if you mean Chapel Hill, the answer is "none". There is a kosher restaurant in Wilmington, and a kosher dining hall in Durham, but nothing in Chapel Hill.
If you mean Chapel Hill, there are no kosher restaurants there. There is a kosher cafeteria at Duke, and a kosher restaurant in Wilmington.
A kosher restaurant is laid out the same way as a non-kosher restaurant. The key difference (aside from being kosher) is that kosher restaurants serve either meat OR dairy, never both.
There are several kosher resaurants in Pasedena, CA. The closest five are "Doggie Kosher", "Cafe O Hookah Lounge & Restaurant", "Got Kosher?", "Shilo's Kosher Restaurant", and "Golan Kosher Restaurant".
It's an Italian restaurant that observes ALL kosher dietary laws.
That is an accepted practice for a kosher restaurant. Normally, the restaurant is 'owned' by a gentile employee over Shabbat and the takings for that day go toward their salary.
I'm not from Boston but I did a bit of searching online and found Rubin's Kosher Restaurant got some pretty good reviews. This restaurant is certified kosher, it's not "kosher style".
Its a restaurant that serves breakfast.
russian
Fine and schapiro
I live near a kosher deli that's open on Saturday and closed on Sunday. I don't know about selling and buying back, but you can call the restaurant to ask about it. __________ That is an accepted practice for a kosher restaurant. Normally, the restaurant is 'owned' by a gentile employee over Shabbat and the takings for that day go toward their salary.
A sit-down restaurant is what an establishment that serves customers at tables is often called. This is in contrast to a take-out restaurant.
This is what a restaurant serves to the Beef that dine there