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The Paddock

Cheaper and brighter, but with all its old virtues intact
By MC SLIM JB  |  February 6, 2008
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Some long-surviving restaurants seem fossilized in amber: the décor, the menu, even the patrons look as though they haven’t changed in decades. On a 2007 visit, I was amazed at how exactly the Paddock resembled the Paddock I recall from 20 years ago, when it was a favorite of my Somerville-native boss. But change (a little, anyway) has finally come: former long-time chef Michael DaCova bought and re-opened the place recently, adding bright new paint and barstools but preserving the old horse-tackle décor.

Menu-wise, DaCova’s still dancing with the girl that brung him, serving large portions of Italian-American favorites, fried seafood (sautéed and baked, too), sandwiches, and pizza. Nightly specials allow him to express his Portuguese side in dishes such as a pretty authentic-tasting Portuguese pork soup ($3.25/cup; $4.25/bowl) with pork shoulder, kale, kidney beans, and bowtie pasta, served with warm rolls and butter. Long-beloved dishes are still there and very fine, like a plate of five huge marinated steak tips ($9.95) with heaps of fries (decent) and vegetables (frozen). A chicken piccata includes three big scallops of thin-pounded breast in a sauce that maybe could show clearer lemon and caper flavors, but you’d feel uncharitable pointing it out, given the price ($11.95) and size (it’s served over what must be a pound of linguine).

Pizza is quite respectable in the thin-crust, lightly sauced Neapolitan mode ($6.50/small cheese; $9.50/large); it ought to appeal to adherents of similar pies from better-known outlets, like the original Pizzeria Regina and Santarpio’s. A hefty garden salad ($3.25) is straight out of the ’50s: torn iceberg lettuce, prefab croutons, winter tomatoes, and too much dressing. The biggest surprise might be that prices are actually lower than those under previous ownership, making this a very family-friendly dining destination. If it’s a just world, locals will come here when they want a casual, reliable night out with inexpensive drinks and down-to-earth service, and shun those execrable casual-dining chains.

The Paddock, located on 249 Pearl Street, in Somerville, is open Monday and Tuesday, from 11 am to 10 pm; Wednesday through Saturday, from 11 am to 11 pm; and on Sunday, from noon to 10 pm. Call 617.628.6525.

Related: Blunch, Sichuan Garden’s ox meat and tripe with roasted-chili peanut vinaigrette, Dance Monkey: October 5, 2007, More more >
  Topics: On The Cheap , Culture and Lifestyle, Food and Cooking, Foods,  More more >
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ARTICLES BY MC SLIM JB
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  •   TAVERN AT THE END OF THE WORLD  |  November 18, 2009
    They say there's no accounting for taste, though most folks will agree that if your tastes and mine are similar, then we both have good taste. This occurred to me as I scanned the jukebox at Charlestown's Tavern at the End of the World, a neighborhood bar/restaurant just outside Sullivan Square.
  •   ELITE RESTAURANT  |  November 11, 2009
    Some meals can bring you back vividly to your childhood, perhaps because your sense of smell and long-term memory are centered in adjacent areas of the brain.
  •   SIMCO'S ON THE BRIDGE  |  November 04, 2009
    Boston has hundreds of food blogs, with new ones appearing every day.
  •   THE SNACK BAR AND O SENHOR RAMOS  |  October 28, 2009
    Despite frequenting East Cambridge, I’m abashed to admit I overlooked the Snack Bar for years.
  •   DUCALI PIZZERIA AND BAR  |  October 21, 2009
    My old boss liked to say that people are happiest when reality exceeds their expectations.

 See all articles by: MC SLIM JB

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