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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.

Parziale’s desserts often rival the more famous bakeries nearby.
They also wholesale bread to local restaurants, so there’s a good chance you’ve already eaten Parziale’s without realizing it.
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.
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.
NORTH END BOSTON FOOD TOUR
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617-719-9542
Meeting Location:
Tony DeMarco Statue,
191 Hanover St, Boston, MA 02113
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