Sep 01

“We’re going out in Dorchester tonight.  Yup.  Gonna save a barn!”

Not your standard script for the babysitter, is it?

Well, on Friday, September 24th, it could be…

and even if you can’t make it, here’s why you should be supporting the Dorchester Historical Society’s Save Our Barn campaign:

One of only a few remaining barns in Boston, the Dorchester Historical Society’s Clapp Family barn is a rare artifact.

Dorchester was once a farming community (case ya didn’t know) and from these farms were fed Bostonia during the occupation of the city by British troops at the beginning of the Revolutionary War. According to DHS, “Fruits developed in Dorchester include the Downer cherry, the Dorchester blackberry, the President Wilder strawberry and the pride of the Society, Clapp’s Favorite Pear.”

The barn symbolizes Dorchester’s past, and the Clapp family is “a premier examplar of that history with its creation of the Clap Favorite Pear in the 1830s.”

To learn more or to purchase a ticket to the gala, go here.

Nov 29

The Hahhp and Bahhhd got a facelift. We’re all excited about the new polished look as it elevates Dorchester Ave. to the classy Main Street we all know it is capable of becoming (or restoring once more).

If you haven’t wandered into the new! improved! H&B, let the Dottie Hottie recommend Sunday or Monday evenings for a buffalo wing smorgasbord. The wings - which come in an array of flavors including honey buffalo, buffalo, and barbecue - are a mere $.50/piece on Sunday and Monday nights. They’re not only cheap, but they’re quite meaty and mos def delicious. The Dottie Hottie has been in search of an establishment to offer wings at a reasonable price that would make Buffalo proud. But Boston bars, it seems, are wont to charge much too much for the pint and the poultry. The Harp & Bard gets the recipe just right.

Those with kiddies, here’s a tip - go ’round about 6p on Monday evenings and have the run of the place. If your child is anything like MID (who thinks booths are made for being obnoxious and peeking over at the connecting booth), this time is to your advantage :)

1099 Dorchester Ave
(between Doris St & Savin Hill Ave)
Dorchester, MA 02125
(617) 265-2893

Oct 04

The Dottie Hottie enthusiastically joins forces with fellow Dot bloggers to share all that there is to adore about this here hottest ‘hood of Boston! Yes we can! ADORE-chester!

If you have been reading this blog for any period of time, you know the Dottie Hottie is already convinced. There is MUCH to adore about Dorchester. This site was created with this ambition in mind: To let the world, or at least Greater Boston know there is a real vitality to this neighborhood. There is beauty and authenticity. You can go ahead and read the headlines; they don’t betray a truth that violence and crime spike where poverty pervades. We are not Boston’s richest neighborhood, but we possess our own riches, and the following are the Dottie Hottie’s favorite five:

1.) Neponset Bike Trail: I wish I could bottle the smell of the sooty railroad tracks, the view of the deep blue Neponset River, the glee of babies in strollers and friendly smiles of parents jogging behind them. I feel a palpable blessing riding my bike on this path with my child MID. Every pedal forward is a gift my city gives me on this well-paved path along a beautiful waterway. Brings new meaning to the word recreation.

2.) Flat Black Coffee Company: The tasty coffee is only transcended by the friendly service. The convenient locations (at Ashmont and Lower Mills) are only transcended by their proximity to Wainwright Bank and Dot Park. Their commitment to Dot is only transcended by their commitment to the fair trade coffee industry in the Third World. Flat Black takes much of the money that I should deposit into that ATM at aforementioned Wainwright. And that is fine with me.

3.) The Dorchester Reporter: If you live in Dot, you really should subscribe. It’s a quality community newspaper, family founded and owned, and you get all the neighborhood bulletins and a bit of blarney to boot.

4.) Sunday Brunch on the patio at Ashmont Grill: It’s such a shame this savory experience is only seasonal, but the Dottie Hottie awaits Patio Season at the AG all winter long. The patio is a true oasis, removed from the din of Peabody Square, all one can hear are the clink of bellini glasses and the kind service. Take a leisurely skim of the Sunday paper while you wait for your brunch to arrive. Every egg dish is scrumptious. Every table is privy to a beautiful sight, be it a humming fountain, a floral vine climbing the stone wall. If only you could take a Sunday nap on a sun-drenched chaise lounge, this place might be a thin slice of Paradise.

5.) The Fields Corner Post Office: It might be the most unlikely of places to adore, but the diversity and authenticity of Dorchester seem to be so perfectly captured by this little microcosm of a place. Where else are we all on equal footing? You could be homeless, jobless, or living in tremendous opulence. You can all pick up your mail here. You might enter in a wheelchair, with a stroller, or with a cane. With the new ramp, your entrance is so much the smoother. And chances are good, some good person of Dorchester will open the door for you. Enough cannot be said of the good postal workers here, too. Always patient, always efficient, always good-humored, they are the salt of Dorchester, and for $.41 on the dollar, they deliver every piece of mail I send without fail. Huzzah!

And you? What do you ADORE about Dorchester?

Sep 23

So my boy Sam Yoon got bested by Menino (shocker!) and Flaherty, but only trailed second place by a couple thousand votes. I have to say that I’m always disappointed when I visit my little precinct in Dot. The Dottie Hottie does so love to exercise the right, and yet, I’m always the only voter there! Granted, I usually go mid-day, but surely my elder voters and my stay-at-home parents should be hitting up the polls prior to naptime, no? I suspect that voter turn-out in Dot is low, and it burns me pretty bad. I didn’t even see many Yoon banner wavers working the polls and this is Sam’s ‘hood! We are one of the greatest neighborhoods in terms of the richness of our non-profits and service agencies, and yet our voter engagement just doesn’t impress. If the primary wasn’t your bag, I really hope to see you on Super Tuesday in November. Be there or be a blank oval on the ballot, y’all.

