Online menus, items, descriptions and prices for Hale & Hearty Soups - Restaurant - New York, NY 10022
We create our sandwiches with the finest ingredients & assemble them with care. Offering hot sandwiches, salads, wraps, desserts, soups & breakfast.
KFC in New York, part of the world's most popular fried chicken restaurant chain, now offering buffets, catering, free wifi and more at select locations. Check our site for local details
100 different sandwiches and 1 little eatery: Our shop offers all different varieties of sandwiches, wraps, and paninis. We also serve hot food and salads!
"A gourmet café and Mediterranean marketplace," Cucina & Co.'s three midtown locations offer take-out and eat-in lunch and dinner from a diverse market selection of freshly prepared, home-style Mediterranean culinary classics. Specialty sandwiches and pastas, alluring pastries and fresh salads, offer a bounty of selections for the taking.
Milk Bar Midtown is a branch of the Momofuku Bakery and Milk Bar and a 2011 JBF Awards nominated restaurant in New York City.
The 21 Club, often simply 21, is an American traditional cuisine restaurant and former prohibition-era speakeasy, located at 21 West 52nd Street in New York City.EnvironmentThe Bar Room includes a restaurant, a lounge and, as the name implies, a bar. The walls and ceiling of the Bar Room are covered with antique toys and sports memorabilia donated by famous patrons. Perhaps the most famous feature of 21 is the line of painted cast iron lawn jockey statues which adorns the balcony above the entrance. In the 1930s, some of the affluent customers of the bar began to show their appreciation by presenting 21 with jockeys painted to represent the racing colors of the stables they owned. There are 33 jockeys on the exterior of the building, and 2 more inside the doors, all painted to portray a uniformly Caucasian skin tone.
Fifth Avenue/53rd Street is a station on the IND Queens Boulevard Line of the New York City Subway. Located at the intersection of Fifth Avenue and 53rd Street in Manhattan, it is served by the E train at all times and the M train weekdays except late nights.Station layoutThis underground station, opened on August 19, 1933, has two levels with the upper level serving trains bound for Lower Manhattan and the lower level serving trains bound for Queens. Each level has one track and one side platform. The upper level, built in a tube design, is approximately 60 feet below street level while the lower level is 80 feet below. Staircases connect each level at either ends.The station has two entrances/exits. The full-time one is at the west (railroad south) end. Two long escalators and one staircase goes up to a turnstile bank, where a token booth is present. A passageway leads to two staircases going up to either eastern corners of Fifth Avenue and 53rd Street. There is another staircase that leads to the underground shopping arcade of 666 Fifth Avenue.The station has a part-time entrance/exit at the east (railroad north) end that has a turnstile bank, customer assistance booth, and two staircases, both of which are built within underground shopping arcades, going up to either eastern corner of Madison Avenue and 53rd Street.