Jamie Oliver’s Fifteen, and other legendary restaurants that have closed for good
Gone, but never forgotten
Jamieoliver/Facebook ; Scott Barbour/Getty Images
Hospitality is a tough business, even for the world's top chefs. Every year, new restaurants and culinary mainstays close their doors, often no longer able to weather the ups and downs of the industry. We look at the incredible restaurants that have gone for good, from Jamie Oliver's once-popular chain to old-school spots that delighted diners for decades.
Read on to discover 31 incredible restaurants that have closed around the world – counting down to the one we miss the most.
Our ranking is based on the popularity of each restaurant during its heyday and its continued positive reputation now that it's closed.
31. Spring, Paris, France
springrestaurant/Instagram
When American restaurateur Daniel Rose opened Paris restaurant Spring in 2006, it was a tiny venue where he worked alone for a number of weeks. It soon became so popular that Rose had to move it elsewhere, to a location almost 10 times the size. The restaurant was among the first to champion fine dining features such as an open kitchen and set menus in Paris. It received rave reviews from publications such as Le Monde and The New York Times, remaining a firm favourite until its closure in 2017.
30. International Smoke, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA
internationalsmokelv/Facebook
Opened in 2019, the Las Vegas outpost of International Smoke followed the success of the San Francisco restaurant opened by chef Michael Mina. Located in the MGM Grand hotel, the restaurant served barbecue styles from around the world, showcasing the likes of Korean gochujang ribs and braised Jamaican oxtail. Despite largely positive reviews, it was announced that the restaurant would close in January 2025, leaving the California location to continue the legacy.
29. Momofuku CCDC, Washington DC, USA
luckypeach/Facebook
Chef David Chang rose to fame as the founder of the Momofuku restaurant group, quickly becoming a leading figure in the culinary industry and receiving numerous awards. Opened in 2015, Momofuku CCDC marked the Virginia-born chef's first opening in his hometown market and was the largest restaurant to date. As with all Momofuku restaurants, it became famed for innovative Asian American cuisine, drawing inspiration from Chang's Korean heritage with traditional Korean flavours and ingredients.
29. Momofuku CCDC, Washington DC, USA
luckypeach/Facebook
However, in 2020, Chang announced that he was permanently closing Momofuku CCDC and Momofuku Nishi, in New York City. He also revealed that he would be relocating Ssam Bar – Momofuku’s second restaurant, also in New York City – to be combined with the existing Momofuku restaurant, Wayo. The chef blamed the COVID-19 pandemic for forcing him to re-evaluate his portfolio.
28. elBulli, Catalonia, Spain
Elbulli-Fundacion-Restaurante/Facebook
Chefs don't come much more legendary or innovative than Ferran Adrià, the Spanish chef who revolutionised cooking and trained many future culinary stars. He carved out his reputation as head chef and co-owner of the restaurant elBulli in the Catalonia region of Spain, widely regarded as one of the best restaurants in the world.
28. elBulli, Catalonia, Spain
Elbulli-Fundacion-Restaurante/Facebook
elBulli is considered the birthplace of modernist and molecular cuisine – a style of cooking that focuses on reinterpreting traditional dishes through extensive use of modern culinary techniques such as foams, gels and emulsions. In 2010, Ferran rocked the culinary world when he announced that he would be closing elBulli despite its phenomenal success. The restaurant had its last service in 2011, never reopening as a traditional restaurant.
28. elBulli, Catalonia, Spain
Elbulli-Fundacion-Restaurante/Facebook
In 2013, Ferran opened the elBulliFoundation, stating that the organisation would focus on transforming the renowned elBulli restaurant into a platform for promoting innovation and creativity in the culinary world. Since then, the foundation has aimed to preserve the legacy and spirit of the restaurant and inspire new ideas and breakthroughs in the world of cooking.
27. Cup & Saucer, New York City, New York, USA
Roey Ahram/Flickr [CC BY-NC-ND 2.0]
You can still find those old-school New York diners where thick pancakes come with crisp rashers of bacon, bottomless coffee and as much maple syrup as your plate can carry – but they’re getting harder to come by. Lower East Side favourite Cup & Saucer closed in 2017 after nearly 70 years serving customers at its counter complete with swivel chairs. The owners of the luncheonette blamed its demise on rising rents.
