well-stocked shelters — for those with a valid ID.

By 2:30 p.m., the Warren Tavern in Charlestown resembled a bustling ski lodge, with patrons walking through the door wearing parkas and snow pants, trading stories about braving treks to the bar through sideways-whipping snow gusts. Many had stayed home from work or, like Kate Garrett, 31, left early to beat the gathering storm.

“This was about the only place open in the neighborhood,” she said.

The bar’s manager, John Harnett, said he expected to stay open until the usual 1 a.m. closing time, noting that he is the only employee who does not live within walking distance and planned to spend the night at the nearby Marriott hotel.

Harnett said he would return home to Lynnfield after the storm lifts Saturday. Until then, he is counting on plenty of company.

“Usually people just hunker down here for storms — stay right through breakfast, lunch, and dinner,” Harnett said.

A few blocks away, at The Ironside Grill, Jessie Haigh and Melissa Kalicin walked in at about 4 p.m. wearing goggles and head-to-toe skiing gear after a journey through the city. They had tried to get to the Top of the Hub restaurant in the Prudential Tower, hoping for a surreal vantage point on a historic storm. But the restaurant, they were told, was closed.

“I’m disappointed,’’ said Haigh, “but happy we made it here.”

Ironside manager Abdel Samir said he had to send his kitchen staff home at 2:30 p.m., so they could catch trains before the T stopped running. That left the bar only able to serve beverages and chips and salsa. Nonetheless, it remained full as evening approached.

“We’ve gotten a zillion calls from people wondering if we’re open,” Samir said. “We’ll stay here as long as we have power.”

Some bars opened unusually early to cater to people who were snowed out of work or school.

Lincoln Tavern & Restaurant in South Boston, which normally opens at 5 p.m. on Fridays, welcomed its first guests at 11 a.m.

“We realized [Thursday] night that 80 percent of the people in our neighborhood wouldn’t be at work, so we decided to open up early,” said bar manager Mike Shaw. “We went crazy on social media telling people we were going to be open.’’

By early afternoon, all the stools at both of the tavern’s bars were occupied, and the restaurant was at about half its 300-person capacity. Shaw said he had increased the bar’s stock on Thursday, anticipating a snow-day rush. Friday’s special hours, he said, were a way to promote the new restaurant, which opened in October.

At Conor Larkin’s Grill & Tap, near the campus of Northeastern University, general manager Matt Pian was looking forward to a busy afternoon and evening of serving college students with no classes to attend and plenty of time to party. Just before 1 p.m., the small bar with room for 93 already was a quarter full.

“In the past, we’ve done well on these kinds of days,” Pian said. “School is closed, so you know students are around.”

David Nystrom, a bartender at Shays Pub & Wine Bar in Harvard Square, was fielding calls Friday afternoon from local hotels looking for places to steer guests. Nystrom happily informed the hotels that Shays was one of the few establishments staying open during the storm and that everyone was welcome to join the early-arriving regulars he was already serving.

“I’m seeing people I would normally see three hours from now,” Nystrom said.

Bill Honeycutt, who owns bars and restaurants in Newton, Waltham, and Malden, said all three did a brisk lunch business Friday in the early hours of the blizzard. But he said he would have to close his John Brewer’s Tavern in Malden and Waltham for the evening because Governor Deval Patrick’s traffic ban prevented his staff from getting to work.

“The lunch business in all three restaurants was great because people weren’t working,” Honeycutt said. “We’re kind of mad at the governor because of the driving ban. It’s not going to get bad till 8 o’clock, but I can’t get my staff here.”

Nearby in West Newton at the Cherry Tree Bar and Grille, manager Pamela Roy said she planned to continue serving food and drinks into the evening, even though some workers were unable to come in because of the driving ban.

“I’m a little nervous because of the storm,” Roy said, “but I’ve got a cook here and I’ve got a bartender. And we’re going to stay open as long as we can.”

By 4 p.m. in Coolidge Corner, Brookline, most stores were closed except for a few bars and restaurants offering customers who lived nearby a warm place to hide from the weather.

