Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Beyond the Bagel Food Tour is offered on Tuesdays and Friday to Sunday, excluding holidays, from 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Ticket prices range from $45 to $95 based on age. For more Food & Wine news ...
St-Viateur Bagel Shop lies on the border of the Jewish Quarter and the Mile End neighbourhood. In addition to St-Viateur Bagel Shop, Montreal's Jewish Quarter is also the home of Schwartz's deli, Moishes Steakhouse, Cheskie's Bakery, [11] and Beauty's Luncheonette, [12] all of which have a long history within the Jewish community in Montreal. [13]
Fairmount Bagel Storefront In Montreal. Fairmount Bagel is a Montreal-style bagel bakery in Montreal, Quebec, Canada in the Mile End neighbourhood of the Plateau-Mont-Royal borough. The first location opened on September 7, 1919 [1] on Saint-Laurent Boulevard by Isadore Shlafman. The current location, on 74 Fairmount Avenue West was opened in 1949.
The restaurant took over the location of Café Miguel. The restaurant's name is a homage to Montreal's infamous Joe Beef , an alias for Charles McKiernan. McKiernan, who owned a tavern that served many lower-class laborers in Montreal, "died in his canteen of a heart attack at the age of 54."
A portion of the Mile End station's metal structure remains today as a performance venue called Entrepôt 77. [21] In 1878, the village of Saint-Louis-du-Mile-End was incorporated, population 1319. Its territory consisted of the western third of Côte Saint-Louis: bounded on the west by the limit of Outremont (generally along Hutchison Street ...
Mile End Delicatessen, is a Jewish deli in Boerum Hill, Brooklyn which opened in 2010 and is named after the neighborhood in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The deli has been highly rated and is currently run by Joel Tietolman.
Bens De Luxe Delicatessen and Restaurant was a renowned Jewish delicatessen in Montreal, Canada. The restaurant was famed for its Montreal-style smoked meat sandwich. During its heyday it was a popular late-night dining fixture in the downtown core and a favourite eatery of many celebrities. It was open for nearly a century, from 1908 to 2006.
The Gibeau Orange Julep restaurant (also known colloquially as OJ or The Big Orange or The Julep or The Orange Julep) is a roadside attraction and fast food restaurant in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The building is in the shape of an orange, three stories high, with a diameter of 12.3 metres (40 ft).