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El Tepeyac Café, or simply El Tepeyac, is a longstanding Mexican restaurant in the Boyle Heights neighborhood of East Los Angeles. They are famous for their massive burritos, “Manuel’s Special Burrito” and the “Hollenbeck Burrito.” The original location is at 812 North Evergreen Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90033. [1]
The Hat is a Southern California fast-food restaurant chain specializing in pastrami dip sandwiches. [1] This eatery, once local only to the San Gabriel Valley, [2] has been offering its "World Famous Pastrami" to Southern California residents since 1951. [3] [4] Its customers consume 13 to 15 tons of pastrami per week. [5]
Southern California Lazy Dog Restaurant & Bar: Huntington Beach, California: 2003 40 West and Midwest Luby's: San Antonio, Texas: 1947 Houston, Texas: 83 Texas Marie Callender's: Orange, California: 1964 Mission Viejo, California: 25 California, Nevada, Utah Metro Diner: Tampa, Florida: 1992 Jacksonville, Florida: 57 East Coast and Indiana Norm ...
On one Yelp ranking, reviewers snubbed Sacramento’s Kru Contemporary Japanese Cuisine.
Cole's Pacific Electric Buffet, also known as Cole's P.E. Buffet, is a restaurant and bar located at 118 East 6th Street in the Historic Core district of downtown Los Angeles, California, the oldest operating in Los Angeles at the same location since its founding. Sign in front with claim to being the oldest bar in Los Angeles
There was one Gino's East location that operated in Manhattan Beach, California, but closed in 1991. Additionally, Gino's East operates a mail-order business, where patrons can order frozen pizzas and have them shipped overnight. The company opened its first restaurant located outside the Chicago area in Granger, Indiana, but closed it in 2012 ...
Cousins Jeff and Sam King launched the company as University Restaurant Group in 1983 as a successor to their family's long-running restaurant operations. [2] The cousins' parents, brothers Mickey and Lou King, opened their King's Coffee Shop in Huntington Park, California, in 1945. The brothers sold to Tiny Naylor's in 1982.
By 1979, the chain had expanded throughout northern Mexico. On December 8, 1980, Ochoa opened his first U.S. restaurant in Los Angeles, California, at 503 Alvarado Street, near Sixth Street. [8] [9] The first American location was only 1,500 square feet (140 m 2) and it grossed more than $125,000 per month during its first year of operation. [10]