26. Kenny Rogers Roasters, USA
Judgefloro, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons
Who wouldn’t want to eat some rotisserie chicken served up by country crooner Kenny Rogers? Now imagine if Dolly Parton swung by to perform an impromptu duet, and maybe even top up your bottomless mug of coffee... OK, so this chain owned by the late music legend wasn’t quite that exciting, but we’d still have loved to dine there.
26. Kenny Rogers Roasters, USA
Judgefloro, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons
At one point, the chain – founded in 1991 by Rogers, together with a former CEO of KFC – had around 425 locations spanning the globe. It was known for its wood-fired rotisserie chicken, carrying the tagline 'Deliciously Healthy'. The first restaurant was in Coral Springs, Florida, and the menu soon expanded with turkey, ribs and plenty of sides.
26. Kenny Rogers Roasters, USA
Judgefloro, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons
Fans of sitcom Seinfeld might remember an entire episode dedicated to Kramer’s love of the chain, which first aired in 1996. Alas, after a series of ownership changes, the last US location shuttered in 2011. You can still try it if you’re travelling in Malaysia or Indonesia, though; Kenny Rogers Roasters still has around 150 franchises in Asia.
25. Official All Star Cafe, various locations
steviep187/Flickr [CC BY-NC-ND 2.0]
Few launches have been accompanied by as much fanfare as the Official All Star Cafe, a chain of sports-themed restaurants from the team behind Planet Hollywood. But then, few restaurant chains have such starry line-ups. A who’s who of the sporting world, including basketball hero Shaquille O’Neal and tennis players Monica Seles and Andre Agassi, lined up to invest. The first restaurant, in New York’s Times Square, was followed by nine others. Ownership changes and fading popularity led to the last one closing in 2007.
24. Ruby Watchco, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
RubyWatchco/Facebook
MasterChef Canada judge and chef Lynn Crawford has had a successful career both as a chef and as a TV personality. The Food Network star has released three cookbooks and is one of the most well-known Canadian chefs, mostly due to the success of her hit TV series Pitchin’ In.
24. Ruby Watchco, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
RubyWatchco/Facebook
The chef opened Toronto's Ruby Watchco in 2010. The fine dining restaurant received widespread recognition as one of the top restaurants in the country and was well-known for celebrating farm-to-table, family-style dining and the use of local ingredients.
24. Ruby Watchco, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
RubyWatchco/Facebook
In 2020, the restaurant announced it was closing after a decade of successful service. While many restaurants were forced to close during this period due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Crawford stated online that the closing of Ruby Watchco was due to a family decision.
23. Threadgill’s, Austin, Texas, USA
threadgillsworldheadquarters/Facebook
In some ways, Threadgill’s was Austin. This legendary hangout was opened by Kenneth Threadgill in 1933 as a gas station and basic bar, serving only beer. It gradually grew into a restaurant and music venue, making history in the early 1960s when one Janis Joplin – then a student – began playing at weekly folk sessions there. Eddie Wilson, who owned the equally legendary Armadillo World Headquarters next door, closed his venue and took over Threadgill’s in 1981, bringing with him a Southern-style food menu.
23. Threadgill’s, Austin, Texas, USA
threadgillsworldheadquarters/Facebook
Wilson described Threadgill’s as representing 'a time before disco or microwaves'. He opened a second location, in South Austin, in 1996 – though that restaurant closed in 2018 due to high taxes and rents. Threadgill’s remained popular thanks to comfort food favourites like burgers and po' boys, though it was unable to withstand the COVID-19 restrictions and, despite initially trying to stay afloat by offering takeaways and deliveries, closed in April 2020.
22. Julian Serrano Tapas, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA
julianserranotapaslv/Instagram
Chef Julian Serrano made the decision to retire in 2024, which meant the closure of a couple of Las Vegas restaurants he helmed. After he stepped away from Picasso and Lago, two restaurants at the Bellagio hotel, news of the closure of Julian Serrano Tapas, located at the Aria Resort and Casino, soon followed. It was set to open its doors for the last time in February 2025. Opened in 2009, Julian Serrano Tapas was loved for its huge helpings of paella and Spanish small plates, as well as its bright and welcoming atmosphere.
