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Diner

A diner is a type of restaurant found across the United States and Canada, as well as parts of Western Europe. Diners offer a wide range of foods, mostly American cuisine, a casual atmosphere, and, characteristically, a combination of booths served by a waitstaff and a long sit-down counter with direct service, in the smallest simply by a cook. Many diners have extended hours, and some along highways and areas with significant shift work stay open for 24 hours.

Counter service at Terry's Coffee Shop, a small diner in Brooklyn
The Summit Diner in Summit, New Jersey, is a prototypical Northeast U.S. railcar-style diner, built by the O'Mahony Company in 1938.
Diner on U.S. Route 7, Canaan, Connecticut, 1976
Classic American Diner in Tampere, Finland[1]
Ruby's Diner in Colorado Springs

Considered quintessentially American,[2] many diners share an archetypal exterior form. Some of the earliest were converted rail dining cars, retaining their streamlined structure and interior fittings. From the 1920s to the 1940s, diners, by then commonly known as "lunch cars", were usually prefabricated in factories, like modern mobile homes, and delivered on site with only the utilities needing to be connected. As a result, many early diners were typically small and narrow to fit onto a rail car or truck. This small footprint also allowed them to be fitted into tiny and relatively inexpensive lots that otherwise were unable to support a larger enterprise. Diners were historically small businesses operated by the owner, with some presence of restaurant chains evolving over time.

Diners typically serve staples of American cuisine such as hamburgers, french fries, onion rings, club sandwiches, and other simple, quickly cooked, and inexpensive fare, such as meatloaf or steak. Much of the food is grilled, as early diners were based around a gas-fueled flattop grill. Coffee is a diner staple. Diners often serve milkshakes and desserts such as pies, cake or ice cream. Comfort food cuisine draws heavily from, and is deeply rooted in, traditional diner fare. Along with greasy spoon menu items, many diners will serve regional cuisine as well, such as clam chowder in New England and tacos in California.[3]

Classic American diners often have an exterior layer of stainless steel siding—a feature unique to diner architecture. In some cases, diners share nostalgic, retro-style features also found in some restored drive-ins and old movie theatres.

History edit

 
The Rosebud, a restored 1941 Worcester Lunch Car No. 773 in Somerville, Massachusetts

A crude precursor of the diner was created in 1872 by Walter Scott, who sold food out of a horse-pulled wagon to employees of the Providence Journal, in Providence, Rhode Island. Scott's diner can be considered the first diner with walk-up service, as it had windows on each side of the wagon.[citation needed] Commercial production of such "lunch wagons" began in Worcester, Massachusetts, in 1887, by Thomas Buckley. Buckley was successful and became known for his "White House Cafe" wagons. Charles Palmer received the first patent (1893) for the diner, which he billed as a "Night-Lunch Wagon." He built his "fancy night cafes" and "night lunch wagons" in the Worcester area until 1901.

Prefabricated diners edit

As the number of seats increased, wagons gave way to pre-fabricated buildings made by many of the same manufacturers which had made the wagons. Like the lunch wagon, a stationary diner allowed one to set up a food service business quickly using pre-assembled constructs and equipment.

The Transfer Station neighborhood of Union City, New Jersey was the site, in 1912, of the first lunch wagon built by Jerry and Daniel O'Mahoney and John Hanf, which was bought for $800 and operated by restaurant entrepreneur Michael Griffin, who chose the location for its copious foot traffic. The wagon helped spark New Jersey's golden age of diner manufacturing, which in turn made the state the diner capital of the world. In the decades that followed, nearly all major U.S. diner manufacturers, including Jerry O'Mahoney Inc., started in New Jersey.[4] Jerry O'Mahony (1890–1969), who hailed from Bayonne, New Jersey, is credited by some to have made the first such "diner".[5] The O'Mahony Diner Company of Elizabeth, New Jersey, produced 2,000 diners from 1917 to 1952. Only approximately twenty[6] remain throughout the United States and abroad. Others more credibly credit Philip H. Duprey and Grenville Stoddard, who established the Worcester Lunch Car and Carriage Manufacturing Company in Worcester, Massachusetts, in 1906, when O'Mahony was still just 16.

