Peter Luger Steak House | |
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Restaurant information | |
Established | 1887 |
Owner(s) | Amy Rubenstein Marilyn Spiera |
Previous owner(s) | Peter Luger Frederick Luger Sol Forman |
Food type | Steakhouse |
Street address | 178 Broadway |
City | Brooklyn |
Country | United States |
Coordinates | 40°42′36″N73°57′45″W / 40.7099°N 73.9626°W |
Other locations | Great Neck, Ebisu, Paradise, Nevada |
Website | www |
Peter Luger Steak House is a steakhouse located in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn, New York City, with a second location in Great Neck, New York, in the western part of Long Island. It was named to the James Beard Foundation's list of "America's Classics" in 2002 [1] and is the third oldest operating steakhouse in New York City, after Keens and Old Homestead Steakhouse. [2]
On January 10, 2022, Peter Luger's and Caesars Palace announced the opening of a third location in Caesars Palace Las Vegas, Nevada in the location formerly occupied by Rao's.
The Brooklyn location is known for its long wooden bar, and the "dining rooms have a Teutonic air, with exposed wooden beams, burnished oak wainscoting, brass chandeliers and weathered beer-hall tables". [3] [4]
In 2019, New York Times restaurant critic Pete Wells gave the restaurant a scathing, zero-star review, [5] a decline from Frank Bruni's 2007 two-star review, [6] a three-star review in 1995 by Ruth Reichl, [7] and a four-star review in 1968 by Craig Claiborne. [8]
The Brooklyn location was established in 1887 as "Carl Luger's Café, Billiards and Bowling Alley" in the then-predominantly German neighborhood that would shortly thereafter be in the shadow of the Williamsburg Bridge. [9] [10] German-born Peter Luger (1866–1941) was the owner, and nephew Carl was the chef. [11] When Peter died in 1941, his son Frederick took over and the restaurant declined. [12]
In 1950, Frederick closed the restaurant and put it up for auction. Sol Forman and Seymour Sloyer, who owned a metal giftware factory across the street, [13] bought it as partners for a "whimsically low" bid. According to Lester Magrill, the auctioneer, the purchase price was $35,000, which included the building as well as the restaurant. According to one history, "The neighborhood was declining, filling up with Hasidic Jews, whose kosher rules forbade the eating of Luger's hindquarters. Both Forman and Sloyer had been eating at Luger for twenty-five years, and they needed a place to take their clients. They were the only bidders during the auction." In 1968, Craig Claiborne of The New York Times gave a four star review of the steakhouse, under the new ownership. [8]
In 1968, Forman and Sloyer opened a Great Neck, New York, location. It was closed in 1984 after a severe fire, but reopened a year and a half later in 1986. [14]
Sloyer died in 2001 at the age of 85, and Forman died in 2001 at the age of 98. [13] [15] Ownership of the restaurant passed to Forman's daughters and Sloyer's wife and children. [16]
In July 2009, while having dinner at Peter Luger, New York Governor David Paterson had Richard Ravitch secretly sworn in as Lieutenant Governor to oversee the stalemate-stricken State Senate. [17]
In 2021, the restaurant opened a new branch in Ebisu, Tokyo. [18] In 2022, the restaurant lost its Michelin star. [19] In November 2023, Peter Luger opened a location at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas. [20]
The menu at Peter Luger is sparse, with the focal point being a porterhouse steak sized for two to four. [21] [3]
Richard Ravitch was an American politician and businessman who served as the lieutenant governor of New York from 2009 to 2010. He was appointed to the position in July 2009 by New York Governor David Paterson. A native of New York City, he graduated from Yale Law School and he worked in his family's real estate development business, a number of government and government-appointed positions, including with the New York State Urban Development Corporation and Metropolitan Transportation Authority, and in private industry, including tenures as chairman of the Bowery Savings Bank and as the chief owner representative in labor negotiations for Major League Baseball.
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Peter Luger was a German chef and restaurateur, who founded Peter Luger Steak House in 1887.
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