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Flames II

Caribbean flavors sizzle in a no-frills setting
By ROBERT NADEAU  |  January 18, 2006

If you’re reading this, you’re probably not in the Caribbean right now, and wish that you were. (If you actually are in the Caribbean, don’t be an idiot. Turn off the computer and go outside and thank your personal higher power you aren’t in Boston during the winter.) Back to those of you marooned in New England: you can get a taste of the Caribbean, if not an actual tan, at Flames. Flames II brings the hearty and highly flavored food of Jamaica from its original Mattapan location to the hospital district. A working-class crowd might sit and chow down here at breakfast or lunch, but on my two night and weekend visits, the place sold mostly take-out and most conversation was with the staff. I think that’s a shame, as this is actually a very decent little room, bright yellow and well-lit with about 14 tables and booths, and the staff have lots to say about how they make the food. If a diner mentions a visit to Jamaica, there will be a discussion of just where, and how far that would be from the staff member’s hometown, and how beautiful it is around there.ALL FIRED UP: Flames II brings hearty Jamaican food to the medical district.

My first impression of the food is that there is quite a bit of it. Appetizers stick to one’s ribs and main dishes run small/medium/large ($5/$7.50/$9). We worked mostly with medium dinners; they started with a choice of rice, and about four times as much of it as I usually eat. Then on would come some stew or broiled meat, and a solid helping of vegetables, and somehow a plastic lid would be forced down onto a plastic clamshell so you could take the dish to your table, cafeteria-style, or home. The most obvious advantage of eating these kinds of platters in the restaurant is that when you can’t stuff in another bite, your leftovers are already packed and ready to go.

You can actually eat heartily at Flames II on steak tips, beef stew, or herbal broiled chicken, dishes that are just good food and not especially Jamaican or ethnic at all. One thing that is very Caribbean is that not all of the menu is available on a given day. What you do is belly up to the steam table and ask about what’s actually in stock — about three or four of the nine listed appetizers, three kinds of rice, and six to 10 of perhaps 24 entrées.

There are probably always beef patties ($1.50), and they are good. The pastry is a squared-off turnover in that alarming chrome yellow, and the filling is sneaky-spicy without being specifically “curry.” Fish cakes ($5) are salt-cod fritters, but ours had been out of the fryer too long and were hard and starchy, though with an after-burn.

Moving on to the dinners, my favorite rice was peas-and-rice, a brown pilaf of cowpeas like hoppin’ John but with a hint of cinnamon. The white rice was somewhat oily and aromatic, like Puerto Rican or Cuban rice. Then there was yellow rice, oily and rich, but with a dry finish from the turmeric. Sometimes a few diced vegetables and green peas in the yellow rice, sometimes not.

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