Category Archives: I like to eats
Larry’s Brown Deer Market
To think I grew up mere blocks from this place and I never knew it existed until now. A foodie friend told me about Larry’s Market in Brown Deer, Wisconsin and I made a stop there over the weekend only to stumble upon everything from imported cheeses, to applewood smoked Nueske’s beef jerky, fresh bakery, local beer, arborio rice, wine, homemade candy, gourmet mustards, olive oils, maple syrups and seasonings, elaborate gift baskets and tons of other gourmet goodies. The place is a little hidden, but worth a visit if you’re heading up north, or are looking for a block of Cheddar fit for a UW-Badger. I may never open this, but as a Madison alum, I had to have this cheese. Larry’s Brown Deer Market, 8737 N. Brown Deer Dr., 414.355.9650.
Filed under ..and more, eliz-a-trip, I like to eats, random spottings
Not known for: Calamari at Kuma’s Corner
Filed under I like to eats, not known for
Happy Thanksgiving
Like everyone else, I’ll be giving thanks for my family, friends, and hearty appetite today. I also wanted to give thanks to the readers, commenters, subscribers, linkers, guest bloggers, and all y’all who’ve kept up with my four-stomach eating adventures for 5 months! In honor of this day of indulgence, here’s a recap of a few Thanksgiving-friendly recipes I’ve posted in the past. Go ahead, there’s still room for pumpkin chocolate chip cookies and chocolate cake shots, right? Right! Speaking of recipes, I’ll be adding another family-gem recipe over the weekend, the very retro and very simple ice box cake. Cook well, eat better and ease up on the tryptophan, yo.
Pumpkin chocolate chip cookies
Country-style apple pie
Chocolate cake shots
Filed under family foods, I like to eats
Cafe Con Leche

Cheap, tasty brunch. It’s just one of several new restaurant categories (great for date, take the ‘rents, late-night bite are a few more) I’ll be rolling out on elizabites in the coming months, so you’ll soon be able to search for a spot that suits your local dining needs (drop me a line with specific category suggestions you’d like to see). This weekend I checked out the friendly and fast Cafe Con Leche in Bucktown for brunch. From chilaquiles to chorizo, jalapeño and black bean burritos, this is definitely Mexican-style brunch with a Greek omelet, French toast and egg sandwiches thrown in for good measure. There’s four different egg dishes and I loved the Huevos Divorciados: two eggs sunny side up served on flour tortillas that are irreconcilably divided between spicy green salsa and a fresh, red salsa, but share custody of black refried beans, cheese and tortilla chips. It all works out in the end, but don’t bother ordering a side of potatoes, which were too greasy for my tastes. The veggie burrito is a wheat flour tortilla stuffed with scrambled eggs, potatoes, black beans, cheese, sour cream and a creamy avocado salsa. Both dishes are a mere 6 bones and totally filling. The drinks rock too, especially the signature cafe con leche, milkshakes and Aguas Frescas (100% natural fruit water drinks in flavors like hibiscus, cantaloupe and watermelon). Cafe Con Leche serves lunch and dinner as well, with carne asada for $13 and a signature El Cubano sandwich with amazing fries for $5. Other details worth noting: Mexican sweet breads and pastries, Strawberry Crush, and Dum Dum pops with the check. 1732 N. Milwaukee Ave., 773.342.2233
Filed under cheap, tasty brunch, I like to eats, new restaurants
Hot Doug’s (finally!)
It didn’t take much convincing, but it did take a bit of organizing and a two-week wait (while they remained closed for much of October) to get a small hungry group together to hoof it to Hot Doug’s on a chilly Saturday afternoon earlier this month. It’s been on my list for a minute, and now that I’ve finally been, I no longer have to endure looks of horror that would transpire as I would reveal that I’ve never been to the famous encased meat emporium. I had heard of long waits, duck fat french fries, alligator sausage and Anthony Bourdain’s summer visit to the restaurant for his show, “No Reservations,” and we experienced almost all of it on our visit.
My adventurous lunch partners and I braved a 45-minute wait, and once we got inside the red, blue and yellow hued space decked with a disco ball, signed celebrity posters and kitschy dog paraphernalia on the walls, we took full advantage of the specials menu, collectively ordering up the deliciously rich duck sausage dog with foie gras and black truffle butter pictured above (the favorite of the haul), the Jack Daniels and fennel pork sausage with sage cheese and bacon garlic mayo, a mega-garlic dog (I can’t remember the exact name but it was delish) and a classic corn dog for good measure, oh, and a game of the week dog: white wine and Dijon rabbit sausage with dijon-garlic goat’s milk butter, Montsegur cheese and balsamic-truffle cream (not-too-gamey and rich, but not as flavorful as the duck). We also threw in a few items from the regular menu including the Salma Hayek andouille sausage dog and a good ol’ Chicago-style dog. And being Saturday, lots and lots of duck fat French fries (and cheese fries just to compare). There was no comparison, the duck fat french fries won out by an addictive landslide, so rich and decadent they almost eclipse the juicy flavor of the sausages doused in hearty sauces. Almost.