Until the Great Depression, most diner manufacturers and their customers were located in the Northeast. Diner manufacturing suffered with other industries during the Depression, though not as much as many industries, and the diner offered a less expensive way of getting into the restaurant business as well as less expensive food than more formal establishments. After World War II, as the economy returned to civilian production and the suburbs boomed, diners were an attractive small business opportunity. During this period, diners spread beyond their original urban and small town market to highway strips in the suburbs, even reaching the Midwest, with manufacturers such as Valentine. After the Interstate Highway System was implemented in the U.S. in the 1960s, diners saw a boom in business as mobile travellers would stop for a meal.[7]

 
The Bendix Diner in Hasbrouck Heights, New Jersey

In many areas, diners were superseded in the 1970s by fast food restaurants, but in parts of New Jersey, New York, the New England states, Delaware, and Pennsylvania, the independently owned diner remains relatively common. Since the 1970s, most newly constructed diners lack the original narrow, stainless steel, streamlined appearance, and are usually much bigger buildings, though some are still made of several prefabricated modules, assembled on site, and manufactured by the old line diner builders. A wide variety of architectural styles were now used for these later diners, including Cape Cod and Colonial styles. The old-style single module diners featuring a long counter and a few small booths sometimes now grew additional dining rooms, lavish wallpaper, fountains, crystal chandeliers and Greek statuary. The definition of the term "diner" began to blur as older, prefabricated diners received more conventional frame additions, sometimes leaving the original structure nearly unrecognizable as it was surrounded by new construction or a renovated facade. Businesses that called themselves diners but which were built onsite and not prefabricated began to appear. These larger establishments were sometimes known as diner-restaurants.

Manufacturers edit

 
The Salem Diner in Salem, Massachusetts

Inspired by the streamlined trains, and especially the Burlington Zephyr, Roland Stickney designed a diner in the shape of a streamlined train called the Sterling Streamliner in 1939.[8] Built by the J.B. Judkins coach company, which had built custom car bodies,[9] the Sterling and other diner production ceased in 1942 at the beginning of American involvement in World War II. Two Sterling Streamliners remain in operation: the Salem Diner at its original location in Salem, Massachusetts and the Modern Diner in Pawtucket, Rhode Island.

Architecture edit

 
Interior of a 1938 Sterling manufactured diner, with curved ceiling, in Wellsboro, Pennsylvania

Like a mobile home, the original style diner is narrow and elongated and allows roadway or railway transportation to the restaurant's site. In the traditional diner floorplan, a service counter dominates the interior, with a preparation area against the back wall and floor-mounted stools for the customers in front. Larger models may have a row of booths against the front wall and at the ends. The decor varied over time. Diners of the 1920s–1940s feature Art Deco or Streamline Moderne elements or copy the appearance of rail dining cars (though very few are, in fact, refurbished rail cars). They featured porcelain enamel exteriors, some with the name written on the front, others with bands of enamel, others in flutes. Many had a "barrel vault" roofline. Tile floors were common. Diners of the 1950s tended to use stainless steel panels, porcelain enamel, glass blocks, terrazzo floors, Formica, and neon sign trim. Diners built in the 2000s generally have a different type of architecture; they are laid out more like restaurants, retaining some aspects of traditional diner architecture (stainless steel and Art Deco elements, usually) while discarding others (the small size, and emphasis on the counter).[citation needed]

Cuisine edit

 
A bacon cheeseburger from a New York City diner in a to-go container, with a pickle slice, onion rings, coleslaw and french fries
 
Many diners serve a metal cup alongside a milkshake, containing what cannot fit in the glass.

Many diners serve casual inexpensive food, such as hamburgers, french fries, club sandwiches, and other simple fare, with menus resembling those from greasy spoon-style restaurants.. Much of the food is grilled, as early diners were based around a grill. There is often an emphasis on breakfast foods such as eggs (including omelets), waffles, pancakes, and French toast. Some diners serve these "breakfast foods" throughout the business day and others that focus on breakfast may close in the early afternoon. These are most commonly known as pancake houses. Coffee is ubiquitous at diners. Many diners do not serve alcoholic drinks, although some may serve beer and inexpensive wine, while others—particularly in New Jersey and on Long Island[citation needed]—carry a full drink menu, including mixed drinks. Many diners serve hand-blended milkshakes.

