Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Intermission, at 1301 J St. in Modesto, is open from 4 to 11 p.m. Thursday, Friday and Saturday and noon to 5 p.m. Sunday. For more information call 209-527-4697 or visit thestate.org .
From old-fashioneds and mai tais to house margaritas and Manhattans, here are the alcoholic drinks to order and avoid, according to the pros. 7 of the best and 7 of the worst cocktails to order ...
Before that, the building has seen a series of dining establishments come and go starting in late 2000 with seafood restaurant Oceana followed by Nosh, Vito’s Ristorante, Bayou Bar & Grill and ...
A tonic cocktail is a cocktail that contains tonic syrup or tonic water. Tonic water is usually combined with gin for a gin and tonic, or mixed with vodka. However, it can also be used in cocktails with cognac, cynar, Lillet Blanc or Lillet Rosé, rum, tequila, or white port. [103] Albra (vodka, cynar, mint syrup, lemon juice, tonic water) [104]
Misono in Kobe—the first restaurant to offer teppanyaki A teppanyaki chef cooking at a gas-powered teppan in a Japanese steakhouse Chef preparing a flaming onion volcano Teppanyaki ( 鉄板焼き , teppan-yaki ) , often called hibachi ( 火鉢 , "fire bowl") in the United States and Canada, [ 1 ] is a post-World War II style [ 2 ] of Japanese ...
Shake with ice and strain into a cocktail glass. [9] Made with ingredients that would have been readily available during the period, this identically named cocktail aims for the same effect. If this drink is, in fact, the source of the modern cosmopolitan, then it would be an adaptation of a Daisy rather than a Kamikaze. [10] [11] [9]
At FireXbox Sushi and Hibachi, you need to try out the bento box, hibachi chicken, California rolls, volcano rolls, rock rolls, New York rolls, hibachi steak, the spicy tuna roll, and so much more.
As the story goes, Connolly simply substituted an onion for the olive and named the drink after the patron. [3] Another version now considered more probable recounts a 1968 interview with a relative of a prominent San Francisco businessman named Walter D. K. Gibson, who claimed to have created the drink at the Bohemian Club in the 1890s. [4]