Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A typical blue-plate special board, from the Red Arrow Diner in Manchester, New Hampshire. A blue-plate special is a discount-priced meal that changes daily. The practice was common from the 1920s in American and Canadian restaurants through the 1950s, especially in diners and greasy spoons.
A blue-plate special A garde manger chaud froid dish, used as a display piece A table d'hôte menu from the New York City Lotos Club, 1893. 86 – a term used when the restaurant has run out of, or is unable to prepare a particular menu item. The term is also generally used to mean getting rid of someone or something, including the situation ...
6 Plate lunches, "meat-and-three", blue willow confirmed. 7 Not every diner has them... 8 Far more common in rural America. 3 comments. 9 WP:FOOD Tagging. 1 comment.
Alabama: Nick’s Original Filet House (A.K.A. Nick’s in the Sticks) Tuscaloosa Claim to fame: Since 1934, this humble-but-packed-to-the-rafters steakhouse with dollar bills tacked to the ...
Chukker owners and their eras. 1956-1968: "Chukker Bill" Thompson opened The Chukker as a restaurant. Tuscaloosa County had voted to go dry in 1907, and stayed so until 1951, when it voted wet.
Operates as BJ's Restaurant & Brewery, BJ's Restaurant & Brewhouse, BJ's Grill, and BJ's Pizza & Grill. Black Bear Diner: Mount Shasta, California: 1995 Redding, California: 144 West Bob Evans Restaurant: Gallipolis, Ohio: 1948 New Albany, Ohio: 440 Mid-Atlantic, Midwest Boomarang Diner: Muskogee, Oklahoma: 1998 Shawnee, Oklahoma: 55 Oklahoma ...
Early bird dinner is a dinner served earlier than traditional dinner hours, particularly at a restaurant.Many establishments offer a seating prior to their main dinner seating with a reduced price menu, often more limited in selection than the standard dinner menu.
Blueplate was a lunch counter and soda fountain [1] at the intersection of Third Avenue and Washington Street, [2] [3] in downtown Portland's Dekum Building. Karen Brooks of The Oregonian called the restaurant a "tiny, adorable outpost of apothecary chic", and described an "old-fashioned" counter with swivel stools and shelves stocking powders, "potions" and other "mysterious" liquids. [4]