Submitted by YodaHead t3_zq3w5n in RhodeIsland

I'll start

  • Champlin's in Galilee
  • Great pizza
  • Matos Bakery
  • "Yeah, I got a guy."
  • Nam Chong in Westerly, RI
  • The dining room view for breakfast at the Ocean Mist in Matunuck.
  • There's never a mystery about what people are thinking at any given moment.
  • "If you're in trouble, everyone on the island will come to help you, but you better be in some real trouble."--- Prudence Island resident
106

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[deleted] t1_j0w9lyn wrote

Honestly it’s the people. The characters. The stereotypes are all true and it’s occasionally annoying but for the most part wonderful

49

RandomChurn t1_j0wbxrh wrote

I love the story of Roger Williams, his principles, and his founding of this place.

It's spectacularly beautiful.

That it's on the ocean.

That it's in New England.

That it's a blue state.

That it's the smallest state.

That people think it's an island (and how it can seem like one at times).

Fantastic food culture.

Not bad in the rest of the arts either.

It's ever so slightly slower paced than MA.

Providence. Specifically, Fox Point. I really love living in Fox Point.

78

SassySauce516 t1_j0wpu5d wrote

The water fire in providence is really pretty, There's some great hiking trails in RI, and all my friends are here

15

theanti_girl t1_j0wqje8 wrote

Twins’ Pizza

No excise tax on cars

So many cultures’ delicious foods to try

Beavertail Park

So. Many. Trails

So many states (with their own cultures) within a couple hours’ drive

California Taco Shop

Roger Williams Zoo

People always know someone who can help (altruistic “I know a guy”)

21

listen_youse t1_j0wqwmv wrote

More diverse than the rest of New England. Not perfect but people who are different or weird seem to have it a bit easier here.

Historic preservation is an industry.

31

blklab16 t1_j0wthxe wrote

I love Twins pizza! There’s no other pizza like it, I live out of state now but every time I go home to visit my family gets a few large Twins pizzas and a cake and pastries from Pastiche and it’s just my definition of food heaven.

8

Aleyoop t1_j0wyio4 wrote

Location! An absurdly high density of cool things within a 6 hour radius.

Beautiful beaches, parks, and general nature things to enjoy, close to more beautiful beaches (the Cape), a walkable capitol city with a top tier food scene and interesting events, easy travel to more events in Boston and New York, easy travel to Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine for awesome nature, camping, and hiking, when you’re bored of that Montreal is also a pretty easy drive and so is Philly.

Seasons! We have all four.

Summer here is awesome. Fall here is awesome. I find winter here to be awesome too (I love that it snows just not constantly and the temperatures don’t get super low for long). Spring here kinda sucks but 3/4 is pretty pretty good!

It’s impossible for me to pick a favorite place, but really long story short is everything I could possibly want is within a days drive and I think that’s amazing. Con: cost of living, but that’s because it’s so desirable.

25

cb020429 t1_j0x1qs3 wrote

New York System Hot Wieners.

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GlotzbachsToast t1_j0x1tv6 wrote

I am a bit worried about Nam Khong! I went to check their website the other day and I got a sense they were closed or being bought out by aPVD based restaurant. I didn’t get a chance to call/go to scope it out, hopefully that’s not the case!

3

Narodeez t1_j0x3t9f wrote

Yo, is this satire?

−18

Locksmith-Pitiful t1_j0x5yrt wrote

Speaking from someone in the city...

Matos bakery as well!

Everything is in walking distance

East side Providence history and architecture

Boba

Diversity of restaurants

Chili's

The fact we complain about our politicians but elect the same ones for decades

Prov place mall

Growing bike culture

Coffee milk

Strip pizza or whatever it's called

RI having the best pizza scene, better than New York and Boston

Cannolis

You kind of know everyone, if something happens, it feels so close and personal

8

TheUncommonSense t1_j0x6e8d wrote

So many crazy stories in such a small area - I love it

3

Desperate_Expert_952 t1_j0x7295 wrote

Beautiful roads, plenty of free public access to the beaches and free parking, considerate educated drivers, honest politicians, low cost of living.

3

SharpCookie232 t1_j0x73mh wrote

1.) RISD & Brown - the East Side is one of the coolest, artsy-est places on earth.

2.) The beaches are some of the most beautiful (those rich-types who settled in Newport for the summer could have gone anywhere).

