Posts by Chrissie

Olena Restaurant

By Chrissie, 22 January, 2009, 1 Comment

Oleana
134 Hampshire Street, Cambridge; (617) 661-0505.

In the Inman Square neighborhood of Cambridge, clapboard multifamily houses are interspersed with small businesses, many of them high-tech offspring of nearby M.I.T. The area’s most delectable surprise, Oleana, snuggles midblock on workaday Hampshire Street northeast of Central Square, its entrance tucked on the side.

The understated exterior belies the bold flavors on the menu. Ana Sortun, chef, part-owner and the guiding palate behind Oleana, is passionate about sultry Mediterranean food, melding Greek with Turk, Armenian with Moroccan. Her warm olives fragrant with oregano and sesame seeds quickly put us in mind of wind-ruffled blue-green waters in spite of the arctic chill outside. Tangy-toasty Armenian bean and walnut pâté with homemade string cheese provided the perfect prelude to subtle cinnamon-poached halibut with almond-spiked spinach and garlicky celeriac mash. Each flavor and texture was individually discernible, yet the cumulative effect was dynamic in the most delicious way. My husband’s grilled spiced lamb steak with fava bean moussaka was no less good and satisfying — rendered better still by a half bottle of Adelsheim pinot noir 2000 from the Willamette Valley in Oregon ($24), chosen from the reasonably priced short wine card organized by color and flavor from light to full.

Ms. Sortun’s food, served in a gently lighted earth-toned room bustling with diners, is at once rustic-traditional and deeply inventive, invested with techniques mastered at La Varenne in Paris and an abiding respect for field-fresh ingredients, whose producers are credited on the menu alongside the kitchen staff’s names.

Persuaded by the evident pleasure that others were taking in the desserts concocted by the pastry chef, Maura Kilpatrick, we sampled the baked Alaska with coconut ice cream and passion fruit caramel under gilded meringue and the warm chocolate soufflé cake with salted almond ice cream. We never intended to finish both, yet we found ourselves reaching for just one more morsel.

Plagued by major service problems when it opened in 2001, Oleana today employs some of the most engaged and often witty help in the Boston area. They juggle an overflowing reservation book and 67 dining-room places. In warm weather there are also 50 sought-after seats in a back garden burgeoning with vines.

INMAN SQUARE, CAMBRIDGE: Oleana, 134 Hampshire Street, Cambridge; (617) 661-0505. Dinner only. Open daily. T-stop: Central Square (Red Line). $60 a person.

Jurys Boston Hotel

By Chrissie, 22 December, 2008, No Comment

Jurys Boston Hotel

350 Stuart Street; 617-266-7200; bostonhotels.jurysdoyle.com/jurys_boston is on the edge of the South End in a former Police Department headquarters.

A wall of trickling water makes the whole lobby smell of chlorine and feel like the Y.M.C.A., but Bostonians love the bar there. The rooms are lavish, with marble bathrooms and contemporary Irish art.

A single is $205.

Boston’s Copley Square Hotel

By Chrissie, 22 November, 2008, No Comment

A recent $18 million renovation has breathed new life into this 143-room hotel.

CENTRAL & CONVENIENT

Whether your in town visiting Boston University, shopping the Back Bay, or if you’re just exploring for a few days, it would be hard to find a more central and convenient spot.

STAY IN PREMIERE KING & AVOID BOUTIQUE QUEENS

Be sure not to stay in the hotel’s “boutique queen” rooms, which are New York-size (205 square feet), with just a thin perimeter for movement around the bed.

PERFECTLY COMFORTABLE BATHROOM

The wallpaper featured unusual reading material: the poem “Paul Revere’s Ride,” by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, in cursive. Otherwise, the bathroom was a nonevent, though perfectly comfortable. As usual, the nicer the hotel, the tinier the trash receptacle; the little bins were no match for our junk.

AMENITIES

The Copley Square is a small hotel with smallish amenities; don’t stay here if you need a gym the size of a health club or other services.

ROOM SERVICE

Super-speedy, but very bland and unremarkable.

BOTTOM LINE

Avoid the roomettes and make plans to eat out. An enviable location, the experience is lackluster.

Copley Square Hotel, 47 Huntington Avenue, Boston; (617) 536-9000; www.copleysquarehotel.com. Rates currently start at around $230.