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Bruneau is a restaurant in Brussels, Belgium which has garnered a Michelin [1] star, as well as an 18/20 rating from Gault-Millau. [2] The chef was Jean-Pierre Bruneau, 74 years old in 2017. The restaurant was taken over [3] by a former sous-chef Maxime Maziers and reopened in June 2018. It was renamed [4] Bruneau by Maxime Maziers. Jean-Pierre ...
Quick Restaurants' previous logo A Quick drive takeway, at Montigny-lès-Cormeilles, Val d'Oise, France. Quick Restaurants is an originally Belgian chain of hamburger fast food restaurants currently based in Bobigny, Seine-Saint-Denis, [1] France. Quick was founded in 1971 by Belgian entrepreneur Baron François Vaxelaire and operates around ...
ShutterstockDid you grow up hating Brussels sprouts? You're not alone, but don't cling to outdated views on the vegetable. The lowly sprout has experienced a culinary glow-up in the past few years.
The Rue du Marché aux Fromages (French, pronounced [ʁy dy maʁ.ʃe o fʁɔ.maʒ]) or Kaasmarkt (), meaning "Cheese Market Street", now also known by its nickname the Rue des Pittas or Pitastraat ("Pitta Street"), is a historic street in central Brussels, Belgium, near the Grand-Place/Grote Markt (Brussels' main square).
The Smilow Translational Research Center at the Perelman Center for Advanced Medicine. The Ruth and Raymond Perelman Center for Advanced Medicine is a specialized medical facility located at 34th Street and Civic Center Boulevard, on the former site of the Philadelphia Civic Center, on the campus of the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania.
The new location was to cost $4 million, and would include the conversion of an office into a ground-based restaurant and bar. [11] A groundbreaking ceremony for the Las Vegas location took place in June 2013. [12] The Las Vegas restaurant was the company's first permanent location. [5]
The Rue Royale (French, pronounced [ʁy ʁwajal]; "Royal Street") or Koningsstraat (Dutch, pronounced [ˈkoːnɪŋstraːt]; "King's Street") is a street in Brussels, Belgium, running through the municipalities of Schaerbeek, Saint-Josse-ten-Noode and the City of Brussels.
In 1968 the Catholic University of Louvain acquired some land in the east of Brussels, which did not have a large hospital at that time. When the university split in two, the French-speaking departments moved from Leuven to Ottignies to found the new city of Louvain-la-Neuve, except for the medical faculty and health sciences sector, which moved to a newly built Brussels campus, now called ...