Aw Shucks

Oysters (ยฉStudio Crevettes)

While seafood is pretty much the name of the game in New England, we’ve got a soft spot for oysters. We might be a little bias about our bivalves, but Boston seafood is famous for a reason. These restaurants dig oysters so much theyโ€™ve put their names on it.

Union Oyster Houseโ€™s Oyster Bar sold close to 60,000 plates of raw oysters last year, according to executive chef Bill Coyne. The idea is simple: bluepoints from Long Islandโ€”the house specialtyโ€”and one local coldwater variety, usually Chatham, Duxbury or Wellfleet, which changes weekly. Coyne recommends ordering a half-dozen, with three of each.

Sustainable oyster options change daily at Citizen Public House & Oyster Bar, although the menu typically features two Atlantic and one Pacific variety. Executive chef Brian Reyelt names Summerside of Prince Edward Island and Barnstableโ€™s Thatch Island as favorites, but he recommends sampling those from both coasts to note differences in salinity, sweetness and size.

Itโ€™s a numbers game at Barbara Lynchโ€™s B&G Oysters where the 12-option oyster menu changes twice daily. Options at the white marble bar stretch from British Columbia to Nova Scotia, New England and New York, but assistant manager Lily Rosenbloom says, โ€œTry oysters from the East Coast โ€ฆ there are so many flavor differences in the small state that we are.โ€ Temporarily closed until September 1, 2025.