Thursday, May 30, 2024

Presidents Favorite Food Recipes

 




GEORGE WASHINGTON


President Washington loved : Hoecakes with Butter & Honey, Fish, Mutton Chops







THOMAS JEFFERSON

3rd PRESIDENT of The UNITED STATES






MAC N CHEESE





FRENCH FRIES








In 1784, Thomas Jefferson struck a deal with his slave, James Hemings. The Founding Father was traveling to Paris and wanted to bring James along “for a particular purpose”— to master the art of French cooking. In exchange for James’s cooperation, Jefferson would grant his freedom.

So began one of the strangest partnerships in United States history. As Hemings apprenticed under master French chefs, Jefferson studied the cultivation of French crops (especially grapes for wine-making) so they might be replicated in American agriculture. The two men returned home with such marvels as pasta, French fries, Champagne, macaroni and cheese, Creme Brûlée, and a host of other treats. This narrative history tells the story of their remarkable adventure—and even includes a few of their favorite recipes!





ANDREW JACKSON

DEFEATING The BRITISH at The BATTLE of NEW ORLEANS





GREEN BEANS & BACON


President Andrew Jackson was fond of Pancakes, Corn Bread and Green Beans cooked with Bacon.







AMERICA'S FAVORITE DISHES

SOUPS BURGERS STEAKS

MAC N CHEESE - MEATLOAF

BLUE RIBBON BBQ SAUCE

FRIED CHICKEN

And More ...








PRESIDENT ABRAHAM LINCOLN

16th PRESIDENT of The USA


Lincoln was particularly fond of sweets, such as Cookies, Cakes and Pies, especially Apple Pie. 
He also loved Bacon & Oyster Stew,





OYSTER STEW alla ABE






FRANKIN PIERCE

14th US PRESIDENT





PRESIDENT PIERCE LOVED FRIED CLAMS

"Who WOULDN'T" ?





ULYSSES S. GRANT

CIVIL WAR GENERAL

18th PRESIDENT of The UNITED STATES





PRESIDENT GRANT
 was FOND of RICE PUDDING










PRESIDENT TEDDY ROSEVELT

26th PRESIDENT of The UNITED STATES


Teddy Rosevelt Loved CORNED BEEF HASH with POACHED EGGS & COFFEE,
STEAKS, Wild Game, and FRIED CHICKEN.





TEDDY ROSEVELT'S FAVORITE MEAL

FRIED CHICKEN






JFK



PRESIDENT JOHN F. KENNEDY

36th PRESIDENT of The UNITED STATES


President John F. Kennedy had a penchant for Cuban Cigars, Steak, Lobster,
and New England Clam Chowder.



Ronald Reagan



PRESIDENT RONALD REAGAN

40th PRESIDENT of The UNITED STATES


President Reagan loved Apple Cider, Apples, Cornbread Stuffing, Grilled Hamburgers,
Ice Cream, and of course JELLY BEANS.






RONNIE ENJOYS a BIG MAC

DOUBLE CHEESEBURGER






The PRESIDENT DIGS IN

PRESIDENT REAGAN CAN'T HELP HIMSELF

He's GOTTA HAVE His JELLY BEANS






BILL CLINTON Has a CHUCKLE

As RONALD REAGAN BRING Hima SPECIAL GIFT

JELLY BEANS at The WHITE HOUSE





BILL CLINTON



PRESIDENT BILL CLINTON

42nd PRESIDENT of The UNITED STATES



President Loves Mexican Food, especially Chicken Enchilada's and Tacos. He is also fond of Burgers, Egg McMuffins, and Cinamon Rolls.









DONALD TRUMP



PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP

45th PRESIDENT of The UNITED STATES



It's a well know fact that Donald Trump loves fast food. He says that it's consistent and clean.

He Loves Burgers, especially from McDonald's, and is a fan of KFC KENTUCY FRIED CHICKEN.
He also likes Steaks, Tacos, Meatloaf, Taco Bowls, and Ice Cream.





