Counting Down the Best New Foodie Road Trips! (No. 3)
 Over the last several weeks, Chowder traversed New England to unearth the most appetizing reasons to take a destination-restaurant road trip—and came up with the six best. This week, we’ve made our way up to…
Over the last several weeks, Chowder traversed New England to unearth the most appetizing reasons to take a destination-restaurant road trip—and came up with the six best. This week, we’ve made our way up to…
No. 3: Five Fifty-Five (Portland, Me.)
If a food psychologist were free-associating with you, and he said, “Portland, Maine!” your immediate response most likely would be “Fore Street!” Sure. You and everyone else. That’s why it’s tough to secure even a bar seat at Sam Hayward’s award-winning eatery these days without waiting a really, really long time.
“It’s like trying to get a table at Olives back when Olives was Olives,” said a disgruntled foodie friend of ours, who recently opted to find solace and a seat off the waterfront at 555. Chowder decided to follow her lead, and found a terrific meal.
555 (pronounced “FIVE FIFF-tee FIVE”) is proof-positive that location isn’t everything. It sits on a desolate, not-quite-gentrified block of Congress Street near Congress Square; if you ask for a seat by the window you’ll get a nice view of Dunkin’ Donuts and an occasional downtrodden passerby. (The exception is the first Friday of each month, when Portland’s downtown art galleries stay open from 5-8 p.m. for a self-guided art walk, and the block bustles.)
But the restaurant is gorgeous, with exposed brick, copper accents (including cool napkin rings made of copper plumbing pipes), and a balcony that overlooks the open kitchen, helmed by Steve Corry—who won national acclaim last year when he was chosen by Food & Wine magazine as one of the 10 best new chefs in the country. The service is flawless without being obsequious, and the vibe is friendly; they aim to please without assuming they please.
With the exception of a slightly chewy hanger steak, the food is just terrific. And, like at Fore Street, there is a focus on local ingredients. Salad greens come from Fishbowl Farms (organic, natch) in Bowdoinham; the mussels (fantastic) come from Bangs Island, up the coast; the cheese selection included a cheddar from Smiling Hill farm in Westbrook.
We forgot to ask where the seared pepper-crusted diver scallops are from because we were too busy loving them. Cooked perfectly, they sat in a yummy, slightly butterscotchy emulsion of baby carrots and vanilla, alongside a potato fennel puree. Fennel shows up a lot on the menu, which changes seasonally; the butterscotch cheesecake on the dessert list even comes with “sweet candied fennel.” Also on the dessert list: a cloth to-go bag of hand-rolled chocolate truffles—something for diners “from away” to enjoy on the long ride home.
BEST BETS: Seared pepper-crusted diver scallops, Bangs Island Mussels, “Take Home Some Chocolates”
DRIVE TIME FROM BOSTON: 2 hours
INFORMATION: 555, 555 Congress Street, Portland, Maine, 04101, 207-761-0555
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3. 555 (Portland, ME))
4. Dressing Room (Westport, CT)
5. The Green Monkey (Portsmouth, NH)
6. Rubi’s Sandwiches (Great Barrington, MA)
**** NEXT THURSDAY…NO. 2! ****
—CARMEN NOBEL
 
						 
						