United States — Massachusetts

Salem — The Witch City's Quiet Dining Revolution

Salem's reputation has always been written in colonial brick and October crowds — but in the last decade a serious dining scene has built itself around the wharf and Essex Street. Ledger cooks 19th-century New England inside a converted savings bank. Settler turns a Lynde Street townhouse into Mediterranean rusticism. Turner's keeps the Lyceum Hall lit nightly. Finz puts the harbor on a raw bar. Bella Verona has poured Lake Garda wine for thirty years. A small city, but five tables that hold their own against Boston.

5Editor Picks
1626City Founded
Pickering WharfWaterfront

Salem’s Greatest Tables

5 restaurants listed

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$ under $40  ·  $$ $40–$80  ·  $$$ $80–$150  ·  $$$$ $150+ per person

Ledger Restaurant & Bar Salem Progressive New England restaurant
1
Close a Deal
Downtown — Washington Street — Salem
Ledger Restaurant & Bar
Progressive New England$$$
The Asiatic Bank of 1855 turned dining room. Original vault doors, original ceilings, a kitchen that takes 19th-century New England seriously and cooks it with 21st-century discipline.
Settler Salem New American — Mediterranean restaurant
2
First Date
Lynde Street — Old Town — Salem
Settler
New American — Mediterranean$$$
Aaron and Shanna Chambers run thirty-two seats of fire-cooked Mediterranean from a 1790s Lynde Street townhouse. The smallest serious room in Salem, and the most romantic.
Turner's Seafood at Lyceum Hall Salem New England Seafood restaurant
3
Team Dinner
Downtown — Church Street — Salem
Turner's Seafood at Lyceum Hall
New England Seafood$$$
The Lyceum Hall room where Alexander Graham Bell first demonstrated the telephone in 1877, now serving the most disciplined New England seafood north of Boston.
Finz Seafood & Grill Salem Modern Seafood — Raw Bar — Sushi restaurant
4
First Date
Pickering Wharf — Waterfront — Salem
Finz Seafood & Grill
Modern Seafood — Raw Bar — Sushi$$$
Pickering Wharf's glass-walled dining room over the Salem harbor. A serious raw bar, a real sushi programme, and the waterfront sunset that no other Salem table can sell.
Bella Verona Salem Northern Italian restaurant
5
Birthday
Downtown — Essex Street — Salem
Bella Verona
Northern Italian$$$
Lake Garda native Giorgio Manzana has poured wine and rolled pasta on Essex Street since 1996. Salem's most affectionate Italian room.

Best for First Date in Salem

Best for Business Dinner in Salem

The Top 5 Salem Restaurants

01

Ledger Restaurant & Bar

Boston Magazine 'Best of'Progressive New England$$$125 Washington Street, Salem

Ledger Restaurant & Bar opened in 2018 inside the 1855 Asiatic Bank building at 125 Washington Street, an Italianate granite block one short walk from Salem Common. The dining room is the bank itself: the original tin ceiling restored, the antique safety-deposit boxes lining the back wall, the vault door open as a passageway between the front bar and the rear dining room. The kitchen, run by chef Matt O'Neil, calls its style 'progressive New England' — a deliberate engagement with 19th-century regional cookery, modernized but never deconstructed for its own sake.

02

Settler

Boston Globe '50 Best New England'New American — Mediterranean$$$2 Lynde Street, Salem

Settler opened in 2020 at 2 Lynde Street, occupying the ground floor of a late-1790s clapboard townhouse half a block from Salem Common. The dining room runs to a single intimate space — exposed brick, twelve-over-twelve sash windows, brass sconces, three banquettes along one wall and four two-tops along the other — with a small open kitchen visible from every seat. Husband-and-wife chef-owners Aaron and Shanna Chambers (he previously at No. 9 Park and Bondir Cambridge, she on the management side of Ten Tables) cook a deliberately tight menu rooted in French country technique and Mediterranean produce.

