Get out of your living room and go have a beer in somebody else’s. There are over-sized leather chairs and couches and arguably the best selection of breweries in the city. Read more.
This place is a dive bar that won’t care about some crayon marks or spit-up on its decor. Read more.
Wrecking Bar isn’t a bar. Well, it is, but it was a lot of other things too: A 20th-century Victorian-style home. A Methodist Protestant church. A dance school. And now a brewery. Read more.
The reason this beer hall is good for kids is simple: Everyone inside is rowdy. The authentic Bavarian-style vibe is kept alive by lederhosen-clad servers who sing, dance, and play giant Alpine horns. Read more.
Located right on Lake Austin, Ski Shores boasts a giant play structure, an outdoor fire pit, and old school arcade games. The minors can go frolic while you down craft beers and listen to live music. Read more.
When you order a lobster roll at this Martha’s Vineyard mainstay, you get your money’s worth. These colossal sandwiches are available all year long, even when most of the island heads home for summer. Read more.
Heaping pieces of fresh meat overflow onto the tinfoil wrapping (it’s a whole lobster’s worth, by the way). But we’ll happily work our way in with a fork, dipping into our side of melted butter. Read more.
Come for the lobster and stay for the views. Each buttered roll is filled with large chunks of soft-shell lobster meat and a dollop of mayo. Read more.
At this authentic New England establishment in the summer town of Narragansett, the sandwiches overflow with just-caught lobster meat. Do yourself a favor and save room for the fried clams. Read more.
Dinner and a show, anyone? Watch fishermen collect oysters they’ve farmed from Potter Pond as you take down a giant lobster sandwich on a split-top roll. Read more.
No trip to Boston is complete without a stop at this South End staple. Don’t let the $29 price tag deter you--this meaty roll is topped with lemon and chive-spiked mayo and a touch of celery. Read more.