Category Archives: I like to eats
On the table: The Southern
Filed under cheap, tasty brunch, I like to eats, new restaurants, on the table
Sea salt brownies at Trader Joe’s
Filed under ..and more, I like to eats, random spottings
Big Star
Start with the ultra-fresh chips and guac, and move onto the queso fundido. Served with perhaps a few too few mini flour tortillas, rich chihuahua cheese mixed with luscious chorizo tops spicy poblanos, all melding gooey-ly on the warm tortillas.
Next, move onto the tacos, they are both 3 bones and 3 bites, so mix and match, or just load up your lime wedge adorned plate with the thick and juicy pork belly, queso fresco and tomato quajillo or the al pastor—the obvious winner with smoky spit-roasted pork shoulder, sweet grilled pineapple and grilled onion. The braised lamb comes with cool slices of radishes and queso and is yet another tasty addition to the collection of juicy bites of meat. I didn’t indulge in the Violet Hour-esque drink menu, but a cold Great White Ale by Lost Coast Brewing brought everything together in perfect harmony. There are so many more things I have yet to try at Big Star, and with their new take-out window in operation, I’ll be back. Or you’ll find me lounging on the beer garden this summer, thinking not of old tire shops but of tacos. 1531 N. Damen Ave.
Filed under I like to eats, new restaurants
Saint’s Alp Tea House
Filed under ..and more, I like to eats
Best eats of ’09
Well, folks, another year has come and, well, is almost gone. And in true Chicago fashion, tonight’s wind chill is predicted to dip well below zero! If you’re heading out, bundle up, stay safe and try keep warm while you devise a way to revisit my top 10 favorite eats of 2009. Man, this was hard to do the say the least, especially since the last year had me traveling and eating my way through NYC, Baltimore, San Fran, San Diego, Milwaukee, Des Moines (of all places), Los Angeles and Chile. BUT, most of my favorite eats still ended up in the Chi. Here’s the top 10 in no particular order:
1). Three Little Pigs Sandwich, Silver Palm, Chicago —This was by far the best BST (Big Sandwich Tuesday), the crew experienced this year, our only regret? Not ordering a few for the table.
2). Steamed Pork Buns, Momofuku, NYC…overrated you say? BAH they changed my life, for reals.
3). Burata with Lovage, Roasted Fennel, English Pea Purée and Garlic Toast, Nightwood, Chicago — I went here over the summer and still dream about this appetizer, I know the menu is ever-changing there, but this one’s gotta stay, at least in the summer.
4). Chocolate Sabayon with Homemade Nutter Butters, Bristol, Chicago — Not sure what’s more unreal, the silky, perfectly light and rich chocolate sabayon served in the mini parfait glass, or the crunchy homemade nutter butters on the side that are worthy of being boxed up Girl Scout cookie-style and sold in bulk.
5). Corned Beef Sandwich, Jake’s Deli, Milwaukee— OK, it’s corned beef, but it was seriously the best corned beef sandwich I had ever had this year. Worth the drive to Milwaukee, at least for the local Miller’s Bakery rye bread and hand-sliced beef.
6). Crispy pata, Sunda, Chicago — When I saw this dish I wanted to grab the boiled and fried pork shank Fred Flintstone-style and gnaw it right off the bone, but the dainty and delicate watercress salad and garlic-foie gras gravy on the side are far too refined for such behavior, (geez). Anyway, the tender, juicy and somehow still crispy pork falls off the bone, so no need to get all caveman on this entrée I hope they keep on the menu.
7). Chick-fil-A, Racine, WI — Why does everyone talk about how good Chick-fil-A is but no one actually makes the trek out to Racine to eat the hand-breaded sandwich and awesome waffle fries? Or do they? Actually, when I made my way up there, there were fellow Chicagoans sitting right next to me in the food court mall who had done that very thing. It’s close to Mars Cheese Castle and Apple Holler, so you really have no excuse not to go. And who knows WHEN the supposed “Aurora” location is opening. Can’t they just ease up on the Jimmy Johns and open a Chick-fil-A in my neighborhood and be done with it?
8). Farmers Cheese Biscuits, Hot Chocolate, Chicago — A mini Staub filled with warm cheese biscuits and honey butter. At Hot Chocolate. Nuff said.
9). The Ron Bennington Cupcake, Molly’s Cupcakes, Chicago — The publishing of this post last spring got the blog a on-air mention by Sirius radio personality and comic Ron Bennington himself, and rightly so, because this cupcake rocks. Cupcakes are over, huh? Well the last time I checked, crushed butterscotch, chocolate cake, chocolate frosting, butterscotch chips and a peanut butter-butterscotch frosting center definitely ARE NOT (see pic).
10). Alinea, Chicago — Really, my top ten list could be made up of my entire meal here last spring, but I’m going to devote this slot to a tie between the black truffle ravioli and the chocolate course. Both amazing, visually stunning, and just a small part of the meal that blew me away the most this year.
Have a safe and happy new year and here’s to more deliciousness in 2010! Eat something out of control this year? Still reeling from it? Sound off in the comments!
Filed under Best bite, I like to eats
Mercadito mirrors and more
Filed under great for date, I like to eats, new restaurants, random spottings
Terry’s Toffee
Filed under I like to eats
Farmer’s cheese biscuits at Hot Chocolate

Farmer cheese biscuits and honey butter
I’m such a sucker for a great bread basket. I seriously think it’s what sets apart solid, memorable restaurants from drecky places that offer a stale hunk of crust you could crack your teeth on, and then kick you while you’re down with a soul-less little bowl of golden topped plastic butter pads. I’m talking real bread baskets..the pretzel rolls at Rockit, the bread with butter and three tasting salts at Duchamp, dark pumpernickel slices at Twin Anchors, sour dough with butter and honey at Coerper’s Five O’Clock Club. I could go on, but what’s even better for bread and butter fanatics like me is the bread course, a not-so-new but delicious trend I’ve seen lately. Eat at Alinea or Avenues and you’ll get a different house-baked bread with every course. Or just go to the Bristol and and get hooked on the monkey bread with dill butter like I did long ago. (An obsession I’ve gushed about on this blog again and again). But the latest crust crush happened last weekend at Hot Chocolate. I love everything at the Bucktown hotspot, from the milkshakes to the desserts and entrées, but truly found a special place in my heart for the house-baked Farmer’s cheese biscuits. Served in a staub pot, they come out golden brown and hot from the oven, creamy enough (from the farmer’s cheese; a cross between feta and cottage cheese) to stand on their own without the honey butter on the side. But slather it on anyway, it’ll melt right into the moist and light bread and hold up to the chewy, buttery outside. Rather than just fill you up before dinner, the sweet-savory combination of a cheese biscuit with sweet honey butter prepares your palate for what’s to come. The way a real bread course should. Hot Chocolate, 1747 N. Damen, 773.489.1747
Filed under I like to eats