DONALD TRUMP

On The CAMPAIGN TRAIL

MUNCHING on KFC FRIED CHICKEN

"One of his FAVORITES"






The BIG LEBOWSKI COOKBOOK

GOT ANY KAHLUA ?

BURGERS TACOS BURRITOS

GUACAMOLE - SOUP

And More ...


















Wednesday, May 29, 2024

Eating in Venice Italy




HARRY'S BAR

VENICE





Trattoria Antiche Carmpane

VENICE


Trattoria Antiche Carampane: This cozy, family-owned restaurant is a Venetian staple. The small restaurant specializes in seafood with menu items such as paccheri with prawns, carpaccio, grilled octopus, and spaghetti with clams. Besides its large seafood selection, it also features a number of non-seafood traditional Italian menu items, including prosciutto and tagliatelle with vegetables.





AL TIMON


Al Timon: This casual outdoor restaurant offers a selection of steak, pasta, and Cicchetti, as well as seafood, dessert, and liquor options. It also offers a stunning view of the legendary Venetian Canal.

This restaurant is an institution in Cannaregio, at the Apertivo Hour. People love sitting outside, sipping Spritz's, wine, and Negroni Cocktails.





ANTICA TRATTORIA PSTE VECIE

"One of CASANOVA'S FAVORITE SPOTS"

Antica Trattoria Poste Vecie: Dating back to the Renaissance, Antica Trattoria Poste Vecie is often considered one of the oldest restaurants in Venice. This 1500s-era restaurant serves several seafood and traditional Italian dishes, including tuna tartare, caviar, spaghetti with scampi, octopus, ravioli, lobster, and beef filet. 




HARRY'S BAR



HARRY'S BAR

DINING ROOM


HARRY'S BAR ... Harry's Bar is without question, Venice's most famous restaurant. It's amazing, but it's not cheap, and without question, it's out of the budget of many peoples budgets. For those with plenty of cash, it's a must do. The place has great ambience, delicious food, 1st Class Service, history, and a most wonderful vibe.

If within your means, Harry's Bar is definitely worth a special treat splurge. If you'd like to have a meal there. and you're on a budget, but splurging, Lunch is your best bet. Get the prefix all-inclusive Lunch Menu. 

The atmosphere of the restaurant, the warm immediacy of it, the company always of people who know each other, the ease of converse, the somehow knowing attitudes of the staff, all these add up to the club like feeling that all the best European cafés possess. Throughout its 93 years' history, Harry's Bar has been the witness of the XX century in Venice. Its importance was also acknowledged by the Italian Ministry of Cultural Heritage that declared it a National Landmark in 2001. No other public place in Italy had received the same award in the same Century.

Harry's Bar - Brief History - 

Harry's Bar was opened in 1931 by Giuseppe Cipriani. According to the company's history, Harry Pickering, a rich young American, had been frequenting the Hotel Europa in Venice, where Cipriani was a bartender. When Pickering suddenly stopped coming to the hotel bar, Cipriani asked him why. Pickering explained that he was broke because his family found out his drinking habits and cut him off financially, and Cipriani lent him 10,000 lire (then about $500 US [$7,839 in 2015 dollars]). Two years later, Pickering returned to the hotel bar, ordered a drink, and gave Cipriani 50,000 lire in return. "Mr. Cipriani, thank you," he said, according to the Cipriani website. "Here's the money. And to show you my appreciation, here's 40,000 more, enough to open a bar. We will call it Harry's Bar."



CICHETTI d VINI



CATINE e VINO SCHIAVI

A GERAT CICHETTI BAR in DORSODURO


Enoteca Cantinone Già Schiavi (a.k.a. Al Bottegon) offers not only a broad selection of €1 cicchetti and inexpensive glasses of vino under a beamed ceiling, but also a few dozen wines under €10 a bottle so you can take un'Ombra home with you.