Hops N Scotch, a new restaurant and bar on Beacon Street, opened its doors at noon rather than the scheduled 5 p.m. It offered a smaller menu and drew dozens of patrons, including teachers, social workers, and computer specialists.

“This is our snow-watching, beer-drinking place,’’ said Jeff Hannan, 26, explaining that he sat at the same table during an earlier storm.

Hannan and his three friends, all in their 20s, said they were not panicked about the blizzard. As city dwellers, they were confident stores would be open by at least Sunday so they could restock. They had heard enough about the fabled 1978 storm that they were hoping to have something of equal proportions to brag about.

Not far away, on Harvard Street, the Coolidge Corner Clubhouse planned to stay open until last call at 1:30 a.m. Jennifer Sullivan, assistant general manager, said the restaurant made sure staff had a place to stay locally and unless the lights went out, or the owner called, they would be serving beer, wine, and cocktails and their signature fries until early morning.

At the bar, three college friends sat together drinking cocktails and tapping on their phones — the start of what they hoped to be an adventurous night in Brookline and Allston. The women, Katherine Duval, Jackie Chuck, and Ali Pagliarini, decided to bunk together at one of their homes in Brookline so they could have company during the storm.

As for essential provisions, Pagliarini said she had it covered.

“I ordered enough Chinese food to last through the weekend,” she said.

By Callum Borchers, Re-posted from BostonGlobe.com

This story was reported by Callum Borchers, Casey Ross, Michael B. Farrell, Jenifer B. McKim, and Robert Weisman and written by Borchers.

A look at Harpoon’s new waterfront watering hole

Tuesday, January 29th, 2013

Harpoon's Beer HallBetween its growing brewery scene and its scores of bars and restaurants, Boston doesn’t lack for beer options. The one thing the city has lacked in our lifetimes is a beer hall — but this is about to change.

Not to be confused with a beer bar, the beer hall is a German-style pub that’s dedicated to serving a ton of beer in a joyful and communal atmosphere.

A 300-person watering hole, the Harpoon Beer Hall is scheduled to open any day now at the Harpoon Brewery in South Boston. Patrons will be able to belly up and order from three of its 20 tap towers with a view of kegs being filled and Harpoon’s new canning line on one side and a waterfront view on the other. Beers will cost $5.75 and be served in proper Harpoon-branded glassware, according to the brand and beer style.

We recently had the chance to walk the beer hall, designed by Boston’s Studio Luz Architects, who created wide-plank floors from reclaimed oak and bar tops from salvaged live-edge Vermont butternut. “The natural deformations and imperfections of the materials add to the tactile experience of the bar,” they explain. That same wood is used in the communal tables, unifying the space.

This new project is a welcome and unique addition to a once-desolate South Boston waterfront that’s witnessed explosive restaurant growth in recent years — unique in that it shouldn’t be confused with a restaurant. “We did not want to build a restaurant,” says Rich Doyle, Harpoon CEO and cofounder. “This is about the beer and the experience of drinking it after seeing the brewery” — something that few breweries accommodate, aside from a quick tasting after a tour.

Wait, so no food? Not quite. In keeping with its German roots, the beer hall will also serve pretzels, but nothing more. “We wanted simple food that went really well with beer and was traditional. Freshly baked pretzels fit the bill,” says Doyle. They’ll be baked on-premises daily and include some of Harpoon’s spent grain from the brewing process. Germans use butter on their pretzels, but this is America. Look for garlic-parmesan butter, IPA cheese, cheddar mustard, queso poblano, and peanut-butter sauce, along with whole-grain and yellow mustards and an icing for a cinnamon/sugar pretzel. Several of the sauces will also be infused with Harpoon beer — perfect for soaking up the suds.

Gluten-intolerant? We got word that Harpoon is working on a special gluten-free vegan pretzel recipe to accommodate. Harpoon cider and root beer will also be available.

