Monthly Archives: November 2008

A Cookie & a Cupcake

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While I don’t think I could tire of writing about Chicago’s food scene, I do plan to take Elizabites on the road when I travel. I had to hit up lovely Cleveland for a work conference last week, and somehow had a moment to stumble upon a very cute cupcake shop called A Cookie and a Cupcake. Syndee Klingenberg and Wendy Thompson, two former pastry chefs from Cleveland’s famous Dante restaurant, opened the tiny pink spot just a couple of weeks before. I saw way more cupcakes than cookies, but maybe that’s because I was paying more attention to the classic flavors from lemon to carrot, as well as creative varieties like PB lovers (chocolate cake, peanut butter crunch, and peanut butter buttercream) and the Grasshopper (chocolate chip cake with mint buttercream). I had to wait 20 minutes for the fresh batch to cool off, but I fell in love with the red velvets, first with the sweet cream cheese frosting and then with the dusting of dehydrated raspberry powder on top. The pastry chefs make gorgeous wedding cakes as well, great custom cupcakes and win the award for cutest logo. 2173 Professor Ave., Cleveland, Ohio, 216.344.9433

A Cookie and a Cupcake

A Cookie and a Cupcake

Red velvet cupcake with cream cheese frosting and dehydrated raspberry powder

Red velvet cupcake with cream cheese frosting and dehydrated raspberry powder

The PB Lovers

The PB Lovers

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Elizabites on the road

For work, play and a chance to extend my Red Velvet Cupcake report beyond Chicago, I’m traveling quite a bit this week and won’t have as much time to post as usual. But keep checking back as I will be blogging when I can about my cross-country eating adventures, from Cleveland’s best restaurants (Cleveland! Who knew?) to Napa and San Francisco. The Ohio report (almost as exciting as Tuesday night’s Ohio report) comes first, including the historic West Side Market (where I noshed on some damn good teriyaki turkey jerky) and Iron Chef Michael Symon’s Lola restaurant. Tasty tidbits from the West Coast to follow.

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North Pond anniversary


Man have I seen a lot of gift bags in my day. After years of covering events and openings, I’ve amassed an obscene amount of booty, from logo-laden drink cozies to airplane-drink-cart bottles of booze stuffed inside flimsy tote bags. But never has a gift bag, or box, I should say, been as amazing and delicious as the one we received at North Pond’s 10th anniversary event last Sunday night. Chef Bruce Sherman’s been touting locally grown, sustainable products since he started at the Lincoln Park restaurant in 1999, and has always been a huge supporter of the Green City Market. He’s also maintained long term relationships with local farms like Shooting Star in Mineral Point, Wisconsin, Kinnikinnick Farm in Caledonia, Illinois and Mick Klug Farm in Michigan. Everything on the table at North Pond (right down to the impossibly creamy Minn.-based Hope Creamery salted cultured butter served with Red Hen bread) is fresh, seasonal and locally sourced if possible. I wrote about chef Sherman’s commitment to sustainable and green practices for CNN Traveller magazine in September, and have continued to follow his efforts to bring local sustainable produce, meats and seafood to the restaurant (including herbs grown in an onsite garden). Anyway, so this gift box. After sampling great wines and the food stations which flaunted everything from candied red, gold, white and chioggia beets to a Fuji apple slaw, we got to take some fresh product with us for the road. The contents, along with recipes, included a red kuri squash from Indiana-based Green Acres Farm; Pleasant Ridge Reserve cheese from Uplands Cheese in Dodgeville, Wisconsin; red globe radishes from Shooting Star Farm; Cameo, Ida red and Fuji apples from Mick Klug Farm, heirloom vegetable seeds from Seed Savers exchange, and a block of small-batch butter from Hope, which, if armed with more pumpernickel-raisin bread from Red Hen, I might just polish off within the week. 2610 N. Cannon Dr., 773.477.5845

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Guest blogger: Melissa Yen on Lito’s Empanadas

As winner of the Sweet Cakes Bakery mystery spot post, Vella Cafe co-owner Melissa Yen harps on one of her favorite hidden-gem spots, Lito’s Empanadas. I have never been and can’t wait to check it out for the chalkboard menu, the prices, the report that the empanadas are fried to order but not greasy..oh, and banana chocolate desserts. Her post follows the pic.
litos-photo
“One of my favorite things besides great food is great food served in a tiny space. The tinier the space, the better. Add friendly service and I’ll be raving about the restaurant to all my friends and anyone else who will listen. If it’s off the beaten path, even better. This sums up Lito’s Empanadas.
The restaurant is on a stretch of Clark Street between Diversey and Belmont. Not exactly off the beaten path, but I would never think of going to this area for great food. Once you do find it, you walk into the cleanest 500 square feet of restaurant space that I’ve ever seen. It’s a bright space with a counter along the window and five stools. You order at the counter from the chalkboard of eight empanadas. There’s a classic empanada with beef, olives, potato and raisins. Sounds weird, but it’s so good. There are two chicken empanadas and two veggie options. The vegetarian empanada with green peppers, cilantro, onion, potato and chipotles is amazing, very flavorful. Your empanadas are fried to order, but aren’t greasy at all. The crust is so flaky and tender, the inside steaming and oozing with yummy fillings. Good, hot, fresh food in less than 10 minutes; plus, at about $2.25 a pop, it’s cheap. That’s lunch for under $5. Well, $7 if you add on the banana chocolate dessert empanada, which you should!” 2566 N. Clark St., 773.857.0794

