adipocere wrote:Just thinking about old fast food chains..... anyone recall Yankee Doodle Dandy? Their steak sandwich was off the chain- they had a steak sauce that was beefy, a little sweet, and I guess we'd say today, umami. Their fried chicken was pretty good as well. The fries were crinkle cut, and allegedly fried in an oil which contained beef fat.
I'd drop by and eat there again, if someone ever reopened the chain with the same menu.
Starting in 1981, the Proyce family decide to withdraw from the fast food industry and refocus their efforts in casual dining restaurant and bar industry through the conversion of two of the company owned Yankee Doodles in Elmhurst and Arlington Heights into the new Bailey's Restaurant & Bar concept while closing the rest of the fast food operations.[4] Eventually a total of four Bailey's Restaurant & Bar were opened by 1988.
Absolutely, bunky.adipocere wrote: Just thinking about old fast food chains..... anyone recall Yankee Doodle Dandy? Their steak sandwich was off the chain- they had a steak sauce that was beefy, a little sweet, and I guess we'd say today, umami. Their fried chicken was pretty good as well. The fries were crinkle cut, and allegedly fried in an oil which contained beef fat.
I'd drop by and eat there again, if someone ever reopened the chain with the same menu.
pudgym29 wrote:After scrounging the week's music radio surveys from WLS, WCFL, WBMX, and the "Galgano Distributors" Soul Survey from the Metro Music store in the mall, instead of eating anything from a mall purveyor (to be honest, aside from the United Audio Centers shop, I cannot recall any other shop therein)...
jnm123 wrote:Had a revelation of sorts the other day. I had heard somewhere that the grinders at Eastern Style Pizza on Touhy just west of California tasted exactly like the ones at the store of the same name that had been shuttered in Skokie for at least 20 years. An Eastern Style beef on garlic bread was my go-to fast food dinner of choice from my high school days in the '70's right up through my twenty-something years, closed arteries notwithstanding.
So I walked into this nondescript, almost barren storefront. And it smelled right--it's amazing how an aroma can bring back memories, hard. The old menu above the grill where every item is squashed in there with pasted characters, all the easier to change prices. Ordered the standard with an RC, and then brought it to my brother's house in Rogers Park for the test. Incredible--nearly a foot long, the hard yet crunchy exterior of the bread, the chopped whatever cut of beef, the salt, the onions, the wisp of tomato sauce. The same taste, the same texture. Only difference now is that I couldn't eat it all, or if I did there would be major repercussions...
I couldn't resurrect Cock Robin, but this was close. All's I needed was a One-In-A-Million shake!
Eastern Style Pizza
2911 W Touhy Ave
Chicago, IL 60645
(773) 761-4070
JoelF wrote:pudgym29 wrote:After scrounging the week's music radio surveys from WLS, WCFL, WBMX, and the "Galgano Distributors" Soul Survey from the Metro Music store in the mall, instead of eating anything from a mall purveyor (to be honest, aside from the United Audio Centers shop, I cannot recall any other shop therein)...
[offtopic]The Century had a very fine store that stocked unusual board games that were far outside both the Milton Bradley family stuff or even Avalon Hill wargames. I don't remember the name, but I do remember picking up some games themed around Lord of the Rings and Elric of Melnibone. [/offtopic] But if I were in that neighborhood, the Creperie was more likely to be my food destination.
jellob1976 wrote:Ricky's at Belmont and Clark (choked on a corn beef on challah when I was 4. A stranger performed the Heimlich on me. I still finished the sandwich afterwards)
Artie wrote:That's because Pillsbury was the original corporate owner.Pie Lady wrote:I also remember having a tin from Poppin' Fresh pies. That must have been thrown out years ago. I think when I was a kid I thought it had something to do with Pillsbury.Bakers Square began in December 1969 with a restaurant called "Mrs. C's" in Des Moines, Iowa, that became popular for its pies.[2] Pillsbury purchased Mrs. C's around that time, renamed it "Poppin' Fresh Pies", and opened additional locations. VICORP, owners of the Village Inn restaurant chain, purchased Poppin' Fresh Pies from Pillsbury in 1983 and renamed the chain Bakers Square.[3]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bakers_Square
lodasi wrote:Como Inn - For some reason this ornate temple to red sauce Italian popped up in my memories.
zoid wrote:lodasi wrote:Como Inn - For some reason this ornate temple to red sauce Italian popped up in my memories.
I was pretty bummed when they closed but my ex-wife was actually moved to tears
Panther in the Den wrote:Cock Robin
A Chicago original, steamed burgers much in the style of White Castle (but bigger and better).
Favorited enough it would always be included in my Festival of Food every birthday.
Memories stretching back to when I was as a preteen tasked with picking up an occasional Saturday dinner, stealing fries from the individual bags on the walk home.
dfishgrl wrote:Also there was a famous, fancy place on Ridge and Pratt and the name escapes me now.