Best Cannoli in Boston’s North End: A Local’s Guide

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Best Cannoli in Boston’s North End: A Local’s Guide

Written by

Bobby Agrippino

Date

Jan 30, 2026

Walk down Hanover Street on any given weekend and you’ll see the same thing: tourists standing on the sidewalk, phones out, trying to figure out whether to get in the Mike’s Pastry line or the Modern Pastry line across the street.

It’s the great North End debate. And everyone’s got an opinion.

Here’s mine, as someone who grew up in this neighborhood and has probably eaten more cannoli than I should admit to: Mike’s Pastry makes the best cannoli in the North End. And it’s not even close.

But not for the reason most people think.

The Detail That Actually Matters

Here’s what most “best cannoli” guides won’t tell you, because the people writing them didn’t grow up here. They visited once, tried both, picked a favorite based on vibes, and wrote 500 words about it.

Mike’s Pastry is the only shop in the North End that makes their own shells.

That’s it. That’s the whole game.

When you bite into a Mike’s cannoli, you’re eating something that was made start to finish in that building. The shell, the filling, all of it. That’s increasingly rare, and it matters.

A fresh cannoli shell has a specific texture. It’s crispy but not brittle, it shatters when you bite it but doesn’t crumble into dust. That’s what you get when the shell was made that morning, not shipped in from somewhere else.

Presidential Endorsement (The Unofficial Kind)

In April 1993, Bill Clinton walked into Mike’s Pastry during a visit to Boston. The photo of him eating a cannoli in the shop went everywhere. Suddenly, Mike’s wasn’t just a North End institution, it was the Boston cannoli spot that even presidents couldn’t resist.

Clinton became a regular whenever he was in town. During the 2004 Democratic National Convention in Boston, he had the Secret Service picking up dozens of cannoli for his staff and entourage. Three nights straight of presidential cannoli runs.

That Clinton moment put Mike’s on the national map in a way that no amount of advertising could. And here’s the thing: they were ready for it. Because they’d already been doing the work for nearly 50 years.

That’s the kind of endorsement you can’t buy.

Today, Mike’s hand-rolls 45,000 cannoli shells every single week. Read that again. 45,000 shells. Per week. All made in-house.

The chocolate chip cannoli is technically the best seller, probably because it looks good in photos. But I’m a purist. The original ricotta is still the best cannoli they make, and it’s the one I order every time.

The Mike’s Pastry Rundown

Mike’s has been on Hanover Street since 1946. The line out the door isn’t a tourist trap, it’s just what happens when you’ve been doing something right for almost 80 years.

What to order:

  • The classic ricotta cannoli is the move. Don’t overcomplicate it.
  • If you want to branch out, the chocolate chip or pistachio fillings are solid.
  • They have probably 15+ filling options. You don’t need to try them all in one visit.

Insider tips:

  • The line moves faster than it looks. Don’t let it scare you off.
  • Go on a weekday if you can. Saturday afternoon is chaos.
  • They’re cash only for orders under $20, so come prepared.
  • Get a box. These aren’t meant to be eaten standing on the sidewalk, despite what you see people doing.

How to Actually Eat a Cannoli

A few ground rules:

Eat it the same day. A cannoli is not a “save it for later” dessert. The shell starts losing its crunch the minute it gets filled. By tomorrow, you’ve got a soggy tube of regret.

Don’t refrigerate it. This accelerates the sogginess problem. Room temperature, eat it fast.

Hold it by the shell, not the ends. The filling will squish out if you squeeze the ends. Grip the middle, take bites from each side to keep it balanced.

Skip the massive ones if you’re sharing. Mike’s cannoli are bigger than traditional Sicilian ones. One per person is plenty unless you’re skipping dinner.

The Bottom Line

If you’re visiting the North End and you want the best cannoli, go to Mike’s Pastry. The line is worth it, the shells are made in-house, and you’re getting the real thing.

If you’re a local and you’ve been a Modern loyalist your whole life, I respect it. But now you know about the shells.

And if you want to skip the debate entirely and just have someone walk you through the neighborhood, point out the spots worth knowing, and make sure you don’t waste your time on tourist traps, that’s literally what I do.

Book a North End Boston Food Tour and I’ll make sure you eat well.

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The Great Molasses Flood: Boston’s Strangest (and Stickiest) Disaster

The Great Molasses Flood: Boston's Strangest (and Stickiest) Disaster

Written by

Bobby Agrippino

Date

Jan 15, 2026

On January 15, 1919, a 50-foot tall tank of molasses exploded in Boston’s North End. What happened next sounds like something out of a movie, but it was terrifyingly real.