There is regional variation among diners with traditional food. In the U.S., Michigan and the Ohio Valley at "Coney Island–style" restaurants, coney dogs are served, as are certain types of Greek cuisine like gyros influenced by Greek diner owners. In Indiana and Iowa, pork tenderloin sandwiches are often on the menu. The Northeast has more of a focus on seafood[citation needed], with fried clams and fried shrimp commonly found in Maine and cheesesteak sandwiches and scrapple in Pennsylvania. Diners in the Southwest U.S. may serve tamales. In the southern U.S., typical breakfast dishes include grits, biscuits and gravy, and soul food such as fried chicken and collard greens. In New Jersey, the "Taylor Ham, Egg, and Cheese Sandwich" is a feature of many diners. Many diners have transparent display cases in or behind the counter for the desserts. It is common with new diners to have the desserts displayed in rotating pie cases. Typical desserts include a variety of pies and cheesecake.

Immigrant influences edit

Several international ethnic influences have been introduced into the diner industry in the U.S., because of generations of immigration.[10] Many diners in the United States—especially in the Northeast—are owned or operated by first and second generation Americans.[11] Greek-Americans, as well as Polish, Ukrainian, Eastern European Jews, Italian-Americans, Mexicans and Cubans, have notable presences depending on the area. These influences can be seen in certain frequent additions to diner menus, such as Greek moussaka, Slavic blintzes, and Jewish matzah ball soup, deli-style sandwiches (e.g., corned beef, pastrami, Reubens), and bagels and lox.[12]

Cultural significance edit

 
Edward Hopper's iconic Nighthawks (1942) captured the ambiance of an urban diner at night

Diners attract a wide spectrum of the local populations, and are generally small businesses. From the mid-twentieth century onwards, they have been seen as quintessentially American, reflecting the perceived cultural diversity and egalitarian nature of the country at large. Throughout much of the 20th century, diners, mostly in the Northeast, were often owned and operated by Greek-American immigrant families. The presence of Greek casual food, like gyros and souvlaki, on several northeastern diners' menus, testifies to this cultural link.[13][14]

Diners frequently stay open 24 hours a day, especially in cities, and were once the most widespread 24-hour public establishments in the U.S., making them an essential part of urban culture, alongside bars and nightclubs; these two segments of nighttime urban culture often find themselves intertwined, as many diners get a good deal of late-night business from persons departing drinking establishments. Many diners were also historically placed near factories which operated 24 hours a day, with night shift workers providing a key part of the customer base. For this reason, diners sometimes served as symbols of loneliness and isolation. Edward Hopper's iconic 1942 painting Nighthawks depicts a diner and its occupants, late at night. The diner in the painting is based on a real location in Greenwich Village, but was chosen in part because diners were anonymous slices of Americana, meaning that the scene could have been taken from any city in the country-and also because a diner was a place to which isolated individuals, awake long after bedtime, would naturally be drawn. The spread of the diner meant that by 1942 it was possible for Hopper to cast this institution in a role for which, fifteen years earlier, he had used an Automat all-night restaurant. The diner as an institution in this painting is a vignette mimicked by a movie lead-in aired nightly on the Turner Classic Movie Channel.

But as a rule, diners were always symbols of American optimism. Norman Rockwell made his 1958 painting, The Runaway, generically American by placing his subjects, a young boy and a protective highway patrolman, at the counter of an anonymous diner.[15] In television and cinema (e.g. The Blob, Happy Days, Grease and Diner), diners and soda fountains have come to symbolize the period of prosperity and optimism in America in the 1950s. They are shown as the place where teenagers meet after school and as an essential part of a date. The television show Alice used a diner as the setting for the program, and one is often a regular feature in sitcoms such as Seinfeld. The diner's cultural influence continues today. Many non-prefab restaurants (including franchises like Denny's) have copied the look of 1950s diners for nostalgic appeal, while Waffle House uses an interior layout derived from the diner.

 
The diner Jax at the Tracks in Truckee, California, was featured in the food reality television series Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives in June 2010.