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Mystery floor

Bees and honeycombs are abuzz on the floor of what sweet Chicago spot?

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The Bristol

.As I mentioned in a previous post, restaurants with bar hooks score major points in my book. But hooks are just the beginning of everything I loved about The Bristol in Bucktown. The formerly weird ll Covo space has been completely transformed and brightened up with long wooden communal dining tables and a menu of pub/gastropub/lots of fried-but-delish stuff. The word is out and the place is going off most nights, so when we checked it out on a Thursday, we were sent to the bar for immediate seating (hence the hook discovery). Our server was still attentive and patient with us as we perused the menus both on paper and written on the back “chalkboard” wall. Chalkboard menus (like the ones also at Chalkboard in Lincoln Square and Bucktown’s Mado) are an eco-friendly trend I’m seeing a lot of and am definitely into. At The Bristol, the entire back wall, we learned, is a floor-to-ceiling, curved chalkboard, as are the signs affixed to the men’s and women’s bathroom doors which feature a different famous couple nightly (we had Yoko and John). Anyway, the food. So chef Chris Pandel’s menu offers snacks, salads, fish, meat and a section called ETC..there is a lot to choose from not including the chalkboard specials which are seasonal and change out daily. It’s all conducive to sharing (hence the communal dining), even the Caesar salad with Romaine, grilled mackerel and one large crispy crouton.

Grilled Caesar with romaine and croutons

Caesar with grilled mackerel

From the snacks menu we ordered Monkey Bread, served in the hot Staub pot it’s baked in with rich dill butter and sea salt. The soft pull-apart bread is savory and tasted like a cross between the dill rolls at Zealous and fresh-baked challah bread.

Monkey bread with dill butter


For other snacks, I wanted the duck fat fries, I really did. But held back in eager anticipation of an impending trip to Hot Doug’s (watch for this post), and got my fry on with smokey fritters and scallion mustard sauce instead. Savory doughnut holes of sorts, these are fried hush puppies with a sweet and slightly crunchy outside but soft, almost cake-like inside with a savory mustard sauce on the side.

Smokey fritters


For the larger plates, we loved the sound of roasted half chicken (with its talon, our server described) with stone fruit panzanella, but ordered delicious steamed mussels in orange, guaciale and white ale (good, but they’re no Hopleaf) and the Raviolo, one large fresh ravioli stuffed with melt-in-your-mouth ricotta and egg yolk with brown butter, it’s a large portion, but not overly decadent and I could’ve scarfed down two a little too easily. We were intrigued by the chalkboard menu of daily specials like grilled pork belly with Brussels sprouts and salsify and the roast fall squash with cranberry. We turned to dessert instead and tried cheesecake with gooey and delicious caramel apple sauce and that crumbly sweet graham cracker crust that definitely isn’t made from those perforated graham crackers we were forced to eat at snack time. And through it all, our steadfast server kept our glasses full of crisp Riesling and spoke loudly when the place got too noisy (as it tends to). We were too full to go into some of the other interesting items on the very unique menu from an ELT (eel, heirlooom tomato with spicy aïoli) to chicken wings stuffed with chorizo (weakness) and blue cheese and a pistachio tart with poached Bosc pears, but I’ll be back to the Bristol as the seasonal specials (and the bathroom doors) change. 2152 N. Damen Ave., 773.862.5555. photos: Toki Collection.

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On the table: Margie’s Candies


Three placemats, three napkins, salt and pepper shaker, mini juke box, (“Al Capone’s table” complete with mirror instead of windows). 1960 N. Western Ave., 773.382.1035

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Vosges skulls

Halloween might be over, but Mexico celebrates the Day of the Dead Nov 1-2 with candy, amaranth and sugar skulls (among other treats like atole, a sweet, hot drink). Vosges Chocolate’s new Day of the Dead Skulls are solid chocolate with black sea salt eyes in varieties like the Barcelona (hickory smoked almond with grey sea salt and deep milk chocolate), the Blanca (Venezuelan white chocolate) and the Red Fire (ancho and chipotle chilies, ceylon, cinnamon and dark chocolate). I spotted these sweet skulls in a very cool display in the Lincoln Park store (951 W. Armitage, 773.296.9866).

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