Sunday, I was unable to attend the LTH picnic because work required me to be in my office all day. My NEW office, that is, located at LaSalle and Lake, a far cry from the west-Loop boondocks of Canal and Monroe I inhabited for the past 13 years. Hah! A newly-minted sophisticate, in zip 606
01, no less. Anyway, I'm learning what's available here, and Sunday, my boss and I decided it would be Ronnie's.
Now, I've known about Ronnie's and its dirt-cheap steak dinners for years. But until Sunday, I had never eaten in one of their outlets. Going back to 1988, when my pal James Moriarty was a freshman at the Art Institute, stationed in a Soviet Blok style dorm in the Crown Center. In addition to witnessing the filming of the exploding toy store scene from the original Child's Play movie directly across from his dorm window, James had easy access to Ronnie's III. Visiting him on bleak pre-South Loop gentrification winter days, I came, I saw, but I did not ever conquer Ronnie's III, mainly because at the time I was a vegetarian, but the failure to connect with Ronnie's went on for another 18 years ... until this Sunday.
This is, I believe, the new home of the original Ronnie's that was located at the northwest corner of State and Randolph, now occupied by Borders Books (no wonder all the pages stick together on the books I purchase there!). So, anyway, Ronnie's has now moved into a space in the State of Illinois building (oops ... I mean the "Thompson Center"). Sunday, about 1:30 p.m., and we walk in and note the special of the day, $7.99 for a complete smothered pork chop dinner. Who could resist? Not us, that's for sure. Turns out the only difference between the "special" and the regular pork chop dinner served every day is the addition of a plastic bullet of jarred applesauce, but hey ... it's still a good deal. (There is a pervasive feeling of upselling, deception, and carny-ness to the whole Ronnie's mise en scene. For example, the servers ask all innocently if you'd like some corn on the cob with your meal, like it's a free option, and then turns out to be a half ear that sells for
$1.19(!). So just know you've been warned and ask what things cost if you want to keep it on the really cheap side).
And what of those pork chops? First off, they were wonderfully breaded and fried; despite it being 1:30 on a Sunday afternoon, the pork chops seemed like they had been pretty freshly prepared, and not sitting on the steam table more than a few minutes. Then, the gravy was pretty tasty, too, if nothing extraordinary; it was just a good complement to the chops and the mashed potatoes. Oh, did I fail to mention the mashed potatoes? Surprisingly -- shockingly, perhaps -- these were simply perfect examples of the mashed potato genre. Lush texture but firm; creamy but mainly potato flavor; silky richness ... all were there, and, I certainly would not have expected it. Almost worth the whole 8 bucks in themselves. But, there was also an OK hunk of garlic bread (tasted like fake butter, but the garlic was real and hey, more starch!) and a simple salad. And, oh yes, that bullet of cheap canned applesauce. And did we want steamed onions with that? Need you ask? Indeed, so. (And no up-charge for the onions, surprisingly enough.)
All I can say is, it exceeded my expectations. Maybe my expectations have become too low from 13 years at Canal and Monroe, but I know I was a happy camper on Sunday (even if I was stuck in the office with my boss the whole day and well into the night ...). So, yeah, Ronnie's feels a bit creepy, like it was beamed down from Fremont Street in Las Vegas or pre-Disney Times Square, but it does have a certain Chicago southside home-cooking sensibility, despite its pseudo-corporate trappings and the egregious up-selling tactics of the servers. I think I may hit them up at breakfast time and see how that goes.
[Edited 9/28 to correct spelling of "Ronny's" for the benefit of posterity.]
Last edited by
JimInLoganSquare on September 28th, 2006, 7:10 pm, edited 4 times in total.
JiLS