Breakfast Is For Suckers
After reading the recent
post about being charged $18 for two slices of toast and ice water or whatever it was at some recently opened joint in Andersonville, I feel compelled to return to the scene of early curmudgeonry on the subject of breakfast.
There is no place more likely to be busy in restaurantdom than a breakfast place in a popular neighborhood on Saturday or Sunday morning, and I am one of those inevitably lined up waiting to get into such places (though it is the one benefit of the kids waking up early that we usually beat the worst of the crush by a half hour or so). Am I satisfied with the simple, yet nevertheless occasionally bungled, items I get? Sometimes. Moreso than the person who got two eggs made of Superball and coffee inexplicably sweetened with Karo in that other thread, I guess. A few breakfast reports on places mostly not previously talked about here (at least for this meal):
Angel Food Bakery
The cute-as-can-be muffin place turns out to have been serving breakfast on weekends for about a year. You order at the counter, they bring it out, but despite being not so much a table service place, everything moved very efficiently. I thought a veggie scramble was rather bland, but French toast with orange marmalade syrup went over big with the kids, as did the Easy-Bake ovens and selection of kids' books (they revisited several old favorites like "In The Night Kitchen").
Milk & Honey Cafe
Another bakery and restaurant where you stand and order first. It was so packed though I resented having to fight my way to fetch my own coffee and such a bit. On the other hand I took delight in ordering bacon from the waitress wearing a "don't eat pig" T-shirt. Try and stop me, copper! Again, my savory dish (some sort of baked huevos rancheros casserole thing) was blandish and produced a substantial puddle at its bottom, but French toast or whole wheat nut something or other pancakes went over much better.
Curio Cafe
There's a lot to like about
this place-- the sunny hideaway location in the middle of a residential block opposite a church, the friendly owners, the play area for little kids. It's a nice little discovery except for the fact that the food proved pretty ordinary, homemade in the "no better than I could make myself" sense more than the "warm thoughts of Mom" sense. Still, it's breakfast, order carefully to ensure non-screwupable items and you can't really get hurt.
Meli Cafe
MJN recommended this Greektown spot in one of his
columns, about breakfast places better than Lou Mitchell's. Well, he has a higher tolerance for froufy breakfast than I do, naming a number of places I really don't think are worth the money (Orange, Tweet, etc.) but in this case, a high tab (over $60 for four, which borders on outrageous) was nevertheless justified by really high quality freshmade food, down to homemade preserves. If someone is staying downtown and you want to impress, this is the improvement you want over the hotel breakfast they'll suggest-- and maybe they'll be able to expense it.
Angel Food Bakery
1636 W. Montrose Ave., Chicago
(773) 728-1512
Milk and Honey Cafe
1920 W. Division Ave., Chicago
(773) 395-9434
Curio Cafe
3400 N. Lawndale, Chicago
(773) 463-2233
Meli Cafe & Juice Bar
301 S. Halsted, Chicago
(312) 454-0748