Off the Eaten Path: Vernon Lanes takes bowling alley food to new places

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Off the Eaten Path: Vernon Lanes takes bowling alley food to new places

In F&D’s Summer 2024 print edition, Kevin Gibson (with photos by Dan Dry) visits Vernon Lanes in Butchertown, which has reemerged as a local showplace, and the nation’s oldest bowling facility, following a period of closure (2015 – 2021) when the classic building patiently awaited an enlightened ownership group — which it now has.

From burgers and hand cut fries to flatbreads and plenty of appetizers, you won’t have to bowl on an empty stomach, although it’s a far cry from what you’d have experienced when the bowling alley first opened in 1902, or even when I was a kid during the late 1970s while frequenting Eastern Lanes in Clarksville.

The crinkle-cut fries there were the biggest hit for me and my friends; at today’s Vernon Lanes, they’re hand-cut fries – and some of the best you’ll find in Louisville. Jarrett said the kitchen goes through 400 pounds of fries every week.

Read Kevin’s account for free at issuu and look for our Fall issue in early September.

OFF THE EATEN PATH | Vernon Lanes: This historic gathering place gets new life with a superb, reinvented menu,...Read more