Category Archives: Chicago

chicago restaurants – more!

More Chicago restaurant recommendations – from my sister who’s lived in and around the Windy City for a long time:

· La Sardine (French/small)  – http://www.lasardine.com/

Publican – a favorite of the chefs – large tables/communal eating

The Purple Pig – small but awesome food – small shared plates  http://thepurplepigchicago.com/ (located on Mag Mile)

Night wood – very cool and hip in Pilsen – great food

Prosecco – great Italian  http://ristoranteprosecco.com/home.html;   Very good.  nice quiet setting.

Frontera/Topolobambo –

Spiaggia Cafe.  Very nice.  A Barack and Michelle favorite (although they go to the main restaurant, not the cafe).

Sepia.  Very good.  http://sepiachicago.com/ (This one I was trying to remember last week while in Chicago – been to several times and liked.)

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Some more restaurant finds in Chicago – and one hotel

I have been to Chicago more times than I can count but never stayed in a hotel – thanks to an abundance of generous relatives who live in and around the city – until last Sunday night. A friend called at the last minute inviting me to join her in Chicago for a one-night trip after her son couldn’t join her as planned. She’d already paid for the hotel and the bus tickets.

We stayed at the Chicago Hilton across from Grant Park – a grand old hotel with an enormous lobby with a high vaulted ceiling, lots of marble columns, chandeliers, sweeping carpeted staircases, big ballrooms. There’s also a photo display of scenes from Obama’s victory night party taken in and around the hotel. Our room was comfortable, spacious and clean.  I slept surprisingly well, for a hotel stay. My friend found some sort of deal for $161 a night – about $100 off the regular price.

For dinner, we went to the new trendy The Girl and The Goat – opened by former Top Chef winner Stephanie (can’t remember her last name) on Randolph Street. Fun and good small plates. Next time I’ll try the meat entrees – this time I stuck with vegetarian because  my friend is a vegetarian and we shared plates. We had the chickpea fritters, cauliflower and squash ravioli plates – all very complicated, flavorful dishes, surprisingly large portions for two people. The chickpea fritters were our favorite – because they tasted nothing like what we thought chickpea fritters would taste like. Not heavy and gritty. Instead light and creamy – more like polenta. Place was loud and dark but we were at a table where we could see and hear each other for the most part. Our server seemed disappointed we ordered so little (plus one drink apiece.) Oh well.

We ate breakfast the next morning at an old coffee shop – the Artist’s Cafe – on Michigan Avenue that has a storied history (visited by many Balanchine, Baryshnikov etc.) not to mention great hashbrowns and attentive service. Then onto the explore the Art Institute, new wing and old, and Millennium Park and saunter along Michigan Avenue where we ended up eating at the FoodLife food court in Water Tower place which was surprisingly good- although had almost too many choices. You get a little plastic card when you arrive and use that to record what you’ve bought, then pay when you leave. Good system although you can lose track of how much you’ve spent. My friend and I ultimately ended up with soup – shrimp and lobster bisque for me; Mediterranean lentil for her. Both good. And I had a fresh squeezed orange juice and my friend had coffee-flavored gelato.

We bought sandwiches from Potbelly around the block from Michigan avenue near DePaul University’s downtown campus – surprisingly good low-mayo tuna sub that worked well to eat on the megabus back to Des Moines.

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Names of those restaurants in Chicago and Evanston

Okay – here’s the names of the places we ate at during recent trip to Northwestern:

– Mario’s  on W. Goethe – a low-key neighborhood place near my Aunt’s Apartment near Astor and Division. The seafood pasta in a light broth-based sauce was very good. Meatballs with meat sauce also a hit.

– Melanthios Greek Char House on North Broadway in Lakeview Restaurant. Good char-broiled octopus served with little but oil, garlic and lemon; big greek salad minus lettuce; yummy moussaka. Huge portions. We shared everything. Good service by a waiter who loves the series “The Wire” which we’re also knee-deep in. And we ate outside at tables along the street. Not quite Athens but close enough.

– Dixie’s Kitchen in Evanston – I had the mini-southern sampler special for about $6.50 – a bowl of gumbo, jambalaya and red beans. Gumbo my fave but all good.

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The College trip – evanston, illinois

Northwestern University looked gorgeous yesterday on a flawless fall day. E and I helped N settle in his dorm room and spent much of the day wandering around campus and town. Found a good restaurant in Town – Dixie’s or some such. Inexpensive cajun and thus popular. Gumbo particularly good and little cornbread pancakes served in the free breadbasket. Also ate my sorrows (rather than drowned my sorrows) at a new greek restaurant near E’s apartment in Chicago’s Lakeview neighborhood on Broadway. Will get name. Time to hit road and return to Iowa.

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The trip I don’t want to take

Tomorrow my son and I hit the road for Chicago – and the next day I’ll help him unpack at his new home, Northwestern University. I’m not used to dreading roadtrips but this one I’m feeling sad just thinking about – although I’m very happy and excited for my son.

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Places to stay/dine – chicago

A friend from Maryland visited Chicago on a perfect summer weekend and loved the place. She liked where she stayed (Homewood Suites on Grand) and ate (Volari, Buca/boka? and some place she thinks was called Bizoni.)

