

Within 10 years of arriving in the United States broke and alone he opened Alba in Quincy, where he has built a large, thriving restaurant and devoted following one handshake, one smile, one great meal at a time. He quickly proved a knack for hospitality and American culture and worked his way up to management at Boston hotspots such as Grill 23 and Legal Seafoods. Keka discussed some of those hardships about escaping communism and his arrival in America in a recent interview with NBC Boston. Keka arrived penniless and unable to speak English, but landed a job washing dishes for fellow Albanian-American Anthony Athanas, the late owner of the former Anthony’s Pier 4, a longtime Boston dining landmark. Keka fled communist Albania in 1990 by swimming across a lake to Montenegro, escaped a Serbian prison and ended up in a refugee camp before getting a seat on a mercy flight to America in 1991. “But I’ve been through worse and we will get through this together.” “There have been a lot of real bad days and bad nights for me and for all our staff over the past few months,” Keka said of the shutdown. So he devoted his energy to pushing forward with plans for Alba on 53, buoyed by his faith in the future of his adopted homeland.
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Keka in recent months suffered personal and professional distress, as have almost all other restaurateurs during the Covid shutdown. Today, the original Alba is the anchor of Greater Boston’s hottest new dining destination, as some two dozen new eateries have sprung up around it in recent years. Yet Alba survived and prospered, even at a time when Quincy Center itself was down and out. Few observers thought this industry newcomer would make it, especially at that dire period in our nation’s history. Keka opened the original Quincy Center Alba in the fall of 2001, in the immediate aftermath of 9/11, one of the worst times ever for restaurants before Covid. It’s an ambitious opening, even in the best of times, let alone during the era of Covid, spanning 7,500 square feet with seats for up to 240 guests (without Covid restrictions).īut Keka has spent his life beating the odds, both personally and professionally, and believes these experiences have prepared him and his team for the challenges ahead.

Alba on 53 opens Monday, a large, beautiful Mediterranean steakhouse from Albanian immigrant restaurateur Leo Keka and the team behind Alba in Quincy Center, a fine-dining landmark for nearly 20 years.Īlba on 53 will feature prime beef, fresh local seafood, open kitchen led by executive chef and Boston restaurant veteran Todd Renner, al fresco dining and a 700-bottle world-class wine list featuring the best in California cabernet and bold Italian reds. A splash of Arab and Eastern Mediterranean flavor will distinguish Alba on 53 from the original Quincy classic.
