Ginkgo wrote:Many years ago, I think in the early 70s, there was a Mexican restaurant just north of Howard near the el station called La Choza. This was a destination restaurant for Evanston and the North side of Chicago. As I remember there were few Mexican restaurants around the area and it was my introduction to Mexican food. Yesterday I noticed a new?? restaurant on North Clark with the same name. Does anyone know if there is any relationship - I know it's been thirty years but they did have great nachos...
T Comp wrote:I have a fading memory of some rather raucous get togethers at La Choza and want to think it was BYOB also, but not sure. A meal here was always considered a great base for further carousing at the music clubs in Rogers Park (Biddy Mulligans, Minstrels) or back to Lincoln Avenue (Ratso's, Orphans, Wise Fools).
Never made it to the Bakery but used to save up for months to splurge at Le Perroquet. In addition to my first taste of sea bass there, they could mix up the best sazerac I could find outside of New Orleans.
trpt2345 wrote:By the way, La Choza in Spanish means the cabin, the hut, something like that.
I remember the spelling as La ChoSa and, boy, do I miss that restaurant. I hope it's OK to post this link to a recipe website where I've posted my version of the famous La Chosa Kamush:
Rene G wrote:I recall it being spelled La Choza and a quick glance at The Good (But Cheap) Chicago Restaurant Book (1974) by Jill and Ron Rohde bears that out. The restaurant was at 7630 N Paulina. By the way, kamoosh (spelling according to the Rohdes) for two was $1.10 back then.
Rene G wrote:I remember the spelling as La ChoSa and, boy, do I miss that restaurant. I hope it's OK to post this link to a recipe website where I've posted my version of the famous La Chosa Kamush:
I recall it being spelled La Choza and a quick glance at The Good (But Cheap) Chicago Restaurant Book (1974) by Jill and Ron Rohde bears that out. The restaurant was at 7630 N Paulina. By the way, kamoosh (spelling according to the Rohdes) for two was $1.10 back then.
stevez wrote:I'll bet they're in that book, too.
Rene G wrote:stevez wrote:I'll bet they're in that book, too.
Villa Girgenti (7625 N Paulina) gets only fifteen words, with no mention of the pizza: "The place for a meatball sandwich. Big, sloppy, delicious. The eggplant parmigiana's not bad either."
nsxtasy wrote:It was well known in the mid 1970s as "the" place for Mexican food in Chicago. Just as, at that time, "the" place for an affordable splurge meal was Louis Szathmary's The Bakery, with its beef wellington, and the "sky's the limit" meant Jovan Tryboyevich's Le Perroquet, with its tiny elevator from the ground floor to the dining room. But I digress.
rustykatz wrote:I started eating at la choza's in the late 60's. Their kamoosh, steak oaxaca, flautas queso fundido etc. doesn't anyone remember their garlic soup? yum yum yum
toria wrote:I also remember the Dill Pickle west on Howard near Western. Corned beef sandwiches. I think they served popcorn and had a crock of dills on the table.
Rene G wrote:toria wrote:I also remember the Dill Pickle west on Howard near Western. Corned beef sandwiches. I think they served popcorn and had a crock of dills on the table.
Do you mean the Pickle Barrel North on Western near Howard? It was a branch of the original Pickle Barrel in Old Town.
stevez wrote:Rene G wrote:toria wrote:I also remember the Dill Pickle west on Howard near Western. Corned beef sandwiches. I think they served popcorn and had a crock of dills on the table.
Do you mean the Pickle Barrel North on Western near Howard? It was a branch of the original Pickle Barrel in Old Town.
The Pickle Barrels were owned by the Osher family who went on to open Barnum & Bagel in Skokie.
Rene G wrote:The Pickle Barrel was at 1423 N Wells. It was opened in the early 1960s by Leo Osher, who later owned Barnum & Bagel (also discussed above).
Rene G wrote:toria wrote:I also remember the Dill Pickle west on Howard near Western. Corned beef sandwiches. I think they served popcorn and had a crock of dills on the table.
Do you mean the Pickle Barrel North on Western near Howard? It was a branch of the original Pickle Barrel in Old Town.