3.) Love of the outdoors and the environment - Save the Bay, RI Audubon, the wildlife refuges, the bike paths, all the local farms - there's just so much to get out and do!

14

edthesmokebeard t1_j0x8nu4 wrote

High costs of living and stupid taxes are just great.

−9

GlitterFish19 t1_j0xam9d wrote

I love that we love Rhody. I am so proud to say I live here

10

stan_milgram t1_j0xdh3a wrote

Charlestown. Low taxes, nice beaches, lots of woods, quiet, no box stores, nice people in general.

0

DumplingChowder6 t1_j0xe02r wrote

Block island baby! Plus the world is so small to everyone in RI - it’s like the Shire - drive out of state and it might as well be another country.

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AhChingados t1_j0xe0nt wrote

Ok, there is plenty of bad. Like I grew up in a developing country and the corruption is at that level. The racism outside mayor metro areas is also pretty 80’s However: Best Mexican food in New England. Close to MA without the price tag If you are LGBT, living in Providence is pretty good. I would not recommend anywhere else in the state though. Italian Food It is a small pond, so advancing in a career that does not require political influence is relatively easy (if you want to be in a Gov. Position you will def need the connection because the corruption part.) If you are a crook you can do pretty well for yourself ALL BEACHES ARE PUBLIC. It is part of the constitution which is amazing considering other states charge you to enjoy nature and the fucking ocean. It is not New Jersey Lots of beautiful parks History!

I love it and you can live here is you don’t pay attention to local politics and work outside the state/private sector because it is truly a shit show.

2

wyzapped t1_j0xfi9e wrote

Take the first right after where the Bennys used to be and there’s a great bakery that has the best pizza strips (applies to pretty much any town in the state)

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Aleyoop t1_j0xfr3h wrote

I think a key character trait for a lot of Rhode Islanders is talking down about the state. I get it. When you’ve lived somewhere for a long time it’s hard to see the good, but there really is so much good.

14

RandmoCrystal t1_j0xgyto wrote

its not miserably boring and flat like the midwest.

10

Thac0 t1_j0xpqjy wrote

I think it’s a trait of locals that haven’t lived in other places for long stints. It kinda blinds them to all the good stuff they’re taking for granted

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SirSteg t1_j0xwty1 wrote

That’s where my boyfriend lives and when I visit him we always have great adventures

1

StinkyDingus63 t1_j0xznni wrote

The yeah I know a guy, abundance of great Italian food, water front always less than an hour away, the history and just being close to everything.

0

BigFlopDonk t1_j0y5pzv wrote

Frisky Fries

Moonlight house of weiners

Dan's pizza place

Being 45 mins from Boston and 3 hours from NY

the sideshow attraction known as Woonsocket

Autumnfest

Roger Williams pumpkin exhibit

The RI border being 5 mins from my house

4

They_Were_Robots t1_j0y6yjw wrote

Love Champlin’s! Be sure to check out James and the Giants next summer most weekends!

−1

Goodnightfutureghost t1_j0ycd1p wrote

I’ve lived in the north west of England, Northern California and here. Rhode Island is like the perfect blend of the two. Plus people here are kind and helpful, but not overly nice. I appreciate that, coming from a very “all smiles but heck off” hometown. Better sense of community.

1

PatDbunE t1_j0yetcu wrote

I never get lost - if I find myself in unfamiliar territory, I can just drive for a bit and I’ll know where I am

3

ReggeMtyouN t1_j0yjcwt wrote

It holds a big part of my past, and now possibly a piece of my future.

1

RandomChurn t1_j0yns3h wrote

>Spring here kinda sucks

I used to feel that way, but now I love Spring here!

Around Feb 5, it's the end of the Dark 13 -- the darkest 13 weeks of the year. From this point, the days will get lighter longer exponentially faster.

In February, visit the glassed-in botanical gardens in Roger Williams Park. Stepping over the threshold is like Dorothy leaving b&w Kansas and entering technicolor Oz, back when technicolor was brand-new

And February is when all the citrus trees there come into bloom. Bury your nose in them: the fragrance is otherworldly 🤤

Meanwhile, back in the neighborhood, end of February is when the first spring flowers bloom: on witch hazel. The blooms look like a slightly pallid forsythia.

