
Luxury, hospitality, pasta: La Padrona is the restaurant Boston needed
The swank dining room is decorated in rich hues and materials, with a grand bar shaped like a racetrack at the center.
Pat Greenhouse/Globe Staff
The restaurant marks a return to Italy for chef Jody Adams, long of Rialto in Cambridge. Its menu takes inspiration from her years of travel throughout its regions. If you could not stop watching Stanley Tucci's 'Searching for Italy,' this place is for you. Adams and executive chef Amarilys Colon draw from Piedmont, Emilia-Romagna, Tuscany, Campania, passing dishes through a translation engine of New England produce, seafood, and meat.
Get Winter Soup Club
[Coming Soon] A six-week series featuring soup recipes and cozy vibes, plus side dishes and toppings, to get us all through the winter.
Enter Email
Sign Up
Bread has its own section on the menu, which says something about the general aims and viewpoint of La Padrona. Nothing will be a throwaway, and programs like pastry and beverages that sometimes seem a side thought here are top of mind. Not every restaurant can afford decor of walnut, brass, and viola marble, but this mind-set is free.
The ordering of cacio e pepe focaccia is contagious: To see the golden slices with their airy crowns of pecorino is to want them, and suddenly they're on every table. But do consider a skillet of chickpea spoon bread, a custardy, fluffy, soul-warming take on Italian farinata, crisp on the bottom and topped with charred leeks, celery leaves, and thin-sliced lemon for brightness and complexity.
Vegetable dishes like charred arrowhead cabbage get their due.
Pat Greenhouse/Globe Staff
Among the antipasti, burrata cheese bread eats like a white pizza, pretty with its crimped edges and topping of frilly frisee and thin-sliced purple radishes. But vegetable dishes steal the show in this category. A fritto misto of delicata squash, mushrooms, and fennel with Calabrian chile aioli and lobster bottarga offers some of the seasonal pleasures of tempura, with a crisp coating more reminiscent of fried clams. It overwhelms some of the delicate flavor of the vegetables, but no one minds much. Charred arrowhead cabbage is complemented by anchovy butter, orange, and sage. I was sorry to see sweet peppers tonnato, served over creamy tuna sauce with celery, currants, and smoked almonds, disappear from the menu. It was absolutely delicious, a sleeper dish among more obvious crowd-pleasers.
Advertisement
For instance: tender, sweet Nantucket bay scallops in saffron butter with pancetta, dill, and orange. The golden sauce is poured around the scallops tableside. There is more tableside action at La Padrona than I've seen in eons. It adds to the sense of theater, and the audience literally eats it up.
Tender, sweet Nantucket bay scallops in saffron butter poured tableside.
John Tlumacki/Globe Staff
Tagliatelle Emilia-Romagna shines in its simplicity: ethereal pasta, a bath of luscious cream, gratings of Parmigiano and black pepper. Then — tableside — a stripe of aged balsamic is applied down the center. With its pure flavors, high-quality ingredients, focused execution, and fillip of showmanship, it feels like a defining dish. I salute the inventiveness of burnt wheat rigatoni, black like squid ink pasta but smoky like ash, with Barnstable clams, braised tomatoes, seaweed, and crispy little peppers. It's like a clambake in Basilicata. I'm glad I ordered it. But next time I'm here, it's the tagliatelle I'll return to.
Also, to my surprise, the risotto. I'm agnostic about this as a restaurant dish, because 8 times out of 10 the grains are either undercooked or mush. La Padrona's version is not only perfect in this regard, it is gorgeous from first taste to last, rich with bites of lobster and uni, caramelized fennel and tomato.
Advertisement
Secondi like osso buco are solid, but the rest of the menu eclipses the meat.
John Tlumacki/Globe Staff
I'm a little less excited by La Padrona's secondi, which comes down in part to personal preference and in part bang for buck: I'd rather splurge on that risotto (a rich $48). But execution is a factor too. I enjoy veal osso buco braised in red wine with polenta and carrots, but it needs salt and the meat is a bit dry. Beef tenderloin is exceedingly tender, but the mushrooms it's served with taste burnt. There are a few large-format meat dishes — rack of lamb, a 40-ounce bistecca alla fiorentina — for a large party or a special occasion.
I appreciate that these dishes are here, and also that they're eclipsed by things like dessert and topnotch cocktails. This administration understands my priorities. The Italian margarita contains pear and lavender, two ingredients I'll always avoid in a cocktail. But a server recommends it with such certainty, I order one, and she is right. It's a sophisticated, nuanced, balanced drink. There's a section of the drinks menu devoted to the Negroni, but I don't make it past the martini list. The Birth of Venus, made with oyster vodka, sherry, and mignonette, served with a crystal dish of pickles, is one of the best cocktails I've ever had; if you love oysters, you may feel the same. The wine list is deep, focused on Italy but not exclusively so, with prestige selections available by the glass.