21. Da Silvano, New York City, New York, USA
PA Archive/PA Images
Hiked-up rents have killed off many a favourite dining spot and Da Silvano, a legendary Italian restaurant in New York’s Greenwich Village, remains one of the saddest losses. Owner and chef Silvano Marchetto was a pioneer of northern Italian cuisine in the Big Apple, serving osso buco (slow-cooked veal shanks), tripe, and pasta with shaved truffles when other menus were all about meatballs and red sauce.
21. Da Silvano, New York City, New York, USA
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The celebrity clientele certainly helped the restaurant achieve fame too. Madonna, Owen Wilson, Sean Penn, Robert De Niro, Tom Hanks and Rihanna are among the stars to have dined there. Unsurprisingly, with all those stellar names, the restaurant made regular appearances on celebrity gossip pages.
21. Da Silvano, New York City, New York, USA
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Silvano blamed huge rents and a rise in the minimum wage for forcing him to close Da Silvano's doors in 2016, 41 years after the restaurant opened. The celebrities had to find somewhere else to go, and there remains a crostini-shaped hole in the hearts of many New Yorkers.
20. Cafe Texan, Huntsville, Texas, USA
CafeTexanHuntsville/Facebook
Reportedly the oldest café in Texas, this iconic spot was known for its original neon sign, diner-style bar stools and classic, made-from-scratch dishes like chicken-fried steak. Cafe Texan opened in 1936, and customers – both locals and visitors – adored the vintage atmosphere, with walls displaying photos from years gone by and some staff working there for decades. Many customers frequented the café throughout their entire lives too.
20. Cafe Texan, Huntsville, Texas, USA
CafeTexanHuntsville/Facebook
The café, whose regulars included a high number of older people, stayed closed during the first months of the COVID-19 pandemic for the safety of customers and staff, but it had intended to reopen. Financial pressures became too much, however, and Cafe Texan closed for good in August 2020. The building was sold, and it's now the Cafe Texan History Museum & Library.
19. Fifteen, London and Newquay, England, UK
jamieoliver/Facebook
British chef and TV personality Jamie Oliver has fronted many cooking shows and launched several all-time bestselling cookbooks. He's also known for his campaigning, from reducing food waste and championing healthy eating in schools to using the food industry as a tool for good.
19. Fifteen, London and Newquay, England, UK
Scott Barbour/Getty Images
Oliver opened his restaurant Fifteen in London in 2002, followed by a second spot in Newquay, Cornwall in 2006. The restaurants operated as a social enterprise that trained unemployed and disadvantaged workers as chefs. He also launched several franchises around the world, including in Melbourne, Australia and Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
19. Fifteen, Newquay and London, England, UK
Tupungato/Shutterstock
In 2018, Jamie put his London restaurant Barbecoa into administration. Shortly after, his restaurant group – responsible for Jamie’s Italian and Fifteen London – was declared bankrupt, with 22 locations closing in total. In December 2019, Fifteen Cornwall, which had been run independently by the Cornwall Food Foundation, closed after an independent financial review.
18. Eme Be Garrote, San Sebastián, Spain
Martin Berasategui/Facebook
Martin Berasategui is a leader of contemporary Basque cuisine, and head chef of his eponymous restaurant in Lasarte, Spain, which he opened in 1993. The renowned chef boasts 12 Michelin stars across multiple restaurants in Spain and Portugal. However, he was still forced to close one of his one-star restaurants in his birth town of San Sebastián.
18. Eme Be Garrote, San Sebastián, Spain
Martin Berasategui/Facebook
Eme Be Garrote was Berasategui's sidrería-style restaurant. A sidrería is a traditional Basque restaurant that usually features a rustic and casual atmosphere, typically serving traditional Basque dishes made with local produce. Opened in 2013, the lauded spot served an elevated yet affordable tasting menu, becoming the first sidrería ever to receive a Michelin star. However, in 2022, Berasategui announced he was closing the restaurant, claiming that it was always meant to be a short-lived project.
17. Kawajin, Tokyo, Japan
Kawajin_sibamata/Instagram
For 231 years, this Tokyo restaurant served customers with a selection of freshwater delicacies. Kawajin was founded in 1790 during the Japanese Edo period, a time when the country was ruled by feudal lords. Since then, the institution was passed down through generations of the same family. It was name-checked in novels and showcased in an award-winning Japanese film series known as Tora-san, which aired in Japan from 1969 to 1995.
