I'm working on a new book -- not food history, like the last two books -- but not excluding food history. This one is titled
Visiting Midwestern History, and it will be showing folks all sorts of museums, reenactments, and living history venues where they can learn more about the Midwest.
But then there is the chapter Eating and Sleeping History. This will be restaurants, inns, and purveyors of food that predate 1910, and preferably stretch back well into the 1800s.
Historic restaurants are not that hard to find -- so far have Long Grove Tavern here in IL; Stagecoach Inn in Marshall, MI; for WI, there's Stage Stop in Wilmot and Union House in Green Bay; in Kansas, I picked Hays House, built by Daniel Boone's grandson and in continuous operation since 1857; Ohio treated me to The Golden Lamb, built in 1803; Indiana offered the Rathskeller (designed by Kurt Vonnegut's grandfather); Missouri had the J. Huston Tavern in Arrow Rock and Old Brick House in St. Genevieve; and Breitbach's for Iowa. So doing okay there -- though still open to suggestions. Ideally, oldest in state (and of the 12 states of the Greater Midwest) or with some interesting connection (such as the Vonnegut connection above).
But where I most could use help is with producers/purveyors. The places must be places that can be visited -- not just an old place that sells to locals. I have Drier's in Michigan -- a place I discovered here on LTH and featured in my pig book. I've heard about (but haven't gotten to yet) the Chalet in WI -- 1885 and the only place in the U.S. making Limburger cheese. What else is really old, making something tasty, and has a place people can walk in and see oldness? (Doesn't have to offer tours or anything, but there should be some visible history.)
Thanks for any help.