If you’ve ever walked through Boston’s North End, you’ve probably noticed the narrow streets, the old brick buildings, and the smell of fresh cannoli drifting from bakery windows. It’s one of the most charming neighborhoods in America.

But over 100 years ago, this same neighborhood was the site of one of the weirdest industrial disasters in history. A massive wave of molasses (yes, the thick, sticky stuff you put in gingerbread cookies), tore through these streets at 35 miles per hour. It killed 21 people, injured 150 more, and left a mess that took weeks to clean up.

This is the story of the Great Molasses Flood. And trust me, it’s stranger than you think.

What Was the North End Like in 1919?

Before we get to the flood, let’s set the scene.

In 1919, Boston’s North End looked very different than it does today. Sure, Italian restaurants and bakeries were starting to pop up. But this was also a working-class neighborhood packed with immigrants, mostly Italian and Irish families, living in cramped tenement apartments.

The streets buzzed with activity. Kids played on the sidewalks. Workers headed to the factories and warehouses that lined the waterfront. Horse-drawn carts rattled over cobblestones.

And looming over it all? A giant steel tank, five stories tall and 90 feet wide, filled to the brim with 2.3 million gallons of molasses.

The tank belonged to the Purity Distilling Company, located at 529 Commercial Street near Copps Hill Wharf. They used molasses to make industrial alcohol, the kind used in munitions during World War I. The tank sat right next to a busy street, the Engine 31 fire station, and the Boston Elevated Railway. Hundreds of people passed by it every single day.

Here’s the thing: that tank was a disaster waiting to happen. And plenty of people knew it.

Warning Signs Everyone Ignored

The Purity Distilling Company’s molasses tank had problems from day one.

When it was built in 1915, workers rushed to finish it. The company was eager to start production, so they cut corners. The steel walls were too thin, a 2014 engineering analysis found they were only half as thick as they should have been, even by 1915 standards. The steel also lacked manganese, making it brittle and prone to cracking. There weren’t enough rivets holding it together. Nobody even tested it with water before filling it with molasses.

Almost immediately, the tank started leaking.

Brown streaks of molasses oozed down the sides. The smell of the sweet, sticky liquid hung in the air. Local kids would actually bring cups and pails to collect the dripping molasses – free treats from a faulty tank.

Residents complained. They told the company the tank was dangerous. The company’s response? They painted the tank brown so the leaks wouldn’t be as visible.

Not exactly a fix.

The tank’s manager, Arthur Jell, had no engineering background. He couldn’t even read blueprints. When workers reported strange groaning sounds coming from the tank, he ignored them. When a laborer brought actual shards of cracked steel from the tank’s walls into Jell’s office as evidence of danger, the treasurer reportedly replied, “I don’t know what you want me to do. The tank still stands.”

Just two days before the disaster, a ship called the Miliero arrived from Cuba carrying a fresh load of warm molasses. Workers pumped this warm molasses into the tank, mixing it with the cold molasses already inside. This temperature difference caused the molasses to ferment and expand, building pressure inside an already dangerously weak structure.

On January 15, 1919, those warning groans turned into a roar.

The Day Everything Went Wrong

January 15, 1919 started out as a surprisingly warm winter day. Temperatures had jumped from below freezing to around 40 degrees. The sun was shining. People were out and about, enjoying the mild weather.

At around 12:30 in the afternoon, city workers were eating lunch near the tank. A group of firefighters played cards in the Engine 31 fire station. Kids were out of school, some collecting firewood, others playing in the streets. At his family’s home overlooking the tank, a barman named Martin Clougherty was still dozing after a late shift at his saloon.

Then came the sound.

Witnesses described it as a deep rumble, like a machine gun firing or a freight train roaring past. The ground shook. The rivets holding the tank together shot out like bullets, pinging off buildings and embedding in brick walls.

And then 2.3 million gallons of molasses exploded into the streets.

A 25 to 40-Foot Wave of Sticky Death

Picture this: a wall of thick, brown molasses, two to three stories tall, moving faster than you can run.

The wave reached speeds of 35 miles per hour – about as fast as a car driving through a neighborhood. Accounts vary on the exact height, with reports ranging from 15 to 40 feet depending on location. The official plaque at the disaster site describes a “40-foot wave.” What’s certain is that it was tall enough to buckle the steel supports of the elevated railway and crush buildings like cardboard.

