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October 03, 1986 - Image 100

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1986-10-03

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

ENTERTAINMENT

BEST OF EVERYTHING

SERVING YOU FOR 8 YEARS IN THE SAME WALNUT LAKE RD. LOCATION

2080 Walnut Lake Rd. at Inkster

West Bloomfield

WISHES EVERYONE
A HEALTHY & HAPPY NEW YEAR

Reservations Suggested For Your Convenience

851-2500

after 3 p.m.

Your Hostess:

Your Host:

Mary Ann Pereny

Al Valente

Barbara and Stan Snitz

Family and Staff of

DELICATESSEN & RESTAURANT

13821 W. 9 MILE RD. •Oak Park

548-1111 or 541-2888

Wish Their Customers, Relatives & Friends

A HEALTHY AND HAPPY NEW YEAR

IIZtIZTI 112111, ;UV,

Continued from Page 98

for seafood.
Dinner at Antoine's, it's
said, is for tourists but it's
not to be missed. Founded in
1840, Antoine's is New Or-
lean's oldest restaurant
where classic creole dishes
were first created. You start
with oysters and crawfish is
fine in season. But recom-
mended dishes include ten-
derloin beef and chicken with
lemony bearnaise and a
sweet brown sauce. The 138-
dish menu is all in French
and the baked Alaska is
famous.
Brennan's is where you'll
find older matrons wearing
hats and drinking bloody
Marys instead of mid-day tea.
Brunch is fabulous with eggs
poached from hollandaise
style to St. Charles on top of
fried trout. From oyster soup
to bananas Foster, the meal
is memorable.
Part of the Brennan family
operates Commander's Palace
which features Creole dishes
in a garden room overlooking
a courtyard or in a room fil-
led with antiques. Recom-
mended are oysters, shrimp
remoulade, turtle soup, soft
shell crabs, redfish with crab
meat and steak with Creole

seasonings.
They say if you've never
been to New Orleans before
and you have time for only
one meal it should be at
Galatoire's where seafood is
the ticket. House specialties
are trout meuniere and spicy
trout Marguery. Broiled
pompano, all kinds of crab
meat dishes and crepes are
popular choices.
K-Paul's Louisiana Kitchen
owes its success to Chef Paul
Prudhomme. The famous dish
is blackened redfish. Spicy
chicken, gumbos and jam-
balayas are hot stuff in more
ways than one.
Another popular Creole
style restaurant is Le Ruth's,
known for crab meat St.
Francis and oyster and ar-
tichoke soup. Also suggested
is the roasted duck, rack of
lamb, soft-shell crabs
meuniere and steak.
Cafe Du Monde in the
French Market is the after
dark place for strong coffee
which is drunk with hot milk
and beignets, square
doughnuts covered with pow-
dered sugar.
Good coffee and jazz in
New Orleans are hard to
beat.

We Will Close Fri., Oct. 3 at 3 p.m.
Reopen Tues., Oct. 7 at 11 a.m.

We Will Close Sun., Oct. 12 all day
Reopen Tues., Oct. 16 at 11 a.m.

BE A WINNER, PLAY

THE CLASSIFIEDS

Call The Jewish News
Today

354-6060

2
I)

May you be inscribed in
the book of life for many
years of good health.

Kibbutz Nir-Eliyahu's Saturday fleamarket.

Saturday Fleamarket
Causes Knesset Flap

DETROIT

Italian-American Dining At It's Finest

Wishes its customers
and friends
A Very Happy and Healthy
New Year

4222 Second Blvd.
Bet. Willis & Canfield

100 Friday, October 3, 1986

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

833-9425

Jerusalem (JTA) — The
issue of a flea market operat-
ing on the Sabbath has open-
ed a can of worms in the
Knesset. Twenty MKs, led by
Labor MK Rabbi Menahem
Hacohen, last week demand-
ed that the Knesset meet for
a special session to discuss
the flea market operated by
Kibbutz Nir Eliahu, north-
east of Tel Aviv.

The two minor religious
parties in the Knesset,
Agudat Yisrael and Shas,
threatened that they would
not hesitate to create a coali-
tion crisis around this issue.
Agudat sources expressed
anger that Prime Minister
Shimon Peres and Deputy
Prime Minister Yitzhak
Shamir did not try to stop the
kibbutz from holding it flea
market and prevent "a mas-

.

sive desecration of the Sab-
bath."
Peres actually did ask the
United Kibbutz Movement to
refrain from its activity. But
the Kibbutz Movement
secretariat rebuffed him, ex-
plaining that Kibbutz Nir
Eliahu is facing an economic
crisis due to a drop in agri-
cultural sales and that a ma-
jor source of income now is
the flea market.
Meanwhile, other Knesset
parties are abuzz about the
special session which some
MKs see a turning into a con-
frontation between the left
and the right. MK Chaika
Grossman, chairperson of the
Mapam Knesset caucus,
warned that the session
would turn into a farce. "A
flea market becomes a central
issue, whereas nobody dis-
cussed vital national issues."

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