Junior's

This article is about the restaurant in New York City. For the restaurant in Atlanta, see Junior's Grill.

Coordinates: 40°41′24.46″N 73°58′55.20″W / 40.6901278°N 73.9820000°W / 40.6901278; -73.9820000

Junior's Restaurant
restaurant
Industry Family restaurant
Founded 1950
Headquarters Downtown Brooklyn, New York City
Products Cheesecakes, desserts, drinks
Revenue $200 Million (2005)
Website www.juniorscheesecake.com

Junior's is a restaurant at 386 Flatbush Avenue Extension at the corner of DeKalb Avenue in Downtown Brooklyn, New York City. The restaurant also has a location inside Grand Central Terminal in Midtown Manhattan, one in the Times Square area, and one in the lobby of the MGM Grand Hotel in the Foxwoods Resort in Ledyard, Connecticut. The restaurant was founded by Harry Rosen in 1950.[1] According to the restaurant, it was named Junior's after Rosen's two sons, Walter and Marvin.[2]

History

According to GO Brooklyn, "At the corner of Flatbush and DeKalb avenues in Downtown Brooklyn, there has been a diner run by the Rosen family since 1929. In 1950, the name was changed to Junior's, and it has been serving its famous cheesecake and other goodies ever since."[3]

Rosen worked with master baker Eigel Peterson[1] to create the cheesecake known today as "The World's Most Fabulous Cheesecake", based on a recipe that was in the Rosen family for three generations.[4] In addition to cheesecake, Junior's features deli sandwiches (particularly corned beef and pastrami), ten ounce steakburgers, cheese blintzes, and unique onion rings. Fans of the restaurant are not limited to Brooklynites. A Kuwaiti prince was known to have taken several Junior's cheesecakes back with him.[4]

In 1981, when the restaurant caught on fire, a crowd of people watching the firefighters started chanting "Save the Cheesecake!"[4][5][6] The interior of the restaurant was modernized after the fire.[3]

Building and future plans

The building, at the corner of DeKalb Avenue and Flatbush Avenue Extension, is 17,000 square feet of red-and-white-striped menus, flashbulb-adorned signs, rust-colored booths and a wooden bar. A shrine to the Brooklyn of old, it has become a must-visit for politicians from borough presidents to President Barack Obama, who bought two cheesecakes and a couple of black-and-white cookies during an October 2013 visit with Bill de Blasio, who was soon to be elected mayor.

Junior's in Brooklyn

In February 2014 the third generation owner Alan Rosen put the building on the market for development as an apartment tower with the hope of striking a deal with a developer to allow Junior's to return as a ground floor tenant. Rosen received offers up to $45M, but that offer wouldn't accommodate Junior's on the ground floor. In September 2014 Rosen took the building off the market after deciding the existing building is Junior's identity.[7]

In April 2015, Junior's announced it would move its baking operations from Queens to Burlington, New Jersey.[8][9]

In popular culture

See also

References

External links

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