At the end it all kind of looked like this. When the colorful melange finally arrived, that silence that falls over a ravenous table ensued as we devoured different bites of each juicy, gourmet condiment-soaked dog in between handfuls of duck fat fries. One of my dining companions saw someone he knew at the next table, and they only nodded at each other mid-chew in respective silence…then no one ate for the rest of the weekend. A few after-thoughts from my dining companions to follow. Hot Doug’s, 3324 N. California, 773.279.9550
“Should we include summaries of the effects on our digestional tracts? New word: digestional.”—J. Hot.
“Duck fat fries are worth the extra cash. Bathroom door signs were as good as the food. It’s best not to eat at Lula one hour before arriving. And the California bus runs efficiently.” —Bill M.
“The California bus was amazing. Too bad they weren’t in charge of the line outside, though half an hour wasn’t bad. My corn dog side car was delicious, the rabbit dog was awesome.”— J. Hot
“Likes—the chairs, owner, game of the week sign, bathroom signs, and anything encased covered in gourmet sauces and cheeses. Duck fat fries are the way to go.” —T. Lange
And in case you’re still not salivating..
Filed under hot dog hunt, I like to eats
Café Gratitude
OK. So here goes my last post from my San Fran adventures before it’s back to the Chi. In true West Coast nature, I closed out my trip detoxing at a fabulous raw/vegan food spot we hit up twice in one weekend. From smoothies made with coconut milk, almond butter and raw cacao chips to zucchini noodle lasagna with cashew ricotta and amazingly fresh and spicy guacamole (there was avocado in practically everything..how can you go wrong?) with crunchy flax seed chips, the food at San Francisco-based Café Gratitude is so tasty, it’s hard to believe it was healthy. The service was so-so and ordering is a little annoying as every menu item is a warm and fuzzy self-affirmation like the “I am renewed” organic wheat grass shot or “I am insightful” veggie springrolls, and you feel pressured to say the damn phrase while placing your order. But it’s worth the embarassment for “I am enlightened” enchilada of the day (ours: jicama and apple) with spicy salsa verde, cashew sour cream and Bhutanese red rice, and a surprisingly flavorful “I am cheerful” sun burger made with pumpkin seeds and walnuts and served on sweet onion sunflower bread. Everything at Café Gratitude was fresh and delish, but it didn’t take long to realize, “I am craving meat,” so, it’s back to Chicago where I’ll be reporting later this week on some heartier eats including what might be the antithesis of this place, my highly anticipated jaunt to Hot Doug’s.
Filed under eliz-a-trip, I like to eats
Tartine Bakery
One of San Francisco’s best bakeries, Tartine also happens to be its most crowded. The small tables are always packed and there’s usually a line that slowly snakes by the bakery case, even on a Monday afternoon (when I stopped in). It’s the only day of the week when they don’t have freshly baked bread ready to go after 5PM. They did, however, have the best shortbread I’ve ever experienced, stunning cakes and teacakes, breakfast pastries, cocoa nib rochers (like meringues) and elaborately gingerbread that was way too pretty to eat. 600 Guerrero St., 415.487.2600
Filed under eliz-a-trip, I like to eats
Ubuntu
From burgers to biodynamic vegetables, we were totally blown away by Chef Jeremy Fox’s vegetable mastery at Napa Valley’s Ubuntu. Give this blog only half a read, and you’ll know that I likes me some steak. But this vegetarian-focused menu of small plates was so flavorful, colorful, inventive and surprisingly filling, I hardly missed the meat. Before I checked out Ubuntu (the spirit of ubuntu translates as “humanity towards others” to the Zulu people of South Africa), I heard it was connected to a yoga studio, and pictured a small, hole-in-the-wall space with rickety chairs and beaded curtains hanging in the doorway. Nothing of the sort, the 19th-century building is spacious, rustic and loft-like with soft lighting and a slightly eerie life-size sculpture by award-winning artist Mark Chatterley of tribal men and women looking out at you with hollow eyes from the center of the dining room. A center communal dining table is made from windfallen redwood and birch trees, and other tabletops are made from reclaimed fir trees. For the daily-changing menu, Chef Jeremy Fox (a 2008 Food and Wine Best New Chef) looks to the restaurant’s masterfully maintained 6-mile garden of organic and biodynamic vegetables to come up with farm-fresh, daily harvested dishes like cauliflower in a cast iron pot, caramelized sunchoke soup and olives marinated in pesto. Tasty, vegetarian-inducing pics to follow. 1140 Main Street, Napa, Calif., 707.251.5656
Filed under eliz-a-trip, I like to eats























