Category Archives: DINING

Detroit’s new cool…

It’s not often that I read a story that makes me want to rush back to my old hometown of Detroit but one in the NYTimes food section yesterday did. It was about a young Detroiter, a former male model no less, who has a bunch of entrepreneurial projects going on downtown including a barbecue place called Slows Bar B Q, in the Corktown neighborhood.

(Slows was also named by Budget Travel as one of the ten best bbq spots in the nation this year – and had good company, including two other places I’ve been to –  Abe’s in Clarksdale, Ms. and Arthur Bryant’s in, of course, Kansas City.)

Other groovy new places in Detroit mentioned by the Times include Supino Pizzeria, serving artisanal pie near Eastern Market, and Roast, a restaurant in a luxury hotel downtown. Soon to open – SLOWS TO GO,  at the corner of Alexandrine and Cass Avenue in Detroit’s  Midtown district and Sugar House, a classic cocktail bar opening next to Slows.

see: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/20/dining/20Detroit.html?pagewanted=1

 



Leave a comment

Filed under DINING, Michigan

Chicago’s Andersonville

Andersonville has been on my to-visit list for some time and now comes another nudge from the NYTimes Travel section which featured this Chicago neighborhood in its recent Surfacing column – so now I must get there. Highlights include Scout (a high-end flea market of sorts, 5221 North Clark); in fine spirits (wine shop/small plates wine bar, 5418 North Clark); Anteprima (a rustic Italian restaurant, 5316 North Clark); Transistor ( an art gallery/music store/book shop/performance space, 5045 – you guessed it – North Clark).

Clearly it’s all happening on North Clark.

Leave a comment

Filed under Chicago, DINING

Best Burger in Iowa City?

A writer for Edible Iowa magazine says the best burger in Iowa City can be found at Short’s Burgers and Shine on Clinton Street, made with local beef and home-baked bun and apparently there’s a $6 Burger special on Monday nights. Don’t forget the hand-cut fries and the Iowa-brewed beer including the venerable Amana Colonies’ Millstream, as well as Court Avenue Black hawk Stout, Old Man River Helles and Dunkel, and Peace Tree Hop Wrangler (I recently tried a Peace Tree sweet corn brew.) Sutliff Cider also gets a nod.

Leave a comment

Filed under DINING, Iowa, Iowa City, Uncategorized

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.)

Leave a comment

Filed under Chicago, DINING, Uncategorized

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.

Leave a comment

Filed under Chicago, DINING, LODGING

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.)

Leave a comment

Filed under Chicago, DINING, LODGING

Leaving northern Michigan

A huge storm knocked out the internet access at our cottage on Big Glen Lake so I’m running behind in my blogging. Yesterday we took a very short hike at Empire Bluff for another spectacular view of the lakeshore and dunes, then checked out Esch road Beach – a relatively remote beach known for nude bathers (although we saw none.)

Later D and I rode our bikes from the cottage to Glen Arbor and then to Glen Haven which has a little maritime museum and a couple of old restored buildings, plus a lovely beach. We stopped at Cherry Republic in Glen Arbor for a drink and some free samples of dried cherries in various forms. Kitschy place but fun and generous spirit. Bumped into Ranger Ryan – who we’d gone on a bike tour with the day before – and he seemed a bit taken aback that we spotted him in civilian gear. Also stopped at Becky Thatcher’s Jewelry design which has gorgeous jewelry made with local stones – including Petoskey stones, which I failed to find on my own, and a pretty blue/green stone from Leland that I”m told is not technically a stone.

The huge storm rolled in around dinner time and fortunately we’d already decided NOT to cook out. We went to Art’s Tavern, the local hang out in Glen Arbor which was jammed packed but we managed to cram into a booth after a half hour wait and had the best cheeseburgers of our trip (they made mine rare!). More tomorrow. we’re safely in Chicago now although D is still searching for a parking spot.

Leave a comment

Filed under DINING, Michigan

Edible Iowa in Dubuque County

No, you don’t have to actually EAT Iowa but eating in Iowa is getting better everyday and Edible Iowa River Valley magazine often offers proof of this. Here’s some tips from the latest issue:

– In Dyersville, it recommends Joe’s Place for good ol American food (burgers, fries,wraps) AND a fresh Thai buffet “rumored to be excellent.” who’d a thunk it? Next up, visit Groovy Grounds, the hipster coffee joint in town.  good pastries too.  and then there’s The English Pub which word tell has a killer Bloody Mary.

– Also in Eastern Iowa’s Dubuque County: Park Farm Winery in Bankston, likened to Tuscany w/gorgeous building and grounds.

– In Dubuque, Breitbach’s Farmers Market Food Store is the place to go and I’m guessing it’s somehow related to the famous restaurant in nearby Balltown that has twice burned down and been rebuilt recently. Good restaurants there: L. May and Pepper Sprout (fanciest) and Manna Java for pizza.

All duly noted for my next visit to my favorite part of Iowa.

Leave a comment

Filed under DINING, Iowa

Traverse City: here we come

We leave Friday for Up North and I found a good website with info on things going on in and Around Traverse City …www.mynorth.com. Here are a few that popped out at me:

Leelanau County’s own celeb chef gives us simple, Italian-inspired recipes.—The Cottage Book Shop (Spend An Evening With Mario Batali on the front lawn of the Village at Grand Traverse Commons on August 14, 2010 from 5pm to 10 pm. Part of the Traverse City National Writers Series.)

http://www.mynorth.com/My-North/August-2010/Four-Northern-Michigan-Restaurants-with-Waterfront-Views/ (includes Glen Arbor restaurant Blu that my friend P recommends.)

Downtown Art Fair in Traverse City August 14, 2010 from 10am to 5pm – Downtown Traverse City annual juried art fair features over 90 Midwest and national artists. Open to the public free of charge. Organized by Downtown Traverse City | Type: art

Suttons Bay artist Neil Walling looks for the unexpected in the Leelanau landscape. The inspiration he finds there is the subject of a new group of oil paintings on display starting Aug. 13 at Center Gallery/Lake Street Studios, 6023 S. Lake St., Glen Arbor. Walling’s self-assigned challenge is to study many of the familiar Leelanau County scenes in search of something fresh to depict. “There are a great many scenes in the county, but I always look for something unexpected or overlooked by the casual observer,” he said. “Fish Town is a good example. It has been painted by many fine artists, so my goal is to see it from a new perspective.” A public reception opens the exhibition Aug. 13, 6 p.m. The show runs through Aug. 19. For more information, please call 231/334-3179.

Cherry Bowl – drive-in movies!:   only 18 miles southwest of Traverse City on US31 South, 7 miles from the Lake Michigan shore line and Sleeping Bear Dune National Park, and a stone’s throw from the Platte River.

Leave a comment

Filed under DINING, Michigan

Conrad Iowa?

A recent story in Midwest Living on hole-in-the-wall restaurants in the midwest mentioned the Cozy Inn, an old favorite in Salina, but also That Place, in Conrad, Iowa which is allegedly near Des Moines. I had not heard of Conrad or The Place or its great pie so mention here so I can remember to try to find and try.

What: That Place
Where: Off Highway 14 outside Conrad, about 10 miles north of Marshalltown

Leave a comment

Filed under Des Moines, DINING