Mr. Broadway is one of my favorites. On Broadway btwn 37th and 38th.
New York City has every kind of international cuisine you can imagine, as well as a vast number of fast food restaurants, pizza places, and specialty delis, shops and restaurants. A good guess would be there isn't a food in the world you can't find somewhere in New York City.
Hopefully, delis won't ever truly go away. That said, many have closed in recent years as the people who frequent them the most continue to get older and older and pass away. Many people in younger generations aren't as interested in deli food. Some people, though, are finding new ways to keep delis fresh and appealing to a younger generation, and some old delis are hanging on (and a few are still doing very, very well). A good book on the subject is Save the Deli.
Henri de Saint-Delis has written: 'Henri de Saint-Delis'
m' delis (from Delis in algeria)
Juan Delis died on 2003-07-23.
Juan Delis was born on 1928-02-27.
A. Delis has written: 'Nonlinear chebyshev fitting from the solution of odes'
I'm not sure we're talking about the same thing. Do you mean those little food stores, which sell snacks and certain groceries, but make most of their money from cigarettes and lottery tickets? Those are called "bodegas" or "delis" in New York.
Juan Delis died July 23, 2003.
Soda is not banned in New York. The New York Board of Health banned the sale of large-sugar sweetened that are more than 16 ounces from being sold a public places such as restaurants, movie theaters, delis, etc. The ban does not apply to drinks sold in grocery stores, diet sodas, drinks that are more than 70-percent fruit juice, or that contain alcohol.
There are wegmans in New York.