525 Tremont St.
Boston, Massachusetts 02116

Explore different restaurants each month while getting to know other singles in the age group of your choice . . . so even if there's no love connection you'll still have a wonderful time. You'll order off the menu and receive separate checks for your purchases. Our website allows you to view the profiles of those registered for each dinner, tracks who've you've dined with so you meet new people every time, and then let's you send a private message to those you've dined with afterward.


For current space availability, to see who's going, and to register please visit our website at www.TastyBoston.net.


This week enjoy dinner at Sibling Rivalry:


"What a “clever” “diversion” for jaded South Enders: “dueling brothers” David and Bob Kinkead offer “competing” “takes on the same ingredient” to create an “intriguing” two-sided New American menu that “fun”-lovers say “backs up” its “gimmick” with “zing” – while “extending the point-counterpoint theme” to the dining rooms, one “serene” and the other “abuzz” (there’s a “frenzied” bar scene too); no-nonsense types who consider it “contrived”, however, grumble the only serious “competition” is between “knowledgeable” but “pretentious” servers “for the highest tab.”" - Zagat.com


"The striking name points to this contemporary South End spot’s even more intriguing Iron Chef–like concept. Each season, brothers Robert and David Kinkead---the former of DC’s Kinkead’s, the latter a local---co-create a bipartite menu that offers two different approaches to a selection of given ingredients. Take bacon. Chef Dave serves up a lobster BLT with avocado and warm potato salad; Bob uses it, in the form of pancetta, to wrap monkfish paired with celery three ways---braised hearts, root purée and salad with truffle vinaigrette showcase the range of the deceptively humble stuff. Other pairings put the spotlight on scallops, pears, beets and so forth. Diners can, of course, mix-and-match and compare-and-contrast to their hearts' content; but the real pleasure here is that the dishes are interesting and generally solidly executed in and of themselves, complex context aside. Meanwhile, although plenty sophisticated, the space itself emphasizes comfort over bedazzlement---at least your body can relax while your taste buds are being kept on their toes. Unless, that is, you’re sitting at the bar lining the exhibition kitchen, tensed at the thought of a fraternal fracas breaking out before you." - Gayot.com

Official Website: http://www.TastyBoston.net

Added by tastyboston on February 16, 2009