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La Tante DC10 Restaurant was a restaurant located inside a converted McDonnell Douglas DC-10 formerly used by the defunct Ghana Airways.Formerly flying 380 passengers, it was converted into a 118-seat restaurant with large numbers of the seats removed in order to provide adequate space for patrons and for the installation of dining tables. [1]
It currently has two branches, located at the Achimota Retail Centre and A&C Mall in Accra. [2] [3] Dishes serve are similar to that of local Chop Bar, but dishes are served in a contemporary environment. [4] The eatery in partnership with digital online food shops like "Jumia Food" and "Eziban Food" provides digital service. [5] [6]
CEQA Food and Beverages Ghana Company Limited (popularly known as Pizzaman-Chickenman) is a Ghanaian fast-food outlet which serves pizza, chicken, Ghanaian jollof and fried rice across Accra and Kumasi. [1] [2] [3] It has the largest chain of restaurants in Ghana. [4]
Vegetable side dishes in a Ghanaian restaurant including diced pineapple with sliced garlic and taro leaf salad. Location of Ghana. Ghanaian cuisine refers to the meals of the Ghanaian people. The main dishes of Ghana are centered around starchy staple foods, accompanied by either a sauce or soup as well as a source of protein. The primary ...
W. E. B. Du Bois Memorial Centre for Pan-African Culture is a memorial place, a research facility and tourist attraction in the Cantonments area of Accra, Ghana, that was opened to the public in 1985. It is named in dedication to W. E. B. Du Bois, an African-American historian and pan-Africanist who became a citizen of Ghana in the early 1960s. [1]
A chop bar is a traditional eatery in Ghana [1] [2] mostly located in the country's south. [3] [4] In Ghanaian pidgin, to chop, far from cutting, means to eat. It may also mean, in reference to money, to spend or squander. In other words, a chop bar is a place where people chop [i.e. eat].
The reduced Accra Metropolitan District (also referred to as City of Accra), 20.4 km 2 (7.9 sq mi), once comprised the entirety of Accra until the Ledzokuku, Krowor, La Dadekotopon, Ablekuma North, Ablekuma Central, Ablekuma West, Ayawaso East, Ayawaso North, Ayawaso Central, Ayawaso West, Okaikwei North, and Korley Kottey districts were carved ...
Although in a state of decay, the districts are significant in the history of Accra, which replaced Cape Coast as the capital of Gold Coast (British colony) in 1876. The original lighthouse, built at James Fort in 1871, was replaced in the 1930s by the current tower, which is 28 m (92 ft) tall.