17. Kawajin, Tokyo, Japan
Kawajin_sibamata/Instagram
Yet, like many restaurants, it couldn't survive the ravages of the COVID-19 pandemic and its restrictions. The eighth-generation owner explained the drop in customers was too damaging, despite his best efforts and government grants. For fans, the closure is a loss to Japanese culture and the legacy of the recipes that have survived through so many generations.
16. Español Italian Restaurant, Sacramento, California, USA
espanolitalianrestaurant/Facebook
Despite the rather confusing name, Español Italian Restaurant survived almost 100 years as a favourite dining spot for many in California’s state capital. It was actually Sacramento’s oldest restaurant, opened in 1923, and it was known for hearty Italian and Italian American dishes like spaghetti and meatballs and ravioli. Meals were served family-style, with all lunch and dinner orders including a tureen of the day’s soup, a salad, a main course and a dessert.
16. Español Italian Restaurant, Sacramento, California, USA
espanolitalianrestaurant/Facebook
The seemingly incongruous name came from the fact that it was originally housed in an old Basque boarding house. With a clientele of loyal older customers and particularly popular with large groups and families coming in for celebrations like birthdays and anniversaries, it struggled to stay afloat during the COVID-19 pandemic. The restaurant originally planned to close temporarily but, in August 2020, it announced it would not be reopening.
15. Howard Johnson's, USA
Alex Lines, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons
With 28 ice cream flavours and a menu devised by legendary French-born chef Jacques Pépin, how could the Howard Johnson’s restaurant chain fail? Well, it didn’t – at first. Founded in 1925 by US entrepreneur Howard Deering Johnson, it started as a soda fountain and lunch counter just outside Boston. Fast-forward three decades, and Johnson had 400 restaurants across the US. By the 1970s, there were more than 1,000 of them.
15. Howard Johnson's, USA
Jerry Huddleston/Flickr [CC BY 2.0]
This wasn’t fast food; the Howard Johnson’s name stood for high-quality meals and traditional, family-focused dining rooms. Food was prepped at central hubs and delivered to the restaurants to maintain a consistent high standard, and even the style of décor was prescribed. Fried clams and 'frankforts', submerged in butter before being grilled, were always on the menu.
15. Howard Johnson's, USA
Dave Whelan/Flickr [CC BY-NC-ND 2.0]
Ho-Jo's, as it was nicknamed, lasted a century – quite a feat in the world of restaurant chains. Now only one franchise remains, in Lake George, New York. It proudly displays a sign declaring it’s the 'last one standing', though it’s become more of an attraction for road-trippers and retro Americana fans than diners. Meanwhile, the associated hotel brand was taken over by the Wyndham hotel group.
14. Empress of China, San Francisco, California, USA
Brad Coy/Flickr [CC BY 2.0]
San Francisco’s Chinatown is the oldest in the US and is a perennial favourite for food lovers. And Empress of China was a landmark among landmarks, with views across the city from its rooftop restaurant and cocktail bar. Its walls were plastered with photos of celebrities including Sammy Davis Jr, Dean Martin and Frank Sinatra, and it was a popular venue for weddings. At some point, however, the old-school establishments – all banquet-style dining and white tablecloths – fell a little out of favour as trends moved further towards more casual (and perhaps more fashionable) places.
14. Empress of China, San Francisco, California, USA
Dirk Saris/Flickr [CC BY-SA 2.0]
The building was sold, and the restaurant forced to close, in 2014, after 48 years in business. A local group campaigned for the building to become a museum dedicated to Chinese American history, though instead it sat empty for five years before the Michelin-starred Hakkasan chain’s former international executive chef, Ho Chee Boon, took over the space. He opened his Cantonese restaurant, Empress by Boon, there in June 2021 and has so far attracted rave reviews. So, while we can only dream of the egg rolls and pot stickers once devoured by Ol’ Blue Eyes and his Rat Pack friends, a new dining destination has risen from the ashes.
13. Brasserie Montmartre, Portland, Oregon, USA
drburtoni/Flickr [CC BY-NC-ND 2.0]
This Portland favourite opened its doors in 1978, and they may as well have been revolving; it went through so many closures and relaunches. It was originally a jazz club with magicians, but it relaunched as a late-night dining and drinking den – and then relaunched again as an acclaimed French-style brasserie. Perhaps because it couldn’t quite make up its mind, it closed for good in 2016 and has now been replaced with a trendy wine bar.