This is Venice's most popular Wine Bars (Bacari). It's a great place for a nice casual lunch of assorted Cichetti (small bites) and a glass of Wine, or two.






CANTINE SCHIAVI

DOSODURO

Grab a plate of assorted Cicchetti, that you pick. Whatever you want. Get a nice glass of local wine. So outside, and find a good spot on the little bridge, sit down and enjoy a splendid little lunch. You're in Venice !!!









Do MORI

VENICE





Do MORI

This is the Venetian cicchetti wine bar you've been dreaming about: old school and ancient, all wooden accents and crowds of locals.

Do Mori has been everybody's favorite bacaro near the Rialto market since 1462—they say even Casanova was a regular.

They do fabulous tramezzini—those crustless oversized sandwiches stuffed with deli meats, cheese, veggies, or tuna—along with a variety of scrumptious, tapas-like cicchetti.







OSTERIA BANCOGIRO


Osteria Bancogiro has always been my favorite place for cicchetti in Venice for several reasons. The first is the location just off the Rialto Bridge in a cute square with tables spilling out on the backside onto Campo Erberia (one of the best places in Venice for after-dinner drinks). 

The cicchetti they serve are more chic and plated with a modern touch. Choose from a selection of raw fish including scampi and oysters or choose from their wide selection of made-to-order cicchetti on their polenta or bread. They are most famed for their curried shrimp salad but I think their baccalà mantecato is some of the best in Venice.






NEED a HOTEL

VENICE & WORLDWIDE

FLIGHTS & HOTELS 






GOING to The AMALFI COAST ?



VOTED BEST AMALFI COAST

TRAVEL GUIDE

POSITANO The AMALFI COAST







SUMMERTIME

Katarine Hepburn

Rossano Brazzi

Have You Seen This Film ?




GOING to VENICE ?

ITALY ?



FLIGHTS & HOTELS

VENICE ROME FLORENCE

WORLDWIDE TRAVEL








Sunday, May 26, 2024

Old Jersey Diners - Burgers

 



The MISS AMERICA DINER

JERSEY CITY, NJ





Inside The MISS AMERICA DINER

JERSEY CITY, NJ


Sitting in his family’s tavern in Bayonne early in 1912, Jerry O’Mahony had an epiphany. He and his younger brother, Daniel, owned several lunch wagons. Towed by horses to choice locations throughout Hudson County, the lunch wagons were doing good business. But it occurred to O’Mahony that the real money might be in designing and building the wagons, not operating them.

Determined to test the hypothesis, the two brothers and a family friend, a master carpenter named John Hanf, built a lunch wagon in the backyard of the O’Mahony home at 7 East 16th Street in Bayonne.

A Jersey City restaurant entrepreneur, Michael Griffin, purchased the first O’Mahony wagon for $800. A contract, dated July 3, 1912, stated the wagon would operate in West Hoboken (today’s Union City), in the vicinity of Paterson Plank Road and Summit Avenue. Three trolley lines intersected near the proposed location. There would be plenty of foot traffic.The transaction helped set in motion New Jersey’s golden age of diner manufacturing, which in turn made the Garden State the diner capital of the world.

In the decades that followed Jerry O’Mahony’s flash of inspiration, nearly all the major U.S. diner builders—including Jerry O’Mahony Inc.—set up shop in New Jersey, producing the factory-built, stainless-steel eateries still admired worldwide. The early diners turned out by O’Mahony and others were gems of American industrial design; often, they resembled gleaming railroad cars. They remain prime examples of Streamline Moderne architecture, a concept emphasizing sleek lines and aerodynamic forms.

The diners reflected the American Machine Age, a period between the two world wars that saw an explosion of innovation and technology. The diner, in essence, became the machine that fed travelers, factory workers, truck drivers and middle-class American families. They emphasized fresh, homemade food and friendly service at an affordable price.