The Birth of Venus martini: like eating oysters, but make it an excellent cocktail.
John Tlumacki/Globe Staff
When are cannoli not cannoli? When they're actually Florentine cookies, lacy and crisp, rolled around citrus-scented ricotta. They are served in a cigar box: a whimsical delight to unbox and to eat. Tiramisu arrives in its mold and is freed tableside, jiggly and boozy as heck. It's great. Skip the stiff, grainy Earl Grey panna cotta.
Advertisement
Tiramisu arrives in its mold, jiggly and boozy as heck.
John Tlumacki/Globe Staff
There are imperfect moments on the menu, and it's a mystery why — amid the beautiful plates and glassware, the arresting presentations, the luxurious design — there isn't really anywhere to put bags. They sometimes wind up lumped on the floor with people's coats, like we're at an after-work happy hour at a bar. Also, the place is noisy. Take it or leave it.
But Boston was thirsty: for luxury, for hospitality, for Italian food that hits a sweet spot between familiarity and invention. La Padrona is the restaurant we needed. There are several ways to translate its name — the restaurant seems to go with 'the matriarch.' That could refer to Adams, who has earned the title (whether she wants it or not) over many years of feeding this town. But it applies as well to the restaurant itself, a grande dame already the day it opened.
LA PADRONA
★★★★
38 Trinity Place, Back Bay, Boston. 617-898-0010,
Wheelchair accessible via elevator (dining room is upstairs)
Prices
Appetizers $12-$28, primi $30-$48, secondi $40-$62 (large-format dishes $126-$216), desserts $14-$18, cocktails $18-$24.
Hours
Sun-Wed 5-10 p.m. (lounge until 11), Thu-Sat 5-11 p.m. (lounge until midnight).
Noise level
Loud music, loud room. If you require a quieter experience, try booking the club room.
★★★★★ Extraordinary | ★★★★ Excellent | ★★★ Very good | ★★ Good | ★ Fair | (No stars) Poor
Devra First can be reached at
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Is This The Absolute Best Vogue Spain Could've Done with Kaia Gerber?
The industry continues to endorse Kaia Gerber like there's no tomorrow. Since her modelling debut as the face of Versace kids in 2012, the daughter of Cindy Crawford has walked a staggering amount of blue chip runway shows, became the face of mega brands like Chanel, Valentino, Celine and graced multiple editions of Vogue worldwide (including British, American, French, Italian, Chinese and Japanese). Therefore, it should come as no surprise to see Kaia Gerber take to the cover of Vogue Spain. Inés Lorenzo, who has served as head of editorial content since 2021, welcomes Gerber as the title's cover girl for June 2025. The model-turned-actress poses before the lens of Amy Troost for the occasion, and is styled by Max Ortega. Gerber gazes down Troost's lens wearing a top from Spanish high-street retailer Mango and a necklace from Sophie Buhai. 'It's good!' declared WAVES upon first look. 'Really?' replied forum member RMDV in a state of shock. 'On the very rare occasion… this cover needed more text. It feels lazy just slapping Kaia's name on the cover and calling it a day. No thought, no effort, no nothing. Always been a Kaia Gerber fan but I'm struggling to defend this. She looks vapid, lifeless, and completely devoid of energy,' voiced vogue28. Also majorly underwhelmed was Zorka. 'Aside from the cheap/amateurish set design and basic photography style, the whole wet hair look just ruins the whole thing for me. This is NOT Vogue cover material,' they declared. 'What a waste of Kaia Gerber. Ugh!' sighed prylvi. 'What do u expect?' asked Xone. 'Max Ortega is involved. He is terrible. Vogue Spain did much better covers with local talent.' See more of Kaia Gerber from the Vogue Spain June 2025 cover shoot and join the conversation, here. The post Is This The Absolute Best Vogue Spain Could've Done with Kaia Gerber? appeared first on theFashionSpot.
