Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In June 1996, plans were announced to renovate the building and rename it as Chicago-Chicago Casino, while retaining the brewery. The Holy Cow's casino was to be expanded, and a restaurant named Big Dog's Chop House was to be added. [16] In 1998, Zagat included the Holy Cow on its list of "America's Best Meal Deals". [17]
In 2012, New Jersey liberalized its licensing laws to allow microbreweries to sell beer by the glass as part of a tour, and sell up to 15.5 gallons (i.e., a keg) for off-premises consumption. The same legislation permits brewpubs to brew up to 10,000 barrels of beer per year, and sell to wholesalers and at festivals.
The Claridge Casino and Hotel: July 20, 1981: February 24, 2014: Merged into Bally's, then sold and reopened as a non-casino hotel Playboy Hotel and Casino: April 14, 1981: 1984: Became Atlantis Hotel and Casino Revel: April 2, 2012: September 1, 2014: Reopened in 2018 as Ocean Casino Resort: Sands: August 31, 1980: November 11, 2006
Holy Cow Idaho! plans to take over at 1396 E. State St. with a goal of opening in October, owner Dylan Hutter said. Eagle residents will sip cold beer and wolf down burgers in the same familiar ...
1. Zuzu. Scottsdale, Arizona. Each month, Zuzu, a restaurant located in the posh Hotel Valley Ho, has a new Show Stopper Shake.The themes range from Girl Scout cookies to root beer float to ...
The production of beer in New Jersey has been in a state of recovery since Prohibition (1919-1933) and the Great Depression (1929-1945). Currently, the state has 123 licensed breweries: [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] a large production brewery owned by an international beverage company, Anheuser-Busch InBev , and 122 independent microbreweries and 19 brewpubs .
AOL latest headlines, entertainment, sports, articles for business, health and world news.
The Lembeck and Betz Eagle Brewing Company was founded in 1869 by Henry B. Lembeck and John F. Betz in Jersey City, in Hudson County, New Jersey, United States.The brewery, bounded by 9th, 10th, Grove, and Henderson streets in downtown Jersey City, developed into one of the most famous, best-equipped, and financially successful breweries on the East Coast of the United States.