Contact Boston Dining Guide Editors for Inquiries
Questions, corrections, reader notes, press requests, and partnership ideas can all start in one place: [email protected].
Good dining guidance depends on small details. The name of a winter soup. The difference between a quiet Tuesday table and a packed Friday reservation. Whether a wine pairing feels generous or merely decorative. If something on La Voile Boston helped you plan a meal, or if something needs a closer look, send it along.

Field note: A clear subject line saves time. “Back Bay dinner question,” “Press inquiry,” or “Correction request” gets routed more cleanly than a blank note.
What Readers Can Send Us
Reader emails often arrive after a meal, when the impression is still fresh: the snap of a baguette crust, the way a server described a Loire white, the surprise of finding a calmer table near Newbury Street before the theater rush.
Those details are useful. They help keep the guide grounded in actual dining decisions, not broad restaurant talk.
Questions
Ask about Boston dining occasions, French brasserie customs, wine pairing basics, seasonal menus, or how to use one of our guides before booking.
Corrections
Send menu changes, outdated wording, broken links, or details that deserve a second pass. Include the page title when possible.
Feedback
Tell us where a guide helped, where it felt thin, or what local dining question you wish it had answered more directly.
For context on the publication itself, the About La Voile Boston page explains the editorial focus in more detail.
Press, Media, and Partnership Inquiries
Press and media notes should go to [email protected] with the request type in the subject line.
What to include
A compact brief works best: publication or organization name, deadline, topic, requested format, and the specific article or dining theme involved. If the inquiry concerns a seasonal feature, mention the timing. A spring menu conversation moves differently than a holiday dining guide.
Partnership conversations
Partnership opportunities are reviewed for fit with the site’s dining coverage. Relevant notes may include French cuisine, Boston neighborhood dining, wine education, culinary events, or reader resources tied to restaurant planning.
Skip the oversized pitch deck at first. A plain-language email with the idea, scope, and desired next step is easier to assess.
Our Editorial Scope and Boundaries
La Voile Boston focuses on practical dining guidance: French brasserie culture, Boston restaurant planning, wine and pairings, seasonal French cuisine, Back Bay and Newbury Street context, and special dining occasions.
In scope
Reader questions about menus, reservation planning, dining etiquette, wine pairing choices, neighborhood context, and article accuracy.
Out of scope
Reservation handling, private customer service issues, employment requests, legal notices, or requests that require personal dining records we do not hold.
Editorial decisions stay tied to usefulness for readers planning meals in Boston. A note about one dish can matter, especially when it clarifies seasonality, price expectations, or the character of a room.
For how site use and personal information are handled, see the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Before You Email
A little structure makes a message easier to answer.
Use this simple format
- Write a specific subject line.
- Include the page title or topic, if your note concerns an article.
- State the question, correction, or request in the first few lines.
- Add timing if there is a press deadline or seasonal dining angle.
- Use the contact email directly: [email protected].
Short notes are welcome. So are careful ones. The most useful reader message often names one article, one detail, and one reason it matters.
Everything routes through one shared inbox: [email protected]. Send us the dish that surprised you, and we’ll take it from there.
