Category Archives: new restaurants

The atrium at Branch 27

img_1557I heard about the “atrium” at the back of Branch 27 when it was still a construction site, but couldn’t really picture what co-owner Cary Michael was describing. After finally making my way over to the new West Town restaurant, which recently opened in a former public library, I got a clear view of the tables before the nightly dinner crowd descends. Even though spring is taking its sweet time to grace us with its presence, this part of the restaurant makes me think of summer. I worship the chairs, the mix of wood, brick, metal and glass, and the lush green ivy hanging above. You can tell it’s probably the coveted seating area of the place, but the rest of Branch is a similar mix of comforting materials and gorgeous votive-lit wooden tables (with a few white marble ones thrown in for good measure). As for the eats, a colleague was raving about the roast chicken with Brussels sprouts, sausage and peppers, and mozzarella sticks the size of egg rolls, making me even more excited to try and score a seat there this weekend, Atrium or not. Full review to come. 1371 W. Chicago Ave., 312.850.2700

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Hoosier Mama Pie

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Apple Pie from Hoosier Mama


The best part about guest-speaking for my friend’s writing class is getting to dig into the apple pie she brought in from Hoosier Mama for her students to try and then write about as an assignment. I’ve been inside the bite-sized 1940’s-style West Town shop before (the former FanSiPan), but have yet to actually try a slice. This actually turned out better because I got to see a whole golden apple pie in all its maple-leaf emblazoned glory. I love the exaggerated zig-zag crust and uneven knife cuts that remind me of my dad’s homemade apple pie he whips up at Thanksgiving. Because it was eaten away off the premises, it was room temperature when we devoured it, but still deliciously tart, with big chunks of diced apples and a buttery flaky crust. I do love apple, but I need to go back for strawberry-rhubarb pie, peanut butter pie and chocolate cream pie with bananas (which I swear I perfected at age 9 but haven’t had since). Expect a separate post on all of the aforementioned greatness. What’s also great is the tag and cool strings tied around the big white to-go box. 1618 1/2 Chicago Ave., 312.243.4846
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Retro pie tag from Hoosier Mama

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Crispy pata at Sunda

img_1513The crispy pata pork shank at Sunda may look like it was plated by a caveman, but chef Rodelio Aglibot’s entrée is nothing but refined. I already reviewed Sunda, but didn’t try this Filipino-inspired dish until my third visit to the River North restaurant last week, and thought it was worth its own post. You may not know where to begin with the Fred Flinstone-affixed shank, but go ahead and knock it over (watch out for the watercress salad) and start digging in. It’s actually a confit pork shank that’s boiled then fried so the outer layer is crispy and flavorful while the pork is tender and falls right off the bone (or can be gnawed off neanderthal style if you so desire). Once it does, send it into the ramekin of garlic-foie gras fat gravy off to the side and devour. 110 W. Illinois, 312.644.0500

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On the table: Tocco

img_130012 place mats, 2 plates, 2 glasses, 2 napkin rolls, 1266 N. Milwaukee Ave., 773.687.8895

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Bugging out at Antennae restaurant

img_1455Who says no one’s opening fine dining restaurants anymore? Here’s a sneak peek at the preliminary menu of Antennae, an ultra-high-end modern Mexican restaurant foodies will be itching to get into once it opens early summer in Wicker Park. The restaurant will focus on rare, prehispanic delicacies like ant eggs, worms and grasshoppers, which are protein-rich and (with enough butter or guacamole) surprisingly tasty. www.anntennaerestaurant.com.

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Sunda Chicago

I first heard about the restaurant that would become Rockit Ranch’s white-hot Sunda three years ago when I was interviewing restaurant designer Tony Chi in New York City for a story. The Chicago-based Asian restaurant concept was only in its beginning stages, and was just one of the many projects the internationally renowned designer was juggling at the time. But I had no idea that chef Rodelio Aglibot would be commissioned to introduce us to a whole new set of cravings. With influences from Japanese, Chinese, Vietnamese cuisines and more, the New Asian menu goes way beyond sushi and rice bows. Like Chi’s daring design (1,200 bamboo fish above the sushi bar, amazing Asian antiques throughout the space, and banquette-seating cozying up to high top communal tables—it sounds chaotic but it’s strangely comfortable), Aglibot doesn’t present the obvious on the menu with a “No You Didn’t” hand roll and a fried banana dessert deemed “Ridiculous,” but his dishes are more about unexpected flavor than fun names.

At a time when some menus are shrinking or disappearing altogether, they don’t hold back at Sunda, with a menu that folds out like a road map to deliciousness. Open it up and go directly to burnt watermelon and unagi “nigiri.” I am a huge unagi fan and loved how it’s crisped up and placed on top of fresh, cold chile-caramelized watermelon and drizzled with lime and diced mango. With the right amount of spice, sweet, crispiness, fresh watermelon and cool mango, it’s the perfect summery cure for, um, random spring snowstorms.