Mar 23

If you also have had to detour your regularly scheduled weekend T ride on the Red Line via a shuttle to JFK, rather than hopping on your favored Shawmut, Ashmont stations or the like, the wait may be over.  The Dottie Hottie recognizes that improvements are necessary in our T stations, particularly for the wheelchair bound and strollerpushing among us.  The Dottie Hottie has taken to subscribing to T-Alert notifications by e-mail to stay apprised of weekend service interruptions.  Still, the Dottie Hottie gets cranky like any good denizen reliant upon public trans.  So the Dottie Hottie was encouraged when a conversation was had with an upstanding member of the MBTA Transit Police today who informed that the Ashmont Station should be complete by early fall and buses should be circling the station like covered wagons in a caravan by late summer.  Yipee-rah! Things appear to be shaping up nicely over there at the station where the overhang looks like it was manufactured by NASA and where the sun glints off the poles like there’s going to be a bright future of non-cranky public transport right here in the near future.

Mar 07

Are you all enjoying the thaw as much as the Dottie Hottie is? Lovely out there without all the snow mush, isn’t it?

Well, if you’re not yet convinced that spring has sprung but still want to turn up the heat, here are two opportunities to get your heart pumping in Dot:

HealthWorks: Instructors Wanted

The members of Codman Square’s HealthWorks Foundation have spoken and the people have listened. HealthWorks is now recruiting individuals who are certified and interested in volunteering their time to teach either yoga, pilates or a dance class. If you are interested devoting time to aid the women of Dorchester for any class, please dial 617-825-2800, or visit the HealthWorks website for more details.

As this spring slowly begins to creep in, the Codman Square Walk for Diabetes Group is looking for active walkers to participate in the group.

The Codman Square Walkers (CSW) began last year and enjoyed a conversive and energetic group of nearly a dozen walkers. This year the group is looking for a new club leader to help organize the group and to try to recruit walkers. If you would like to be a part of the CSW, whether helping lead this group or just enjoying the fresh air and good conversations, please email Codman’s Grace Moore at Grace.Moore@codman.org.

Nov 20

The Dottie Hottie is launching an informal campaign with a target audience: Strollerparents. Or strollernannies. Or anyone pushing a stroller. Much like the Jeep wave, a friendly albeit esoteric social rite shared by those who drive Jeeps, the Dottie Hottie would like to institute a tacit policy of cordiality for those passing by another strollerperson. Please say Hi. Or at least acknowledge the other stroller roller with a simple nod, a warm smile, or feel free to stop and talk and compare the attributes of the Bugaboo versus the Micralite. The Dottie Hottie is a little lonely and feels a bit dejected when other stroller pushin’ peeps are cold.

What have you got to lose?

We’ll see you out on the pavement (at least until it’s covered in snow….)

Aug 31

Dot 2 Dot cafe is a fairly new establishment to grace Dorchester Ave., and by “grace,” the Dottie Hottie is not even being sarcastic. Dot Ave. is starting to see some illumination beyond the miles of forbidding storefront grates. In addition to its cheerful signage, Dot 2 Dot has accented its storefront with some tricked out mosaic work — largely in thanks to the good folks of DotArt. Huzzah!

Dot 2 Dot owner Karen Henry-Garrett says she was looking for a way to improve the “ugly” stone facade. Enter: DotArt. The organization involves local teens in arts education and with its new Clay Studio - conveniently across the street from Dot 2 Dot - the teen artists were able to give the old building where Dot 2 Dot resides something way better than Botox. Check it!

mosaic
(But you’ll have to see it for yourself in living color….)
inside dot 2 dot

Dot 2 Dot Cafe
1739 Dorchester Avenue,
Dorchester MA 02124
617-436-2368
www.dot2dotcafe.com

Aug 14

Dotties about town may have noticed a truck making frequent and long pit stops whereby its back hatch was opened and bags of food distributed. What is up with that truck? Is it a farmer getting rid of surplus? A drug dealer in disguise?

The answer is: The Fair Foods truck. It’s a primitive looking truck. Doesn’t have a cute jingle like the ice cream truck and could probably be eligible for some MTV “Pimp My Ride.” But it’s purpose eclipses all aesthetic. And it was started by a group of fellow Dotties! The Fair Foods truck takes the refuse of produce that would otherwise end up in dumpsters around Chelsea piers. The refuse, which is often perfectly good except for some minor defects, e.g. cucumbers have some yellow spots, onions have some deformities, is then sold for a dollar a bag.

Fair Foods volunteer Jason tells us it’s a “dollar for dignity.” Stop by and holla with your dollah at the Fair Foods truck sometime. The truck stops at 455 Adams St. every Friday from 10:30 - 12p. Their other stops can be found on their website.

farmer jason

dollah

Aug 05

Chances are good that you Dotties have already signed the petition to Save the Fahhhhm. The Blandino family has a marvelous proposal for preserving green space and producing more greens in Dorchester. But they’re up against some condo developers who don’t appear to be unreasonable. Still, the Blandinos need our help.

The Dottie Hottie is all for posh real estate in the Dot to enhance the neighborhood profile, but this neighborhood needs another condo complex like Dot Ave. needs another nail salon. Do we need to be convinced some more or should we yank Al Gore and his rising platform to explain this further?

Read more about the City Farm here and consider signing the petition!