here's some stuff cribbed from various CH posts I've made in the past. However, I can't find the post where I recommended Flower's Pot oxtail. Though I did, I remember menioning the caveat that it wasn't a lot of meat - the pricing however is pretty standard for the caribbean places up here that i've tried 9/10 bucks for a dinner which comes with rice, and side dish.
Jeff, I remember your recommendation of ambassador in the past when i asked about oxtail on CH, it had slipped my mind, but I do inted to try them out, waddya think of La unica's?
San's which is mentioned below, is unfortunately no longer in business
Caribbean American Baking Co.
1539 West Howard
(773) 761-0700
Caribbean-American sells Jerk Chicken (and pork though none was avaialble last night) $6.00 per pound. It's juicy, moist, nicely spice rubbed and hacked to order. It doesn't have much smoke flavor however. the sauce which is the color/consistency of a watery urad dal (sorry my heritage coming out) is flavorful but not one of the real good ones around town - the flavors that come out most are the fruity, sweet tones of scotch bonnet rather than the heat - i would have liked it if it had ccoked down a little more. it comes with a couple slices of the dough bread that you get everywhere (which after all most likely originate from this bakery)
For dessert options We tried a couple of things, brownies for the kids, corn cake (moist buttry really good) and also some banana cake and sweet coconut bread. The banana cake was good but not anything that would beat something brought into the office by a co-worker, the coconut bread was little dry to my taste. Everything is however amazingly cheap. I've previously really really liked their coconut cookies
Spice Garden Cafe
2055 Howard St.
773-262-7096
Going in, I new it porbably wasn't the best place to order jerk chicken as it didn't have the overpowering heavy smell that the best jerk places do, but since I've been on a little kick recently we ordered a jerk chicken as well as on order of oxtail to give it a try.
The jerk was definitely more baked than anything else in a barbecue heavy sauce chunky with onions and stuff, ok, but not really what I want from jerk chicken.
The oxtail was better, (both kids said they liked it better than rancho luna's but not as much as San's or Flower's Pot) I thought it still a little tough and not gelatinous, long cooked enough, but with good flavors.
No ting to be had, but they did have some nice imported and packaged in kingston, frozen in white plastic bottles coconut water, much fresher tasting than some of the canned stuff you find.
Overall I'd say you're better off in the area going to au Rendez vous or Flower's pot for the wetter dishes or Caribbean-American Bakery or Linette's for Jerk.
79th st - Tropic Island, B& B caribbean, Island Delites & Mr. Vigorous roots tonic
The other night a buddy of mine came into town from LA, and we decide to go down to 79th for some jerk chicken tasting, unfortunately time was somewhat limited so we weren't able to get to RST's much praise JR jerk hut on 79th & ashland but we did manage a couple places. At each we had a jerk chicken dinner with rice& peas and cabbage
First off was the sitdown tropic island, as has been said before this is great chicken and even better jerk sauce. My buddies who are haitian-american claimed the sauce was similar to one one of their aunt's made in haiti (Very high praise) cabbage was sweet but still firm
Next was B& B carribean traditions, slighlty further east, also sit down - very nice place, nice atmosphere, good tunes, moist and flavorful chicken, larger serving size than the 1/2 chicken dinner at T.I but the sauce was quite a letdown after tropic island, smoother, sweeter, less flavorful, like having bottled after homemade, in fact we went back to the car and snuck in some of the takeout containers of TI sauce to dip our chicken into.
Whereas we had washed down our tropic island with ting grapefruit soda, at B&B we spied one lone bottle of "mr. Vigorous Roost Tonic" - with a name like that who could resist - when we asked the proprietor if he had enough for all 3 of us - he said "No, that's good, we can't keep any around. The bottle, distibuted by Eve's Importing featured a large jamaican version of Mr. Clean showing off a Mr. Universe Style Bicep. among the ingredients: Chaney root, Sarsparilla, briar root, "Strong back", "4-man strength" --it was kinda good, very carbonated but with a flavor I can't describe - how do you describe something whose main ingredient is Chaney root? Cabbage was longer cooked here and rice mushier
We didn't get to Island Delite but both my buddies had been there previously and described it as similar in quality to B&B and not on par with tropic island
79th in general seems to be quite a worthwile earting zone, beside the places mentioned - Old world pizza has reopened quite close-by, there's Captain's Hard-Time dining and Izola's which both looked pretty interesting and slightly classier, orbit subs etc.
Tropic Island Jerk Chicken Restaurant
419 E 79th St
773-224-7766
also at 1922 E 79th St
B & B Caribbean Traditions
716 E 79th St
(773) 873-1261
Island Delites
2347 E. 75th
(773) 978-3200
I've never eaten at Rootsman corner, but Linnette's is pretty good. There are also some other carribean options in the area (se below), I liked Flower's Pot and Au Rendez Vous very much. At all these places, only 1/3 to 1/2 of the menu may actually be avaialble on any given day, and at Au Rendezvous they run out of the specials early. There's also Carribean-American Bakery, which has jerk and Homestyle Cookin in Evansaton (Which I posted about recently which does Island food on the weekends, but I haven't tried them on the weekend yet)
Au Rendez Vous (Haitian)
337 Howard Street
Evanston
(847) 475-2053
http://www.evanstonillinois.net/aurendez-vous.htm
Last night I finally got around to trying som stuff from Au Rendezvous on Howard St. This place has been praised a few times by RST and Monica Eng noted it in the cabbie story recently.
We called for pick-up around 3:30 or so and already the day's special was running low so we tried a few things of the regular menu:
Griot (Fried Pork)
Poulet (Stewing Chicken)
the poulet was served with a large portion of rice and beans kinda cuban congri style and the griot came with some plantains verte (fried kinda crunchy green plantain discs) and little containers of a picklies (habanero slaw -folks who like the slaw that comes with pupusa will like this)a flavored mayonaise type thing (red pepper?) and a a great dipping pour over sauce for the the little chunks of flavorful fatty pork - Eng described these like "Puerto Rican carne frita but without chewiness" which is about right.
the poulet was pretty flavorful and had a nice sauce (I wish there was a little more of it) though the meat was a little stringy.
Folks are very nice, (they get a kick if you speak french to them) even if when you first walk in it may seem intimidating or that you're the center of attention. A decent option in the area but unless you really want specifically haitian I'm not sure I'd travela cross the city for it.
I'll have to go back early one of these days before the specials run out.