But this wasn’t water. Molasses is heavy, about 1.5 times denser than water. And in January, even on a warm day, it was cold enough to be incredibly dense.

The force was unbelievable.

The Boston Globe reported that buildings “cringed up as though they were made of pasteboard.” The wave ripped structures off their foundations. It crumpled the steel supports of the Boston Elevated Railway like they were made of paper. It picked up trucks, carts, and horses and tossed them around like toys. One truck was hurled all the way into Boston Harbor.

The Engine 31 firehouse was knocked clean off its foundation, its second story collapsing into its first. The firefighters who had been playing cards just moments before were suddenly trapped in a molasses-flooded pocket of space, fighting for their lives.

The Clougherty home was swept away and dashed against the elevated train platform. Martin Clougherty, having just woken up, watched his home crumble around him before being thrown into the current. “I was in bed on the third floor of my house when I heard a deep rumble,” he later remembered. “When I awoke, it was in several feet of molasses.” Martin nearly drowned in the gooey whirlpool before grabbing onto something floating nearby, his own bed frame. He used it as a makeshift raft to rescue his sister Teresa. But his mother and younger brother were among those killed.

The Boston Post described the aftermath: “Here and there struggled a form, whether it was animal or human being was impossible to tell. Only an upheaval, a thrashing about in the sticky mass, showed where any life was.” Horses caught in the flood “died like so many flies on sticky fly paper.”

The chaos lasted only minutes. But for the people caught in it, those minutes felt like hours.

Could You Swim in Molasses?

Here’s a question people ask all the time: if you got caught in the wave, couldn’t you just swim out?

The answer is no, and the science explains why this flood was so deadly.

Molasses is what scientists call a “non-Newtonian fluid.” That means the faster you try to move through it, the thicker it becomes. Imagine trying to swim through concrete that keeps getting harder the more you struggle.

A 2013 Scientific American article explained it this way: “A wave of molasses does not behave like a wave of water… A wave of molasses is even more devastating than a typical tsunami. In 1919 the dense wall of syrup surging from its collapsed tank initially moved fast enough to sweep people up and demolish buildings, only to settle into a more gelatinous state that kept people trapped.”

When the wave hit, victims were knocked down by the sheer force. Then the molasses pinned them in place. Every attempt to move just made the liquid resist more. Arms and legs got stuck. Heads got pushed under. The more people fought, the more trapped they became.

The cold January air made things worse. As the temperature dropped, the molasses thickened even further. What started as a flowing liquid became closer to thick tar within minutes.

Rescue workers later described pulling victims from the molasses like pulling them from quicksand. Many survivors had to be cut out of their clothes, which had hardened into a sticky shell around their bodies.

There are harrowing stories of survival, like that of a young boy who was picked up by the wave and carried like a surfer on a syrupy crest until he was finally rescued, barely able to breathe because his throat was clogged with molasses.

It’s a terrifying thought: a flood you literally cannot swim through. And it helps explain why 21 people lost their lives in what sounds like it should have been a survivable situation.

The Nightmare of Rescue and Cleanup

When the wave finally stopped, the North End looked like a war zone.

Buildings were destroyed. Wreckage was everywhere. And covering it all was a layer of thick, brown molasses, some spots were waist-deep. The streets were flooded two to three feet deep in places.

Rescue workers rushed to the scene within minutes. Police and firefighters arrived first, followed quickly by 116 cadets from the Navy training ship USS Nantucket, which was docked nearby. These young sailors waded into knee-deep molasses to pull out survivors. Red Cross nurses, Army soldiers, and regular citizens all pitched in.

But the molasses made everything harder.

The sticky liquid clung to everything. It pulled at boots. It coated ropes and tools. It made it almost impossible to move quickly. Victims trapped under debris were slowly being suffocated by the thickening goo. One Boston Post reporter wrote: “If a worker stood still for a minute he found himself glued to the ground.”

The cold didn’t help. As temperatures dropped, the molasses became even thicker and harder to work with. Rescuers used chisels and saws to cut through the hardening mess.

The most dramatic rescue took place at the Engine 31 firehouse, where several firefighters from the lunchtime card game were trapped in a molasses-flooded pocket of space on the collapsed first floor. Workers freed the survivors after several hours of cutting away floorboards and debris, but not before one of the firefighters lost his strength and drowned.

