Delicatessen \Del`i*ca*tes"sen\, n. pl. [G., fr. F. d['e]licatesse.] 1. Relishes for the table; dainties; delicacies. ``A dealer in delicatessen''. --G. H. Putnam. [Webster 1913 Suppl.]
2. ready-to-eat foods, such as cold cuts, cooked meats, and prepared salads. [PJC]
3. sing.; pl. {delicatessens}. a store or section of a store where delicatessen[2] is sold. ``Get a sandwich for lunch at the delicatessen counter.'' [PJC]
"Sam said he didn't want to stand in a delicatessen line."
The discovery that unauthorized evidence was at the jury's disposal brought to a halt Wednesday jury deliberations over a delicatessen owner's claims that Paul Newman reneged on a promise to give him a share of the actor's food business.
Aside from investing in a delicatessen that displayed photographs of gangsters on the walls, Raymond Junior stayed in the background, authorities said.
Pizza companies, a dairy and delicatessen association, and discount building supply companies are among the employers that have come to look for management prospects, Gutman said.
David S. Smoak, senior vice president and chief financial officer, was named president and chief operating officer of this maker of pizza toppings and delicatessen items.
Meanwhile, they both got jobs at a suburban La Jolla delicatessen.
With caviar costing up to $395 for 14 ounces, a fish-egg-laden party supplied by New York's Zabar's delicatessen can cost $30 to $40 a head.
He expects the focus of the strategy will be "adding value" and continuing growth in the company's current meat product categories, especially delicatessen meats and pizza toppings.
The delicatessen packages are stamped with a code number of 368 and either a number 22 or 23 indicating the week of the year in which they were produced.
Prices will range from $1.89 for packages of shredded cheese to $4.99 per pound at the delicatessen counter.
They learned that hope springs eternal in the female breast and that the delicatessen down the street is incapable of getting a lunch order straight.
In the shopping arcade next to a train station in Tokyo's upper-middle-class Meguro ward, Yoshiyuki Abe and his wife operate the Japanese equivalent of a delicatessen.
Some of it went to Zabar's, a fancy New York grocery and delicatessen.
He needed to raise money to move the delicatessen.
But salami? A delicatessen owner is offering a free, 1-pound kosher salami worth $7 to anyone who can produce a ticket stub from a Mets game won by pitcher Frank Viola.
The product, sold in 5- and 12-ounce cold cut retail packages and 6- to 7-pound delicatessen packages, was distributed in Maine, Vermont, Massachusetts and New Hampshire.
Nevel, president of the Dade County Young Democrats Club, had some secret weapons _ veteran Miami Beach get-out-the-vote organizer Harry Mildner and his father Joseph Nevel, a civic activist and owner of the famed Wolfie's delicatessen.