36 hours in Portland, Maine
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36 hours in Portland, Maine
Peaks Island waterfront, in Portland, Maine, June 2024. The island, with nearly 1,000 year-round residents, was once home to an amusement park and now has a no-shoes-required vibe. (Greta Rybus/The New York Times)

by Chelsea Conaboy



NEW YORK, NY.- From the fishing piers and wharves lined up like piano keys along Commercial Street to the ocean views and Queen Anne-style homes atop Munjoy Hill, Portland, Maine, offers a lot for visitors to take in. And then there is the food. Maine’s largest city has long been nationally known as a top food destination, and just this year two Portland bakers won James Beard Awards. To host travelers, culinary or otherwise, five boutique hotels have opened since 2020. Hotel construction, high-end condo development and rising coastal real estate prices have exacerbated a housing crisis. But the elements that make this New England city such an attractive place to visit — a dynamic creative economy, juxtaposition of the old and the new, and the distinctive character of a working waterfront — endure.

ITINERARY

Friday

4 p.m. | Wander Washington Ave.


A four-block stretch of Washington Avenue is a food hub good for shopping as well as eating. Start your stroll at Onggi, a fermentation market and cafe, where shelves are stocked with sake, chili crisp, pickled blueberries and more. Buy a hojicha-butterscotch oat cookie ($3.25 each) to enjoy as you wander south to browse high-end kitchenware and Maine-made home goods at Strata and Post Supply, found inside what once was the J.J. Nissen bakery, where the New England top-split hot dog bun was created. On the way: The repurposed shipping containers at the Black Box, which serve as five tiny shops with month-to-month leases. Arriving in July is a pop-up version of Rabelais, a renowned seller of rare food-and-drink books.

6 p.m. | Pick Your comfort food

On to the eating, but how to choose? Texas-style barbecue is served on Terlingua’s sprawling back decks (one pound of house-smoked meats with a side, cornbread and pickles, $35), while sake and shared plates, such as fried tofu with jalapeño soy sauce and bonito ($7) or sautéed udon noodles with duck breast and vegetables ($15) can be found at Izakaya Minato. Cong Tu Bot offers a warm welcome, with Vietnamese food ordered family style, great cocktails and a buzzy dining area that’s especially pleasant when the garage-style doors are open. Try the salad of puffed rice, oyster mushrooms and “pickled stuff” dressed with chile oil ($17) or the twice-cooked eggplant ($14). Leave room for che chuoi, a dessert of tapioca, coconut and banana that is more than the sum of its parts ($11).

7:30 p.m. | Savor the sunset

After dinner, take a short stroll up Munjoy Hill, which dominates the eastern end of the city’s peninsula, to enjoy not one but two incredible views. At the end of Marion Street, follow the stone steps up to Fort Sumner Park, which looks west over Portland’s Back Cove. On a clear day, you can see the peak of Mount Washington and an exceptional sunset. From there, walk up Quebec Street to arrive at the Eastern Promenade, a 78-acre park that looks east over Casco Bay. Lounge on the grass or head back downhill on Congress Street to sit outside at Oxbow, one of the many Maine breweries that make beer in Portland or have outposts here, or choose from a long list of ciders on tap (from $7.50) at the Basque-inspired Anoche.

Saturday

8 a.m. | Enjoy Breakfast


Ugly Duckling, which opened in 2023 with a big U-shaped counter and a come-as-you-are vibe, is the latest project by Ilma Lopez and Damian Sansonetti, owners of the nearby Spanish-French brasserie Chaval. Breakfast sandwiches come on housemade English muffins. The No. 2, which includes two fried eggs, house pork sausage, American cheese and ketchup, is a popular order ($11.75). You might need a fork to finish the Como Se Dice Buongiorno ($12.75): fried egg, hash brown, prosciutto, jalapeño, arugula and garlic aioli on an English muffin with everything-bagel seasoning.

10:15 a.m. | Ride the ferry

Catch the 10:15 a.m. boat to Peaks Island at the Casco Bay Lines ferry terminal on Commercial Street. The island, with nearly 1,000 year-round residents, was once home to an amusement park and now has a no-shoes-required vibe. Part of the city of Portland, it sits just 3 miles offshore but feels much farther. During the 17-minute trip (from April to October: $14 round trip for adults, $7 for seniors and children), take in a view of Portland from the water, watch for harbor seals and pass by Fort Gorges, a formidable granite military fort built in the mid-19th century and now a frequent host to kayak tours and history buffs.

10:45 a.m. | Bike Peaks Island

You can explore the island by foot, but a bike is handy to make the nearly 4-mile loop around the perimeter. Bring your own on the ferry for an extra fee ($7 adult, $3.50 children) or rent one from Brad & Wyatt’s Island Bike Rental ($20 for two hours, $30 for four hours; rentals are first-come, first-served, no website). You’ll find great spots for exploring the rocks on the east side of the island, with views of the Atlantic Ocean. Before catching the return ferry, circle back to Il Leone for salad and pizza cooked in a wood-fired oven and eaten at a shady picnic table. The menu typically includes at least one pie that follows the harvest, highlighting Maine-grown garlic scapes, heirloom tomatoes or squash blossoms (pizzas start at $17.95).

4 p.m. | Hunt for treasure

Think of an indoor flea market and you might imagine rows of booths, some full of beauty, others full of dust. Back on the mainland, Open House instead arranges furniture in cozy living-room vignettes throughout its 10,000-square-foot shop on Congress Street, which has a large selection of vintage clothing and handcrafted goods. Items range in price from $5 for packable trinkets to a few thousand dollars for midcentury-modern antiques. And the owners welcome browsers — no stuffy gatekeepers here.