Over 100 rescue workers searched through the night, using lanterns to spot survivors in the darkness. A makeshift outdoor hospital was set up to treat the injured. They found bodies in strange places – under collapsed buildings, inside wrecked train cars, even floating in the harbor where the molasses had flowed.

The final toll:

  • 21 people dead
  • 150 injured
  • Dozens of horses killed
  • Several buildings completely destroyed
  • Property damage totaling nearly $100 million in today’s dollars

How Long Did It Take to Clean Up the Molasses Flood?

The short answer? Weeks of backbreaking work. But the sticky truth is more complicated.

The initial rescue and recovery took about four days. Workers searched through the wreckage around the clock, pulling out survivors and, eventually, bodies. The last direct victim wasn’t found until nearly four months later, 32-year-old Cesare Nicolo was discovered under a wharf near Commercial Street during a spring cleanup.

The major cleanup effort lasted about two weeks. Over 300 workers descended on the North End armed with shovels, brooms, and fire hoses. They pumped thousands of gallons of salt water from the harbor to dissolve the molasses. Fresh water would have just made it stickier – salt water was the key. The Engine 31 fireboat, whose firehouse had been destroyed in the flood, was crucial in the cleanup efforts.

But getting the neighborhood truly clean? That took much longer.

Molasses had seeped into every crack and crevice. It coated basements, soaked into wooden floors, and clung to brick walls. Workers spread sand and sawdust on the streets to absorb the goo. They scrubbed buildings by hand with stiff brushes. The elevated railway had to be cleaned car by car.

For months, every person who walked through the North End tracked sticky brown footprints across Boston. Subway seats, telephone receivers, doorknobs, everything stayed tacky. As one famous remark put it: “Everything that a Bostonian touched was sticky.” The waters of Boston Harbor remained stained brown until the summer.

Cleaning up 2.3 million gallons of molasses was a job nobody ever wanted to do again.

Who Was to Blame?

After the disaster, people wanted answers. And more importantly, they wanted someone to take responsibility.

Over 125 lawsuits were filed against the United States Industrial Alcohol Company (USIA), the parent company of Purity Distilling. This was a big deal in 1919. Back then, companies rarely faced consequences for accidents like this. Most courts sided with businesses, not workers or residents.

But this case was different.

The cases were eventually combined into a massive legal proceeding. A court-appointed auditor named Hugh W. Ogden was assigned to investigate and oversee the case. For the next six years, he heard testimony from over 3,000 witnesses. Nearly 45,000 pages of testimony and arguments were recorded. There were so many lawyers involved that the courtroom couldn’t hold them all.

The company tried to blame the disaster on anarchists. They claimed someone had planted a bomb in the tank. It sounds crazy now, but this was 1919, the height of the first Red Scare. Anarchist bombings were a real concern (there had even been a bomb discovered at a USIA facility in Brooklyn in 1916), and the company spent over $50,000 on expert witness fees trying to prove sabotage.

It didn’t work.

Ogden’s investigation proved the tank was poorly built from the start. The steel was too thin. The rivets were spaced too far apart. The company had ignored warning signs for years. There was no bomb, just greed and negligence.

On April 28, 1925, Ogden released his report, rejecting USIA’s sabotage claims outright and concluding that the tank collapsed due to structural failure. The court ruled against USIA. The company ultimately paid out $628,000 in settlements – about $8 to $10 million in today’s money. Families of those killed reportedly received about $7,000 per victim, which was significant money in those days.

It was one of the first major cases where a corporation was held responsible for an industrial disaster, and it helped pave the way for modern corporate accountability laws.

How the Flood Changed Everything

The Great Molasses Flood didn’t just reshape Boston’s North End. It reshaped how America thinks about safety.

Before 1919, there weren’t many rules about how companies built things. Engineers didn’t need licenses. Buildings didn’t need inspections. Companies could cut corners without much fear of consequences.

The molasses disaster changed that.

New rules included:

  • Engineers had to get certified and stamp their designs
  • Construction projects required detailed blueprints and inspections
  • Companies faced stricter oversight for industrial projects
  • Building codes became more rigorous across the country

Stephen Puleo, author of “Dark Tide: The Great Boston Molasses Flood of 1919,” views the disaster as a pivotal event that did for U.S. construction standards what the Cocoanut Grove fire later did for fire codes.

These changes didn’t happen overnight. But the molasses flood was a turning point. It showed what could happen when companies put profit over safety. And it proved that regular people could hold powerful corporations accountable.