Manhattan was once known for its diners. The Moondance Diner was shipped to Wyoming to make room for development.[16] Diners provide a nationwide, recognizable, fairly uniform place to eat and assemble, desirable traits mirrored by fast food chains. The types of food served are likely to be consistent, especially within a region (exceptions being districts with large immigrant populations, in which diners and coffee shops will often cater their menus to those local cuisines), as are the prices charged. At the same time, diners have much more individuality than fast food chains; the structures, menus, and even owners and staff, while having a certain degree of similarity to each other, vary much more widely than the more rigidly standardized chain and franchise restaurants. The Poirier's Diner and Munson Diner, both manufactured by the Kullman Dining Car Company of Lebanon, New Jersey, are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[17]

 
John Baeder, 2007, John's Diner with John's Chevelle

Diners have figured significantly in American films and television since the form developed. In I Love Lucy, the episode titled "The Diner" shows the perils, pitfalls, and difficulty in operating a diner, to much comedic effect. Archetypal appearances include significant scenes in classic films such as Sullivan's Travels and The Killers. The 1982 "rites of passage" film Diner was centered on an eatery shared by the protagonists. Waitress in 2007 was about a waitress in a diner.[18] Television series include the Food Network show Diners, Drive-Ins, and Dives. Pennsylvania Diners and Other Roadside Restaurants, is a 1993 documentary. Diners are the focus of photorealist painter John Baeder who spent about 40 years painting diners across the US. In 1990, Williams Electronics Games introduced a pinball machine entitled Diner. The object of the game is to serve all customers to light-up Dine Time (the jackpot).

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Restaurants – American Diner (in Finnish)
  2. ^ "The History of the American Diner". pastemagazine.com. September 5, 2016. Retrieved November 30, 2021.
  3. ^ "The History of the American Diner". pastemagazine.com. September 5, 2016. Retrieved November 30, 2021.
  4. ^ Gabriele, Michael C. (May 2018). "Jersey Gems". New Jersey Monthly. p. 43.
  5. ^ p.16 Westergaard, Barbara A Guide to New Jersey Rutgers University Press
  6. ^ NJ.com, Mark Di Ionno | NJ Advance Media for (March 29, 2015). "A classic Jersey diner comes to an end | Di Ionno". nj. Retrieved June 21, 2022.
  7. ^ "Diners, the original prefab success story". curbed.com.
  8. ^ Witzel, Michael Karl (2006). The American Diner. MBI Publishing. pp. 76–78. ISBN 978-0-7603-0110-4.
  9. ^ "1939 Sterling Diner". Antique Car Investments. Retrieved August 7, 2010.
  10. ^ Maze, Jonathan (March 29, 2017). "For many immigrants, restaurants are the American dream". Nation's Restaurant News. Retrieved December 17, 2020. Overall, immigrants own 29 percent of all restaurants and hotels, more than twice the 14-percent rate for all businesses, according to U.S. census data.
  11. ^ Maze, Jonathan (April 17, 2017). "Why Are Diners Traditionally Greek? It's an Immigration Story, Naturally". The Kitchn. Retrieved December 17, 2020. There's no official Bureau of Diner Ownership to keep count, but if you're a diner fan, you know that Greek families traditionally run the show at these beloved 24-hour joints, especially in the Northeast.
  12. ^ Li, Irene (March 11, 2019). "Let's Stop Putting Immigrant-Owned Restaurants Into A Box". WBUR. Retrieved December 17, 2020.
  13. ^ Berger, Joseph (March 16, 2008). "Diners in Changing Hands; Greek Ownership on the Wane". The New York Times. Retrieved May 27, 2009.
  14. ^ Kleiman, Dena (February 27, 1991). "Greek Diners, Where Anything Is Possible". The New York Times. Retrieved May 27, 2009. ... Greeks became a visible presence in the diner and coffee shop business in the late 1950s after several waves of immigration. They congregated mostly in the northeast, where the food service industry provided an easy economic foothold for many immigrants who were often unskilled and unable to speak English. As with immigrants from many nations, one relative would send word of opportunity back home, encouraging others to come to America.
  15. ^ Norman Rockwell – The Runaway
  16. ^ Brown, Kristen V. (August 16, 2008). "Moondance diner gathering dust in Wyoming one year after move". Daily News. New York.
  17. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
  18. ^ Jennifer Wright (January 30, 2015). "How Diner Waitress Uniforms Have Evolved From Scandalous Bloomers to Gingham Dresses". Eater. Retrieved April 8, 2016.