Those really looking to geek out should take the new brewery tour. “This is a combined beer hall and visitors’ center,” says Doyle. “Tours have become so popular that we grew out of our old tasting room and needed to expand. The tours will start and end in the new space instead of the tasting room on the other side of the brewery. Tours will go through the brewery and stop in the tasting room to sample beer before ending in the beer hall.”

The visitors’ center will also feature a new retail outlet with 20 beers to go, thanks to a new state-of-the-art 64-ounce automated growler station, plus plenty of Harpoon gear. Private function room and event bookings will also be available. Learn more at harpoonbrewery.com, and for opening announcements, follow @harpoon_brewery.

HARPOON BREWERY :: 306 Northern Ave, Boston :: 617.574.9551 or harpoonbrewery.com

FOR MORE BEER BUZZ: VISIT BEERADVOCATE.COM :: @BEERADVOCATE
By Jason & Todd Alstrom- Re-posted from ThePheonix.com

Author Stephanie Schrow explores local history in “Drinking Boston”

Wednesday, January 16th, 2013

"Drinking Boston"Boston has always been a drinking city, from the time of its earliest Puritan settlers — who urged moderation but enjoyed tankards of ale on the regular — right up to the Daily Beast’s recent declaration that the Hub is the drunkest city in America for the second year in a row.

In her new book “Drinking Boston: A History of the City and its Spirits,” author Stephanie Schorow treats Boston’s production and consumption of alcohol as an important part of its social, economic, and political history, one that has reflected changing times but also helped shape those changes.

Schorow, a former Boston Herald reporter and a freelance restaurant critic for the Globe, described some of that history in a recent talk at the Old South Meeting House, where about 50 fans of history, drinking, or both gathered to listen.

Colonial taverns in New England often served also as inns, Schorow said, and there were many in Boston, including the Dog and Pot, the Good Woman, and the Bunch of Grapes. They were gathering places for a wide range of activities, including the planning of the Boston Tea Party and later of westward expansion.

“The taverns weren’t just places to drink, but they [also] had this impact on exploration and these other things,” Schorow said.

In the 19th century, as waves of immigration brought increasing ethnic diversity, Schorow said, the conflict between established Yankees and newer immigrants from Ireland and southern Europe was visible in Yankee opinions about their supposedly upright and virtuous bars versus the dens of iniquity where immigrants took their drink.

By the late 19th century, downtown Boston was filled with bars — nearly 100 just in the few blocks around Old City Hall — but the city was also increasingly a home to the anti-alcohol Temperance Movement.

Schorow said the modern understanding of that movement is typically oversimplified.

Too often New England’s role in Temperance is overlooked, she said, and it is seen as a Midwestern movement. But there were many Temperance leaders across this region, and now and again local municipalities would temporary be declared “dry,” as Cambridge was 1887.

And though many Temperance leaders were women, men were also important in the movement, and some women became involved only because it offered an entry point into politics and public service they were otherwise denied.

It took decades, but ultimately anti-alcohol sentiment led to Prohibition, from 1920 – 1933, which initially reduced rates of drunkenness and related arrests, Schorow said, but failed to keep them low.

Speakeasies ensured that city-dwellers had access to alcohol, and there were plenty. Muckraking journalist Walter Liggett estimated about 4,000 speakeasies in Boston by 1930, Schorow said, compared to only about 1,000 licensed bars in the city before Prohibition.

One unintended consequence of Prohibition was that bars ceased to be the all-male enclaves they had usually been before. As speakeasies became trendy, even respectable women were willing to be seen in them, and women continued to visit bars and nightclubs after Prohibition was repealed in 1933.

“It’s interesting that the very face, the very image of Repeal is a woman with a drink in her hand,” Schorow said.

Repeal ushered in the age of glamorous nightclubs like the Club Mayfair, Casa Mañana, the Silver Dollar, the Cocoanut Grove, and the Latin Quarter. These nightclubs, Schorow said, catered to men and women of all ages, unlike contemporary clubs frequented only by the very young.