12. Louis' Restaurant, San Francisco, California, USA
LouisRestaurant/Facebook
There was an outpouring of grief when Louis’ Restaurant announced its closure in July 2020. This unpretentious spot had occupied (arguably) the best location in San Francisco since 1937, when it opened on a cliff overlooking the Pacific Ocean; the area became part of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area in the 1970s. The restaurant was known for delicious comfort food, from burgers to fresh seafood, and it survived several fires over the years.
12. Louis' Restaurant, San Francisco, California, USA
LouisRestaurant/Facebook
This iconic eatery was unable to survive the continuous stay-at-home orders and restrictions imposed due to COVID-19. Owners Bill and Tom Hontalas, grandsons of Greek immigrant founders Louis and Helen Hontalas, made the announcement on the restaurant’s Facebook page, saying that to wait out the pandemic was 'financially unreasonable'. Fans flocked to buy coffee mugs, menus and aprons bearing the restaurant's logo, keen to own souvenirs of their favourite place to eat.
11. Caesar's, San Francisco, California, USA
Thomas Hawk/Flickr [CC BY-NC 2.0]
Its cioppino – a tomatoey stew packed with seafood, invented by Italian fishermen in San Francisco – was legendary. So was its linguine with freshly dived clams. But Caesar's, close to San Francisco’s busy Fisherman’s Wharf, is one of many old-school Italian restaurants to have shuttered over the past decade or so. It served its last bowls of pasta in 2012, after 56 years in business, with high rents believed to be the culprit.
10. Picasso, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA
bellagiolasvegas/Facebook
Picasso opened in 1998 and was known for French fine dining – as well as for displaying artwork by Pablo Picasso himself. Run by renowned chef Julian Serrano, it closed in August 2024, after Serrano announced his retirement from the restaurant industry. But before its closure, it was the first Las Vegas restaurant to win a Best Newcomer James Beard Award, and it also picked up two Michelin stars. The restaurant and its chef both left their mark on the Las Vegas dining scene after operating for more than 25 years.
9. Dominique Ansel Bakery, London, England, UK
Chrispictures/Shutterstock
French pastry chef and restaurateur Dominique Ansel worked for several Michelin-starred restaurants in France before moving to the US in 2006 – and eventually opening his renowned London bakery in 2016. One of the leading pastry chefs in the world, he made his name with one sweet creation: the Cronut, a croissant-doughnut hybrid launched in 2013 (and since patented).
9. Dominique Ansel Bakery, London, England, UK
Will Howe/Shutterstock
The Cronut's success allowed Ansel to open other bakeries and restaurants around the globe. He has also authored several cookbooks and has been recognised with numerous awards and accolades throughout his career, including a prestigious James Beard Award.
9. Dominique Ansel Bakery, London, England, UK
Salvador Maniquiz/Shutterstock
However, in late 2020, he announced that his London bakery would permanently close, as the COVID-19 lockdown and restrictions made it impossible for the Belgravia-based bakery to continue operating profitably.
8. Tickets, Barcelona, Spain
ticketsbar/Facebook
Ferran Adrià and his equally talented brother, Albert Adrià, launched this Michelin-starred restaurant together, taking tapas to another level. It quickly became an institution in Barcelona. Located in the trendy Raval neighbourhood, Tickets was named number 20 in the World’s 50 Best Restaurants in 2019, and its popularity meant getting a reservation was almost impossible.
8. Tickets, Barcelona, Spain
ticketsbar/Facebook
Apparently, being one of the best restaurants in the world, serving great food and having an incredible reputation that keeps you fully booked isn't enough. Like many other restaurants, Tickets fell victim to the COVID-19 pandemic and filed for bankruptcy in 2020.
7. Bahooka Ribs & Grog, West Covina and Rosemead, California, USA
Sam Howzit/Flickr [CC BY 2.0]
A connection to gonzo journalist and author Hunter S. Thompson is usually enough for a restaurant to earn cult status. But this tiki bar and restaurant went a leap further with a famous fish as its mascot. Bahooka opened in West Covina, near Los Angeles, in 1969 before moving location to nearby Rosemead seven years later.
