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Croutons atop a salad. A crouton (/ ˈ k r uː t ɒ n /) is a piece of toasted or fried bread, normally cubed and seasoned. Croutons are used to add texture and flavor to salads [1] —notably the Caesar salad [2] — as an accompaniment to soups and stews, [1] or eaten as a snack food. [citation needed]
In 2014, the restaurant's "Bahama Mama" sausage on a roll was voted as Columbus's official food, in a Columbus Dispatch contest for readers. 2,900 readers voted for the dish, 46 percent of the total. The restaurant's cream puffs are also highly regarded, though they have been served since the 1960s, while Schmidt's has been making sausages ...
Cuisine With German Flavor. Full of rich, meaty, carbohydrate-dense dishes like bratkartoffeln (pan-fried potatoes), bratwurst (sausage), roulade (thinly rolled meat), and schnitzel (cutlet ...
A spicy wedding soup with bread dumplings, liver dumplings and finely sliced pancakes. Lebkuchen: Pastry/Cookie German kind of gingerbread of which the most famous originates in Nuremberg and is traditionally only available at Christmas, although tourist demand means that Lebkuchen are available in some form practically all year round ...
Prost (restaurant) – Small chain of German restaurants in the United States; Quisisana – German food-service company; Rhein Haus Seattle – German restaurant in Seattle, Washington, U.S. Runza – Fast food restaurant chain in Nebraska; Scholz Garten – Beer garden and restaurant in Austin, Texas, U.S.
The city has a strong German heritage and a variety of German-oriented restaurants and menu items can be found in the area. Goetta, a meat-and-grain sausage or mush made from pork and oats, is unique to the Greater Cincinnati area and "every bit as much a Queen City icon" [18]: 244 as Cincinnati chili.
Pistacia Vera was founded in the same year by siblings Spencer Budros and Anne Fletcher, as a stall in North Market, a marketplace and food hall in Downtown Columbus. Around 2006, the business became "Pistachio", operating in the Short North district of Columbus. [ 6 ]
It was added to the German Village district on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974. The building was slated for demolition in 1973, when restaurateur Chuck Muer purchased the building at auction and renovated it at a cost of about $1 million. [6] He opened a seafood restaurant there in 1974, also called Engine House No. 5. [4]