Further reading edit

  • Baeder, John, Diners. Rev. and updated ed. New York: Abrams, 1995.
  • Butko, Brian, and Kevin Patrick. Diners of Pennsylvania. Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole Books, 1999.
  • Garbin, Randy. Diners of New England. Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole Books, 2005.
  • Gutman, Richard J. S. American Diner: Then and Now. New York: HarperPerennial, 1993.
  • Kaplan, Donald; Bellink, Alan, Classic Diners of the Northeast, Faber and Faber, 1986
  • Witzel, Michael Karl The American Diner. MBI Publishing Company, 1998.
  • , retrieved on December 29, 2007.
  • Charles Palmer's 1893 patent

External links edit

  •   Media related to Diners at Wikimedia Commons
  •   The dictionary definition of diner at Wiktionary

diner, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, dinner, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, april, 2017, learn. For other uses see Diner disambiguation Not to be confused with Dinner This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations April 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message A diner is a type of restaurant found across the United States and Canada as well as parts of Western Europe Diners offer a wide range of foods mostly American cuisine a casual atmosphere and characteristically a combination of booths served by a waitstaff and a long sit down counter with direct service in the smallest simply by a cook Many diners have extended hours and some along highways and areas with significant shift work stay open for 24 hours Counter service at Terry s Coffee Shop a small diner in BrooklynThe Summit Diner in Summit New Jersey is a prototypical Northeast U S railcar style diner built by the O Mahony Company in 1938 Diner on U S Route 7 Canaan Connecticut 1976Classic American Diner in Tampere Finland 1 Ruby s Diner in Colorado SpringsConsidered quintessentially American 2 many diners share an archetypal exterior form Some of the earliest were converted rail dining cars retaining their streamlined structure and interior fittings From the 1920s to the 1940s diners by then commonly known as lunch cars were usually prefabricated in factories like modern mobile homes and delivered on site with only the utilities needing to be connected As a result many early diners were typically small and narrow to fit onto a rail car or truck This small footprint also allowed them to be fitted into tiny and relatively inexpensive lots that otherwise were unable to support a larger enterprise Diners were historically small businesses operated by the owner with some presence of restaurant chains evolving over time Diners typically serve staples of American cuisine such as hamburgers french fries onion rings club sandwiches and other simple quickly cooked and inexpensive fare such as meatloaf or steak Much of the food is grilled as early diners were based around a gas fueled flattop grill Coffee is a diner staple Diners often serve milkshakes and desserts such as pies cake or ice cream Comfort food cuisine draws heavily from and is deeply rooted in traditional diner fare Along with greasy spoon menu items many diners will serve regional cuisine as well such as clam chowder in New England and tacos in California 3 Classic American diners often have an exterior layer of stainless steel siding a feature unique to diner architecture In some cases diners share nostalgic retro style features also found in some restored drive ins and old movie theatres Contents 1 History 1 1 Prefabricated diners 1 1 1 Manufacturers 2 Architecture 3 Cuisine 3 1 Immigrant influences 4 Cultural significance 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory edit nbsp The Rosebud a restored 1941 Worcester Lunch Car No 773 in Somerville MassachusettsA crude precursor of the diner was created in 1872 by Walter Scott who sold food out of a horse pulled wagon to employees of the Providence Journal in Providence Rhode Island Scott s diner can be considered the first diner with walk up service as it had windows on each side of the wagon citation needed Commercial production of such lunch wagons began in Worcester Massachusetts in 1887 by Thomas Buckley Buckley was successful and became known for his White House Cafe wagons Charles Palmer received the first patent 1893 for the diner which he billed as a Night Lunch Wagon He built his fancy night cafes and night lunch wagons in the Worcester area until 1901 Prefabricated diners edit As the number of seats increased wagons gave way to pre fabricated buildings made by many of the same manufacturers which had made the wagons Like the lunch wagon a stationary diner allowed one to set up a food service business quickly using pre assembled constructs and equipment The Transfer Station neighborhood of Union City New Jersey was the site in 1912 of the first lunch wagon built by Jerry and Daniel O Mahoney and John Hanf which was bought for 800 and operated by restaurant entrepreneur Michael Griffin who chose the location for its copious foot traffic The wagon helped spark New Jersey s golden age of diner manufacturing which in turn made the state the diner capital of the world In the decades that followed nearly all major U S diner manufacturers including Jerry O Mahoney Inc started in New Jersey 4 Jerry O Mahony 1890 1969 who hailed from Bayonne New Jersey is credited by some to