Then start looking on the ground in sunny spots for snowdrop shoots. There are some that bloom in my neighborhood as early as end of Feb and certainly by early March.

Right after them come the crocuses.

By that time, even though we'll get snow on our daffodils, they can take it: get buried in snow and road salt yet spring right back, good as new. And the snow melts fast by now. You can easily feel how much warmer the sun is.

Visit the grounds of Blithewold in Bristol: there are literally tens of thousands of daffodils blooming throughout their woods.

And next, there's a parade of flowers that come into bloom, each in their turn marking progress toward warmth.

The flowering trees are spectacular here, especially on the East Side of Providence. Magnolia are the earliest, dogwood the final ones. By the time you see those, summer is nearly here.

Around Mother's Day, when you notice rhododendrons are starting to bloom, visit the Kinney Azalea Gardens in S Kingston near URI. Prof Kinney devoted his life to traveling the world (mostly China) and bringing back cultivars of azalea and rhododendrons, and using the grounds of his house to further develop them. I believe he is the reason RI has so many spectacular rhodos and azaleas everywhere. The blooming time at his garden spans at least 5 weeks. He's passed but left the garden as a legacy with a staff to maintain it, and open to the public.

Spring is spectacular in RI if you know where to look

6

LEENIEBEENIE93 t1_j0yptjf wrote

Beaches. Coffee milk. Italian food. Dels. 4 seasons. Chowdah.

1

Aleyoop t1_j0yt5z7 wrote

You’re not wrong about any of this and I very much appreciate you providing a counter narrative to “spring sucks”.

But like, the WIND. There is so much wind in spring particularly. That’s the thing that kills me. We have a lot of spring days that would be temperate enough to enjoy sitting around outside and then the wind makes that impossible.

4

Aleyoop t1_j0ytboj wrote

I was just talking about this the other day to someone who doesn’t live here! It’s great, I never worry when I end up somewhere unfamiliar.

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adebium t1_j0ytw8b wrote

What is Nam Chong in Westerly?

2

tempelhof_de t1_j0yvnq9 wrote

The beaches in the summer (East Beach in Charlestown)

Wickford

Bristol

The East Side

Roger Wiliams Park

Edgewood

Best quality of life in New England for the money (Boston / MA is overrated and overpriced)

3

RatardTrader t1_j0ywojt wrote

Narragansett will have my hear forever

0

Alarmed_Nebula3917 t1_j0yx3h5 wrote

I love the fireball nips nailed to the light poles some asshole hit when they were wasted and killed their friend in the accident

0

whatsaphoto t1_j0z0s6q wrote

My partner and I were talking about this the other day. No other place where you find a population as passionate about where they live than RI as a whole. Go up to MA and you'll only find Sox and Boston merch, go to ME and you'll find pockets of town pride but rarely much pride for Maine outside of the major tourist areas, CT has... something about Mystic Aquarium probably idk.

But in RI you'll find people just generally pumped about RI as a state. As an ex-pat from Mass I found that very interesting when I first moved here.

14

OGAnnie t1_j0z1b46 wrote

It’s perfect!

0

whatsaphoto t1_j0z2072 wrote

Met a girl for a date in Bristol at the herreshoff dock a couple years ago while I was still living in Attleboro. I made her cookies and we drank beer and laughed until about 1am when it was time to go home.

We're getting married this upcoming september. Very thankful that RI gave me that :)

10

blueplasticgirl t1_j0z4vhj wrote

So many things:

Monahan's Clam Shack Tilted Barn Brewery Food trucks, notably Butterheads Narrow River Paddling to the mouth Mission Burger/TSK Biking the Blackstone Greenway Eastside Pockets An All-Italia from Sandwich Hut Thames St and the Wharf especially during Christmas...

There's too many!

There's also a lot of great donuts here: Allie's Donuts RI Guys Donuts Knead Donuts Glaze n' Daze

2

feelsmagical t1_j0z55e6 wrote

> If you are LGBT, living in Providence is pretty good. I would not recommend anywhere else in the state though

The southern part of the state is a great place to be LGBT. Wakefield, Jamestown, Newport, Narragansett, Wickford... so many happy LGBT folks.

5

Independent-Area-552 t1_j0z7dv2 wrote

I’ve lived in Cranston for one year and let me tell you it is the worst state I have ever lived in hands-down you people suck at fucking driving. Your customer service sucks and the list goes on and on and on.

