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Get your appetite ready: Taste of Cincinnati returns this weekend. Taking place May 25-27, the event will feature a record-setting 85 vendors, including 28 restaurants, 33 food trucks, two ...
A dish from Opal Rooftop, which will be one of over 50 restaurants participating in Greater Cincinnati Restaurant Week from Monday, April 15, to Sunday, April 21, 2024. Cincinnati foodies rejoice!
The following is a list of notable restaurants in Cincinnati, Ohio This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources .
The Wheel was the "first restaurant in Cincinnati to sign a contract with the culinary trade unions," [19] and did a lot of business with Cincinnati Reds fans after each game. [20] Before retiring from politics in 1967, Bachrach sold the restaurant; unfortunately, due partially to the baseball strikes in 1980 and 1981 , the Wheel folded and ...
The idea of Taste of Cincinnati derived from Taste of the Big Apple News, which Karen Maier, then Frisch's vice president of marketing, came across in the Nation's Restaurant News, a publication that covers the American foodservice industry. [1] Taste of Cincinnati started in 1979 as a daylong festival in Piatt Park, previously known as ...
The historic West End was largely razed in the 1950s and 60s which led to a large drop in population from 67,520 in 1950 to 17,068 in 1970. This razing was done as part of a series of urban renewal projects and the construction of Interstate 75, its interchange with Interstate 71 and the construction of the 6th St Expressway for U.S. Route 50.
Skyline Chili is a chain of Cincinnati-style chili restaurants based in Cincinnati, Ohio.Founded in 1949 by Greek immigrant Nicholas Lambrinides, [3] Skyline Chili is named for the view of Cincinnati's skyline that Lambrinides could see from the first restaurant (which has since been demolished), [4] opened in the section of town now known as Price Hill. [4]
The neighborhood was also home to one of the first Fleischmann's Yeast factories in the US and was founded by Louis Fleischmann, his brother Maximilian, and James Gaff. [3] In 1835, Sedamsville incorporated as a village in the newly organized Storrs Township. [4] Cincinnati annexed the township, including Sedamsville, in 1870. [5]