Fine Dining

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Fine dining

The Fat Duck, a fine dining destination restaurant in Bray, UK

Fine dining restaurants are full service restaurants with specific dedicated meal courses. Décor of such restaurants features higher-quality materials, with establishments having certain rules of dining which visitors are generally expected to follow, sometimes including a dress code.

Fine dining establishments are sometimes called white-tablecloth restaurants, because they traditionally featured table service by servers, at tables covered by white tablecloths. The tablecloths came to symbolize the experience. The use of white tablecloths eventually became less fashionable, but the service and upscale ambience remained.[4][5]

Plymouth

Plymouth is a city in Sheboygan CountyWisconsin, along the Mullet River. It is included in the Sheboygan, WisconsinMetropolitan Statistical Area. The city is located in the Town of Plymouth, but is politically independent. Plymouth is known as “Hub City” because of its central location in Sheboygan County, along with being an equidistant point in the Eastern Wisconsin region among MilwaukeeSheboyganFond du Lac, and Green Bay. The “Hub City” name also applies to it being a former regional center of wooden wheelwrighting.[6] The population was 8,445 at the 2010 census. Mayor Don Pohlman was last reelected in April 2014.

Plymouth was surveyed in 1835 by United States engineers,[7] one of whom was named Mullet, and the Mullet river was subsequently named after him.[8] The first land sold to a private party was sold to an Englishman named John Law who had emigrated from London. It was sold to Law on August 13, 1836. The next sale was to another Englishman, also from London, named Thomas Margrave. Settlers continued trickling in and the town was organized on April 3, 1849.[9] In the 1840s a group of immigrants arrived from Tioga County, Pennsylvania. Their ancestors had moved to that area from New England shortly after the American Revolution. The Thorpe family arrived from Hartford, Connecticut. They were of old New England ancestry. These immigrants being the original pool of settlers in Plymouth gave the region cultural continuity with New England.[10] The town was named Plymouth, after Plymouth, Massachusetts, where the Pilgrims had landed in 1620.[11]

Originally known by early Native Americans as Quit Qui Oc, or Crooked River,[12] Plymouth was settled in 1845 by Isaac Thorp [13] and incorporated in 1877.[14] The city is often called “Hub City” because of its central location within Sheboygan County, but the nickname “Hub City” began in the 1860s when the Schwartz brothers had a wagon shop where they made wagons, hubs and spokes.