Founded in 1921, __ is America's oldest fast-food burger restaurant. | |
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| Numbers Don't Lie |
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| Year Restaurante Botín, the world's longest-operating restaurant, opened in Madrid | 1725 |
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| | Number of Auntie Anne's pretzel franchises owned by basketball star Shaquille O'Neal | 17 |
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| Seasons of celebrity chef Guy Fieri's "Diners, Drive-ins & Dives" TV show, as of 2022 | 35 |
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| | Cost of Tanbo R-1 and R-2, the first robot waiters employed in a U.S. restaurant, in 1983 | $40,000 |
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| The first American diners were mobile. |
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Most of the diners Americans patronize today are stationary spots, but the country's earliest greasy spoons were more like modern food trucks. First called "night lunch wagons" by Rhode Island inventor Walter Scott in 1872, the horse-drawn diners served hot meals to patrons who were often late-shift workers or partiers looking for meals long after other restaurants had closed. Soon after, ingenious restaurateurs developed rolling eateries complete with seats, some providing both a meal and transportation to hungry diners looking to travel across town. By the 1890s, trains began incorporating the concept (ticket holders were previously responsible for supplying their own meals), debuting dining cars that fed patrons on long journeys across the growing West. The original dining carriages, however, quickly fell out of style; maintenance costs, city bans, and competition from brick-and-mortar restaurants pushed many proprietors out of business by the early 1900s. Those that survived swapped their carts for permanent locations often resembling their original carts or made from modified railroad dining cars — an iconic look that remains today. | |
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You might also like | 6 Stimulating Facts About Coffee | Coffee is one of the most widely consumed beverages in the world, and Americans are no exception. Can't get enough? Discover six amazing facts you might not know about this beloved morning beverage. | |
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