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Defunct restaurants in Manhattan (3 C, 78 P) Pages in category "Defunct restaurants in New York City" The following 14 pages are in this category, out of 14 total.
Defonte's is a sandwich shop in Red Hook, Brooklyn, New York City. It is known for large Italian heroes with ham, provolone, salami, roast beef, mozzarella and fried eggplant. [1] There is also a steak pizzaiola sandwich.
Don Peppe is an Italian-American restaurant in South Ozone Park, Queens but was originally in Brooklyn. [1] Don Peppe is a half mile east of Aqueduct Racetrack and is decorated with photographs of thoroughbreds as well as jockey silks. They still have people from the track as customers but not as large as in the past.
Nutrition: 420 calories, 16g fat (3g sat fat), 960mg sodium, 50g carbs (1g fiber, 7g sugar), 17g protein. We know, we didn't expect a fish sandwich at Dairy Queen, either! With 17 grams of protein ...
Frankies 457 Spuntino is an Italian restaurant and olive oil company located in Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn, New York established in 2004 by Frank Castronovo and Frank Falcinelli. [ 1 ] According to Laura Shunk of The Village Voice , the restaurant is considered one of the fourteen essential Italian restaurants in Brooklyn and is known as ...
Randazzo's Clam Bar is an Italian Restaurant, opened in 1959, [2] in Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn that continues to serve the community today [3] The restaurant appeared on Man v. Food (season 9) where host Casey Webb had the linguine with white clam sauce. Randazzo's was one of Anthony Bourdain's five favorite
The Pastrami Queen is a Jewish deli on the Upper East Side of Manhattan which opened as Pastrami King in Williamsburg, Brooklyn before moving to Kew Gardens, Queens [2] in 1961. [3] The kosher restaurant opened in 1956. [4] They've since opened (2020) [5] a location on the Upper West Side [6] considered their flagship location. [3]
In June 2007, they celebrated the restaurant's 100th anniversary, and in November 2015, they celebrated 50 years of Russo family ownership. [1] In 2014, waiters started using iPads to take orders, discontinuing their former practice of using pen and paper. [2] In late 2019, the restaurant opened an additional location in Tinton Falls, New ...