Burnt watermelon and unagi nigiri

Burnt watermelon and unagi nigiri

Just as unexpected as an appetizer was Indo Corn Fritters. I’m a sucka for fried apps, and this one’s light and tasty with whole kernels of corn and coriander in a texure conducive to generous dunking in a sweet-onion ginger sauce. It’s great for a fried-fix, but is more mild than the bevy of spicy specialties that await.
Indo corn fritters

Indo corn fritters


Speaking of which, a dining companion suggested starting with fiery wok-fried shishito peppers, but only if we were planning on pairing with heat-battling Asian beer (they have my favorite, Hitachino and other usual suspects). But we opted for specialty drinks like the Toasted Ginger Snap; gin, fresh grapefruit and lime juice, egg white, ginger syrup, mint and anise seeds. A perfect balance is found in the palate-cleansing concoction, but the best part is the rim garnish; orange honey dotted with crushed almonds that’s dessert in itself. The fruity (yet not sickly sweet) Kung Pao Mango also flaunts balance, beauty and a toasted sesame seed and chili powder rim. I’m usually a white wine girl when it comes to Asian food pairing, but with more food-friendly drinks to try like the Lychee Petals and Wasabi H20, I’ll be kicking it Martini-style on future visits.
Kung Pao Mango Martini

Kung Pao Mango Martini


The “first flavors” go on and on, and another unexpected winner was the Buddha’s-style grilled ahi tuna and pork salad. The presentation isn’t as stunning as everything else on the menu, but we literally couldn’t stop plunging our chopsticks into the simple salad of grilled tuna, slightly sweet pork tossed with chile vinegar and sweet onion with cooling chunks of mango. Again, Aglibot demonstrates that he’s a master of balance and unexpected flavor combinations. Said talent is also revealed in the sliced crab cake-encrusted ahi tuna sashimi; an experiment in brilliance that tastes as good as it sounds and is served beautifully with Japanese hot mustard and a sweet soy glaze.
Grilled ahi tuna and pork salad

Grilled ahi tuna and pork salad


Let’s talk about soft shell crab for a second and why it’s almost impossible not to order once spotted on a menu. At Sunda, it’s served up in the Devil’s Basket; wok-tossed crispy soft shell crabs, dried chiles (a massive pile of them), shallots, scallops and toasted garlic. A great sharable and almost too-pretty-to-eat dish, the delectable melt-in-your-mouth crab are served in an iron pot.
Devil's Basket

Devil's Basket


The sushi bar at Sunda ain’t bustling for no reason, as a fantastic list of classic and creative rolls await. I’ve only scratched the surface of the sushi, nigiri and maki offerings, but the truffled tataki sashimi won out for creativity and flavor with ultra-fresh selections of sliced tuna, salmon, American kobe on a platter with enoki mushrooms, chive soy and a truffle vinaigrette. A killer roll was the Ultimate Handroll of crab, shrimp tempura, and spicy tuna (it’s a mega-sized roll, so ask your server to have it sliced into two).
Truffled tataki sashimi

Truffled tataki sashimi


So, I haven’t even gotten to the Main Flavors portion of the menu yet, which features awesome fish, beef and pork entrées worth sharing. The miso-bronzed baked cod was served with a glazed eggplant that defied my dislike of the vegetable, and I preferred the cod’s delicate flavor to the semi-bland Malay-style Chilean seabass with curried cauliflower. There was nothing bland about the “Shaking Beef,” once dunked into tangy lime-pepper dipping sauce it was dripping with irresistible juiciness. Other tempting dishes to try include duck breast, crispy pata pork shank, and the Kobe beef sirloin, just to name a few. If there’s still room after it all, order up an unexpectedly great side like crispy cauliflower, the ultimate blank-canvas vegetable to soak in garlic, miso and chiles.
With all that spice, texture, sweet and heat still buzzing on your tongue, it’s almost a shame to void it out with dessert, but I did love the cooling avocado mousse with raspberry purée, and housemade Sunda cookies for a light sweet bite. And if you are able to put down your chopsticks and look around at some point, you’ll notice the place can get crowded and sceney on weekends. But it doesn’t matter when the food and service are spot-on, and it’s not the celeb-spotting you’re still marveling at, but the perfect marriage of unagi and watermelon (at least I still am). Sunda, 110 W. Illinois, 312.644.0500
Avocado mousse

Avocado mousse

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Big Sandwich Tuesday at Theory

I was tempted to be real boring and write about Shamrock Shakes today (which I’ve been strangely craving for years now) but thought I would spare myself the stomach ache and focus on a particularly good and semi-big sandwich I enjoyed at Theory last week. I am a sucker for a good chicken salad sandwich on a lunch menu, but am often disappointed with the obscene amount of mayo that douses many concoctions. The Chicken Salad Sammy at Theory made me forget about the 15 flat screen TVs surrounding our table with smoked chicken breast, walnuts, raisins, grapes, celery all mixed in a slightly spicy dijon chive mayo on lightly toasted sourdough. I knew it would be good when I could actually see all of the contents of the salad, which had luckily escaped a hearty drenching of Hellman’s. A mix of hand-cut regular and sweet potato fries rounded everything out, and if we would’ve tacked on the ice cream cookie sandwich trio, it would’ve been the perfect lunch, plasma screens aside. 9 W. Hubbard St., 312.644.0004.
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Sushi scene at Sunda

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Man, oh man I couldn’t wait for Sunda to finally open, and dropped in this week to experience chef Rodelio Aglibot’s never-ending modern Asian menu, and the long-awaited interior designed by the internationally renowned Tony Chi. A packed house last night (even at 10:30PM) had the sushi chefs whipping up maki rolls and more under the watchful eyes of 1,200 bamboo fish hanging above. Watch for a full post on my fantastic meal (can you say crab cake-crusted ahi tuna sashimi? Yeah, um, you’re going to wanna). 110 W. Illinois, 312.644.0500

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