03

Turner's Seafood at Lyceum Hall

#1 Seafood — Yelp MassachusettsNew England Seafood$$$43 Church Street, Salem

Turner's Seafood at Lyceum Hall occupies one of the most historically dense rooms in New England dining: 43 Church Street, the upper floor of the 1830 Salem Lyceum, where Alexander Graham Bell on February 12, 1877 made the first long-distance telephone call to Watson in Boston, and where Daniel Webster, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and Henry David Thoreau all lectured. The Turner family, fishmongers in Gloucester since 1948, took over the building in 2014 and restored the second-floor lecture hall as a 180-seat dining room with the original twenty-foot ceilings, the lecturer's apse intact at the front, and a forty-seat oyster bar running along the western wall.

04

Finz Seafood & Grill

Tripadvisor Travelers' ChoiceModern Seafood — Raw Bar — Sushi$$$76 Wharf Street, Salem

Finz Seafood & Grill sits on the eastern edge of Pickering Wharf at 76 Wharf Street, a glass-walled pavilion that wraps three sides with Salem Harbor and faces the Friendship of Salem tall ship across the basin. The dining room runs to about 120 seats inside and another sixty on a covered outdoor deck (May through October), with a forty-seat horseshoe bar dedicated almost entirely to the raw and sushi programmes. The vibe is brighter and louder than Ledger or Settler — this is a restaurant designed to take advantage of a view rather than a granite vault — and the energy on a summer Saturday is the closest Salem comes to a Boston Seaport room.

05

Bella Verona

Tripadvisor #11 of 148 (Salem)Northern Italian$$$107 Essex Street, Salem

Trattoria Bella Verona opened in 1996 at 107 Essex Street, one block from the Peabody Essex Museum, and has been owned and operated by chef Giorgio Manzana — a native of Lake Garda — for every one of those years. The dining room is small (about fifty seats), warm, and unapologetically nostalgic: exposed brick walls, white linen on the tables, a hand-painted mural of Verona behind the bar, candles in Chianti bottles, framed photographs of the Manzana family scattered across the walls. Service is largely family and long-tenured: Giorgio's wife Lina works the room nightly and the senior servers have been there for a decade or more.

Dining in Salem

The insider’s guide to Salem’s table

The Dining Culture

Covington's dining culture has been shaped by three forces operating simultaneously: a German-Kentucky settler heritage that left MainStrasse Village as a working historic quarter; the proximity to downtown Cincinnati directly across the Ohio River that pulls metropolitan diners southbound by foot across the Roebling Bridge; and a Northern Kentucky restaurant renaissance that began in earnest with Bouquet in 2007 and accelerated through the Hotel Covington's 2016 opening. The cooking here is unapologetically regional — bourbon-country Appalachian, German-Kentucky biergarten, Ohio Valley farm-to-table — and the prices remain twenty to thirty percent below comparable Cincinnati rooms, which is the operating economic argument the city continues to make.

Best Neighbourhoods

MainStrasse Village holds the walkable historic core — Otto's, Wunderbar, the bourbon-and-beer hall density, and a cobblestone street pattern that operates as the city's most photographed corridor. The Roebling Point district (around the Roebling Suspension Bridge) holds Bouquet and Frida 602 in a quieter, more residential-mix block. Madison Avenue holds Coppin's at the Hotel Covington — the boutique-hotel address that anchors the formal dining floor. Everything is within a six-to-ten minute walk of everything else.

Reservations & Practical Tips

Coppin's books two to three weeks for weekends; Bouquet one to two weeks; Otto's and Wunderbar usually one week; Frida 602 one week for weekends, walk-in at the bar most weeknights. Cincinnati / Northern Kentucky International Airport (CVG) is fifteen minutes south by car. The Roebling Suspension Bridge is closed to vehicles after 6pm — walk it as part of the after-dinner ritual. Convention weekends (BLINK light festival in October, MainStrasse Maifest in May, Oktoberfest in September) compress availability across all five rooms.

Dress Code & Tipping

Coppin's at the Hotel Covington is smart — collared shirts and elegant attire expected at dinner. Bouquet and Frida 602 are smart casual. Otto's and Wunderbar are casual to smart casual — no shorts after 5pm at any of the five. Tipping in the Greater Cincinnati region runs 18–22% at the table-service tier; service is always added to the bill at parties of six or more. Bourbon programmes at Coppin's and Otto's are typically poured at the bar before being moved to the dining floor — request a barrel pick at the captain station rather than the bar if you want the senior recommendation.