Later, some bars and nightclubs served as places not just for enjoyment but for building of communities and movement toward social change.

The jazz clubs that once lined Massachusetts Avenue were among the few places that black and white Bostonians would gather socially in the mid-20th century, and downtown gay bars played an important role in the social life of the local gay and lesbian communities, Schorow said.

“Yes, they were places to pick up and meet other people, but they were also a place where you could go and be accepted.”

By Jeremy Fox, Re-posted from Boston.com

Restaurant Sciences survey: Brown Whiskey drinkers may be the best tippers

Thursday, January 10th, 2013

Johnnie WalkerIf you’re a saloon-keeper, you want your lounging bar to be wall-to-wall with customers drinking Johnnie Red, Jack Daniels, and Wild Turkey.

Why? Because the brown-whiskey drinking demographic tends to leave the biggest tips for bartenders, waiters, and waitresses.

So concludes a new survey from Restaurant Sciences, a Newton firm that analyzes guest checks to compile useful data for the restaurant industry. In putting together its “Hey Big Spender Survey,” the firm said it analyzed more than 4 million checks that came from a wide range of establishments, including family restaurants, nightclubs, and hotel bars.

Customers who ordered scotch had the highest check totals at $69.14, the firm said, and while bourbon drinkers tipped a bit more, wait staff serving Scotch drinkers received a much higher average tip — $13.91 from Scotch drinkers versus $9.60 from bourbon drinkers.

“Restaurant Sciences’ data shows that guest checks with only wine sales are 25 percent higher than checks with only spirit sales and 78 percent higher than those checks with only beer sales,” company president Chuck Ellis said in a statement. “Whether consumers ordered beers, wine, or spirits, they generally tipped an above average amount of more than 20 percent per check.”

Wow — 20 percent tips suggest that US consumers are indeed a generous lot. One might surmise that in putting together its sample of restaurants, the firm gave an understandable leaving-alone to the cash-on-the-bar, low-rent gin mills so esteemed by the crack professionals on the Business Updates staff.

By Chris Reidy,Globe Staff- Re-posted from Boston.com

How to Get Around on New Year’s Eve: Free MBTA, Road Closures and More

Monday, December 31st, 2012

 

We’ve suggested 32 ideas for celebrating New Year’s Eve in Boston (see here, here & here), plus a complete guide to First Night, so we hope by now you’ve locked down your evening plans. After that’s all settled, it’s now time to coordinate your transportation for New Year’s Eve in Boston. Should you take the MBTA? Should you drive? Should you avoid both and just walk? Below you’ll find everything you need to know about riding the MBTA on New Year’s Eve (it’s free!), as well as road closures and parking information throughout the city. Happy 2013!

 

 

Taking the T

If you don’t have to drive, the MBTA is the way to go tonight. The system will be running on a “modified weekday schedule,” and additional trains will be added during rush hour service beginning at 2 p.m.

What’s more, the MBTA is offering free service after 8 p.m. tonight, and the Blue, Orange, Green and Red Line trains are running extended hours until 2 a.m. Yes, you read that correctly: free service from 8 p.m. until 2 a.m.!

Additionally, the commuter rail will run on a modified weekday schedule with extended services on some lines tonight. Click here for the full MBTA New Year’s Eve schedule.

Taxis

Plan on being out past  2 a.m.? There are a slew of taxi services to help you get home that don’t involve waving your hand in the air like a fool in the bitter cold. Download these apps to shuttle you around on New Year’s Eve.

Uber – Free – Described as “everyone’s private driver,” Uber offers on-demand car service at the click of a button. Simply input your credit card info into the app, and you’ll be riding in style to and from your New Year’s Eve bash. Be warned: Uber rates go up during peak hours, such as New Year’s Eve, so rides may get costly.

Pingup – Free – The Boston-based app allows customers to communicate with local businesses via text. Pingup has a relationship with more than 500 taxis in Boston, all of which will be giving priority to people who use Pingup to hail a cab on New Year’s Eve. Users can text their request, and dispatch will notify them through Pingup when their cab has arrived.

