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The restaurant was best-known for its "Mystery Drink", a cocktail served in a bowl with a "smoking volcano" in its center. The Mystery Drink served four people and had eight ounces of rum and brandy. It was always served by the "Mystery Girl", a server summoned with a gong, and who only appeared to dance the drink to diners' tables.
Top of the Hub was a restaurant on the 52nd floor of the Prudential Tower in Boston. It closed in April 2020 after 54 years. [1] In October 2022, it was announced that on the top three floors of the Prudential Tower, in the 59,000 square foot space, the previously closed observatory would reopen, as well as a bistro scheduled to open in 2023.
Midway on High, also known as Midway Bar and Restaurant or simply Midway, is a bar located in Columbus, Ohio, adjacent to the main campus of Ohio State University. Directly across the street from the Ohio Union , the High Street bar has been open since 2012 and since its opening has been owned by local firm A&R Creative.
The calendar that hangs on a kitchen wall in the old Ho Toy restaurant is still flipped to December 2022, the second-to-last of approximately 768 months the Downtown mainstay was in business.. The ...
Guy Fieri's Trattoria is the latest of 18 concepts and nearly 100 restaurants bearing the celebrity chef's name. They serve barbecue, sandwiches, tacos, chicken, burgers and other dishes, largely ...
The "Top of the Hub" restaurant, which had occupied the 52nd floor since December 1965, [22] was scheduled to permanently close on April 18, 2020, [23] but was closed a month earlier due to the COVID-19 pandemic. [4]
Rusty Bucket Restaurant & Tavern is a restaurant company headquartered in Columbus, Ohio. It was founded in 2002 by president and owner, Gary Callicoat. [1] The company currently owns 21 restaurants in Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, North Carolina, and Florida. [2] Rusty Bucket Restaurant & Tavern is the sister company of Cameron Mitchell Restaurants.
Restaurant entrance at the base of the building's hose tower. The building is made of red brick on a stone foundation, with two stories and 6,000 sq ft (560 m 2). [3] It is a contributing property to the Columbus Near East Side District, a national historic district established in 1978.