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  2. The Food Emporium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Food_Emporium

    The Food Emporium grew throughout the 1990s, converting many of its New York-area A&P stores to The Food Emporium and expanding the chain to New Jersey. The 2000s brought new, stronger competition to the New York area, and the chain shrank, receding mostly to Manhattan. At the time of A&P's liquidation in 2015, The Food Emporium had 11 stores.

  3. Fairway Market - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairway_Market

    This store was the first Fairway Market location in Suffolk County on Long Island and the 15th food store in the metropolitan area. The company closed the store after only two years. 2017: In January, Fairway opened a store in a Georgetown (Brooklyn) strip mall. In March 2020, the store was sold to Key Food for $5 million. [18]

  4. CTown Supermarkets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CTown_Supermarkets

    CTown is the fifth-largest food retailer in the New York City metropolitan area. CTown is supplied by Krasdale Foods; many products sold in CTown stores are labeled Krasdale Foods (Krasdale also is a supplier for the smaller Bravo supermarket chain). Marketing and advertising for CTown are handled by Alpha-I Marketing Corp.

  5. Gristedes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gristedes

    Meyer died in 1969, and Sloan retired in 1977. His successor was a son-in-law, Jules Rose. By 1982 the 42-store Sloan's Supermarkets Inc. chain had estimated sales of $150 million a year. Its viability, Rose said, rested on seeking to market items with the greatest profit margin, such as meat, frozen items, produce, and gourmet foods.

  6. D'Agostino Supermarkets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D'Agostino_Supermarkets

    The store was founded in 1932 by brothers Pasquale and Nicola D'Agostino. At D'Agostino's peak in the 1990s, the chain operated at 26 locations in New York City and adjacent Westchester County, with annual sales exceeding $200 million. Later, D'Agostino's consolidated to nine stores (now ten), in Manhattan. [3]

  7. Best Market - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Best_Market

    Best Market was a family-owned, regional supermarket chain with 30 stores in New York, Connecticut, and New Jersey. The company was headquartered in Bethpage, New York, and had been owned by the Raitses family since the company's first store opened in Lake Ronkonkoma, New York, in 1994. [1] [2]

  8. Key Food - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Key_Food

    In August 2012, the co-op reopened its South Street Seaport location as 55 Fulton Market, a 23,000 square feet, two-floor flagship store. [27] The cooperative took over two Queens CTown locations in January 2013, converting them to Key Food stores. [28] In June 2013, Key Food opened several new locations in New York City within a two week period.

  9. Balducci's - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balducci's

    Previous Balducci's logo. The new flagship store in the New York Savings Bank Building (at Eighth Avenue and 14th Street) in Manhattan opened in December 2005. [13] Following its opening, Local 1500 of the United Food and Commercial Workers Union began protesting outside the store against the non-unionized status of employees. [14]