The Red Apple Rest was a legendary restaurant open from the 1930s
through the 1980s on New York's Route 17. Located midway between New
York City and the resorts of the Catskill Mountains, the restaurant
served as a who's who of entertainment luminaries. Elaine Freed
Lindenblatt was born into restaurant royalty as the youngest child of
the establishment's founder, Reuben Freed. For her, the Red Apple was
the "family room" across the road--one she shared with over a million
customers every year. In this book fifty-plus years unfold in a series
of lively vignettes--enhanced with photos, memorabilia, and even a
closely guarded recipe--as she recreates what it was like to be raised
in the fishbowl of a round-the-clock family operation. Stop at the Red
Apple is at once an account of growing up in 1950s small-town America,
a glimpse into the workings of a successful food operation, and a swan
song to a glorious slice of bygone popular culture.