![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
Found Bottle
KEVIN
RATHBUN STEAK – Message in a Bottle Buy a print from the restaurant (only $100.00) All Proceeds go to our favorite Charity The Atlanta Community Food Bank
Call it
luck, or call it what the plumber called it as he held the
bottle up…”Must be Fate!” It appears the new
space was destined to become a steakhouse.
Kevin
Rathbun says, “I think this building was destined to be
Kevin Rathbun Steak. There
hasn’t been any digging in the building in many many years,
so the bottle has sat in the ground since the early 1900’s.
Somebody must have been enjoying a steak sandwich for
lunch one day and had the sauce with it”. The
bottle was found as the plumbers were digging the holes for
the plumbing at Kevin Rathbun Steak. How do we know that it
is a real bottle? Because
in the late 1800’s, the sauce was often copied and to prove
that it was an original Lea & Perrins bottle, Lea &
Perrins had to raise the letters on the bottle. The
impurity (Iron) in the sand resulted in the green color of
the bottle. It has the initials of JDS on the bottom of the
bottle, which signifies that it was imported by a New Yorker
by the name of John Duncan. He was the first United States
importer of the product and it was first made in 1876 by the
Salem Glass Works, Salem New Jersey. In 1839, Lea
& Perrins was the only commercially-bottled condiment and
the Americans loved it.
For
additional information, please contact Cliff
Bramble or Kevin Rathbun at 404.524.8280 or visit the
website at www.kevinrathbunsteak.com
. An image of
Kevin Rathbun can be taken from http://rathbunsrestaurant.com/images/kevinphoto.jpg
. Additional information
on Lea & Perrin can be taken from http://www.artofflavor.com/about.cfm?catid=4073. |
|
|
© 2007 KEVIN RATHBUN STEAK - RATHBUN'S® IS A REGISTERED TRADEMARK |
|