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This law was put in place to resolve the problem of "secret" cover charges, which are indicated only in tiny text on the menu. Clubgoers would then find this cover charge added to their first drink order. In Illinois, bars cannot impose a cover charge unless the fee goes toward the cost of off-setting entertainment costs such as a live band.
A serving of beef chislic at a restaurant in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. Chislic (or sometimes chislick) is a dish consisting of skewered cubes of red meat, usually mutton or lamb, although game meats such as venison and even beef steak can be used.
Mangalorean cuisine is a collective name given to the cuisine of Mangalore.. Since Mangalore is a coastal city, fish forms the staple diet of most people. [1] Mangalorean Catholics' Sanna-Dukra Maas (Sanna – idli fluffed with toddy or yeast; Dukra Maas – Pork), Pork Bafat, Sorpotel and the Mutton Biryani of the Muslims are well-known dishes.
Successful Restaurant Design. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 17– 18. ISBN 978-0-470-25075-4. Committee on Nutrition Standards for Foods in Schools, Food and Nutrition Board, Institute of Medicine (2007). Nutrition Standards for Foods in Schools. National Academies Press. page 83. Mosimann, Anton (1983). Cuisine à la carte. Macmillan Publishers ...
Nosh may refer to: NOSH-aspirin, a category of new hybrids of aspirin; Farah Nosh, Iraqi-Canadian photojournalist; Nosh A Lody (born 1989), Finnish footballer of Congolese descent; The Nosh Bar, London salt beef bar
The Kudremukh Iron Ore Company in Mangalore. BASF, [5] [6] Mangalore Refinery and Petrochemicals Ltd. (MRPL), Mangalore Chemicals and Fertilizers Ltd. (MCF), Kudremukh Iron Ore Company Ltd. (KIOCL), Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Limited (HPCL), [7] Bharat Petroleum Corporation Plant (BPCL), [8] Indian Oil Corporation Limited (IOCL), [9] ONGC Mangalore Petrochemicals Limited (OMPL), JBF ...
1652 Sanson Map of India. Mangalore was named after the deity Mangaladevi, the presiding deity of the Mangaladevi Temple, [9] or a synonym of the goddess Tara of the Vajrayana Buddhist sect. [10] According to local legend, a princess named Parimala or Premaladevi from Malabar [11] renounced her kingdom and became a disciple of Matsyendranath, the founder of the Nath tradition. [12]
The first runway (09/27), 1,615 m (5,299 ft) long, was opened in 1951. It is a tabletop runway, with landing approaches presented with the extreme edges of a hillside. [19] [20] The edges of the hill drop into a valley from a height of about 90 m (300 ft) to 9 m (30 ft)) within a short distance of just 500 m (1,600 ft) on the east of the runway and from about 83 m (272 ft) to 25 m (82 ft) on ...