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Cheddar's Scratch Kitchen, formerly known as Cheddar's Casual Cafe, [2] is an American restaurant chain based in Irving, Texas. Founded in 1979, [ 3 ] the company has more than 170 locations in 28 states as of 2018.
The Kitchen in History, Osprey; 1972; ISBN 0-85045-068-3; Kinchin, Juliet and Aidan O'Connor, Counter Space: Design and the Modern Kitchen (MoMA: New York, 2011) Lupton, E. and Miller, J. A.: The Bathroom, the Kitchen, and the Aesthetics of Waste, Princeton Architectural Press; 1996; ISBN 1-56898-096-5.
Some kitchen workers would rather pull dead insects from food and serve it rather than throw it away. Maccas75 describes a case where a restaurant cook removed a dead fly from a customer’s meal ...
The Original Soupman was a chain of soup restaurants originally run by Iranian-American soup vendor Ali "Al" Yeganeh (Persian: علي یگانه), modeled after Yeganeh's original restaurant Soup Kitchen International, which was a well-known soup restaurant at 259-A West 55th Street (between Broadway and 8th Avenue), in Midtown Manhattan, New York City.
Cheddar's Scratch Kitchen: Arlington, Texas: 1979 Orlando, Florida: 175 Nationwide The Cheesecake Factory: Beverly Hills, California: 1978 Calabasas, California: 207 Nationwide 14 locations are branded as Grand Lux Cafe. Coco's Bakery: Corona Del Mar, California: 1948 Beaverton, Oregon: 10 Arizona and California Cooper's Hawk Winery ...
K-Paul's Louisiana Kitchen was a Cajun and Creole restaurant in the French Quarter owned by Paul Prudhomme that closed in 2020. [1] [2] Prudhomme and his wife Kay Hinrichs Prudhomme opened the restaurant in 1979. The restaurant is “credited with helping put New Orleans on the culinary map” and popularizing Cajun cuisine. [3]
Spyce Kitchen or just Spyce was a robotic-powered restaurant which prepares food in "three minutes or less ... Their second restaurant, which opened in February 2021, ...
Conflict Kitchen was a take-out restaurant in Pittsburgh that served only cuisine from countries with which the United States was in conflict. [3] The menu focused on one nation at a time, rotating every three to five months, and featured related educational programming, such as lunch hour with scholars, film screenings, and trivia nights.