Category Archives: great for date

On the table: Marigold

Three words: Duck Leg Dum

Three words: Duck Leg Dum

4 napkins, 4 plates, 4 glasses, votive (lit) 4832 N. Broadway, 773.293.4653
Hey all. Taking a break for the Labor Day weekend and Wisconsin-based festivities. I plan to return with tales from Tomaso’s pizza in Cedarburg, Milwaukee’s new burger joints, random finds in Oostburg, and most exciting of all…a new camera!

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On the table: C-View

IMG_30292 candles, menu. Affinia Hotel, 166 E. Superior St., 29th Floor.312.523.0923

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Outdoor patio at Duchamp

View of the Duchamp patio from Damen Avenue last Saturday night. Here’s hoping for a long Indian summer of fleece-free patio nights. Duchamp, 2118 N. Damen, 773.235.6434

Come for the patio, stay for the killer Korean wings

Come for the patio, stay for the killer Korean wings

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Filed under ..and more, great for date, I like to eats

On the table: Perennial

Love the birch trees affixed in the center of the dining room

Love the birch trees affixed in the center of the dining room

2 glasses, 2 napkins, 4 knives, 2 forks, 2 plates, vase, flowers. 1800 N. Lincoln Ave., 312.980.7070

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On the table: Juicy Wine Bar

Love going here to see what fab vino Rodney Alex has up his sleeve. Head there Aug. 22 from noon-3PM for the Pug Chug charity event hosted by Alpana Singh

Love dropping in to see what fab vino Rodney Alex has up his sleeve. Head over on Aug. 22 from noon-3PM for the Pug Chug charity event hosted by Alpana Singh

Single votive (lit). Juicy Wine Bar, 694 N. Milwaukee, 312.492.6620

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Filed under boozeworthy, cheap, tasty brunch, great for date, on the table

Chicago Antique Market

Just a few retro foodie shots captured at the Chicago Antique Market this weekend. Held once a month on Randolph and Ogden in the West Loop, the market returns August 29-30 and Sept. 26-27, and if you’ve never been, it’s more than worth the $10 entry fee. We spotted everything from great mirrors, to cookbooks, furniture, jewelry, artwork and memory-inducing retro glassware.

I am not sure who designed these retro vegetable jars, but I swear my parents had the full set of jars and glasses.

Do these vegetables looked stoned? Either way I love these jars, and I swear my parents had the full set of glasses

Is it me or do these vegetables looked stoned?


More great teapots, bowls, etc.
More retro pots, teapots, bowls and more

Orange overload


One vendor had an awesome selection of vintage cookbooks.
Vintage cookbooks

Vintage cookbooks


These thick A & W mugs brought back serious memories of pigging on hamburgers, fries and root beef floats in the comfort of my parent’s station wagon. I know there’s an A & W still lurking in Racine, and I think a trip up there for a float (or at least the root beer suckers) is on the horizon.
Must-have mugs

Must-have mugs

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Filed under ..and more, family foods, great for date, random foto, random spottings

Fitting the bill at Sepia

The bill at Sepia comes on one of these postcard trays

The bill at Sepia comes on one of these postcard trays

I swear, I am getting to the food we ate at Sepia last weekend, but I wanted to do a post on the great vintage French postcard trays that are brought to the table carrying your paper check. So much nicer than when the bill is just slapped inside a black vinyl book, put on a plastic American Express tray, or folded up and subtly placed in the middle of the table. I know Hamburger Mary’s delivers the bill in a stiletto, and Urban Belly plunks down chewy ginger candies with theirs. Any other interesting bill presentations you’ve noticed or particularly like?

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Nightwood

The hand-written menu changes daily at Nightwood

The hand-written menu changes daily at Nightwood


With a name like Nightwood, how can a restaurant not be cool and automatically great? But ever since I heard that chefs behind Lula Cafe, Jason Hammel and Amanda Tshilds, were opening a second spot, I was already intrigued and couldn’t wait to check it out. It’s located in Pilsen, just a block away from the divey Skylark Restaurant (perfect place for an after-dinner nightcap complete with rolling chairs, kitschy mirrors and a photo booth).
Just like Lula, I knew there would passion and thought behind the place, not to mention a seasonal, local focus and the kind of menu you want to experience with 6 close friends so you can try everything and share. But unlike veggie-friendly Lula, Nightwood seems to focus more on meat, pork and poultry dishes on the entrée side, with short ribs, chicken liver and pig trotters making an appearance on the appetizers. For other not-so-light starters, deep-fried mozzarella nestles up to mustard greens and shallot marmalade, english peas get chummy with bacon (see pic) and egg yolk joins ricotta in a raviolo with sage and brown butter. But a personal highlight was fresh burrata with lovage, roasted fennel, and toast points loaded with a mound of soft, spreadable garlic. English peas and their purée covered the plate, easily spread with the soft, creamy burrata. We asked for more crispy bread after we polished off the first two pieces, but we would’ve happily cleaned the plate without it.
Burrata with lovage, roasted fennel and garlic toasts

Burrata with lovage, roasted fennel and garlic toasts


After coming to the conclusion I could live on the burrata appetizer alone (the menu changes daily at Nightwood, so pray this one stays in the rotation), we moved onto entrées, another tough decision that involved a spit-roasted half chicken, wood-grilled Wisconsin trout, hand-cut basil pasta with cauliflower, almonds and chili oil and a buttered pork panino on brioche with turnip greens, cherry mustard, smoked bacon and sunny-side up egg. I took our server’s advice and went with the meat; spit-roasted pork loin with butter roasted apricots, cabbage, crème fraîche and olives was a delicious, generous bone-in loin with a smokey barbecue flavor and perfect tenderness. The roasted apricots on the side also picked up the crispy sweetness to the pork. Oy, I tried my best to take a decent shot as night fell on the outdoor patio, but this just doesn’t do it justice.
Spit-roasted pork loin with butter, roasted apricots, cabbage, crème fraîche and olives

Spit-roasted pork loin with butter, roasted apricots, cabbage, crème fraîche and olives


Side of Nichols Farm English peas with bacon

Side of Nichols Farm English peas with bacon


Dessert could be another round or two of the fantastic house cocktails, like strawberry-basil gimlet or the lavender Collins, which tastes like a Tom Collins with a dose of flower. But we opted for chocolate and hazelnut custard which was exactly what it sounded like, with housemade whipped cream on top of a rich, creamy concoction of milk chocolate and hazelnut, like top-of-the-line Nutella on over-drive, taken even more over-the-top with a garnish of crunchy hazelnuts.
Chocolate-hazelnut custard

Chocolate-hazelnut custard


As mentioned, there’s a great outdoor patio lit by lanterns and candles, but the interior looked just as enticing with seating around the bustling open kitchen, a wall of fire-wood and wooden two-tops. Whether I sit inside or out, no doubt I’ll be back try the rest of the ever-changing menu at this Pilsen gem, just as long as they keep bringing back the burrata. Nightwood, 2119 S. Halsted, 312.526.3385
The outdoor garden patio at Nightwood

The outdoor garden patio at Nightwood

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