have made the first such diner 5 The O Mahony Diner Company of Elizabeth New Jersey produced 2 000 diners from 1917 to 1952 Only approximately twenty 6 remain throughout the United States and abroad Others more credibly credit Philip H Duprey and Grenville Stoddard who established the Worcester Lunch Car and Carriage Manufacturing Company in Worcester Massachusetts in 1906 when O Mahony was still just 16 Until the Great Depression most diner manufacturers and their customers were located in the Northeast Diner manufacturing suffered with other industries during the Depression though not as much as many industries and the diner offered a less expensive way of getting into the restaurant business as well as less expensive food than more formal establishments After World War II as the economy returned to civilian production and the suburbs boomed diners were an attractive small business opportunity During this period diners spread beyond their original urban and small town market to highway strips in the suburbs even reaching the Midwest with manufacturers such as Valentine After the Interstate Highway System was implemented in the U S in the 1960s diners saw a boom in business as mobile travellers would stop for a meal 7 nbsp The Bendix Diner in Hasbrouck Heights New JerseyIn many areas diners were superseded in the 1970s by fast food restaurants but in parts of New Jersey New York the New England states Delaware and Pennsylvania the independently owned diner remains relatively common Since the 1970s most newly constructed diners lack the original narrow stainless steel streamlined appearance and are usually much bigger buildings though some are still made of several prefabricated modules assembled on site and manufactured by the old line diner builders A wide variety of architectural styles were now used for these later diners including Cape Cod and Colonial styles The old style single module diners featuring a long counter and a few small booths sometimes now grew additional dining rooms lavish wallpaper fountains crystal chandeliers and Greek statuary The definition of the term diner began to blur as older prefabricated diners received more conventional frame additions sometimes leaving the original structure nearly unrecognizable as it was surrounded by new construction or a renovated facade Businesses that called themselves diners but which were built onsite and not prefabricated began to appear These larger establishments were sometimes known as diner restaurants Manufacturers edit Bixler Manufacturing Company DeRaffele Manufacturing Co Inc Fodero Dining Car Company Jerry O Mahony Diner Company Kullman Dining Car Company Mountain View Diners Company Silk City Diners Tierney Dining Cars Worcester Lunch Car Company Sterling Streamliner diners nbsp The Salem Diner in Salem MassachusettsInspired by the streamlined trains and especially the Burlington Zephyr Roland Stickney designed a diner in the shape of a streamlined train called the Sterling Streamliner in 1939 8 Built by the J B Judkins coach company which had built custom car bodies 9 the Sterling and other diner production ceased in 1942 at the beginning of American involvement in World War II Two Sterling Streamliners remain in operation the Salem Diner at its original location in Salem Massachusetts and the Modern Diner in Pawtucket Rhode Island Architecture edit nbsp Interior of a 1938 Sterling manufactured diner with curved ceiling in Wellsboro PennsylvaniaLike a mobile home the original style diner is narrow and elongated and allows roadway or railway transportation to the restaurant s site In the traditional diner floorplan a service counter dominates the interior with a preparation area against the back wall and floor mounted stools for the customers in front Larger models may have a row of booths against the front wall and at the ends The decor varied over time Diners of the 1920s 1940s feature Art Deco or Streamline Moderne elements or copy the appearance of rail dining cars though very few are in fact refurbished rail cars They featured porcelain enamel exteriors some with the name written on the front others with bands of enamel others in flutes Many had a barrel vault roofline Tile floors were common Diners of the 1950s tended to use stainless steel panels porcelain enamel glass blocks terrazzo floors Formica and neon sign trim Diners built in the 2000s generally have a different type of architecture they are laid out more like restaurants retaining some aspects of traditional diner architecture stainless steel and Art Deco elements usually while discarding others the small size and emphasis on the counter citation needed Cuisine editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp A bacon cheeseburger from a New York City diner in a to go container with a pickle slice onion rings coleslaw and french fries nbsp Many diners serve a metal cup alongside a milkshake containing what cannot fit in the glass Many diners serve casual inexpensive food such as hamburgers french fries club sandwiches and other simple fare with menus resembling those from greasy spoon style restaurants Much of the food is grilled as early diners were based around a grill There is often an emphasis on breakfast foods such as eggs including omelets waffles pancakes and French toast Some diners serve these breakfast foods throughout the business day and others