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  2. Brickskeller - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brickskeller

    The Brickskeller, a tavern and hotel located in the Dupont Circle neighborhood of Washington, D.C.. The DC Comedy Loft and Bier Baron Tavern (formally The Brickskeller Dining House and Down Home Saloon) is a tavern in Washington, D.C., located near Dupont Circle across from Rock Creek Park and on the edge of Georgetown, in the Baron Hotel building.

  3. Sambazon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sambazon

    Sambazon was founded in 2000 by Ryan Black, Edmund Nichols and Jeremy Black, following a trip to Brazil where they experienced their first açaí bowls. [2] Credited for introducing açaí to the US, the company started by selling frozen açaí pulp to juice bars in southern California, but now has distribution networks across the US, Japan, Korea, Taiwan, Mexico and Canada.

  4. MonaVie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MonaVie

    MonaVie produced a variety of blended bottled fruit juices, carbonated energy drinks, dietary supplements and dieting products. [21] MonaVie Kosher, one of the company's juice products, was certified as kosher according to Jewish dietary laws by the Orthodox Union of North America and the Chief Rabbinate of Israel.

  5. List of kosher restaurants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_kosher_restaurants

    Until its last branch closed in summer 2010, Bloom's restaurant was the longest-standing kosher restaurant in England. B&H Dairy: New York City, United States 1930s era luncheonette and kosher dairy Creole Kosher Kitchen: New Orleans, United States Was one of the only kosher restaurants in the city of New Orleans, Louisiana prior to Hurricane ...

  6. Clyde's Restaurant Group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clyde's_Restaurant_Group

    Clyde's Restaurant Group is an American company that owns and operates 13 restaurants in the Washington metropolitan area.Founded in 1963 to take advantage of a change in Washington, D.C.'s liquor laws, it pioneered a number of changes in the way restaurants in the district operated.

  7. History of the Jews in Washington, D.C. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Jews_in...

    In 2017, 7% of Jewish adults in the Metro DC Jewish community identified as LGBT and 7% identified as Jews of color or Hispanic/Latino Jews (12,200 people). 9% of Jewish households in the region include a person of color, whether Jewish or non-Jewish. The majority of the DC region's Jews of color, three out of ten, live within Washington, D.C. [20]

  8. Kosher restaurant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kosher_restaurant

    Occasionally, an establishment operating as kosher will make the choice to drop its certification and become non-kosher. One such instance was a Dunkin in Rockville, Maryland (a suburb of Washington, D.C.), which made the decision to be non-kosher in 2007 in order to offer menu items sold at non-kosher Dunkin' Donuts locations (such as ham).

  9. Restaurant Nora - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Restaurant_Nora

    By the early 2000s, the restaurant had become a fixture in Washington's dining scene, and was named among Washingtonian magazine's "Very Best Restaurants." [8] In 2016, Nora's was one of the approximately 100 restaurants reviewed in the first Michelin Guide for Washington, D.C. [1]