



bjt wrote:I don't know what's in the crust, but eating any lard or fat-based crust cold filled with anything savory is going to set the eater up for disappointment on so many levels. Mouthfeel, graininess, gumminess. I would never eat an empanada from El Mercado cold even though the insides are full of juicy, fun things. (Cold these would be kind of well, gross and congeal-y/greasy.) Ditto for a cold pasty. (A pasty that was hot then went room temp to still warm is a different story -- maybe.) I would bet the same on something from Pleasant House. I have only been once but I can only imagine that their pastry and savory fillings would not shine being eaten cold. Oomph I can't speak to, that is a different story.
bjt
Roald Dahl wrote:"Very carefully, I now began to unwrap the greaseproof paper from around the doctor's present, and when I had finished, I saw before me the most enormous and beautiful pie in the world. It was covered all over, top, sides, and bottom, with a rich golden pastry. I took a knife from beside the sink and cut out a wedge. I started to eat it in my fingers, standing up. It was a cold meat pie. The meat was pink and tender with no fat or gristle in it, and there were hard-boiled eggs buried like treasures in several different places. The taste was absolutely fabulous. When I had finished the first slice, I cut another and ate that too. God bless Doctor Spencer, I thought. And God bless Mrs. Spencer as well."
theskinnyduck wrote:Why, why. why is this place so far south (even hard to reach with public transit from work downtown, let alone home)?? I am planning a trip there this saturday, the reviews and pictures are making me hungry even though I am still full from dinner. How is parking there?
mtgl wrote:
And yes, parking's a cinch. And if 31st is too far south, you'll be missing many treasured LTH gems
Even though I was stuck at my desk for most of the day
Vitesse98 wrote:Even though I was stuck at my desk for most of the day
You mean stuck in the car for most of the day, right? Bridgeport to Niles?!How long did that take you on a weekday?
ronnie_suburban wrote:Vitesse98 wrote:You mean stuck in the car for most of the day, right? Bridgeport to Niles?!How long did that take you on a weekday?
As I posted, it was my co-worker who went to PHB, not me. He left the office at 10:45, stopped and took inventory at one of our warehouses (the actual purpose for his trip), left PHB at 12:30 with our order and was back at our office right around 1:00 pm.
Generally, the best time for a trip like this is the middle of the day.
=R=
at ChicagoTribune.com, Kevin Pang wrote:Enter the husband-and-wife team of Art and Chelsea Jackson, here to rescue us from cliches. Their 3-month-old restaurant, Pleasant House Bakery in Bridgeport, fills a void you didn't know needed to be filled, offering a classically trained chef's take on blue-collar British cooking. It is my favorite new restaurant of 2011.
Like all kitchen grunts, Art Jackson yearned to become his own boss. He worked at Les Nomades and ran the kitchen at Bijan's Bistro for eight years, but he was always working for someone else. Last year, Jackson and several partners purchased a vacant lot near 18th Street and Racine Avenue, transforming the space into an urban garden in the heart ofPilsen.
He called the garden The Pleasant House, named for a home in Northern England's Yorkshire County where his family once lived. The Pleasant House in Britain evoked only pleasant memories for Jackson, with the memories revolving around his grandmother's country orchard and the large wooden kitchen table where Sunday roasts were served.
For the Jacksons, opening their own restaurant, sourcing ingredients from their urban garden and reconnecting with Art's English roots — it all seemed so obvious. And no chef in Chicago had taken on the challenge of workaday British food.
bjt wrote:Hey, does this article articulate that Pleasant House Bakery (now being referred to as PHB here on LTH, land of acronyms) is not in Pilsen but in its Bridgeport location?
bjt
Pleasant House Bakery
964 W. 31st St.; 773-523-7437 pleasanthousebakery.com
Open: 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday; 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Friday-Saturday; noon-8 p.m. Sunday; closed Monday
bjt wrote:Hey, does this article articulate that Pleasant House Bakery (now being referred to as PHB here on LTH, land of acronyms) is not in Pilsen but in its Bridgeport location?
bjt
kevin pang, chicago tribune wrote:Their 3-month-old restaurant, Pleasant House Bakery in Bridgeport, fills a void you didn't know needed to be filled, offering a classically trained chef's take on blue-collar British cooking.
Cathy2 wrote:Hi,
If the traffic hadn't been so slow moving, I would have seen you last night. Was there any wait to get in?
Regards,
Cathy2 wrote:Hi,
If the traffic hadn't been so slow moving, I would have seen you last night. Was there any wait to get in?
Regards,