Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Food Basics was a no-frills discount supermarket chain owned and operated by The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company in the northeastern United States.. Food Basics carried major national brands, as well as A&P's portfolio of private labels, [1] including America's Choice, A&P's flagship private label, Food Basics and Home Basics, Live Better, and Green Way.
Food Basics was created by A&P Canada to compete with the successful No Frills warehouse-style supermarket operated by Loblaw Companies.It became part of the Metro group [2] when A&P Canada was sold to Metro for $1.7 billion in 2005.
The final O'Malia's Food Market at 4755 E. 126th Street in Carmel, Indiana in 2010. The first O'Malia's Food Market opened in 1966 near 106th Street and College Avenue in an area of Hamilton County by Joe O'Malia. [91] There were eight O'Malia's Food Market when O'Malia sold the company to Marsh Supermarkets in June 2001. [17]
For those in need of a free Thanksgiving meal this year, here's list of places around Indianapolis and Central Indiana. ... 2605 East 25th St., Indianapolis.
The company began with a single cafeteria in Indianapolis, Indiana, in 1950, founded by Charles O. McGaughey and George Laughner. MCL is an abbreviation of their two names. [1] Today, the chain operates locations in Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio. It is a privately owned company, now exclusively owned by the McGaughey family.
New Orleans and St. Louis represented the last two divisions of National Supermarkets, a.k.a. National Tea, which originated in Chicago in 1899, making the chain one of the oldest in the USA. It was also one of the largest, ranking as the fifth largest in the late 1960s, only A&P, Safeway, Kroger, and Food Fair were larger. Loblaw bought the ...
Indianapolis hosted the World Food Championship's The Final Table in 2020, with the winners from all of the categories cooking off at Ivy Tech Community College for a $100,000 grand prize.
In Indianapolis, Jewel opened three Turn-Style/Eisner Family Centers in late 1970 that combined a Turn Style discount department store with an Eisner Food store under one roof. [12] [13] This concept did not last very long and the three Turn Style stores within each Indianapolis family centers were converted into Osco Drug stores by November 1977.