7. Bahooka Ribs & Grog, West Covina and Rosemead, California, USA
Sam Howzit/Flickr [CC BY 2.0]
There it reigned, trussed up like a shipwreck with buried treasure, topping stiff drinks with umbrellas and dishing up stacks of sticky ribs. Stuffed with licence plates, Polynesian head statues, surfboards and anything pineapple-shaped, it was used as a location in Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, the film adaptation of Thompson’s cult road-trip novel. Rufus, an ageing Pacu fish (he was 38 at the last count) and the restaurant's mascot, even appears on screen with Johnny Depp in the movie.
7. Bahooka Ribs & Grog, West Covina and Rosemead, California, USA
Matt/Flickr [CC BY-NC 2.0]
When it closed in 2013, fans queued for hours to sip one last Mai Tai cocktail within the bamboo-lined walls. The Fliegel family, who owned the restaurant, closed the place because they wanted to retire and there were no other family members to take over operations. Rufus was going to be adopted by the building’s new owners and placed in their new restaurant, but he's since gone missing.
6. Ruby Foo’s, various locations
Tichnor Bros. Inc./Boston Public Library, CC 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Ruby Foo was a pioneering restaurateur who opened multiple club-style Chinese restaurants in the US and Canada, and she's been credited with being one of the first to serve Chinese cuisine outside of the Chinese American community. The original Ruby Foo’s Den opened in Boston, possibly in the late 1920s (it’s unclear exactly when), and Foo soon lent her name to restaurants in New York, Miami and Montreal.
6. Ruby Foo’s, various locations
Gary Stevens/Flickr [CC By 2.0]
Foo herself died in 1950, but the restaurants bearing her name lived on. Menus from the 1950s show classic dishes of chicken chow mein and Cantonese-style fried wontons – a familiar sight today, but new to many at the time. Unfortunately, the success of Ruby Foo’s didn’t last. One by one, the locations began to close down, including the closure of the Montreal restaurant in 1984. Two Ruby Foo’s were later recreated in New York City, with the first opening in 2000, but these also eventually closed in 2009 and 2015.
5. Charlie Trotter’s, Chicago, Illinois, USA
Melody Joy Kramer/Flickr [CC BY-NC-ND 2.0]
In Chicago, new restaurant openings – and restaurant closures – are an everyday occurrence. But Charlie Trotter’s, which operated in the Windy City between 1987 and 2012, was different from the rest. This was the place to go for a special occasion or just to treat yourself. Chef and owner Charlie Trotter achieved legendary status when he introduced what was, at the time, a radical idea: the fine dining tasting menu. At its peak, the restaurant held two Michelin stars.
5. Charlie Trotter’s, Chicago, Illinois, USA
thetrotterproject/Facebook
Trotter also ran a foundation to help kids from low-income backgrounds attend culinary school, and he launched the careers of lauded chefs including Grant Achatz and Homaro Cantu. He closed the restaurant to focus on academia, and he tragically died after suffering a stroke the following year. An obituary in The New York Times described Trotter as a 'homegrown talent', going on to praise his menu of 'multiple small courses, each audacious in its inventiveness and exquisite in its ingredients'. His influence on Chicago's dining scene can still be felt today.
5. Charlie Trotter’s, Chicago, Illinois, USA
thetrotterproject/Facebook
In 2025, Charlie Trotter's son Dylan briefly opened up the restaurant to host a pop-up, together with Grant Achatz. The menu was inspired by Trotter’s first five books, and the restaurant was restored with original features, including wallpaper, dining chairs and even kitchen equipment. Dylan Trotter has expressed his desire to reopen the restaurant permanently, but as of early 2025, has no clear plans as to what form it could take.
4. K-Paul's Louisiana Kitchen, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
kpaulslouisianakitchen/Facebook
It’s not hard to find good food in New Orleans – just ask any local or follow your nose. But even among the many legends of the Big Easy dining scene, K-Paul’s was a standout. The French Quarter landmark was opened in 1979 by Paul Prudhomme, who had already made his mark as executive chef of the city’s acclaimed Commander’s Palace, and his wife Kay (pictured). It quickly became known for excellent Cajun and Creole cuisine.
