Mike G wrote:I mean that denying people the ability to use terms such as "Schaumburg Chinese" to perfectly encapsulate a certain form of dining is as bad as denying them the right to say that a barbecue place is real ghetto, that a southern food place is authentic redneck, that a Mexican place is straight from over the border, that an Italian place happens to share a name with a long-ago gangster. It's the kind of hypersensitivity that ultimately creates more barriers and discourages the open sampling of different food cultures
for fear of offense.
I don't deny that there are bland chain restaurants in the suburbs, although I have certainly
demonstrated that there's a lot more besides. You requested an "an actual example of this prejudice
everybody keeps pointing to"; I provided a quotation that used "suburban" as a slur. Your response is that, since "great amounts of plastic chain dining exists in the suburbs," that use is just fine. To me, that's akin to saying that since there are so many illegal aliens, it's OK to refer to all immigrants as "wetbacks."
I would also suggest that anyone who equates "suburban" with "gentility" has a very naive and limited view of the suburbs.
If you want to believe that I'm hypersensitive to consider that the use of "suburban" as a synonym for "bland and chainlike" unfairly condemns a broad swath of diverse communities and therefore demonstrates disrespectful prejudice, so be it.
Mike G wrote:How was your tour of Milwaukee Ave. for the eGullet folks? I remember telling RST about that area, years ago. He had the usual prejudices about anything outside the city but I told him, look past the Best Buy and the Penney's, you've got Polish delis and middle eastern and Filipino and all kinds of stuff being carried out there as immigrants settle in the burbs. Fascinating area. Maybe you should tell LTHForum about it, too.
Milwaukee Avenue is a very long street, stretching from River West in Chicago to Gurnee. While I have taken various folks on tours of different parts of it, for the recent eGullet Gathering, I led a tour of Niles, which included a few stops on Milwaukee, but other areas as well.
I and others have covered Niles fairly well on this site. Indeed, the restaurant referred to in the quotation we've been discussing is in Niles, along with highly acclaimed places like Siam's House and the Himalayan, plus H-Mart and a wide variety of other food stores.
However, here's an overview of the area:
Super markets: Niles' plethora of ethnic grocers makes town food-shopping mecca