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T
he next time you buy a Fenway Frank, you might want to pair it with a cup o’ joe. You heard us: Win or lose, the Fenway Café has the perfect pre- or post-game pick-me-up, in a neighborhood where you wouldn’t expect to find it. It’s easy to miss, but the café has great coffee, much cheaper than at the chains, and ice cream that beats those Hoodsie cups and the soft-serve in the stadium, hands-down, with flavors including black raspberry and cake batter. There are longer hours during baseball season so you can get that caffeine hit before the game. O’Brien
Then-Red Sox owner John Taylor picked the name for Fenway Park in 1911 not only because that was what the neighborhood was called, but also to promote his other business, the Fenway Realty Company.
Fenway Café
Website
61 Brookline Ave. between Lansdowne Street and Yawkey Way
Boston, MA, 02215
617.262.2233
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October through March, daily, 7 a.m. to 5 p.m.
April through September, daily, 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.
These lines serve the Fenway Café. Click to find more secrets on your route.
19 Bus, 47 Bus, 55 Bus, 57 Bus, 60 Bus, 65 Bus, 8 Bus, 9 Bus, CT2 Bus, Fenway/Green Line D, Kenmore/Green Line B C D
Find more secrets in Fenway Park, The Fenway, Kenmore Square,
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