Highwood Stop-over: Il Mulino and Miramar
On Saturday, Lucantonius, Amata, and I went on an outing to the north with the intention of a) getting a chance to spend a little time walking in a wooded setting and perhaps also visiting a nice spot on the lake front and b) going to Kenosha and, among other things, visiting a couple of food destinations there. Having gone to Kenosha several times over the past few months via the Eden's and therefore being bored with the prospect of seeing that route again, we decided to go at least much of the way north along Lake Shore and then Sheridan road. Once that was determined, it occurred to me that we would be travelling fairly near Cathy2's stomping grounds and, in particular, the Sicilian bakery in Highwood that she had written of in the best. Highwood, Illinois thus became for us an interim destination on our trip to Chenoscia.
***
Il Mulino is a small bakery -- the actual shop is in any event quite small -- but one which offers a good range of Italian baked goods and even a smattering of Italian grocery items. The two display cases are filled with all manner of delicious looking cookies and pastries and cakes. On a table behind the counter there was a group of large squares of foccaccia dressed with oil and tomato and along the back wall a set of shelves with several piles of Italian bread of various forms.
Our purchases we're: 1) cookies with M&Ms on top, which did not escape the keen eyes of Lucantonius; 2) a
filone (long loaf of basic bread -- flour, water, yeast, salt) which, when sampled later that night back at home in Chicago, turned out to be of excellent quality; 3) two
arancini, that is, balls of rice (saffron coloured) with at the centre a spoonful of a
ragù with tomatoes, ground beef and peas and a chunk of mozzarella, dredged in bread crumbs and fried in olive oil. These arancini were quite delicious and remarkably un-greasy.
All in all, Il Molino looks to be an Italian bakery of high quality and deserving of being more widely known in Chicagoland. Thanks to C2 for bringing this place to our attention.
***
Upon leaving Il Mulino, we all felt it would do well to get something to drink before continuing on our journey. We turned southward, back toward what seemed to be the centre of town and went just a couple of blocks before noting a place that proclaimed itself to be a cafè named the
Miramar.
What drew my eye to Miramar was the lengths to which the management had tried to make the place look like a French cafè. And once one enters the establishment, one sees that this desire to recreate a piece of France in Highwood has been taken to almost absurd -- though also pleasantly musingly -- lengths. The floor tiles, the tables, the chairs, the wait station with piles of baguettes and other breads out in the open, the bar, the hard-boiled eggs on the bar, the cigarette display over the bar, the brands of cigarettes offered in the display over the bar (a couple of kinds both of Gitanes and Gauloises), all the signs, the menu, the sink in the bog, the urinals in the men's bog, etc. You get the picture. The only thing missing was the cleaning lady in the rest room with a dish set out on which to collect the bog-fee.
But there's an odd wrinkle thrown in, namely the sub-theme of things Cuban: in one corner of the place, to the left of the bar, is a corner with some signs referring to Cuba and things Cuban, a picture of Che Guevara and what look to be a beret and Castro-hat hanging up. On the menu, which is almost entirely French in character (bistro style food, especially as imagined in this country) and with a number of the items offered being presented under their French name (e.g.
gratin de macaroni, poulet rôti, etc.), there also appears a 'Cuban Sandwich', on which Cathy2 has reported not too long ago. They also offer a few drinks (mojito, 'Hemingway daquiri') which share in the Cuban sub-theme. Amata also noted that the wait staff was dressed in guayabera shirts (not so typical in France, at least in my experience!) and the Buena Vista Social Club was the musical background to our visit.
All we had was a Perrier, a juice and a double-espresso. The double espresso was delicious but at $4.50 rather overpriced to my mind. Positive reviews have been posted about the food on
egullet and the menu certainly includes lots of nice, fairly simple classic French dishes that I would happily order.
One can't help but wonder why the owner decided to graft the Cuban sub-theme onto this otherwise obsessively French place. I suspect it may just be a little private joke, building on the fact that the name 'Miramar' ('Seaview' in both Occitan/Catalan and Spanish) is the name of a famous hotel in Provence and also a place near Havana.
If we're in the neighbourhood again, we will likely visit both places again.
Antonius (Amataque)
Il Mulino Bakery
530 Sheridan Road
Highwood, IL 60040
847-266-0811
Miramar Bistro
301 Waukegan Avenue
Highwood, IL 60040
847-433-1078
www.miramarbistro.com
Last edited by
Antonius on December 19th, 2005, 11:36 am, edited 2 times in total.
Alle Nerven exzitiert von dem gewürzten Wein -- Anwandlung von Todesahndungen -- Doppeltgänger --
- aus dem Tagebuch E.T.A. Hoffmanns, 6. Januar 1804.
________
Na sir is na seachain an cath.