The North End Today: Where History Meets the Best Food in Boston

Walk through the North End today and you’ll find one of the best food neighborhoods in America. Italian bakeries, family-owned restaurants, and some of the finest espresso on the East Coast.

But if you know where to look, you can still find traces of the molasses flood.

The tank once stood at 529 Commercial Street, near Copps Hill Wharf where molasses shipments were delivered. Today, that location is home to Langone Park and the Puopolo Athletic Field. A small plaque at the entrance to Puopolo Park, placed by the Bostonian Society, marks the spot where 21 people lost their lives over a century ago.

In 2016, researchers used ground-penetrating radar to identify the exact location of the tank. The concrete slab base remains in place approximately 20 inches below the surface of the baseball diamond at Langone Park. On January 15, 2019, the 100th anniversary of the disaster, attendees of a memorial ceremony stood in a circle marking the edge of the tank while the names of the 21 victims were read aloud.

Can You Still Smell Molasses in Boston?

Here’s the question I always get asked: can you still smell molasses in the North End?

The honest answer is… maybe?

For years after the flood, the smell was undeniable. Molasses had soaked into the wood, brick, and soil of the neighborhood. On hot summer days, the sweet, burnt-sugar scent would rise from the streets and buildings. According to journalist Edwards Park, “The smell of molasses remained for decades a distinctive, unmistakable atmosphere of Boston.”

Old-timers who grew up in the North End swear they could smell it well into the 1950s and beyond. Some surviving residents interviewed in the 1980s claimed that on very hot days, you could not only smell molasses but actually observe it seeping up through cracks in the sidewalk.

Is it actually molasses from 1919? Probably not. More likely it’s the power of suggestion mixed with the general smells of an old city neighborhood.

But here’s the thing: when you’re standing at 529 Commercial Street, where the tank once stood, and someone tells you to take a deep breath… you might just convince yourself you smell it too.

That’s part of what makes the North End special. The history isn’t just in the books. It’s in the streets, the buildings, and maybe, just maybe, still in the air.

When you take a food tour through the North End, you’re walking the same streets that were covered in molasses back in 1919. You’re passing buildings that survived the flood. You’re eating in a neighborhood that rebuilt itself after one of the strangest disasters in American history.

That’s what makes the North End special. It’s not just about the food – although the food is incredible. It’s about the stories. The history. The resilience of a community that has been through everything and keeps coming back stronger.

Why the Molasses Flood Still Matters

The Great Molasses Flood happened over 100 years ago. So why should we still care?

Because the lessons still apply.

Every time a company cuts corners to save money, they risk another disaster. Every time regulators look the other way, they put people in danger. The molasses flood reminds us that safety standards exist for a reason – and they exist because people died.

It’s also a reminder that communities can recover from almost anything. The North End in 1919 was devastated. Today, it’s one of the most beloved neighborhoods in Boston – and America. That didn’t happen by accident. It happened because people rebuilt, adapted, and refused to give up.

Experience the North End for Yourself

Want to see where the Great Molasses Flood happened? Want to taste the best cannoli, pizza, and pasta in Boston while learning the stories behind this historic neighborhood?

Book the North End Boston Food Tour and I’ll show you around. You’ll eat incredible food, hear amazing stories, and walk through 400 years of Boston history, one delicious bite at a time.

Because in the North End, every street has a story. And some of those stories are sweeter (and stickier) than you’d ever expect.

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The Best Hole-in-the-Wall Spot in Boston’s North End Is Still Parziale’s Bakery

The Best Hole-in-the-Wall Spot in Boston’s North End Is Still Parziale’s Bakery

Written by

Bobby Agrippino

Date

Jan 9, 2026

The North End is loud about its food (and rightfully so). Lines down Hanover Street. Neon signs. Pastry boxes stacked like Jenga towers. But if you want the version of the neighborhood that locals quietly protect, you end up a few blocks off the main drag on Prince Street, pushing open the door at Parziale’s Bakery.

No spectacle. No gimmicks. Just a bakery that’s been doing the same thing for more than a century and never felt the need to explain itself.

 

Why Parziale’s Matters to Me 

I grew up in this neighborhood and have lived here my entire life. The North End didn’t just shape my taste in food, it shaped how I understand community. Parziale’s is the kind of place that reminds me of that every time I walk in.

Parziale’s Bakery is located at 80 Prince Street, Boston, MA 02113, just off Salem Street in a quieter, mostly residential stretch of the North End.

