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Defunct Michelin-starred restaurants in San Francisco (10 P) Pages in category "Defunct restaurants in San Francisco" The following 17 pages are in this category, out of 17 total.
The food became less sauce-focused and "lighter," as it was described in the San Francisco Chronicle in 1985. Galloway started working with different food distributors, improving the quality of the seafood, and hired a larger dessert staff. [5] The restaurant had food-focused theme dinners.
Defunct restaurants in San Francisco (1 C, 17 P) Pages in category "Defunct restaurants in the San Francisco Bay Area" The following 12 pages are in this category, out of 12 total.
The bodies of the four people— a 20-year old assistant manager, an 18-year-old woman and two 16-year-old boys— were found two days later in a wooded area. No photos had been taken inside the restaurant after the crime or before the rooms were cleaned up, destroying any evidence. [89] The crime has never been solved. [90] Born:
Andrew Lolli, a retired U.S. Army general, purchased the restaurant from the Castagnolas. He ran the restaurant as a family business until his death in 2006. It remained in the family when his stepdaughters took over. Lolli temporarily closed the restaurant in 2001 after a labor dispute caused them to try to sell the lease. [2]
The chain, born in the ’70s, at one point had more than 500 family-friendly steakhouse buffet restaurants sprinkled across the country and employed more than 20,000 people. Kenneth E./Yelp Furr’s
The Washington Square Bar & Grill was a landmark restaurant adjoining Washington Square in San Francisco's North Beach neighborhood (Powell at Union streets). Known widely as the Washbag, so named by columnist Herb Caen as a play on words, it was a favorite gathering place for a generation of writers, politicians, musicians, and social elite.
After Tower's departure the restaurant was reopened briefly by new investors under the same name but with a less expensive, Mediterranean concept. [4] In 2004 it became the new location of San Francisco's Trader Vic's, which had been closed since 1994. The Palo Alto location of Stars became a branch of Wolfgang Puck's Spago Restaurant in 1997.