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East Coast Grill & Raw Bar, commonly known as East Coast Grill, was a seafood and barbecue restaurant [1] in the Inman Square neighborhood of Cambridge, Massachusetts. It was opened by Chris Schlesinger in 1985. The restaurant was famous for their annual Hell Night which focused on super-spicy foods. [2]
Charlie's Kitchen ("The Double Cheeseburger King") is a restaurant serving American fare with New England specialties in the Harvard Square neighborhood of Cambridge, Massachusetts. “Charlie’s” houses bars on two separate floors; additionally, a front patio and backyard beer garden are open seasonally.
Terminal 1 departure hall. Terminal 1 was opened to public and officially opened on 1 October 1999 along with a 4000-metre runway and a cargo hub. [14] It was built to handle the demand for traffic and to relieve Shanghai Hongqiao International Airport's traffic. The exterior of Terminal 1 is shaped like a seagull, and has 28 gates, 13 of which ...
Veggie Galaxy is a diner-style vegetarian restaurant located in the Central Square section of Cambridge, Massachusetts. [1]The establishment was founded by Adam Penn in 2011 after his first vegetarian restaurant, Veggie Planet in Harvard Square, had operated for more than ten years. [2]
The Middle East, a nightclub and music venue, [6] as well as a Lebanese restaurant. [7] The Plough and Stars, another bar and music venue. [8] Toscanini's, an ice cream restaurant recognized as the Best of Boston by Boston Magazine several times. [9] Upstairs On the Square; Veggie Galaxy; Yume Wo Katare
Oleana is an Inman Square (Cambridge, Massachusetts) fine dining, Middle Eastern restaurant owned by Ana Sortun and opened in 2001. [1] The menu also has Mediterranean influences. Culinary influences on the menu include Spain, Turkey and Armenia.
The working name for the restaurant in the early stages of construction had been "Cambodia Café", which was criticized by Bob Perry's mother, Pat Perry, as too literal, trite, and boring. Instead, she suggested the name "Elephant Walk" as a reference to the 1954 movie of the same name and due to the importance of elephants in Cambodian culture ...
The Middle East opened as a Lebanese restaurant in 1970. In 1975, after brothers Joseph and Nabil Sater Habib purchased the establishment, they expanded into a store front at 472 Massachusetts Avenue. The brothers maintained the ethnic food and, in keeping with the theme of the restaurant, they had Arab-language bands, music and belly dancers.