That location is everything. Locals stop in for bread. Families grab pizza for dinner. 

When I bring people here on the North End Boston Food Tour, they immediately feel the difference. This isn’t a stop designed for tourists. It’s a place that locals never stopped going to.

 

Why Parziale’s Is the Ultimate Hole-in-the-Wall

Calling it “hole-in-the-wall” isn’t dismissive; it’s a badge of honor. This bakery has authentic history baked into its bricks and served up with every loaf and cannoli. Compared to more tourist-heavy pastry counters, Parziale’s gives you something rare in a city full of classic sweets: a local secret with roots deeper than most.

Visitors often tell stories of finding Parziale’s by accident and instantly falling in love with the unpretentious vibe and classic flavors.

A Bakery That Helped Bring Pizza to Boston

Parziale’s history is part of Boston’s food history.

Parziale’s story starts in 1907, when Joseph and Anna Parziale immigrated from the Sarno area near Naples and opened a bakery in the North End. Joseph built his own brick oven and began baking bread for the neighborhood.

Over time, Parziale’s is widely credited with introducing pizza to Boston, originally from a location on Charter Street before settling on Prince Street. 

 

 

Today, the bakery is still run by the Parziale family, now in its fourth generation, using traditional methods and recipes that have remained largely unchanged for over a century.

That continuity is rare, and you can taste it.

 

What to Order at Parziale’s Bakery

While Parziale’s is known for its bread and pastries, the bakery has been leaning more heavily into pizza and calzones recently, and that shift has paid off.

If you only order one thing, start here.

 

Sicilian Pizza

Parziale’s Sicilian pizza is classic square-cut, no-nonsense, and deeply satisfying. The crust is airy but sturdy, the sauce slightly sweet, and the slices are inexpensive compared to most North End options. It’s the kind of pizza locals grab without thinking twice.

 

Calzones (Especially Broccoli Rabe)

The calzones deserve special attention. The sausage and broccoli rabe is a standout: savory sausage, bitter greens, and well-baked dough that holds everything together without feeling heavy. It’s balanced, filling, and quietly excellent.

Bread and Traditional Baked Goods

    • The french bread (made with no preservatives), which they are especially known for

    • The best tiramisu in the neighborhood bar non (made with Grand Marnier)

    • Italian cookies including pizzelle, anisette cookies, walnut cookies, and sfogliatelle

Parziale’s desserts often rival the more famous bakeries nearby.

 

Practical Things to Know Before You Go

    • Address: 80 Prince Street, Boston, MA 02113

    • Phone: 617-523-6368

    • Hours: Typically opens early around 6:00 a.m. and stays open late, sometimes until midnight (hours can vary by day)

    • Payment: Historically cash-only, though cards are often accepted now. Bringing cash is still a good idea.

They also wholesale bread to local restaurants, so there’s a good chance you’ve already eaten Parziale’s without realizing it.

 

The Vibe: Neighborhood, Not Tourist Trap

Parziale’s feels lived-in, not “curated.” There’s less foot traffic than at big tourist draws like Bova’s. That’s part of why locals love it. People come for breakfast pastries, swing back in for a midday slice, or grab bread for dinner. They’re welcomed like regulars even if it’s your first visit.

 

Practical Tips

    • Go early or late. Fresh bread and pastries are most abundant early, and the pizza trays often get replenished during peak hours.

    • Pair with a North End walk. Combine Parziale’s with stops at Paul Revere’s House, Copp’s Hill, and quieter corners off Hanover Street for a more local food tour feel.


    • Try bread for dinner. The bakery supplies loaves to area restaurants, so if you taste something great elsewhere, it might well be Parziale’s behind the scenes.
 

Final Bite

If you want the North End experience that feels like stepping into its history rather than a tourist stop, start your exploration at Parziale’s. It’s not just a bakery. It’s a quiet reminder that some of the best food in Boston is about family traditions that survive the centuries.

Open early and often, it’s exactly the kind of authentic, hole-in-the-wall spot worth seeking out on your next Boston adventure.

 

FAQs

Is Parziale’s Bakery a good alternative to Bova’s Bakery?

Yes. Many locals prefer Parziale’s because it offers high-quality cannoli, cookies, and pastries without the long lines or heavy tourist crowds found at Bova’s.

What is Parziale’s Bakery best known for?

Parziale’s is best known for its french bread, Sicilian pizza, calzones, tiramisu, and traditional Italian cookies. It is also widely credited with introducing pizza to Boston.

