From: ChgoMike
Post subject: Re: Openings, Closings, Comings & Goings, April - June 2010
Posted: Tue May 18, 2010 9:47 pm nsxtasy wrote:
There's a banner on the front of Phoenix Inn in Evanston that they are re-opening tomorrow, May 11. (I think they were temporarily closed due to a fire.) I was chatting with a friend this past weekend who hails from near Sichuan Province. He tells me that Phoenix Inn has a new Sichuan chef and the specialties are "80% authentic" and much better than pre-fire fare. I haven't been, though I intend to stop by sometime this week.
---------------------------
I haven't been to the Phoenix Inn since it reopened in May, so I can't comment on the new chef or the quality of the food since the restaurant rose again from the ashes. But a new carry-out menu was dropped in my mailbox yesterday, and some changes are obvious. While the "lunch specials" list contained all the usual suspects, the roster of individual entrees was more extensive, especially in the seafood and pork categories. Under seafood, for example, we have sea cucumber offered two ways: with grilled onions and in brown sauce (as well as iron flog legs--hmmmm....). The pork list now offers spicy pork intestine with tofu, pork stomach and scallion, pork intestine with garlic bolt, and spicy and aromatic pig blood--plus bullies pork intestine (???), among others. I'm sure none of these was on the old, pre-fire menu. There are also some lamb dishes I don't remember from the old menu: lamb with pickled pepper, lamb stir-fried with cumin spice.... Might be worth a return visit....
PS. Down memory lane: Phoenix Inn was where, as a Northwestern freshman many years ago, I ate my first "real" Chinese food. Before that, my "Chinese" dining was limited to the pork or beef chop suey my mother made from leftover roast and that Chung King canned combo of 1/mixed vegetables and 2/crispy chow mein noodles--plus LaChoy soy sauce.
"Life is a combination of magic and pasta." -- Federico Fellini
"You're not going to like it in Chicago. The wind comes howling in from the lake. And there's practically no opera season at all--and the Lord only knows whether they've ever heard of lobster Newburg." --Charles Foster Kane, Citizen Kane.