"Testa's Palm Beach Restaurant Matchbook" (NEW/ Old Stock)
SKU: 79484951115

"Testa's Palm Beach Restaurant Matchbook" (NEW/ Old Stock)

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"Testa's Palm Beach Restaurant Matchbook" (NEW/ Old Stock)Palms In The Winter Palm Beach, FL (1921 2017) Pines In The Summer Bar Harbor, ME 2" x 1 1 2" 221 Royal Poinciana Way, Palm Beach, FL 33480 Testas was a fixture in Palm Beach from 1921 2017 Here, crowds will miss the breakfast blueberry pancakes and the famous strawberry pie, as well as a menu thats adapted to trends over the years but was known for being simple, down to earth food. Its not fou fouey, she said, its just really good, simple food. Her

Palms In The Winter/ Palm Beach, FL (1921-2017)

Pines In The Summer/ Bar Harbor, ME

2" x 1 1/2"

221 Royal Poinciana Way, Palm Beach, FL 33480

Testa’s was a fixture in Palm Beach from 1921-2017

Here, crowds will miss the breakfast blueberry pancakes and the famous strawberry pie, as well as a menu that’s adapted to trends over the years but was known for being simple, down-to-earth food.

“It’s not fou-fouey,” she said, “it’s just really good, simple food.”

Her dad, Michael Testa Jr., now deceased, explained it in a 1991 interview with this reporter by saying, “We don’t let our cooks get too creative. We have a formula book (for them), and they follow our way of doing things.”

The recipes were created from family recipes, brought to America by his forebears from Sicily.

Pleasing customers was the rule, he said. “We know what our customers want.”

He remembered when horse-drawn carriages brought people to the restaurant, and mules were used to pull a streetcar down Main Street. “It cost 5 cents to ride,” he said.

Through the years, tastes changed, and a younger crowd now visits the island, asking for healthier foods, Mrs. Striefel said.

“Crab au gratin — we haven’t had that for years,” she said, laughing over the best-sellers from the late 1980s. “Spaghetti Testa — we haven’t had that for years, either. People just don’t eat that way anymore — all that heavy food, with sauce on that and other sauces there. They want lighter foods.”

Kale salads, avocado and other trendy vegetables play a role on today’s menu and are used creatively. “Gone are the days of the fruit salad with the cup of sherbet in the middle.”

The strawberry pie remains, however. “That recipe will probably go to our graves with us,” she said, laughing. Its popularity amazes her. “Isn’t it funny, after all these years. But it is so yummy.”

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SKU: 79484951115

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SalliForth3
Massapequa, US
★★★★★ 5
Horrific Voter Suppression
Format: Paperback
This is a very well documented book about voter suppression in America. It was interesting to see that before the Jim Crow era, black people voted, were elected to office, got educations and did fairly well. With Jim Crow, horrific voter suppression began (lynchings, etc.). In the early days it was the Southern Democrats and the KKK. As time went on the methods simply became more devious. In the 1930s FDR began attempting to attract black voters to the party. By the end of WWII we had "Dixiecrats". By the time the time the Civil Rights Act was passed, the transition was complete and those Southern Democrats were now members of the GOP. (Much of that bit of history is not in the book, but you'll want to look it up.) The GOP is now the master of voter suppression, and you can see it pretty much everywhere but especially in Georgia, Texas, Minnesota and many southern states. The book is chock full or examples, case histories and stories of resistance. It made me want to sell my house and give the money to the ACLU, NAACP, and SPLC to defend our most precious right (not privilege) to vote.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 4, 2020
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Abra Smith
Birmingham, US
★★★★★ 5
This is a MUST read!!
Format: Kindle
This book is a must read! I was just not aware of the extent of the planned, organized, deliberate and insidious actions that the Republican Party has taken to suppress votes from the disenfranchised and the impact that has on our Democracy. I am stricken by the horror of what has been happening now for YEARS and is still going on today!! Carol Anderson has compiled hard data to demonstrate the pervasiveness of the many voter suppression steps that have been taken across many states, primarily in the deep south, but not exclusive to the south. It’s very difficult to take reams of data and put it into a coherent, logical sequence that can be easily understood but she is masterful at making her book eminently readable. This is a very data driven book but I had no trouble getting through it. The conclusion did have some hopeful information relaying steps that some states are taking to increase voter participation which did give me some hope. I am so glad that I read this and I think we all should be informed on this issue as it is central to our state as a country.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 30, 2021
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nmb
Waukegan, US
★★★★★ 5
Great book but disappointing kindle experience
Format: Kindle
A must-read for anyone who wants to understand the troubled and racist history of voting rights in the US. My only complaint is that the Kindle version of this book messes up the footnotes. The great thing about reading on the Kindle is that you don't have to flip back and forth to check the footnote cites; you only have to click on them. Sadly, the footnotes aren't correct in the Kindle version of the book. They somehow were shifted by one, as I was able to confirm in my hardcover copy, completely ruining the experience if you wish to read more about a specific incident. This is inexcusable in my mind, but I won't hurt the rating for this book by taking off a star.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 5, 2021
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mark arthur
New York, US
★★★★★ 4
Very informative
Format: Hardcover
Good reading good experience very informative
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Reviewed in the United States on January 22, 2024
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Richard Weems
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 5
Activist history
Format: Hardcover
Anderson quite thoroughly explodes the myth of the rampant voter fraud claims that fuel the actual problem of rampant voter disenfranchisement, particularly aimed at non-whites. And, by extension, Anderson explodes the myth of the United States being a free and open democracy and shows us how much we still have to do to live up to the national image some of us like to think we put out to the world. From the illegal purging of voter registrations, to gerrymandering, to voter intimidation, Anderson offers up the facts of the racist policies that look to keep elections in the hands of white patriarchy and suppress its opponents. While Anderson sometimes resorts to some typical metaphors in her rhetoric (false comparisons to Stalin, for example, or Orwell name drops) that could too easily be cherry-picked by dull-minded opponents looking to poke holes in an otherwise fine case of what should be enraging us into action.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 4, 2019

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