Restaurants

Ghost Pepper is a sultry postcard from Latin America, not merely a boozy taquería

“The dishes are fashionable but unpretentious.”

El Ocho octopus tentacle on gold potato purée, drizzled with sauce
El Ocho, octopus tentacle on gold potato purée, at Ghost Pepper. Emily Chan

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Dining out requires choices, and over-ordering at Ghost Pepper Taco and Tequila Bar is a reasonable one. Whatever you decide, be sure your meal includes the bewilderingly excellent el ocho ($16), a crispy-edged curl of octopus braised in citrus and drizzled with an earthy salsa laced with tortilla ash. All of it sits atop a gold-hued purée called causa — spicy Peruvian-style mashed potatoes infused with ají amarillo. The el ocho has as artful a plating as you will get from an operation that eschews ring-molds and tweezers. As with the Dorchester crowd at Ghost Pepper, the dishes are fashionable but unpretentious.

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