DH et al:
Here are some other hopes for our native territory -
- Beignets and coffee at
Nola's Cup. Their muffaletta is still quite weak but man can they do deep fried, and are finally coming up to speed on some other entrees (pretty decent gumbo, and a nice pork shoulder special).
- the Pilsen specials menu at
Fuego Loco. They had it on May 5th and again over Memorial Day. Shockingly, someone at this yuppified Tex-Mex marg-joint finally hired a cook with some pride, as we had excellent cumin-lamb tacos, ceviche, and pulled roast chicken with three kinds of hot sauteed peppers. Their salsas are improving as well along with the service. The tasty 'carne caliente' with all of the sauteed peppers and garlic butter, does strongly remind me of something I had in Playa del Carmen - admittedly not the most traditional area in the country - but order it with the tortillas separate or you'll be dripping.
- Moroccan plates du jour at
Hemmingway's Bistro. I had a marvelous lamb with home-made couscous pearls and preserved lemon in April, and have noticed other lemon and harissa-laced specials of late.
- Saltimbocca at the
Pasta Shoppe - you must admit it's a very pretty room with all of the hardwood, but I'll understand if the very poor overcooked chicken entrees have disappointed in the past. Their fresh pastas are usually solid, and I've had a few above average items recently, including a nice saltimbocca and a very spicy arrabiata.
Otherwise, yes, it's fairly dismal. I never want to go to the Avenue / Alehouse / Whatever again after their burgers and fries went from moist and tasty to frozen Sysco crud. Cafe le Coq did suck for a little while (gristly steak, oversalted cassoulet, no specials) but seems to be returning. Completely disenchanted with the cuisine at La Majada and the prices at Nuevo Rebozo, though Paco is affable and occasionally the pipian verde mole special or tortilla soup with frijoles negros can hit the spot. Winberie is just not there anymore, especially for brunch. They still make what I consider a good Caesar salad and an excellent Bloody Mary. Erik's has one reasonable sandwich to my mind - roast beef with french-fried onions on a croissant - but they have no good condiments to accompany (horseradish mayo, good Dijon mustard, any good barbecue sauce) and just about everything else there is dull beyond words. I always want to give Robison's BBQ another chance but have been affronted by surly or incompetent order takers and gloppy undercooked pork far too many times. Mama Thai makes me weep at the possibilities gone wrong (worst.beef.salad.evAr.)
My guilty pleasures that offer sustenance but not really hope are Carnitas crispy tacos from
Chipotle, the 'thai ravioli' bowl from
Penny's (lots of peanuts, roast pork, sweet chile oil, dumplings), and a very few dishes from
Szechwan Beijing (sic), including the salt and pepper chicken and Mongolian beef (well-spiced, although the meat quality isn't uniform).
I have to remind myself that other places I frequent - Parky's, Amarind, Wishbone at Fitzgeralds, Johnnie's, Freddy's, La Piazza - are not actually in Oak Park even though you could hit most of them with a 3-wood from our borders. I have some hopes for Harrison Street (Buzz and the new place). Perhaps we can do a tour of the surrounding highlights sometime soon.