I get more excited about a meal at O Ya, Boston’s spectacular little
Japanese restaurant, than just about any restaurant I have ever visited
– which is rare for me, because as much as I love food, I usually save
most of my emotion, as well as the bulk of my appetite, for dessert. O
Ya loosely translates to mean “gee whiz,” a Japanese expression of
curiosity. It is also the expression heard over and over on a given
evening as diners search, but fail, to find just the right words to
describe what is happening in their mouths when they taste chef-owner
Tim Cushman’s beautifully inventive flavor pairings.
O Ya opened about a year and a half ago with little fanfare and
gradually became a sensation. In March, 2008 New York Times restaurant
reviewer Frank Bruni named O Ya the best new restaurant in the country
outside of New York. Since then, reservations have been booked about
two months in advance. In its July issue, “Food & Wine” named
chef-owner Tim Cushman a Best New Chef 2008. And the accolades continue
to pile in. For the record, those of us who live here did not need the
national media to tell us what a gem we had, hidden away on an
unassuming side street between the city’s financial district and its
Chinatown.
Boston
Boston
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