that focus on breakfast may close in the early afternoon These are most commonly known as pancake houses Coffee is ubiquitous at diners Many diners do not serve alcoholic drinks although some may serve beer and inexpensive wine while others particularly in New Jersey and on Long Island citation needed carry a full drink menu including mixed drinks Many diners serve hand blended milkshakes There is regional variation among diners with traditional food In the U S Michigan and the Ohio Valley at Coney Island style restaurants coney dogs are served as are certain types of Greek cuisine like gyros influenced by Greek diner owners In Indiana and Iowa pork tenderloin sandwiches are often on the menu The Northeast has more of a focus on seafood citation needed with fried clams and fried shrimp commonly found in Maine and cheesesteak sandwiches and scrapple in Pennsylvania Diners in the Southwest U S may serve tamales In the southern U S typical breakfast dishes include grits biscuits and gravy and soul food such as fried chicken and collard greens In New Jersey the Taylor Ham Egg and Cheese Sandwich is a feature of many diners Many diners have transparent display cases in or behind the counter for the desserts It is common with new diners to have the desserts displayed in rotating pie cases Typical desserts include a variety of pies and cheesecake Immigrant influences edit Several international ethnic influences have been introduced into the diner industry in the U S because of generations of immigration 10 Many diners in the United States especially in the Northeast are owned or operated by first and second generation Americans 11 Greek Americans as well as Polish Ukrainian Eastern European Jews Italian Americans Mexicans and Cubans have notable presences depending on the area These influences can be seen in certain frequent additions to diner menus such as Greek moussaka Slavic blintzes and Jewish matzah ball soup deli style sandwiches e g corned beef pastrami Reubens and bagels and lox 12 Cultural significance edit nbsp Edward Hopper s iconic Nighthawks 1942 captured the ambiance of an urban diner at nightDiners attract a wide spectrum of the local populations and are generally small businesses From the mid twentieth century onwards they have been seen as quintessentially American reflecting the perceived cultural diversity and egalitarian nature of the country at large Throughout much of the 20th century diners mostly in the Northeast were often owned and operated by Greek American immigrant families The presence of Greek casual food like gyros and souvlaki on several northeastern diners menus testifies to this cultural link 13 14 Diners frequently stay open 24 hours a day especially in cities and were once the most widespread 24 hour public establishments in the U S making them an essential part of urban culture alongside bars and nightclubs these two segments of nighttime urban culture often find themselves intertwined as many diners get a good deal of late night business from persons departing drinking establishments Many diners were also historically placed near factories which operated 24 hours a day with night shift workers providing a key part of the customer base For this reason diners sometimes served as symbols of loneliness and isolation Edward Hopper s iconic 1942 painting Nighthawks depicts a diner and its occupants late at night The diner in the painting is based on a real location in Greenwich Village but was chosen in part because diners were anonymous slices of Americana meaning that the scene could have been taken from any city in the country and also because a diner was a place to which isolated individuals awake long after bedtime would naturally be drawn The spread of the diner meant that by 1942 it was possible for Hopper to cast this institution in a role for which fifteen years earlier he had used an Automat all night restaurant The diner as an institution in this painting is a vignette mimicked by a movie lead in aired nightly on the Turner Classic Movie Channel But as a rule diners were always symbols of American optimism Norman Rockwell made his 1958 painting The Runaway generically American by placing his subjects a young boy and a protective highway patrolman at the counter of an anonymous diner 15 In television and cinema e g The Blob Happy Days Grease and Diner diners and soda fountains have come to symbolize the period of prosperity and optimism in America in the 1950s They are shown as the place where teenagers meet after school and as an essential part of a date The television show Alice used a diner as the setting for the program and one is often a regular feature in sitcoms such as Seinfeld The diner s cultural influence continues today Many non prefab restaurants including franchises like Denny s have copied the look of 1950s diners for nostalgic appeal while Waffle House uses an interior layout derived from the diner nbsp The diner Jax at the Tracks in Truckee California was featured in the food reality television series Diners Drive Ins and Dives in June 2010 Manhattan was once known for its diners The Moondance Diner was shipped to Wyoming to make room for development 16 Diners provide a nationwide recognizable fairly uniform place to eat and assemble desirable traits mirrored by fast food chains The types of food served are likely to be consistent especially within a