Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Old World Village is a German enclave in Huntington Beach, California. It features shops, restaurants, a chapel, and a hotel. [1] [2] Many of the proprietors of its businesses live above their establishments. This live-work arrangement is unusual for Orange County. [3] [4] About 40 families live in the village. [5]
The word das Wienerschnitzel is German, and like Jägerschnitzel and Zigeunerschnitzel, was spelled as one word before the spelling reform of 1996. [8] The restaurant's name is a portmanteau of Wiener and Schnitzel, meaning "Viennese" and "cutlet" respectively.
California Hall, originally named Das Deutsche Haus [3] (English: The German House, sometimes also referred to in incorrect German as Das Deutsches Haus), is a historic commercial building and event venue built in 1912, located in the Polk Gulch/Tenderloin neighborhood in San Francisco, California. [4] It started as a German social meeting hall ...
These spots offer a wide selection of German dishes. For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
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 ...
Hofbrau is an American cafeteria-style restaurant concept, similar to a carvery. The name is derived from the German term Hofbräu, which originally referred to a brewery with historical ties to a royal court. Hofbraus emerged in San Francisco just after World War II, and spread through Northern California and elsewhere.
Jack's Restaurant was opened 162 years ago in 1863 by George Voges in downtown San Francisco, California. [ 71 ] It became a brewery in 2002, and permanently closed in May 2009, 16 years ago. It has been a San Francisco landmark since 1981.
[2] [4] [5] The design of Julius' Castle was to pay tribute to Layman's Wooden Castle (also known as Layman’s Folly) a former German-style castle building that was a tourist attraction on Telegraph Hill from 1882 to 1903. [2] [5] [6] Both Roz and Mastropasqua had emigrated from Italy to San Francisco a year prior to the closing of Layman's ...