I always find it difficult to judge menus from the 19th century because our eating habits, food preferences, and food resources have changed considerably since then. It is difficult to decide whether any given menu is fine, average, or poor. The following menu was designed by a hotel steward (stewards were in charge of expenses) [...]
Posts Tagged as ‘menus’
September 11, 2008
Mary Elizabeth’s, a New York institution
Mary Elizabeth Evans, for whom the landmark tea room was named, began her career in 1900 at age 15 as a small grocer and candymaker in Syracuse. After one year in business she cleared the then-handsome sum of $1,000 which she contributed to the support of her family while supervising a growing crew of helpers [...]
Filed under restaurants
Tags: careers, confectioneries, Mary Elizabeth's, menus, New York City, restaurant cuisine, tea rooms, women
August 7, 2008
Lunching in the Bird Cage
Lord & Taylor’s Bird Cage restaurant and tea room was opened in the late 1930s. It continued on the fifth floor of the Fifth Avenue New York City store until the 1980s when it was updated and renamed Café American Style. Accommodating only about one hundred persons, the Bird Cage was considerably smaller than the [...]
Filed under restaurants
Tags: Bird Cage, department stores, Lord & Taylor, menus, New York City, tea rooms
We eat in restaurants several times a week and yet know very little about their history. I plan to dip into my archive of research and images every so often to present a little tidbit that highlights aspects of our American restaurant culture. Let me know your thoughts.