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Luxury Retail Still Prevails on Mount Street
LONDON — In Mayfair, retail is bucking the luxury slowdown. Grosvenor, which owns prime retail property across London, is strategizing to keep the momentum going this summer with the Mount Street Neighbourhood Summer Festival as it celebrates the neighborhood's fashion, food and art offerings. More from WWD Franz Kraler to Open Luxury Ski-slope Chalet in Cortina d'Ampezzo Five Modes Boutiques Reopen Under New Italian Company Jewelry Brand Vickisarge Gets the Val Garland Makeover The crown jewels of the Mount Street Neighbourhood include diamond jeweler Jessica McCormack, the luxury hotel The Connaught, fashion designer Huishan Zhang, the Prada-owned patisserie Marchesi and the restaurant Hideaway. There's also openings taking place this summer from chocolatier Barnaby, perfume brand Fueguia 1833 and celebrity facialist and aesthetician Melanie Grant. 'After COVID-19, Mount Street came out of the block so strongly mainly because we'd cemented it as a neighborhood and we've made the strategic decision to really widen that tenant mix that's less dominated by fashion,' said Joanna Lea, Mayfair retail portfolio director at Grosvenor. Grosvenor has brought a set of consultants onboard to better understand the neighborhood's clientele, which makes up 5 to 10 percent of the world's global wealth. The Mount Street Neighborhood has been rebranding itself image-wise and on social media since October, around the same time that Frieze London kicked off. The neighborhood is being treated like a set of sails that reacts to the winds, in this case the cultural events taking place in and out of the city, from BST Hyde Park, Royal Ascot, the RCA Summer Exhibition to the Wimbledon Championships. The English pub the Audley Public House will be hosting 'A Week of Wimbledon' in July, serving up strawberries and cream with Pimm's and Wimbledon Martinis, but the beer on tap will stay put. 'When we think about programming Mount Street, we don't operate like a normal shopping neighborhood and think about Mother's Day or Easter, but instead it's about thinking about an international high-net-worth calendar,' said Lea, adding that they also take national holidays such as Saudi National Day and Fourth of July. American and Middle Eastern customers are the top spenders on Mount Street and it's a clientele that Grosvenor caters to carefully by vetting any newcomers into the neighborhood. 'No brand will come to the estate without us having met them. Ultimately, it's a people business and we want to do deals with great people because experience tells us that pays us dividends over the long term,' said Lea. Even though the luxury slowdown hasn't hit the Mount Street Neighborhood directly, luxury brands that are signing up for spaces in the neighborhood are taking a cautious approach by bidding on smaller units to test the waters before upgrading to larger spaces in the long run. Best of WWD Macy's Is Closing 66 Stores in 2025 — Here's the List, Live Updates Inside the Demise of Lord & Taylor COVID-19 Spikes Elevate Retail Concerns Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


Boston Globe
a day ago
- Boston Globe
That White Sox cap spotted on Pope Leo XIV? It came from newlywed Red Sox fans from Haverhill
But Kelly and Gary DeStefano are pretty sure they have absolution. They married at Sacred Hearts Parish in Haverhill on May 25 and traveled to Rome for their honeymoon. They hoped to join the 'sposi novelli' audience for newlyweds seeking a blessing from the Holy Father. (Tickets are required and couples Advertisement Newlyweds Gary and Kelly DeStefano stood at their home in Haverhill with the White Sox hat on June 13. The newlyweds attended a papal blessing at the Vatican with Pope Leo XIV along with the cap. Jonathan Wiggs/Globe Staff But spots aren't guaranteed, so a cousin dreamed up a backup plan to catch Pope Leo's eye: put on the White Sox caps. 'It was like, maybe he'll still see you, point you out in the crowd,' she told the Globe in an interview on Thursday after they returned home. 'It was kind of funny, you know, [since] we're from Boston,' she added. 'He even had a hard time finding the hat in Massachusetts ... and Gary was like, 'I'm not wearing this hat.' But then we did get in [to the sposi novelli], so we didn't even have to wear them.' By the time Pope Leo came over to offer his blessing, the hats had slipped her mind. He asked the couple where they were from, and her husband, Gary, bent down to kiss his ring. Advertisement 'And then Gary pulls [the hats] out from behind his back,' she said. 'And it was just a surreal moment, to hear the pope laugh.' Kelly and Gary DeStefano gave the hat to Pope Leo XIV when on honeymoon in Rome. In a video the couple shared with the Globe, Pope Leo, smiling, told the couple, 'You're going to get in trouble for this,' a playful nod to their devotion to the 'other Sox' in the American League. He removed his zucchetto and donned the cap, while Gary put on the other one. After taking photos, the pope, who will be celebrated with a special Mass Saturday in Chicago at the White Sox stadium, gave the 'blessed' hats back to take them home to Red Sox Nation. 'We'll probably encase them in glass, maybe with a few news articles and a picture of the pope,' Kelly said. 'It will be a wonderful story to pass on to our grandchildren.' When asked if he'd ever wear a rival team's hat for anyone else, Gary didn't hesitate: 'Absolutely not,' said the born-and-bred Boston fan. 'No way.' Rivalries aside, however, baseball is unifyingpastime. 'It's a national sport,' Gary said. By wearing the cap, the US-born pontiff is speaking to And with that gesture aimed at Americans for the first time, the logo on the cap doesn't matter, Gary said. 'If the pope today went into the Chicago stadium [with the hat on], everybody there would roar," he said. 'And if he came to Boston and went to Fenway Park with the Chicago hat on, they would still roar.' Advertisement Kathy McCabe of the Globe Staff contributed to this report. Rita Chandler can be reached at