Is Parziale’s Bakery cash only?

Historically, Parziale’s was cash only. In recent years, credit cards are often accepted, but policies can change, so bringing cash is recommended.

Where is Parziale’s Bakery located?

Parziale’s Bakery is located at 80 Prince Street in Boston’s North End, just off Salem Street.

Is Parziale’s Bakery popular with locals?

Yes. Parziale’s is considered a neighborhood bakery and a local favorite, with less tourist traffic than many Hanover Street bakeries.

 

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Why The North End Boston Food Tour Is Personal

Why The North End Boston Food Tour Is Personal

Written by

Bobby Agrippino

Date

Dec 31, 2025

I’ve lived my entire life in Boston’s North End. This neighborhood didn’t just shape me, it raised me. Every street, every doorway, every bakery window holds a memory tied to my family, my childhood, and the people who made this place what it is.

When I walk through the North End, I don’t see it like a visitor does. I see generations. I see tradition. I see a tight-knit Italian neighborhood that taught me what community really means.

My name is Bobby Agrippino, and this North End Boston Food Tour isn’t something I created to show tourists where to eat. It’s my story, my culture, and my roots, shared through the food and history of the neighborhood I’ve always called home.

Growing Up in Boston’s North End

Growing up in the North End felt like growing up inside one big family. You didn’t just know your neighbors. You knew their parents, their grandparents, what they cooked on Sundays, and which bakery they swore by.

Food was at the center of everything. It wasn’t about going out to eat. It was homemade sauce simmering all day, fresh bread pulled straight from the oven, and family recipes passed down without ever being written down.

To this day, my mom still makes the best eggplant parm I’ve ever had. No restaurant version comes close. That dish alone explains more about North End Italian cooking than any guidebook ever could. It’s made the way it always has been, with patience, pride, and love, and that’s the same spirit behind this tour.

Those are the things that stay with you forever.

Why I Started the North End Boston Food Tour

I didn’t set out to become a tour guide. I started this tour because I wanted people to feel the North End the way I do.

Too often, I’d see visitors rush through the neighborhood, grab a quick slice, snap a few photos, and leave without ever understanding what makes this place special. The North End isn’t just restaurants and historic buildings. It’s family. It’s sacrifice. It’s generations of people protecting their culture and passing it down.

This food tour was my way of offering something different. An authentic Boston food experience led by someone who grew up living these stories, not reading them off a script.

What Makes This the Best Food Tour in Boston

When you join my North End Boston food tour, you’re not following a flag or listening to rehearsed lines. You’re walking the neighborhood with someone whose life is deeply connected to it.

I take you to the places I grew up with.
I share the stories I lived, not just the ones in history books.
And sometimes, we even run into my mom, because that’s how real this neighborhood is.

You can’t manufacture that. You can’t fake it. That’s what makes this one of the most authentic food tours in Boston.

What This Tour Is Really About

I believe food brings people together, but stories are what make people stay.

This North End food tour is about more than great Italian food. It’s about understanding the neighborhood, the people, and the culture that made it legendary. I want you to leave feeling like you didn’t just visit Boston, you experienced it through a local’s eyes.

This tour is personal. It’s emotional. It’s real. And if you decide to walk these streets with me, you’ll feel that from the very first stop.

Ready to Experience the North End Like a Local?

If you want more than a quick bite and a few photos, this tour is for you. The North End Boston Food Tour is a chance to experience real Italian food, real stories, and the neighborhood the way locals have for generations.

Spots are limited to keep the experience personal, and tours fill up fast.

Book your North End Boston Food Tour now and walk the neighborhood with someone who grew up here.

Book Your Tour

Prefer to plan ahead or give the experience as a gift?
Gift cards are available year-round.

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North End Boston Food Tours © 2025, All rights reserved.

What to Do With One Day in Boston: The Local’s Guide to the Best Things to Do

What to Do With One Day in Boston: The Local’s Guide to the Best Things to Do

Written by

Bobby Agrippino

Date

Nov 19, 2025

If you’ve only got one day here, you deserve an itinerary shaped by someone who actually lives in the city and knows where the real stories, food, and culture are. Boston is my home. I grew up in the North End, Boston’s oldest neighborhood, surrounded by the kind of community you don’t find in many cities anymore. When people ask how to spend a single day in Boston, I share the version locals would choose, not the one-size-fits-all list you see on travel sites.