Hailo – Free – Similarly, Hailo is a taxi app that lets users hail taxis without ever raising a hand. The app picks up on your location, and you just click a button, alerting a taxi driver to come pick you up there.

Driving

If you do insist on driving on New Year’s Eve, below you’ll find a full schedule of traffic detours, parking restrictions and tow zones. Remember, don’t drink and drive!

Traffic detours will be in place due to the following street closures.

Boylston Street, from Dalton Street to Charles Street, will be closed to vehicular traffic from 4 PM to 8 PM.
Charles Street, from Boylston Street to Beacon Street, will be closed to vehicular traffic from 5 PM to 8 PM.

Temporary parking restrictions are outlined below.

“Tow Zone No Stopping Boston Police Special Event, Saturday Through Tuesday” signs will be posted at the following locations.

Boylston Street, South side (Copley Square side), from opposite #585 to opposite #575.
Blagden Street, North side (Library side), near Dartmouth Street.

“Tow Zone No Stopping Monday” signs will be posted at the following locations.

Arlington Street, Both sides, from Beacon Street to Boylston Street

Atlantic Avenue, East side, from East India Row to Commercial Street; West side, from Commercial Wharf to Cross Street

Beacon Street, South side (Public Garden side), from Charles Street to Arlington Street; Both sides, from Charles Street to Walnut Street

Berkeley Street, Both sides, from Boylston Street to Newbury Street

Boylston Street, Both sides, from Dalton Street to Arlington Street (excluding the area on Boylston Street requested above); North side (Public Garden side), from Arlington Street toCharles Street; Both sides, from Charles Street to Tremont Street

Cambridge Street, Both sides, from Court Street to Sudbury Street

Central Street, Both sides, from Old Atlantic Avenue to the Dead End

Charles Street, West side (Public Garden side) from Boylston Street to Beacon Street

Clarendon Street,  Both sides, from Newbury Street to Boylston Street

Court Street, Both sides, from Washington Street to Cambridge Street

Cross Street, Both sides, from Atlantic Avenue to Hanover Street

Dartmouth Street, Both sides, from Boylston Street to Newbury Street

Exeter Street, Both sides, from Newbury Street to Boylston Street

Fairfield Street, Both sides, from Boylston Street to Newbury Street

Gloucester Street,  Both sides, from Newbury Street to Boylston Street

Hereford Street, Both sides, from Boylston Street to Newbury Street

Milk Street, Both sides, from J.F.F. Surface Road to Old Atlantic Avenue

Old Atlantic Avenue, Both sides, from Milk Street to State Street

Surface Road, Both sides, from Sudbury Street to State Street

By Lisa DeCanio, Re-posted from BostonInno.com

Party Brunches in Boston: Can Liquid Brunches Take Hold in Boston?

Tuesday, November 27th, 2012

On a typical Sunday afternoon in the Hub, some Bostonians can be found wrapping up a quiet brunch of eggs Benedict, coffee and perhaps a spicy Bloody Mary or two. However, there was nothing quiet about a brunch taking place at a Downtown Crossing hotspot a few weeks ago.

Two Sundays ago marked the launch of GEM’s new dining series called The Brunch Club. At The Brunch Club, patrons are treated to a full service menu that includes typical brunch items like eggs benedict and breakfast sandwiches with sides of tater tots and bacon, served alongside a ramped up drink menu and a live DJ.

Randy Greenstein, owner of the Big Night Entertainment Group which represents GEM, said The Brunch Club was inspired by two current entertainment industry trends.

“Brunches are hot,” said Greenstein, adding, “Day parties in Vegas have been hot for a couple years now.”

Guests of GEM’s first Brunch Club came out at 1 p.m., in groups of six or more, noshing on eggs and slowly sipping mimosas to DJed beats. By 3 p.m., Greenstein said the meal portion of the afternoon had begun wrapping up. The lights were dimmed, the music was turned up, and patrons rose from their tables, dancing and drinking well into 7 p.m. that evening.

