These 10 towns and cities pack in enough top-notch eateries to make the food scene a draw unto itself. Don’t miss our picks for the best foodie getaways in New England.
New England has so many incredible towns for foodies that narrowing down our list to the following 10 vacation destinations was quite a challenge. And the list of contenders has only grown in the past decade. Of course, Boston has always been a food lovers’ destination, but when Bon Appétit named Portland, Maine, its 2018 Restaurant City of the Year, it was a watershed moment for the New England food scene. Finally, after years of quietly linking farms with tables, recruiting and nurturing top-tier talent, and growing a whole new generation of bakers, cheese makers, and confectioners, we were finally being recognized as a food lover’s paradise on par with San Francisco, New Orleans, and Seattle.
The following guide takes you through the highlights of 10 towns and cities that pack in enough top-notch eateries to make the food scene a draw unto itself. We considered the concentration of restaurants, bakeries, shops, farm stands, and food producers. Many are, unsurprisingly, larger cities, but some exceptional small towns made the cut as well. Time to hit the road and get eating!
This up-and-coming former mill town found a second life as a food lover’s destination beginning with the Palace Diner, a classic Worcester dining car that Greg Mitchell and Chad Conley remade into the ultimate destination for perfect tuna melts and buttermilk pancakes. Lured by comparatively affordable rents, other chefs followed — and now Biddeford has an embarrassment of riches, with one of the most innovative dining scenes in New England, with some eateries located in the converted mill buildings, now known as the Pepperell Mill Campus, that give the town its character. It’s home to the greatest culinary bookstore in the country, Rabelais. Even better, neighboring city Saco is seeing its own restaurant renaissance spill over from across the river.
Don’t Miss: Elda, Palace Diner, Jackrabbit Cafe, Rover Bagel, Night Moves Bread, Magnus on Water, Little Spruce Baking Co.,Elements, Part & Parcel, Pepperell Provisions, Sweetcream Dairy, Nibblesford, Lorne Wine, Lucky Pigeon Brewing Co.
Great Barrington balances its identity as a weekend destination for city folk with an eat-local, farm-forward community of dedicated, food-savvy year-rounders. This creates a fantastic cross-pollination of top-notch ingredients, talent, and a consistent customer base. Head over to Railroad Street, known as “Restaurant Row,” to be in the center of things. And don’t miss a stop at Guido’s Fresh Marketplace, the kind of green/gourmet/everyday supermarket that every town deserves, but few have.
Food Editor Amy Traverso oversees the Yankee Magazine Food department and contributes to NewEngland.com. Amy's book, The Apple Lover's Cookbook (W.W. Norton), won an International Association of Culinary Professionals (IACP) cookbook award for the category American.