sundevilpeg wrote:There are also two Cali locations of Al's - one in Chino (east of LA, vaguely in the Ontario area), and one in San Jose.
ronnie_suburban wrote:Tim wrote:Why doesn't somebody change the title of this discussion?
That's completely up to the OP.
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for the Moderators
ronnie_suburban wrote:Tim wrote:Why doesn't somebody change the title of this discussion?
That's completely up to the OP.
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for the Moderators
Tim wrote:What is the "OP"?
zoid wrote:Original Poster or Original Post
zoid wrote:I believe Ronnie's point was that if the original poster (in this case spinynorman99) wants to change the title he can but the mods will leave that decision up to him.
Roger Ramjet wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote:Tim wrote:Why doesn't somebody change the title of this discussion?
That's completely up to the OP.
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for the Moderators
from the American Heritage Dictionary of Idioms:
sell out 1. Dispose of entirely by selling.
Note that this is the first (i.e., primary) definition given.
It's also, for what it's worth, the first (and only) meaning I thought of, since the context makes it clear that the business owner in question is indeed selling his business, rather than compromising the quality of his products for the sake of profit (a secondary meaning of the expression).
Kman wrote:Granted, more searching can find references that associate the same term with "clearing the shelves" type of actual sale process but I'd offer (with no scientific basis to support this) that the average reader of this thread associates the term "selling out" with the more negative connotations offered by Wikipedia and Urban Dictionary. I know I do.
ronnie_suburban wrote:zoid wrote:I believe Ronnie's point was that if the original poster (in this case spinynorman99) wants to change the title he can but the mods will leave that decision up to him.
Yes . . . or her in this case, if I'm not mistaken. It's not a Moderator decision.
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Kman wrote:Roger Ramjet wrote:
from the American Heritage Dictionary of Idioms:
sell out 1. Dispose of entirely by selling.
Note that this is the first (i.e., primary) definition given.
It's also, for what it's worth, the first (and only) meaning I thought of, since the context makes it clear that the business owner in question is indeed selling his business, rather than compromising the quality of his products for the sake of profit (a secondary meaning of the expression).
If, as it appears, we are veering into pedantry let's at least, then, be accurate. The OP's title uses the term "selling out", NOT "sell out".
<snip>
Granted, more searching can find references that associate the same term with "clearing the shelves" type of actual sale process but I'd offer (with no scientific basis to support this) that the average reader of this thread associates the term "selling out" with the more negative connotations offered by Wikipedia and Urban Dictionary. I know I do.
However, several readers reacted - judging by the torch & pitchfork waving . . .
bnowell724 wrote:I give Roger Ramjet the win.
from the American Heritage Dictionary of Idioms:
sell out 1. Dispose of entirely by selling.
Note that this is the first (i.e., primary) definition given.
It's also, for what it's worth, the first (and only) meaning I thought of, since the context makes it clear that the business owner in question is indeed selling his business, rather than compromising the quality of his products for the sake of profit (a secondary meaning of the expression).
spinynorman99 wrote:Looks like the local chain will soon have new outsider corporate overlords:
Bster wrote:Portillo's hot dogs have a distinct flavor profile that I haven't quite encountered elsewhere.
ronnie_suburban wrote:I think of Portillo's as an approximation of genuine hot dog stands, burger joints and Italian beef shops. It feels touristy. Everything rates a B or a C. There are no A's served there. Whatever corporate modifications the buyer puts in effect will likely be unnoticeable. This chain is already firmly in the volume over quality zone.
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eating while walking wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote:I think of Portillo's as an approximation of genuine hot dog stands, burger joints and Italian beef shops. It feels touristy. Everything rates a B or a C. There are no A's served there. Whatever corporate modifications the buyer puts in effect will likely be unnoticeable. This chain is already firmly in the volume over quality zone.
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I disagree about this. When it comes to beefs Portillo's is firmly in my top tier chain or no. There are only a handful of independent beef places that serve a better sandwich in my opinion and even those places will put out a clunker from time to time. On the other hand Portillos beef is always very good, sometimes great, and never bad.
Same with their excellent dogs. They are really set apart by attention to detail in assembly, with just enough of everything, all neatly capped off by the pickle spear which holds everything else in place. You get a little of every ingredient in every bite at Portillos, I've only had a better dog at Poochies and Jeff's Red Hots, that's it.
ronnie_suburban wrote:I'm intrigued by your comments. Which stores do you frequent? I find Old Orchard and River North to be consistently just ok. Maybe I'm hitting the wrong locations.
eating while walking wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote:I'm intrigued by your comments. Which stores do you frequent? I find Old Orchard and River North to be consistently just ok. Maybe I'm hitting the wrong locations.
Let me consult the beef files...
OK, the Portillos I go to most is the River North location. I agree it is very touristy but every time I go I have a good-to-great meal.
To my taste, better beefs than Portillos can only be found at 6 places: Al's, Johnnie's, Bob O's, Bari's, Scatchell's, and Frannie's in Schiller Park.
ronnie_suburban wrote:As a fan, how concerned are you about prospective changes under the new ownership?
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eating while walking wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote:As a fan, how concerned are you about prospective changes under the new ownership?
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Hm, not very concerned to be honest. I hesitate to geek out even more about Portillos but I think their kitchen workflow process is quite impressive. If the new owners can resist the temptation to tinker with the well oiled machine the place should do just fine.