In New York City, the combination of the brunching and day partying has been a dynamic recipe for success in recent years. Manhattan nightclubs and lounges like Bagatelle and Lavo have perfected the brunch party, pumping up the music and pouring cocktail after cocktail, turning a Sunday afternoon into something that resembles a Saturday night out.

In Boston, several venues have attempted to replicate New York’s liquid brunches, but with little success.

“We tried doing them for close to three months, and they really never took off,” said Edward Brooks, whose Back Bay lounge, The Brahmin, ended their “Social Sundays” series this past June.

Woodward at the Ames Hotel also ran a few Sunday brunches with a live DJ last fall, but a spokesperson for the hotel said brunch – liquid or otherwise – is no longer offered at Woodward.

“There really has yet to be a successful one,” said Greenstein, noting that Massachusetts’ stringent liquor laws may be a contributing factor to the failure of some party brunches.

Because bars are required to shut down at 2 a.m., patrons are home in bed relatively early – at least compared to cities like New York. Therefore, brunch here occurs earlier, often before noon, making the concept of partying all day harder to get started.

Greenstein also called Boston a “destination city,” meaning that customers go out knowing exactly what they want and where they want to get it from. No one is wandering around, popping into and discovering new places, he said.

“When you go to brunch, it’s a relaxing experience… a nice way to start your morning,” said Renee Hirschberg, who heads up Boston Brunchers, a group of 1,500 local bloggers and social media influencers that review brunches in the Boston area.

She added that Boston is a “foodie city,” and said Bostonians go to brunch primarily for culinary experiences – not loud music with a side of eggs.

“I really don’t think Boston is the market that goes [to brunch] to dance on tables,” she said.

Massachusetts happy hour laws preventing drink specials, like bottomless mimosas, may also contribute to the failure of party brunches in Boston, said Hirschberg, echoing Greenstein’s sentiment.

Still, as the GEM crowd proved last week, party brunches are not something all Bostonians are opposed to.

A few months ago, Rich McGlynn and his friends were sitting down to traditional Boston brunch, recapping their previous night out, when it dawned on them.

“Why can’t this be an extension of the party?”McGlynn asked.

His solution was the Liquid Lunch Club, an event company that coordinates invite-only lunches or brunches, with drink sponsors, live entertainment and giveaways, set to launch in the next month.

“I think Boston is a party town – in a good way,” added McGlynn, citing our willingness to come out in full forces for local sports teams on Sundays.

“[But] there wasn’t really anything that you could describe as a ‘party brunch.’”

McGlynn explained that the Liquid Lunch Club’s element of exclusivity will help local businesses know how many guests to expect. He hopes it removes the uncertainty from planning an event like a party brunch and simply crossing your fingers that people show up.

“We’ve gotten a great response so far,” said McGlynn, who is currently collecting email addresses for the 40 to 50 person, monthly Liquid Lunch Club events.

The Brunch Club at GEM is taking a similar approach to timing, running the second Sunday of every month.

For Greenstein, though, a successful party brunch rests in the unique experience being offered to Boston.

“It’s one of those adult opportunities,” he said, referring to the fact that party brunches allow guests to come or go throughout the day as they please, without the set time limits of a traditionally orchestrated restaurant experience or a 2 a.m. curfew of a night at the bar.

“I think fun is the key,” he added.

By Lisa DeCanio Re-posted from BostInno.com

How to Ruin a Perfectly Good Bar

Friday, November 16th, 2012

No bar caters to everyone. From the trendy bars in Los Angeles to the blue-collar bars in Boston, there’s something different for all stripes. We could go the positive route and say that’s because people are all wonderfully different and collectively represent the beautiful complexities of humankind…

But in reality, it’s largely based on the fact that most folks tend to be über-critical and are just looking for an excuse to whine. Like the guy who shows up at a high-end club in his shorts and then writes a blistering review about how the “rude doorman refused to let me in. And let me be clear, it was for absolutely no good reason WHATSOEVER!”