“Diners are more American than apple pie,” says Paterson native Herbert Enyart, whose career as a diner manufacturer began in 1952 at the Paterson Vehicle Company’s Silk City Diner division.

The mobile lunch wagon—like those the O’Mahonys owned—actually debuted in 1872 on the streets of Providence, Rhode Island. But the diner business found fertile ground in New Jersey, thanks to the state’s population density and superior infrastructure. Diners became an integral part of New Jersey’s culture, commerce, mythology and roadside landscape. (Today’s popular food trucks also descend from lunch wagons, carrying on the mobile-meal tradition.)

Robert Kullman, the one-time president and chief executive officer of Kullman Dining Car Company, which his grandfather established in Newark in 1927, describes diners as “community restaurants—places where anyone could gather, feel relaxed and enjoy good food at a fair price.” The best diners, he says, became fixtures in their communities. “That’s what gave diners a special place in New Jersey.”

Garden State diner builders churned out hundreds of neon and stainless-steel eateries from the 1930s to the 1950s. On September 23, 1951, the New York Times estimated there were 6,000 diners in the United States, most of them east of the Mississippi River. The diners served 2.4 million customers each day.

Garden State masterpieces of the era that remain standing today include the Summit Diner, built in 1938 by Jerry O’Mahony Inc. of Elizabeth, and Bendix Diner in Hasbrouck Heights, installed by Pequannock-based Master Diners, circa 1947. Vintage diners like these are modular, prefabricated, fully equipped eateries, built in a factory, then transported and assembled on location.

Other Jersey manufacturers of that golden age included Fodero Dining Car Company (Bloomfield); Mountain View Diner Company (Singac/Little Falls); Swingle Diner Manufacturing Inc. (Middlesex); Paramount Dining Car Company (Haledon); and Manno Dining Car Company (Fairfield).

Alas, tastes change. By the late 1950s, the diner business began to slump. The Northeast market was saturated, and the anticipated Western markets never took off. People in the Midwest preferred drive-ins and fast-food restaurants. Soon, fast-food chains moved eastward and elbowed their way into choice locations, often competing with family-owned diners.

Adjusting to the new reality, diner owners in the 1960s and 1970s opted for bigger structures more akin to restaurants. Kitchens were hidden away, and significantly more seating was added for customers. Such structures had to be built on-site; the factory-built diner was becoming a dinosaur.

Diner aesthetics were changing, too. “In the early 1960s, municipalities didn’t want diners,” says Kullman. Zoning boards, he explains, objected to the stainless-steel, truck-stop image of the classic diners. “They didn’t even want the word diner in the sign.”

As a result, Kullman’s parents, Harold and Betty, created what they called the colonial look, substituting wood-and-brick exteriors for the stainless-steel facades. Interiors got a warmer, family-friendly look, with wood paneling, hanging light fixtures, smaller counters, and larger booths and tables. Words like restaurant and grill replaced diner in the signage.




The ROADSIDE DINER


A colorful, late-1940s Silk City number built in Paterson, the Roadside was trucked to its location in Wall. It was used as a location for the photo shoot for Bon Jovi’s 1994 greatest hits album, Cross Road.





The ROADSIDE DINER

WALL, NJ


As tastes continued to change in the 1960s and ’70s, Kullman rolled out the “Mediterranean” design, with white stone exteriors and red tile roofs. More recently, diner design has gone retro, with renewed interest in the classic stainless-steel look.

The Kullman company, which moved from Newark to Lebanon in Hunterdon County, created an estimated 1,500 eateries over eight decades, producing everything from early lunch wagons to the sprawling, stainless-steel Tick Tock Diner in Clifton, factory built (in seven sections) in 1994. Robert Kullman’s sale of the company in February 2006 marked the end of factory-made diners in New Jersey.

Today, the Garden State has about 600 diners, including factory-built eateries, site-built structures and storefront businesses. It’s hard to tell anymore what constitutes a diner.