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A little Lollapalooza in Des Moines

Des Moines is getting some mighty nice spillover from the massive Lollapalooza music festival in Chicago, where my 18-year-old son is no doubt having the time of his life, along with his half-sister.  Two bands that are playing to thousands of people in the Windy City this weekend will play on much smaller more intimate stages in Des Moines soon after. The Black Keys play at the funky old Val Air Ballroom here on Sunday and even more surprisingly, Phoenix plays at People’s Court, a smaller venue in downtown Des Moines, on Tuesday (we’ll be there…and maybe at the Black Keys too – I’m a fan of the theme song they wrote for the new HBO show “Hung,” which also is set in my hometown of Detroit.)

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Cycling and swimming along the Chicago Lakefront – Xoco – Taste of Chicago

Chicago on a beautiful summer day is hard to beat – and boy did we get lucky on Tuesday. The temps were in the 70s, bright sunshine, light breeze. My sister and I rode on the bike trail along the lake front south from North Beach down to around Hyde Park area – great trail, easy riding, little congestion (on a Tuesday), stunning views of the lake and the city, riding past sandy beaches and landscaped gardens.  I borrowed a bike but there is a bike rental at North Beach (and a few other places) – and the rental place has a free air pump, which we made good use of.

On the return trip, we stopped for lunch at Taste of Chicago – crowded but not as bad as a weekend. We “tasted” some good Thai dumplings, a so-so Greek sausage, and an icky Ukrainian dumpling (starchy dumpling with what looked like tomato soup atop it).  Later, I swam for the first time at the Oak Street Beach – the lake was cleaner and warmer than expected with a nice sandy bottom and manageable waves. Laid out on the beach for awhile. Very nice.

For dinner, I went with E and M to Xoco (“cho-ko”) the new Rick Bayless restaurant – we picked just the right time to go: 5:30 p.m. on a Tuesday. We’d heard about long lines and limited seating but this time worked great. We stood in line for maybe 5 minutes, got our food right away, and sat at a high top table on stools outside overlooking the street. Well-managed place.  Food was interesting – supposedly it’s Mexican “street food” but smarted up with artisanal ingredients – the sources for the food – the bread, cheese, meat etc – were prominently displayed.  The Woodland Mushroom torte was a favorite. The Ahogada – which some critic likened, accurately, to a Mexican version of an Italian sub, was messy and hot and tasty (golden pork carnitas, black beans served on crusty bread face down in a tomato broth with a “spicy arbol chile sauce” (wisely, this is not offered for take-out.) We tried one of the caldos (soups) – the pork belly vermicelli which was interesting but not our favorite although the avocado was especially creamy after floating in the thin broth.  The churros were outstanding – a lighter, less greaser version of what we’ve had in Spain. The hot chocolate wasn’t our cup of tea – I’m sure it’s authentic but too sweet for us (we had the Almendrado – a chocolate shot with almond milk.) Very good guacamole (made according to the recipe used by Xoco’s fancier sibling next door, the Frontera Grill) with “just made” (of course) chips. The homemade Mexican vanilla soft serve ice cream tasted pretty much like regular vanilla soft serve…But overall, the place felt unique and fresh, like something truly new and ambitious – and reasonably priced. We spent $60 for three – granted we didn’t have any alcohol.

Next time I’d like to try the Pepito and one of the  griddle Tortas (our two tortas were cooked in a woodburning oven).  Also would like to try the carnitas and the cocoflan (which they didn’t have when we visited.)

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Transporation between Chicago and Traverse City, Mi.

I’m trying to find an economical (as always) way to get my son from Traverse City, Mi. to chicago (and ultimately Des Moines) in mid-August. He can take the megabus from Chicago to Des Moines for $10 (I LOVE that bus!) but the first leg of his trip is problematic. No bus service of any kind, as far as I can tell. A one way plane tix is over $600. Another option is for him and his older sister (who is 25 so she can rent a car) to rent a car at the traverse city airport for $115 and drive back to Chicago. Then he’ll catch the bus from there. Wish there was a megabus between Traverse City and Chicago!

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Filed under Chicago, Michigan

Dining in Chicago – some new favorites

I discovered some more great places to eat in Chicago during my visit there last weekend. They include:

– Shaw’s Crab House. This bustling, old-fashioned place, serves a tasty one-pound Lobster Boil for $22 in a lively dining room with attentive waiters. There’s also a cool bar that’s good for lunch – and has live jazz at night (or at least the Sunday night we were there.) The soft-shell crab got good reviews too.

– Taza is a fast-foody Middle Eastern restaurant at 176 S. Franklin Street, a block south of the Chicago River (handy for designers attending the annual NeoCon show at the nearby Merchandise Mart – which I also visited, tagging along with my sister-in-law, who is a designer in NYC).  A no-frills place with food shoveled into styrofoam-ware and served over the counter by cheerful men who are very generous with the free samples. The falafel was perfect – not too hard or soft or greasy. Also good chicken and turkey schwarma. Gyro meat and the lentil soup looked very good too.

– Brats at the Old Town Art Fair – served in a churchyard. Big juicy grilled. I ate it with a spicy topping of sauteed peppers and celery (that has an Italian-sounding name starting with a “g”)  It was dubbed “mild” but had quite the kick.

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