Or the scenester lady who goes to a dive and is aghast at how the floors are sticky and the bathroom handles don’t work very well.

Or the imperious hipster… who goes anywhere… and says anything, most of which tends to center around some permutation of “I liked this place before it got popular” or “I can’t believe they don’t carry Nepalese Pliny Bout Dark Stout Oak Hefeweizen Bock! And they call themselves a beer bar, puhhleeeaaaze.”

Of course, there are a few things that bars tend to do which warrant a little universal chastising. And if you don’t agree, why don’t you just go away and listen to Mumford & Sons or something?

We totally liked them before they got popular.

Tasting pours
Tasting Pours
Okay, we’ll make an exception if we’re at some specialty wine bar with rare varietals nobody has ever heard of and we want to avoid throwing down $25 for a glass of Balsamina Shiraz that tastes horrible. But if we’re at the average bar, we’re here to drink. We’re not libation experts, we don’t care that the hops were harvested beneath the full moon and fermented in barrels of Amboyna Burl. Just give us the beer. If we like it, we’ll order another. If we don’t, we’ll order another till we do.

 

 

 

The mixology complex
Mixology Complex

This ties to our hatred of tasting pours, but it shouldn’t be looked at as a lack of appreciation for fine drinks. We’re big fans of a proper cocktail, and we’re more than happy to spend a little extra on something original that’s been prepared with pride. But, donning a vest and a newsboy hat doesn’t make your barback a mixologist, people. And complicated doesn’t mean well-thought-out or good. Just look at the U.S. federal budget.

 

 

 

 

Bars that have coasters of beer brands they don’t carry!
Beer Coasters
How does this even happen? You can buy like 2,000 of these things in bulk for less than it costs to meter-park for the night. Serving a craft beer on a Budweiser coaster doesn’t bother us so much, but there’s something inherently wrong with resting a can of PBR on a coaster branded by Allagash Curieux, especially when all you have behind the bar are mass-market domestics.

 

 

 

 

Really loud music in a bar that’s trying to be a club, but should just be a bar.
Really Loud Music
Yes, this makes us sound 90, but it speaks more to the fact that we’re convinced most people go to a bar either to talk, catch a game or quietly drink the pain of their failed lives away. It doesn’t matter where you are, whether it’s trying-too-hard bars in Chicago or tucked away bars in NYC, they’re all guilty of it. What’s with cranking up the music so loud we have to practically scream in someone’s ear just to give them the time of day? Keeping the volume up at the club is fine, but if we have to perform charades at a regular watering hole one more time just to get the bill, it will probably lead to a sudden reenactment of Charles Bronson’s Death Wish. Besides, if we wanted to get smashed and scream at people, we’d go visit our in-laws.

 

Beer enthusiasts
Beer Enthusiasts
You: What do you recommend?
Bartender: We just got a stock of Jolly Pumpkin Bam Biere on draft, it’s a great Saison.
You: Cool, I’ll try one.
Guy Next To You: Ooh, nice choice. I find this to be great Belgian-style beer. It’s made by an artisan brewery in Michigan. They use only wild yeast and age everything in oak barrels with open fermentation. This allows microbiological cultures like brettanomyces to create a wonderfully earthy undertone, and you’ll notice notes of citrus that are just subtle enough to blend perfectly with the spicy malt.
You: Please stop talking.

 

Theme nights in general
Theme Nights
If we wanted to hang out with a bunch of slack-jawed adults buying overpriced food and beverages while costumed staff acted like the entire scene was the greatest thing on earth, we’d go to Disneyland. And probably punch Mickey in the face. Nobody likes Bingo, trivia nights are just an excuse to pretend boozing is educational and anyone who thinks wearing an oversized Hawaiian shirt is fun probably also thought the Macarena was the coolest dance craze ever. You know what bar theme we’d like to see? Serve Me a Drink and Shut Your Face Night.

Also, if Disneyland security calls, we’re not here.

By PartyEarth, Re-posted from HuffingtonPost.com