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Dock's Oyster House is a restaurant and bar located in Atlantic City, New Jersey. It opened in 1897 by Harry "call me Dock" Dougherty, who believed that the city needed a clean place to serve fresh seafood. They had no liquor license and only 60 seats. One hundred and twenty years later, they have expanded the seating and has a liquor license. [1]
Address: 7185 W. Charleston Blvd. Hours: 4-9 p.m. Monday and Tuesday AYCE. Phone: (702) 363-5988. Website: thehushpuppylv.com. The Hush Puppy offers a little piece of the Gulf in Sin City ...
Atlantic Grill is a seafood restaurant located at 50 West 65th street of Manhattan, New York City. The 220-seat restaurant opened in 1998. It specializes in fish dishes, and is noted for its by-the-glass wine list. The restaurant's wood and chrome bar is lined with photographs of the French Riviera by Jacques-Henri Lartigue.
The Knife and Fork Inn is a restaurant located at the confluence of Atlantic and Pacific Avenues in Atlantic City, New Jersey which was first opened in 1912 as a private club by "the Commodore" Louis Kuehnle and then in 1927 "on the eve of Prohibition" became an exclusive dining room catering to the municipalities' upper echelons founded by the New York City hotelier Milton Latz.
Business Insider asked chefs to pick the best and worst seafood dishes to order at a restaurant. They said fluke is an underrated fish, and deep-fried calamari may lack flavor. The chefs suggested ...
1702 Arctic Avenue, Atlantic City, New Jersey. 128 N. New Road, Pleasantville, New Jersey. Wash's Restaurant, later called Wash & Sons' Seafood Restaurant, Wash's Inn, and Wash's Catering, was an African-American family-owned and operated soul food restaurant that was in business for over 70 years, first in Atlantic City and then in ...
Although you may not have heard of it in songs or books—Route 66 and the Pacific Coast Highway get all the love in that department—an Atlantic Coast road trip following this grand highway from ...
The A.E. Phillips packing plant processed seafood from many of the watermen in the region. In 1956, after a surplus season of crabs, son Brice Phillips and wife Shirley opened the first “crab shack” in Ocean City, Maryland. Brice and Shirley began building a new dining room each year at Phillips Crab House until it finally seated 1400 people.