−1

NeetStreet_2 t1_j0zame9 wrote

I'll see your Ocean Mist and raise you the Coast Guard House.

0

Sparrow728 t1_j0zb26r wrote

Want to hike in the woods? 15 minutes Want to go to the beach? 15 minutes Wanna hang in the city (Providence)? 15 minutes

Add in Olneyville Weiners, clam shacks and coffee milk

2

RandomChurn t1_j0zcjdi wrote

Well, there's the whole "March comes in like a lion" only here it's more like last half of March+ 😆 -- but just in recent years, we've been having way more wind it seems than ever in the past. Crazy windy. Climate change?

2

CoolAbdul t1_j0zog8z wrote

Well, it WAS the steak tips at Box Seats.

0

CoolAbdul t1_j0zoneg wrote

Jim Taricani and Bill Rappleye, RIP

0

Choc401 t1_j0zrf2z wrote

Small state with a lot diversity which makes a lot of great fusion restaurants.

0

crystalistwo t1_j102kru wrote

I love when I drive to Mass, and cross the state line and the road suddenly becomes a quality road, because it wasn't put in by someone's cousin who got the contract.

0

masime00 t1_j105qyh wrote

My favorite part is leaving.

2

Locksmith-Pitiful t1_j105w27 wrote

One of the cheapest sit down restaurants to eat at during this period of inflation, even fast food is more expense. Also, pretty fucking good for a chain restaurant, the unlimited chips and salsa are amazing. However, the service is usually absolute trash at most locations, sometimes I don't even get a server... whatever, chips and salsa as I angrily wait lol

0

Cakes2015 t1_j107yqb wrote

Can confirm Chilango's is the best for plated Mexican food. If you're looking for more of a focus on handhelds (tacos/burritos, etc), the best ones are Masa, Tacos Don Nacho, or El Paso.

1

WrathWise t1_j10fref wrote

And when you leave the US : Political correctness is no longer a thing, even they described it as such… Also saw that Obesity is truly an American issue, they would eat fried chicken, pasta, and pork every day and STILL you’d barely see an Obese person.

1

samskeyti_ t1_j10lq47 wrote

Oh Champlin’s… college job for life

0

sbaz86 t1_j10ozrp wrote

You threw me for a loop with Chilis out of all the restaurants in RI, but you backed it up so that’s awesome but I must ask, what does one do when they don’t have a server? Do you go in the kitchen like “fucks my food man?” and get it yourself and bring it back to the table? Next, do you give yourself a bill? I understand if you do, morally, but do you tip yourself a little extra, not at all, just the bare minimum? I need answers to this.

By the way, I find the Chilis at Lincoln mall to be the best, but keep that just between us.

0

leavingthecold t1_j10pv64 wrote

Used to be the buffet scene

RIP Fire and Ice, Hometown Buffet, and countless others.

0

YeahIsme t1_j10tx62 wrote

I love that all of these are in Souther RI! Northern RI is a totally different vibe

I don't really get to South RI often so I don't get those cutesy town vibes with twinkle lights everywhere.

Instead I get Providence traffic, the nonsense of the 6/10 connector, great Asian food, and incessant sirens !!! Still love it tho, great weather, close distance to lots of places, and relatively chill/non pretentious people

2

ncastleJC t1_j10u2wx wrote

Everything’s close even if it’s far, plenty of nature, diversity of hobbies and even if it’s not in RI it’s right across the border, colleges, sports, food in abundance and diversities of cultures, artistic culture. History. Modernization. You can be put and about or chill at home. As long as we don’t turn too into Boston 2.0 we’re pretty set. Hopefully we get a new school too for Pawtucket though I feel for people who will get the short end of the stick in that. A night school I worked at was limited in their own way.

1

Locksmith-Pitiful t1_j11og8p wrote

It's just a personal favorite of mine... there's so many damned good spots that I prefer over it if that makes sense. There've been a few times I nearly walked out after waiting 45 minutes at my table just for a menu... idk why I do this to myself sometimes

1

drnick5 t1_j11thxn wrote

How did you not mention coffee milk? Or Chourico?

1

retardedsatoshi t1_j13424f wrote

Pascoag Reservoir and Burlingame are worth visiting every summer

1