This guide gives you a full, meaningful Boston day: history in the morning, food and culture in the afternoon, and a perfect night out. The centerpiece, of course, is my North End Boston Food Tour, which gives you the real insider experience you can’t find anywhere else.

The Best Things to Do in Boston in One Day

If you’re trying to figure out what the top things to do in Boston are for a single day, here’s the short answer: mix history, food, and real neighborhood culture. This itinerary focuses on the experiences visitors talk about long after they’ve flown home.

Morning: Start with the Heart of Boston’s History

The Freedom Trail winds through 16 historic sites, but you don’t need to check every one off the list. Start at Boston Common and follow the red line toward downtown. You’ll pass spots like the Granary Burying Ground, the Old State House, and Faneuil Hall.

This is the quickest way to absorb Boston’s Revolutionary spirit without spending your whole morning indoors or rushing through museums. Take your time, look up at the architecture, and let the city set the tone for your day.

Stop at the Boston Tea Party Ships & Museum

If you want one immersive, theatrical, hands-on attraction, this is it. The museum lets you step directly into the events that sparked the American Revolution. You can even throw tea overboard like the Sons of Liberty did in 1773.

It’s interactive, quick, and memorable, and it sets you up perfectly for an afternoon in the North End.

Late Morning or Early Afternoon: The North End Boston Food Tour

Whether you join the 11:30 AM or 2:30 PM tour, the timing fits seamlessly into a one-day Boston itinerary. Do not eat a full lunch before this. The tour includes generous portions from some of the neighborhood’s most iconic family-owned shops and restaurants.

And this isn’t a typical food tour where you get two raviolis and need to pay separately for your wine (You’re a guest in my neighborhood, everything is all-inclusive). Every stop tells a story, every dish has heritage behind it, and every corner of the North End holds a memory.

On the tour, you’ll:

• Eat authentic dishes from the same spots locals have loved for decades
• Learn the real history of the neighborhood from someone who’s lived it
• Explore the North End the way lifelong residents experience it, not the way guidebooks describe it

Most guests tell me this tour becomes the part of their Boston visit they talk about long after they’ve gone home. It’s food, culture, neighborhood, and history all in one experience.

Did you know you can give a tour to someone else? Follow this link to share it with a loved one.

After the Tour: Choose Your Afternoon Adventure

Depending on which tour time you choose, you’ll have options for how to spend your remaining hours.

If You Did the 11:30 AM Tour

You’ll finish with a full stomach and the pulse of local history in your ears. Choose one of these two nearby cultural gems:

Museum of Fine Arts

A world-class museum that holds everything from ancient artifacts to contemporary masterpieces. You can spend an hour here or get lost for the rest of the day.

Or

Institute of Contemporary Art

The ICA showcases cutting-edge contemporary art with stunning waterfront views and bold exhibitions you won’t find anywhere else in Boston. It’s the perfect spot to explore new ideas, discover emerging artists, and enjoy a vibrant creative experience after your tour.

Boston Public Library in Copley Square

This is one of the most beautiful public libraries in the country. Marble staircases, murals, quiet courtyards, and architecture that surprises every visitor.

If You Did the 2:30 PM Tour

You’ll finish in the early evening, right when the North End starts to glow. Wander through the neighborhood, take photos, stop into a shop or two, and savor the atmosphere. The streets feel different at night: lively, warm, and unmistakably Boston.

Night: A Perfect Boston Ending

Boston offers a strong finish to the day no matter the season.

Catch a Celtics or Bruins game at TD Garden

You’re right on the doorstep of the arena.

See a show in the Theatre District

Musicals, comedy, local productions, national tours.

Walk the waterfront

On a warm night, the harbor is peaceful, beautiful, and just a short ride from the North End.

Bonus Stops If You Have Extra Time

If you want to swap in or extend your day, consider:

Boston Common + Public Garden for a scenic, easy stroll
New England Aquarium if you’re traveling with kids
Harvard Square for a quick Cambridge adventure

Final Thoughts

You can spend months exploring Boston and still uncover something new. But if you only have one day, the best way to understand the city is to combine its history with its living culture. That’s why the North End sits at the center of this guide.

The neighborhood isn’t just where I live. It’s where my family’s roots are, where generations of stories are baked into every brick, and where visitors can feel the real spirit of Boston in a way no other neighborhood offers.

If you want your one day in Boston to be memorable, meaningful, and delicious, I’d love to show you my home on the North End Boston Food Tour.

 

 

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