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Restaurant manager Matt George shares a laugh with a guest at the PortaVia bar. The eatery opened in August.
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There's no bottled beer but there's brew on tap and grappa.
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PortaVia means takeout but there's the option of dining in.

PortaVia Opens in Former Paddy's Pub

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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Owner James Boland says he saw opportunity when the former Paddy's Pub space opened up late last year. 

DALTON, Mass. — PortaVia is bringing a taste of Italy to Dalton with fresh ingredients and generational recipes.

The eatery opened in the former Paddy's Pub in August, offering pizza, comfort appetizers, salads, sandwiches, and curated alcoholic beverages.  

The Italian word "porta via" translates to "takeaway" in English.

Owner James Boland and his wife, Donna, have embarked on this venture while working full-time jobs largely for one reason: family.

"This is for my son and my grandson," he explained.

"He is 28 years old, this is a very tough industry and I'm not sure anyone was going to give him the break that I could. I've been fortunate enough and I'm grateful for what I've gotten and I needed to help him take a step. That's it. That's what keeps us working."

Boland said his son, Cameron Taylor-Boland, is "the flavor" of the kitchen and has been woodfire cooking for about a decade. His mother is a baker by trade, working as a kitchen manager for the Pittsfield Public Schools.

Boland's younger children Max and Lila also work at the restaurant.

The pizza is a crossover between Napoletana and New York style, meaning it is on the thin side with a substantial crust.

One of the best-selling pies features black garlic, ricotta cheese, and a black truffle balsamic drizzle.  This garlic is fermented for three to four weeks to remove the bite and preserve its sweet taste.

The top-selling item has been the wood-fired wings that come in six different flavors.

"People always ask, 'Where's the pasta?'" Boland said. "I say I did 20 trips in Italy on business and amazingly enough, there's a lot of restaurants with just small plates that don't have pasta and they're still Italian restaurants."

Two menu staples come straight from Boland's family recipes.  

"The sauce is mine from my grandfather's recipe — I've been personally making it for 30 years with tweaks — and then the meatballs, which have been going weirdly crazy. That's the only two things I'm responsible for," he said.

"It's a fully fresh menu, salad dressings, the wing sauces Cameron reduces in-house. Everything is fresh right down to the final piece, which was the mozzarella product."

Not wanting to buy the cheese frozen, Boland acquired a mozzarella recipe from the former owners of The Pillars restaurant in New Lebanon, N.Y., Paul and Patricia Bock.

The Bocks helped design the flow of PortaVia's kitchen as a favor and as family friends. Before they left, Boland told them he loves their Mozzarella en Carrozza and asked for the recipe.


Bock agreed and told him the ingredients off the top of his head while imitating the motions of making it.

"My wife and I went to the store, grabbed all the ingredients [Bock] mentioned, and tried them at home that night and my wife knocked it out of the park. I couldn't believe it," Boland said.

"It felt like being a kid because when your parents bring you to The Pillars for a nice dinner, the kids got the Mozzarella en Carrozza, which means mozzarella in a carriage."

Longtime friend Matt George came on as front-end manager, bringing what Boland describes as almost a lifetime of restaurant experience to the eatery.

"He's been managing since breathing, I think, and he has had such a good taste. He curated the entire bar, which we carry not one bottle of beer," he explained.

"Daring. Not only in Berkshire County but in Dalton, Massachusetts, it's a stretch and we're killing it because we're offering a little bit of a different idea. He curated the taps, every beer on tap has a reason. The bars are identical on each side, the bottles are completely identical so that a bartender can shift from left to right and have the same mechanical motion. This is the kind of detail that Matt George brings to this game."

George also brings his family's recipe for grappa, a pomace brandy, that is a part of the bar lineup.

Boland saw that the space was going to be on the market late last year. He wrote a 30-page business plan and secured the spot in March.

Though he had never owned a restaurant, he worked at Papa Joe's through school and had always been interested in the idea, it just never worked out.

Per his son's recommendation, an ilFornino wood-fired oven replaced the kitchen's convection oven.  The front of house was transformed to emulate an Italian villa, complete with photographs that were taken by a friend in Tuscany.

Near the grappa behind the bar is a photo of an anonymous, cheery older man that is lovingly called "Pappa Grappa" by the staff.

"We want you to walk in here and feel like you're stepping into an Italian villa," Boland said.

He was happy to report that the town of Dalton and customers have been very supportive of his venture, already having a few established regulars.

"Dalton is extremely business-friendly," Boland said. "Really, all of the folks at town hall couldn't have been more helpful."

PortaVia is open on Thursday from 4 to 10 p.m, Friday and Saturday from noon to 10 p.m., Sunday from noon to 8 p.m., and Monday from 4 to 10 p.m.

A menu can be found on the eatery's Facebook.


Tags: new business,   Italian,   restaurants,   

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Pittsfield School Committee OKs $87M Budget for FY27

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The School Committee has approved an $87 million budget for fiscal year 2027 that uses the Fair Student Funding formula to assign resources. 

On Wednesday, the committee approved its first budget for the term. Morningside Community School will close at the end of the academic year and is excluded. 

"This has been quite a process, and throughout this process, we have been faced with the task of closing a $4.3 million budget deficit while making meaningful improvements in student outcomes for next year," interim Superintendent Latifah Phillips said. 

"Throughout this process, we've asked ourselves, 'What should we keep doing? What should we stop doing? And what should we start doing?' I do want to acknowledge that we are presenting a budget that has been made with difficult decisions, but it has been made carefully, responsibly, and collaboratively, again with a clear focus first on supporting our students."

The proposed $87,200,061 school budget for FY27 includes $68,886,061 in state Chapter 70 funding, $18 million from the city, and $345,000 in school choice and Richmond tuition revenues.  It is an approximately $300,000 increase from the Pittsfield Public Schools' FY26 budget of $86.9 million. 

The City Council will take a vote on May 19. 

Thirteen schools are budgeted for FY27, Morningside retired, and the middle school restructuring is set to move forward. The district believes important milestones have been met to move forward with transitioning to an upper elementary and junior high school model in September; Grades 5 and 6 attending Herberg Middle School, and Grades 7 and 8 attending Reid Middle School. 

"I also want to acknowledge that change is never easy. It is never simple, but I truly do believe that it is through these challenges that we're able to examine our systems, strengthen our practices, strengthen our relationships, and ultimately make decisions that will better our students," Phillips said. 

Included in the FY27 spending plan is $2.6 million for administration, $62.8 million for instructional costs, $7.5 million for other school services, and $7.2 million for operations and maintenance. 

Assistant Superintendent for Business and Finance Bonnie Howland reported that they met with Pittsfield High School and made two additions to its staff: an assistant principal and a family engagement attendance coordinator.

In March, the PHS community argued that a cut of $653,000 would be too much of a burden for the school to bear. The school was set to see a reduction of seven teachers (plus one teacher of deportment) and an assistant principal of teaching and learning, and a guidance counselor repurposed across the district; the administration said that after "right-sizing" the classrooms, there were initially 14 teacher reductions proposed for PHS. 

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