Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Franco Pepe (born July 18, 1963, in Caiazzo) [citation needed] is an Italian award winning pizzaiolo, internationally recognized as one of the best in the world. [1] [2] He is the owner of Pepe In Grani restaurant in Caiazzo, Italy, [3] and is featured in one of the episodes of Netflix's docu-series Chef's Table: Pizza. [4]
He has owned or operated multiple restaurants across Europe, North America and Asia. This is a list of the notable such restaurants, including many which have since closed. As of late-2024, the organisation lists 90 restaurants currently open worldwide. Ramsay founded his first restaurant group, Gordon Ramsay Restaurants, in 1997.
The area that was later to be occupied by the village of Santa Cruz de la Cañada is located 25 miles northwest of Santa Fe, New Mexico, and a half-mile east of Española, New Mexico, at 5,655 feet AMSL, and UTM NAD 83, Z-13S, 404927E, 3983643N in the valley of the Santa Cruz River half-mile from its confluence with the Rio Grande.
Roscioli Cacio e Pepe. Ingredients : 120g tonnarelli 70 g pecorino 30 g parmigiano Pepper to taste. Instructions: Combine the parmesan, pecorino with a pinch of pepper in a container and blend ...
Frank Pepe Pizzeria Napoletana, commonly known as Frank Pepe's or simply Pepe's (/ ˈ p ɛ p i z /), is a popular pizza restaurant in the Wooster Square neighborhood of New Haven, Connecticut, at 163 Wooster Street and originator of New Haven-style pizza. Opened in 1925, it is one of the oldest and best known pizzerias in the United States.
Boston Pizza (branded as simply Boston's Restaurant & Sports Bar outside of Canada) has franchised 396 restaurants in North America. Boston Pizza International Inc. was Canada's number one casual dining brand with more than 340 restaurants in Canada and system-wide sales of $831 million in 2008. [ 5 ]
Note 1 The Ojo Caliente hot springs, an uninhabited area at the upstream entrance to the Canada Alamosa on Alamosa Creek in southwest Socorro County, New Mexico (33.570084°-107.595117°), should not be confused with Ojo Caliente, New Mexico, a small unincorporated community in Taos County, New Mexico (36.304545° -106.051235°), on the Ojo ...
These settlers left the area by 1700 and were replaced by the New Mexico families from the old ranchos. [2] In 1706, the village had a small church, but this structure proved to be inadequate and in June 1733, Governor Gervasio Cruzat y Gongora granted the inhabitants of Santa Cruz permission to build a new church.