Richard J.S. Gutman, whose 1979 book American Diner is considered the first history of the industry, warns not to be “rigid” when defining a diner. He weighs architectural significance as well as intangibles: quality of food and service; affordability; camaraderie between customers and staff; the cozy, compact interior atmosphere; and whether the eatery has a meaningful place in the community it serves.

“The diner has always been this place where people get together to share ideas,” says Gutman. “It’s this everyday, overlooked culture that makes the world go ’round. Diners have evolved architecturally, and menus have changed, but they’ve always been places where people like to go. It’s part of a diner’s mystique. It’s something that goes beyond food.”

So is New Jersey still the diner capital of the world? “Absolutely,” declares Gutman. “Without a doubt.”







The COLONIAL DINER

LYNDHURST, NEW JERSEY


Built in the mid-1950s by Mountain View Diner Company, the Colonial in Lyndhurst retains the look of the period. Keep an eye peeled for this recurring special: shrimp salad on a roll with bacon, avocado, fresh spinach and tomato slices, with a cup of clam chowder on the side. It’s a winner. 






The SUMMIT DINER

As painted by Daniel Carvalho





The SUMMIT DINER

SUMMIT, NEW JERSEY

This iconic 1938 Jerry O’Mahony model has an old-school interior, wherein patrons sitting at the counter soak up the invigorating sights, sounds and smells of food being prepared on the flattop grill. Further allure: the mountain of crisp bacon always piled there. 






COOK DINER FOOD

RECIPES in The BADASS COOKBOOK

TAYLOR HAM & EGGS

BURGERS - MEATLOAF

SOUPS

TACOS - BURRITOS

And More ..









WHITE MANNA HAMBURGERS

Art by Bellino

From FINE ARTS AMERICA





ANGELO'S DINER


Part of the scene at Rowan University in Glassboro, Angelo’s was 
built by the Kullman Dining Car Company in the early 1950s.
 The intimate eatery, with its distinctive exterior awnings and oval neon sign, 
earns raves for its breakfasts and homestyle dinners.







ROSIE'S DINER

Little Ferry NJ

Rosie’s Farmland Diner in Little Ferry became world famous in 1973 when it was the location for a Bounty paper towel commercial “the quicker picker upper”  featuring actress Nancy Walker as the namesake of the diner.

The owner changed the name of the diner to capitalize on the fame. However, fame was fleeting and the diner closed for good in 1990.






The BENDIX DINER

One of The Most Famous Diners of Them All

Than God it Still Stands and has Not Been Ravished by TIme or so-called Progress

On Route 17 in HASBROUCK HEIGHTS, New Jersey

I played the Jukebox and had man a Cheeseburgers has, but my brother Jimmy who goes there often.
still with his wife Linda, has had many more than me. I first started eating Cheeseburgers here with my Dad in the Mid-60s


LEARN HOW to COOK BURGERS and Other DINER RECIPES










The MISS AMERICA DINER

JERSEY CITY

322 Westside Avenue 

at the corner of Culver Avenue and Greenville



New Jersey is said to have approximately 625 diners, more than any other state, and Jersey City has had its share: The Miss America Diner, White Mana Diner, Al’s Diner, Colonette Diner, Flamingo Restaurant, and VIP Diner. The Newark Avenue Diner (a Sterling Diner), at 361 Newark Avenue, was used in the movie Wise Guys and called the "Turnpike Diner." The Tunnel Diner (a Paramount Diner, ca. 1940) at 184 – 14th Street, Boyle Plaza, near the Holland Tunnel, was used for the movie City Hall in 1976.

In 1872, Walter Scott of Rhode Island began the phenomenon of the fast-food eateries when he started a lunch wagon for workers in Providence. The popular lunch wagons soon evolved into stationary eateries that offered 24-hour service in the 1910s. The diners of the 1930s and 1940s displayed an art deco design and the use of stainless steel, tile, and glass for the exterior; Formica paneling, counters and stools, booths with jukeboxes, and tables with napkin dispensers and ketchup became synonymous with the interiors of the diners.

