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Restaurants

Why Chong Qing Xiao Mian’s house cold noodle is always my first meal in San Francisco.

Elyse Inamine

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From a bakery turning out heavenly croissants to a stellar lineup of breweries, Richmond is small but mighty.

Julia Kramer

Emily Schultz

Its pillowy potato roll, perfectly tender meat, and crunchy slaw are just for me, thanks.

Emily Schultz

One city’s humble, but indisputable, iconic dish.

Melissa McCart

But how could I convince my Italian brother-in-law of this indisputable fact?

Tyler Kord

The Detroit suburbs have gone through a massive demographic change in the past 60 years. Gino’s has been around during all of it.

Tracie McMillan

So why have I never been visited?

Claire Carusillo

We asked the Yale historian who wrote the book Ten Restaurants That Changed America.

Paul Freedman

I look at the way Italian Americans have progressed from a demonized immigrant group to an unquestioned part of the country’s fabric, and I think, Damn, I want that too.

Chris Ying

BA’s wine editor has a not-so-guilty pleasure.

Marissa A. Ross

Hilary Cadigan

How do you keep the old customers while also courting the new? Ask 73-year-old restaurateur Frank Guido.

Jen Doll

At Frankies 457 Spuntino in Brooklyn, the real fun starts when the after-dinner drinks hit the table.

Andrew Knowlton

Silvio Frlic has worked at Brooklyn red sauce stalwart Bamonte’s for 41 years. Silvio Frlic has seen some things.

Hilary Cadigan

But how does it even make sense for them to offer this?

Sarah Jampel

Friday night at Camille’s, a Providence, Rhode Island, red sauce legend more than a century in the making.

Molly Birnbaum

As they say, “the worse the art in restaurants, the better the food.”

Sarah Cascone

(But it was never really about the pizza.)

Amanda Shapiro

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