Apparently, Wicker Park needs not one, but two, serious cocktail bars. The Exchange recently opened on "Lower" Milwaukee Avenue, in a rather desolate stretch across from the cavernous strip mall/office building adjacent to the Jewel parking lot. The Exchange recently has been written up in
Tasting Table, and
Time Out Chicago.
I was pretty impressed by the cocktails at this place, which has decor that is -- keep with me here -- slightly more spartan and spiffier than Bar DeVille, but much more casual than The Violet Hour. For me, The Exchange's draw is that Peter Vestinos (who launched Sepia to cocktail fame), crafted the cocktail menu. For those who remember his drinks at Sepia, I think The Exchange's menu shows someone who is honing his craft and becoming more sophisticated -- the drinks at The Exchange have all the flourish and execution inherent in Sepia's serious craft cocktailing under Vestinos, but unlike Sepia (whose menu served as sort of Cocktailing 102, a step above the classics, so to speak), the cocktails at The Exchange push the boundaries more. (I do not mean this as a slight on Vestinos' tenure at Sepia -- but if you recall that he was there some two years ago, and craft cocktails were fairly new on the Chicago scene (back then, it was really only him and TVH), the cocktail game has definitely been upped in 2010.)
For example, the Smoke and Mirrors, which includes lapsong-souchong tea-infused tequila, lime and egg whites (the tea is supplied by noted tea slinger, Marcus Rodrick, aka Rare Tea Cellar), falls just on the pleasant side of smoky. "The 75," a riff on the French 75, includes Belgian ale and is refreshingly spritzy. Not as successful are the Negroni v. Negroni, two variations of the classic drink, one known as "The Champ," the other as "The Challenger." Neither includes the usual Campari. In fact, after just reading the ingredients (which I cannot now recall), neither looks like the usual Negroni on paper. After telling the bartender that I prefer a more bitter Negroni (heavy on the Campari), he steered me to The Challenger, which is "more robust" due to the inclusion of bitter-ish Cynar, an artichoke liqueur. I see where The Exchange is going with it, but if I blind-tasted this drink, I would not peg it as a Negroni. (Maybe I'm just a classicist at heart.)
Some might think it heresy that The Exchange has not one, but two, vodka drinks on the menu (The Exchange Cocktail uses Death's Door; none of them use Belvedere). But a Bulleit bourbon drink, as well as the creativity of the drink menu, should make up for what some might consider a misstep. I noticed a couple of punches on the menu, which looked interesting, and are served in vintage cut-glass bowls. My inner Charles Dickens is excited about the prospect of drinking punch; so I'll have to go back to sample them.
The Exchange serves only drinks (no food). I do not know what their policy is on bring food into the bar, but Tocca is right next door, and I would imagine that would make for a nice 1-2 punch. I haven't tried enough of the cocktails at The Exchange to predict where it will fall in the TVH-Bar DeVille-Whistler-Drawing Room pecking order, but, at this point, it seems promising.
The Exchange
1270 N. Milwaukee Ave
Chicago IL 60622
(773) 342-5282
http://www.theexchangebar.com