tikibars wrote:New investors have been working on the reopening since before the original shut its doors (December 31, 2005).
sundevilpeg wrote:Here are some of the city's oldest restaurants:
Schaller's Pump, opened 1881.
Daley's, opened 1892.
Margie's, opened 1921.
The Green Door, opened 1921.
Lindy's, opened 1924.
The Green Door serves food? What sort?
Yes. The food's nothing special, but the building is quite historic, dating to 1871, and the interior is fairly atmospheric. The tavern opened in in 1921 and was a notorious speakeasy back in the day.nr706 wrote:I'm guessing the reference is to:
Green Door Tavern
678 N. Orleans St.
Chicago
which serves basic bar food.
Yes, we know.tikibars wrote:The story is that the Palmer House was no longer interested in hosting Trader Vic's, but that Vic's corporate offices (they have a few dozen restaurants world wide) wanted to stay in Chicago. New investors have been working on the reopening since before the original shut its doors (December 31, 2005).
sundevilpeg wrote:
Quote:
Here are some of the city's oldest restaurants:
Schaller's Pump, opened 1881.
Daley's, opened 1892.
Margie's, opened 1921.
The Green Door, opened 1921.
Lindy's, opened 1924.
The Green Door serves food? What sort?
Perhaps you are thinking of The Green Mill which is definitly a Chicago Institution/Landmark and is a Jazz Club no food.
MortonG wrote:Any more suburban "Institutions" still operating besides Myron&Phil, Hackney's and Lou Malnati's? Possibly Charcoal Oven?
MortonG wrote:I think Chicago's Best has featured some west/south/southwest suburbs that looked kind of like "Institutions". So yes, it would be great to hear about those as well.
Gypsy Boy wrote:Somehow never noticed this thread before. The Red Apple Buffet is missing. Oh, and Sarkis Cafe and Sayat Nova...
riddlemay wrote:Maybe it's time for a bump/update, 5 years later?
I was prompted to seek out this thread because of a post about Captain Nemo's sub shop in another thread.