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Spoleto – Fast-food style Italian cuisine restaurant chain in Brazil; The Station; Talea by Antonio Guida; Tony Macaroni; Torno Subito; Totti's; Umberto's Clam House; Union Street Café, London; Vapiano; Veeno; Veniero's; Zarra's; Zizzi – a chain of Italian restaurants found across the United Kingdom, which was owned by Gondola Group
Olive Garden. With just about 900 locations, the place is impossible to avoid, no matter where you are.The Garden’s infamous Never Ending Soup, Salad, and Breadsticks move remains one of the ...
The Toronto Star argued that the inaugural 2022 guide failed to capture the full diversity of Toronto restaurants, being overly represented by Japanese cuisine and downtown restaurants. [15] The Star also publishes its own alternative restaurant guide that it argues better captures Toronto's food scene, released around the same time as the ...
Italian immigration continued into the post-World War II era, where approximately 20,000 to 30,000 Italians immigrated to Canada each year between the early 1950s and the mid-1960s. [4] By the 1960s, more than 15,000 Italian men worked in Toronto's construction industry, representing one third of all construction workers in the city at that time.
The second Mother's Pizza location opened on May 5, 2014, in Kitchener, Ontario at 4391 King Street East. [12] A third Mother's Pizza location opened in Spring 2015 in Brantford, Ontario at 185 King George Road. [13] A fourth Location opened in fall 2016 in Waterloo, Ontario at 183 Weber Street North. The Hamilton location closed September 2017.
By the 1970s, Italian immigrants from Little Italy on College Street, moved northward to St. Clair Avenue. One of the largest celebrations on St. Clair Avenue West was when Italy won the 1982 FIFA World Cup , which involved an estimated 300,000 fans, shutting the street down for nearly 20 blocks between Caledonia and Oakwood. [ 1 ]
Son to Italian immigrants, Johnny Lombardi was born in The Ward in 1915, and went on to found one of the first multilingual radio stations in Canada, CHIN in 1966, in Palmerston–Little Italy. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] By the 1920s, most Italians had moved west of Bathurst Street and the College-Clinton area had emerged as the city's major Little Italy.
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