Showing posts with label 19th C. Dining Humor and Money. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 19th C. Dining Humor and Money. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 10, 2020

Etiquette and Dining Humor

“What we want in Virginia,” said he, “Is a high-toned restaurant like the Poodle-Dog in San Francisco, or Delmonico’s in New York; a place where a gentleman of taste and means could get a meal varying from five to twenty-five-dollars, with frog legs, truffles, terrapin stews, and some rare old Hock or Burgundy—a place where one could dine at his leisure and invite a friend with some degree of confidence.” 


Then and Now

About two weeks ago a bolder of much Sierra Nevada stock was finding fault with the gastronomical facilities of this mountain town. “What we want in Virginia,” said he, “Is a high-toned restaurant like the Poodle-Dog in San Francisco, or Delmonico's in New York; a place where a gentleman of taste and means could get a meal varying from five to twenty-five-dollars, with frog legs, truffles, terrapin stews, and some rare old Hock or Burgundy—a place where one could dine at his leisure and invite a friend with some degree of confidence.” This morning the same man was heard to ejaculate: “It’s about time we had some two-bit restaurants in this town, like the Miner’s Restaurant in San Francisco, or the What Cheer House, where a man could get a substantial meal without bankrupting himself.”—Virginia Chronicle, 1878


Etiquette Enthusiast, Maura J. Graber, is the Site Editor for Etiquipedia© Etiquette Encyclopedia