region exceptions being districts with large immigrant populations in which diners and coffee shops will often cater their menus to those local cuisines as are the prices charged At the same time diners have much more individuality than fast food chains the structures menus and even owners and staff while having a certain degree of similarity to each other vary much more widely than the more rigidly standardized chain and franchise restaurants The Poirier s Diner and Munson Diner both manufactured by the Kullman Dining Car Company of Lebanon New Jersey are listed on the National Register of Historic Places 17 nbsp John Baeder 2007 John s Diner with John s ChevelleDiners have figured significantly in American films and television since the form developed In I Love Lucy the episode titled The Diner shows the perils pitfalls and difficulty in operating a diner to much comedic effect Archetypal appearances include significant scenes in classic films such as Sullivan s Travels and The Killers The 1982 rites of passage film Diner was centered on an eatery shared by the protagonists Waitress in 2007 was about a waitress in a diner 18 Television series include the Food Network show Diners Drive Ins and Dives Pennsylvania Diners and Other Roadside Restaurants is a 1993 documentary Diners are the focus of photorealist painter John Baeder who spent about 40 years painting diners across the US In 1990 Williams Electronics Games introduced a pinball machine entitled Diner The object of the game is to serve all customers to light up Dine Time the jackpot See also edit nbsp Food portal nbsp Companies portalList of diners a list of notable diners in the US Diner lingo American verbal slang used by staff in diners Lunch counter a small diner like restaurant located within another retail establishment Greasy spoon any small cheap eatery including diners Cha chaan teng a diner like cafe in Hong Kong Dhaba a roadside diner in India Warung cheap eatery in IndonesiaReferences edit Restaurants American Diner in Finnish The History of the American Diner pastemagazine com September 5 2016 Retrieved November 30 2021 The History of the American Diner pastemagazine com September 5 2016 Retrieved November 30 2021 Gabriele Michael C May 2018 Jersey Gems New Jersey Monthly p 43 p 16 Westergaard Barbara A Guide to New Jersey Rutgers University Press NJ com Mark Di Ionno NJ Advance Media for March 29 2015 A classic Jersey diner comes to an end Di Ionno nj Retrieved June 21 2022 Diners the original prefab success story curbed com Witzel Michael Karl 2006 The American Diner MBI Publishing pp 76 78 ISBN 978 0 7603 0110 4 1939 Sterling Diner Antique Car Investments Retrieved August 7 2010 Maze Jonathan March 29 2017 For many immigrants restaurants are the American dream Nation s Restaurant News Retrieved December 17 2020 Overall immigrants own 29 percent of all restaurants and hotels more than twice the 14 percent rate for all businesses according to U S census data Maze Jonathan April 17 2017 Why Are Diners Traditionally Greek It s an Immigration Story Naturally The Kitchn Retrieved December 17 2020 There s no official Bureau of Diner Ownership to keep count but if you re a diner fan you know that Greek families traditionally run the show at these beloved 24 hour joints especially in the Northeast Li Irene March 11 2019 Let s Stop Putting Immigrant Owned Restaurants Into A Box WBUR Retrieved December 17 2020 Berger Joseph March 16 2008 Diners in Changing Hands Greek Ownership on the Wane The New York Times Retrieved May 27 2009 Kleiman Dena February 27 1991 Greek Diners Where Anything Is Possible The New York Times Retrieved May 27 2009 Greeks became a visible presence in the diner and coffee shop business in the late 1950s after several waves of immigration They congregated mostly in the northeast where the food service industry provided an easy economic foothold for many immigrants who were often unskilled and unable to speak English As with immigrants from many nations one relative would send word of opportunity back home encouraging others to come to America Norman Rockwell The Runaway Brown Kristen V August 16 2008 Moondance diner gathering dust in Wyoming one year after move Daily News New York National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service March 13 2009 Jennifer Wright January 30 2015 How Diner Waitress Uniforms Have Evolved From Scandalous Bloomers to Gingham Dresses Eater Retrieved April 8 2016 Further reading editBaeder John Diners Rev and updated ed New York Abrams 1995 Butko Brian and Kevin Patrick Diners of Pennsylvania Mechanicsburg PA Stackpole Books 1999 Garbin Randy Diners of New England Mechanicsburg PA Stackpole Books 2005 Gutman Richard J S American Diner Then and Now New York HarperPerennial 1993 Kaplan Donald Bellink Alan Classic Diners of the Northeast Faber and Faber 1986 Witzel Michael Karl The American Diner MBI Publishing Company 1998 Greasin up the Griddle and Rollin into History The Journal of Antiques and Collectibles August 2003 retrieved on December 29 2007 Charles Palmer s 1893 patentExternal links edit nbsp Media related to Diners at Wikimedia Commons nbsp The dictionary definition of diner at Wiktionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Diner amp oldid 1194046241, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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