5 p.m. | Find a good book

Maine has a rich literary past and present — for starters, Stephen King and Lois Lowry live and write in the state. In Portland, used, independent and specialty bookstores abound. Linger in the beautiful children’s section at Back Cove Books, in the Woodfords Corner neighborhood, which displays its biographies and current affairs books in an old bank vault. Or visit Print: A Bookstore, with its expertly curated staff picks and a large section highlighting Maine writers. Both shops draw an impressive slate of author readings and other events each month, so check their calendars online.

6:30 p.m. | Eat from the sea

Plenty of restaurants in Portland serve lobster, but few get you as close to the lobster boat as Luke’s Lobster, a lobster-shack chain that has a full-service restaurant on the end of Portland Pier, off Commercial Street. The two-story restaurant, with a view of the Fore River as it meets Casco Bay, sits next to the company’s commercial lobster-buying facility, where lobster boats dock to sell their catch, some of which goes directly to the kitchen. (No reservations during the peak summer season.) Or reserve a table at Bar Futo in the Old Port to try skewers of squid, fish, pork belly or chicken ($7 to $9 each) grilled over binchotan, or Japanese charcoal, alongside a perfectly carbonated whiskey highball made with a Suntory Toki machine ($14).

8 p.m. | Listen to the local sound

Portland’s go-to venue for summer concerts by nationally touring artists is Thompson’s Point, an outdoor stage near the bank of the Fore River. Included in the 2024 lineup are Goose, Counting Crows and Dark Star Orchestra. But One Longfellow Square, in the West End with 180 seats, has a cozy feel that lends itself well to the folk and roots music that makes up most of its shows. Ticket prices vary but start around $20. Just half a block away is Blue Portland Maine, which hosts jazz and more. Half the shows are ticketed, with prices between $10 and $20, and half are free with a hat passed for the artists.

Sunday

9 a.m. | Go south in the north


Start your Sunday at Hot Suppa, with some shrimp and cheesy grits ($22) or scrambalaya ($17) — that’s eggs scrambled with jambalaya. Don’t choose your meal without consulting the specials, which highlight the kitchen’s from-scratch Southern cooking and seasonal produce. Recently, they included eggs Benedict with bacon and ramps ($23). And if your plate doesn’t already include corned beef hash, order a side for the table ($16).

10:30 a.m. | Take in Maine art

Intricacy and devotion are on display in “Jeremy Frey: Woven,” through Sept. 15 at the Portland Museum of Art. Frey is a seventh-generation basket maker from the Passamaquoddy tribe in Maine whose works have been shown at art markets for years and are found in major museums across the United States. This is the first solo museum exhibition for Frey, with more than 50 baskets and a short film documenting his process. While at the museum, you can see paintings by Winslow Homer and N.C. Wyeth, but don’t miss the work of artists who have broadened and deepened the legacy of Maine art in recent decades, including paintings by Reggie Burrows Hodges and Daniel Minter, and sculpture by Lauren Fensterstock. (Admission free for ages 21 and under. Seniors and students, $18. All others, $20.)

12:30 p.m. | See the light

Leave time for the 15-minute drive out to Fort Williams Park, a 90-acre park owned by the nearby town of Cape Elizabeth that has a cliff walk, a children’s garden and a panoramic view of Casco Bay. It’s also home to Portland Head Light, a historic and much-photographed lighthouse. If you haven’t eaten a lobster roll yet (or even if you have), visit the Bite Into Maine food truck to choose between a Maine-style with mayo or a Connecticut-style with butter, or try the picnic-style roll, with lobster piled on a bed of coleslaw ($29.95). Yes, these rolls are pricey, but consider the view.



KEY STOPS

The Eastern Promenade offers picnicking, beach access, a playground with a view and food trucks.

The Portland Museum of Art has a collection of established and emerging Maine artists and a small sculpture garden.

Fort Williams Park in nearby Cape Elizabeth provides breathtaking views and a good lobster roll.

WHERE TO EAT

Cong Tu Bot has a cheerful dining room and a family-style Vietnamese menu.

Ugly Duckling is a sweet luncheonette with memorable breakfast sandwiches.

Il Leone turns local ingredients and naturally leavened dough into wood-fired pizza magic on Peaks Island.

Luke’s Lobster was known for exporting Maine lobsters to a chain of lobster shacks, then returned to build a restaurant on the Portland Pier.

Bar Futo serves yakitori-style skewers and sharing plates with creative cocktails.

Hot Suppa brings from-scratch Southern cooking to this very northern city.

Bite Into Maine’s Fort Williams food truck offers a very Maine experience: eating a lobster roll with a lighthouse in view.

Oxbow Blending & Bottling blends and packages aged beers, with a large bar and patio and live music.

Anoche offers Spanish gin, wine and hard ciders, and Spanish cheeses, meats and tinned fish.

One Longfellow Square draws folk and roots musicians to an intimate performance space.

Blue Portland Maine is expanding its legacy as a jazz bar to include other genres.

WHERE TO STAY

The Longfellow Hotel, named after Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Portland’s most famous poet, opened in May, with 48 guest rooms and a spa on the edge of the West End neighborhood. Rooms start at $499, higher during the summer season.

Canopy by Hilton on the Portland Waterfront has 135 rooms and a year-round rooftop bar, called Luna. Rooms start at $399 during the warmer months, higher for a water view.

The Holiday Inn By the Bay is a more affordable mainstay. The location is convenient — a block from the Portland Museum of Art — and room rates start around $160.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










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