We went out to dinner once a year. Local restaurant called Bishops. They put a basket of bread on the table and you could put real butter on it and eat all you wanted!
How I felt?
How I felt?
I was a youngster in the 50's and 60's. My family didn't dine out very often except when we were on a rare road trip. Chain joints essentially didn't exist, so when we dined it was local family restaurants, luncheonettes and diners. These were nearly everywhere, now nearly all gone. Small town and country hotels also served better quality food at reasonable prices. If you had a party of at least 4 or 5, you could do a "family style" package price meal with platters and bowls of food. You self-served. Dozens of those places have closed or reinvented themselves in the past 25 years. They were done in partially by chain restaurants, where people waited long for seating and replicator food and also by a lack of available labor.
Not family dining, but in the early 60's my kid friends and I had a Mecca for any available quarters that we managed to come by. An independent ice cream and burger joint with a large, covered dance patio, juke box and pinball machines. A 50-cent piece got one a burger, a hotdog, fries and soda with a nickel or so left for pinball play. At night, the older teens and young adults held court. It was great entertainment to spy on that place and its parking lot at night.
Your experience wasnt as unusual as it sounds today. Thats part of our problem now…everyone is poor and still wants takeout food delivered.I grew up in the 60's and early 70's. I was only taken to eat out one time and that was for my high school graduation.
I was a waiter at the Steak and Ale in Cherry Hill, NJ during the 80s.Steak & Ale baybay!
I was travelling for work in Texas the last time I saw one, had to have been 20 years ago. I had to stop for nostalgias sake. I was quite disappointed. I can remember being 8 or 9 and we stopped at one, I thought it was like where the Queen of England might have gone for dinner. I was pretty sure that the one I stopped in was last cleaned when I was 8 or 9.......
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I didn't think of HoJo. The only ones I had experienced were at rest areas on the Pa. turnpike and similar highways. Not so available in residential areas. I suppose there were also all the dime store chains with day time lunch areas. Many long-gone burger chains as well. For going out to eat with the family it was nearly all independent establishments.Wasn't Howard Johnson's the biggest American chain restaurant of the 50s and 60s?
Northern VT checking in; same here, keep ‘em faaaaaaaar away from me! The chain stores and restaurants, that is.There are very few franchise eateries in southern Vermont. the closest ones are 25 miles from my home.
I was born in 72 and grew up on a dairy farm in New England. Most meals were home but as a kid I remember Ponderosa vividly!!!!!!!! Saladbar and a "chopped steak" ..... Went many times with my grandparents.
Looking back at the sit down Pizza Hut experience. That pan pizza served on the table in the same pan it was cooked in I think changes the taste from todays pizza hut that the pizza goes from the cooking pan to the box, The pizza needs time to finish cooking and get that texture on the bottom only a eat in Pizza Hut experience can replicate!In the late 60's and 70's a sit down Pizza Hut was a great place to go. Pizza was normally very good. IIRC the female servers were always cute.
According to Wikipedia, it was the largest with over 1000 locations, and the locations I recall were all attached to motels. The last restaurant was located in Lake George NY and closed in 2022. The hotels still exist under the Howard Johnson's name but they are owned by Wyndham.Wasn't Howard Johnson's the biggest American chain restaurant of the 50s and 60s?
According to Wikipedia, it was the largest with over 1000 locations, and the locations I recall were all attached to motels. The last restaurant was located in Lake George NY and closed in 2022. The hotels still exist under the Howard Johnson's name but they are owned by Wyndham.
My understnding is that at the peak, maybe half the restaurants were attached to motor lodges. But the company itself started out as freestanding ice cream shops before expanding into restaurants and lodging.
You forgot your wallet on your first date?My first date was in one of their Italian restaurants, it was like the scene in "Fast Times"