So we went back to Aurora on Saturday to visit another
Tourist Attraction No One Knows About-- the
Aurora Regional Fire Museum. I highly recommend this to anyone with kids of an age where fire engines are right up there among the coolest things on earth-- it's the original Aurora fire station, complete with poles, stables, a pre-computer-age alarm system (how did they know, in 1920, which fire alarm was going off? This will show you), a tower to hang wet hoses in (never thought about how they keep the hoses from mildewing, did you?), old-fashioned sirens the kids get to crank, and half a dozen restored vintage fire engines. Ironically, and a little sadly, at the end of the tour they said something about raising money to put in computer kiosks and interactive exhibits "to make it more interesting to kids." Hey, I have a dumb old computer in my home-- what I don't have is a brass pole to slide down and a hand-cranked siren loud enough to wake the dead. If that isn't interesting to kids, what the HELL is?
Anyway, for lunch and dinner we pretty much did the Dicksond Western Suburbs Classic Tour. I had a vague idea of trying some of his recent Taqueria discoveries in Aurora itself, but when we stopped for gas near West Chicago I thought, we're here, this probably isn't the time to experiment, let's try By-By's again. I wasn't wild about the chivo this time-- what I got was very fatty and connective tissue-y-- but everybody else had gorditas or huaraches with all the fresh-fried masa goodness you could wish for, and pronounced themselves very happy.
After much aimless toodling (found a great Lionel train store in Oswego, the kids couldn't understand why I didn't immediately snatch up the Scrooge McDuck gold bar car for a mere $150), for dinner we first thought Katy's but, remembering that we had been there about 8 times this past year, and hadn't been to
Fabulous Noodles since discovering Katy's, decided to hit that old GNR favorite for its beloved Yu Noodles Indonesian style, which were thoroughly enjoyed that night, and again the next day.
Someday we will go back, find the mysterious airplane museum which was most certainly NOT at the address we had found online, and try some of Dicksond's
taquerias-- we passed by both Los Cabritos, which is in the kind of pointy building that bespeaks a 60s Mr. Swiss or something, and El Pollo Giro, which has moved out of its van (still parked in front) and appears to be operating happily in the strip mall.
Aurora Regional Fire Museum
Corner of New York and Broadway (Rt. 25), Aurora
(630) 892-1572
By-By's
142 W Washington St., West Chicago
630-562-1710
Fabulous Noodles
4663 Old Tavern Rd
Lisle
630-305-8868
Ageless Classics Museum of Transportation
100 S. River (not that we could see), Aurora
(630) 466-0888