The Miss America Diner is an example of the "Streamline" style of diner manufactured by Jerry O'Mahony during the 1940s. According to James P. Johnson, "In 1913, Bayonne's Jerry O'Mahony [1890-1969] noticed the resemblance between the local roadside lunch wagons and the railroad dining cars and coined the word diner" (113). His production of former trolleys or electric streetcars into restaurants, Johnson remarks, began in a local garage: "O'Mahony kept the wheels on his diners so they could both avoid building codes and change locations. . . . [He also] encouraged his buyers to leave the doors propped open to attract those who dreaded the male-dominated atmosphere. By the 1920s, O'Mahony and others added tables and booths to attract the fairer sex" (113-114). He moved his business to Elizabeth, NJ, and manufactured hundreds of diners there until 1956.

The Miss America Diner is "the best diner in New Jersey . . . . There’s no first runner-up either," writes Peter Genovese, author of several works on roadside architecture (New Jersey Curiosities 32). In many respects, it meets the criteria for diners of the "golden age" in the 1940s as defined by Genovese: "Diners were long, low, 'fluid looking' structures with no hard edges, all corners were rounded. One design trade of this time: the generous use of reflective surfaces" (Jersey Diners 25).

With its classic-looking design and décor, the Miss America Diner has been the setting for several television commercials, including promotional campaigns for Cherry Seven-Up and Tums. The interior of the original section of the diner retains most of its original features such as the white Formica-paneled recessed ceiling with peach trim, peach patterned terrazzo floor, gray Formica counter, stools, tables, and lighting. The peach booths and wood blinds have been replaced and the jukeboxes and soda dispenser removed. Over the years, the favorite food choices of customers who call the Miss America "the Old-Fashioned Diner with the Home-Style Cooking" have been said to be its breakfast specials, meatloaf, and chocolate cream pie.

According to waitress Marilyn Borelli, a more than thirty-year veteran at the popular eatery, the diner dates back to 1942. It was originally called the Joe Cherico Diner for the owner. When Fritz Welte, a German immigrant, bought the diner from Cherico, he renamed it the Miss America Diner to honor his adopted home. A nephew, Alfred Welte, and his wife Helga Welte, later purchased the diner from Fritz. According to Mrs. Borelli, the diner was then sold to three individuals of Greek ancestry (Andy, Peter and Tony). Tom Carlis became the diner's next owner until he retired in 2002. In the early 1990s, Carlis and his co-owner Sam Galatis expanded the stainless steel diner with a 40-seat dining room decorated in blue Formica.

The next owner of the diner was Miquel and Monica Figueroa. In 2005, it was purchased by Christos Stamatis, the former owner of Constantine's Restaurant in nearby Bayonne. Since 2014, Tony Margetis has become the owner of the local landmark. Margetis is the former owner of the Colonette on Rt. 440 in Jersey City

The New Jersey City University campus now extends from Kennedy Boulevard to the corner of Westside and Culver avenues where the Miss America is located. The diner, in fact, is surrounded by the right angle of the university's Athletic and Fitness Center, and serves members of the university community among its patrons.

















NEW YORK COFFEE

GREEK DINER












"RIPPERS"

DEEP FRIED HOT DOGS

At RUTT'S HUT

CLIFTON, NEW JERSEY







The BIG LEBOWSKI COOKBOOK

GOT ANY KAHLUA ?

The COLLECTED RECIPES of The DUDE

TACOS BURGERS STEAKS BREAKFAST

And More ...












 

Learn How to Make SINATRA SUNDAY SAUCE ITALIAN GRAVY

Sinatra n Sunday Sauce

   SINATRA & SUNDAY SAUCE ?   Yes, they go together, Francis Albert Sinatra  & Sunday Sauce  ...            ...