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Kutsher's in 1977. Kutsher's Hotel and Country Club in Thompson, Sullivan County, near the village of Monticello, New York, was the longest running of the Borscht Belt grand resorts in the Catskill Mountains region of New York.
Riverdale, New York: The last kosher deli in the Bronx. Masbia: New York City, United States A network of kosher soup kitchens in New York City. Pardes Restaurant: Brooklyn, United States foodie destination restaurant. Permanently closed. Ratner's: Manhattan, United States A famous Jewish kosher dairy (milchig) restaurant on the Lower East Side ...
Kosher dairy restaurants began to emerge in modern Europe and then 19th Century America, primarily in New York. Descended from the milchhallen or "milk pavilions" of Europe, they popped up in the Jewish immigrant community of the Lower East Side in the late 19th, where there were at once hundreds of dairy restaurants.
B&H Dairy Sign (top center) for Ratner's, Lower East Side, Manhattan (c. 1928. A Jewish dairy restaurant, Kosher dairy restaurant, [1] [2] dairy lunchroom, dairy deli, milkhik or milchig restaurant is a type of generally lacto-ovo vegetarian/pescatarian kosher restaurant, luncheonette or eat-in diner in Ashkenazi Jewish cuisine, particularly American Jewish cuisine and the cuisine of New York ...
Located in Kiamesha Lake, New York, United States, the Concord was the largest resort in the region and was also one of the last to finally close in 1998, long after the others closed. (A primary competitor, Grossinger's Catskill Resort Hotel , closed in 1986.) [ 1 ] At the Concord, there were over 1,500 guest rooms and a dining room that sat ...
Dingfelder's Delicatessen, Seattle Katz's Deli, Houston, Texas Katz's Delicatessen, New York City Langer's Deli, Los Angeles, California Liebman's Deli, New York City Russ & Daughters, New York City Following is a list of Ashkenazi Jewish restaurants, including some kosher restaurants :
Masbia (Hebrew: משביע, lit., "satiate") [3] is a network of kosher soup kitchens in New York City. Its three locations in the Brooklyn neighborhoods of Borough Park and Midwood, as well as the Queens neighborhood of Rego Park, serve over 500 free, hot kosher meals nightly. Masbia is the only free soup kitchen serving kosher meals in New ...
Ratner's was founded in 1905 by Jacob Harmatz and his brother-in-law Alex Ratner, who supposedly flipped a coin to decide whose name would be on the sign. [1] Ratner sold his share in the restaurant to Harmatz in 1918, and it remained in the Harmatz family from then on.