Old-School NYC

Publicado 11/05/2018
Incluso en una ciudad en constante cambio, hay algunos lugares que perduran durante décadas. Estamos hablando de restaurantes que cambiaron la escena gastronómica en el año 1800 y museos cerca de la marca del siglo donde se pueden ver artículos más antiguos que la propia ciudad. Eso es sin mencionar un espectáculo de Broadway que ha estado abarrotando audiencias desde la década de 1980. Pasa un día conociendo estos tres clásicos de NYC.

1
Fraunces Tavern Museum
1
54 Pearl St.
Standing in lower Manhattan since 1719, the building that houses this museum has seen the City—and the country—grow up around it. There is a bar-restaurant on-site, as there has been more or less since the 1760s, as well as a museum that dives deep into Revolutionary War–era NYC. Exhibits include a look at secret agents during the American Revolution, a collection of early flags and a recreation of a Federalist-style dining room.

2
Delmonico's Restaurant
2
56 Beaver St.
New York City’s restaurants are known for starting trends, and this institution is credited with being the country’s first fine-dining spot. Its current Lower Manhattan location opened in 1837, and that legacy can be found in the building’s entrance columns (said to have been imported from Pompeii by the restaurant’s original owners), the buttoned-up waitstaff and the menu of classic dishes such as oysters, steak tartare and filet mignon.