4. K-Paul's Louisiana Kitchen, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
kpaulslouisianakitchen/Facebook
The restaurant is credited with putting those cuisines on the map, offering dishes like gumbo and jalapeño and Cheddar rolls, and it continued to thrive even following Prudhomme’s death in 2015. His niece, Brenda took over with husband Paul Miller, yet made the 'heartbreaking' decision to close after being hit by restrictions due to COVID-19. They announced the permanent shutdown in July 2020, having been out of service for several months.
3. Le Gavroche, London, England, UK
Chrispictures/Shutterstock
Michel Roux Jr closed the doors of his French fine dining restaurant Le Gavroche in January 2024, after 34 years at the helm. The restaurant was opened in 1967 by French restaurateur brothers Albert and Michel Roux Sr (Roux Jr's father and uncle, respectively). At the time, it was the only French restaurant of its kind in London, combining glossy, classical food with high-end service. Michel Roux Jr took over the restaurant in 1991, earning two Michelin stars and maintaining La Gavroche's world-famous reputation as a bastion of classical French cookery.
3. Le Gavroche, London, England, UK
Photo by Jodi Hinds
TV personality and former Masterchef: The Professionals judge Michel Roux Jr said he wanted a 'better work/life balance' when he announced the closure of Le Gavroche, but revealed that an iteration of the restaurant, ‘Le Gavroche residencies at sea’, would launch on board Cunard’s luxury Queen Anne and Queen Mary 2 liners in June 2024. Le Gavroche's signature dishes include the Soufflé Suissesse (a decadent, double-cooked cheese soufflé, pictured), which was on the menu for 40 years. Top chefs who have worked at Le Gavroche include Marco Pierre White, Gordon Ramsay, Marcus Wareing and Monica Galetti.
2. Burger Chef, USA
Northridge Alumni Bear Facts/Flickr [CC BY-SA 2.0]
There’s a scene in TV drama Mad Men where Peggy, Don and Pete sit munching fries and slurping milkshakes in Burger Chef, preparing to pitch to the fast food chain and take on its advertising. It may have largely fallen out of the collective consciousness in favour of the ubiquitous McDonald's and Burger King, but in the 1960s and 1970s, the orange roofs were everywhere.
2. Burger Chef, USA
John Margolies, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons
At its peak, there were around 1,200 Burger Chefs flipping patties and dishing out fries throughout the USA. The chain was also a pioneer of what has become a fast food mainstay – the meal deal. The Triple Threat, with a burger, fries and a drink, was a customer favourite, selling for just 45 cents (34p).
2. Burger Chef, USA
Northridge Alumni Bear Facts/Flickr [CC BY-SA 2.0]
A series of ownership changes and image redesigns through the decades saw its influence – and number of restaurants – dwindle, while McDonald's established itself as the burger behemoth. Its final franchise, in Cookeville, Tennessee, shuttered in 1996, around four decades after the chain was born in Indianapolis, Indiana. Die-hard fans still drool at the memory of those generous, juicy burgers and the bottomless salad bar.
1. Carnegie Deli, New York City, New York, USA
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The sandwiches at Carnegie Deli, crammed with four-inch-thick pastrami or corned beef and Swiss cheese, were enormous – and so were the queues. Delis don’t come much more classic, or more New York, than Carnegie, which opened in 1937 opposite Carnegie Hall in Midtown Manhattan.
1. Carnegie Deli, New York City, New York, USA
Joakim Jardenberg/Flickr [CC BY 2.0]
An appearance in Woody Allen’s 1984 film Broadway Danny Rose only cemented its iconic status. To regulars, it was already a huge star. The deli was packed out all day, every day with people digging into house-made cheesecakes and rugelach, a sweet, flaky Jewish pastry. But the restaurant shut its doors in 2016, breaking the hungry hearts of its many, many fans.
1. Carnegie Deli, New York City, New York, USA
Roman Arkhipov/Unsplash
Owner Marian Harper Levine primarily blamed the 'gruelling hours' and the toll they took as the reason for the closure. Carnegie still produces its cured and smoked meats at its New Jersey plant, however, and it even ships its famous sandwiches and cheesecakes to hungry customers nationwide. Carnegie also opened a stall at Madison Square Garden so, although you can't visit the legendary deli, you can still get a gloriously overstuffed Carnegie sandwich.
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Last updated by Laura Ellis.