G Wiv wrote:Uncle John's BBQ is the only other Chicago BBQ joint, aside from Honey 1, using straight (100%) wood with both Barbara Ann's and Lem's using a mix of charcoal and wood.
Santander wrote:Neither is my favorite, certainly, but at discrete moments of time* at least Ribs 'N Bibs on 53rd street in Hyde Park and Smokin M's in Forest Park claimed to have been using exclusively wood-burning "aquarium" smokers.
Rene G wrote:(I don't know about Smokin' M's, plus it's not in Chicago).
LAZ wrote:I don't know what fuel they use, either, but surely denying that Smokin' M's is Chicago barbecue unnecessary, anti-suburban quibbling? I'm surprised that somebody who spends so much time touring the southern suburbs would stoop to it.
I have always assumed that, unless otherwise specified, "Chicago" in the sense of discussion of restaurants on this board, is equivalent to "Chicagoland" and means the entire metropolitan area, especially when used as an adjective.
Santander wrote:The existence of other neighborhood BBQ joints on Chicago's South and West sides that are not covered on our board makes Gary's interesting statement true only for what we know, that is, what is covered on LTHForum, and in Chicago proper, as opposed to the outlying area.
Rene G wrote:First, because when G Wiv referred to "Chicago BBQ joint[s]" I thought it very possible he was speaking only of establishments in the city. Second, because I have little knowledge of suburban barbecue.

Rene G wrote:Clearly the term "Chicago" can be ambiguous. I'm sure I'm not always consistent but when I say Chicago I tend to mean the city proper. I'll often say "in the city" or something similar to avoid confusion. If I'm referring to the whole region I'll often say "Chicago area" or even "Chicagoland."
LAZ wrote:Rene G wrote:Clearly the term "Chicago" can be ambiguous. I'm sure I'm not always consistent but when I say Chicago I tend to mean the city proper. I'll often say "in the city" or something similar to avoid confusion. If I'm referring to the whole region I'll often say "Chicago area" or even "Chicagoland."
I don't think anyone's very consistent, but I rarely see anyone except city dwellers limiting the use of "Chicago" to mean inside-city-limits-only.
Binko wrote:LAZ wrote:Rene G wrote:Clearly the term "Chicago" can be ambiguous. I'm sure I'm not always consistent but when I say Chicago I tend to mean the city proper. I'll often say "in the city" or something similar to avoid confusion. If I'm referring to the whole region I'll often say "Chicago area" or even "Chicagoland."
I don't think anyone's very consistent, but I rarely see anyone except city dwellers limiting the use of "Chicago" to mean inside-city-limits-only.
I'm hesitant to stick my toe in this one, as I am one of your aforementioned Chicago-dwellers and am perhaps proving your point, but it seems reasonable and useful to me that, on a Chicago-area message board, many would make a distinction between Chicago proper and its environs, for geographical informativeness. I personally use the narrow definition of "Chicago" meaning "within city limits" and the more expansive "Chicago area" to mean Chicagoland.
MBK wrote:hm, is edison park chicago or is it just edison park?
ronnie_suburban wrote:I am a suburbanite and when I say "Chicago" I mean the city proper. When I am referring to the entire metro area, I say either "Chicagoland" or "the Chicago area" but I'm just anal that way
LAZ wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote:I am a suburbanite and when I say "Chicago" I mean the city proper. When I am referring to the entire metro area, I say either "Chicagoland" or "the Chicago area" but I'm just anal that way
If you were in, say, Oklahoma, and somebody asked where you live, what would you say?
LAZ wrote:If somebody came on this board and asked, "Where are the best places for Italian beef in Chicago?" would all of you Chicago-means-within-city-limits purists refrain from mentioning Johnnie's? (In a recent discussion elsewhere, one of you -- you know who you are -- brought up Johnnie's when the subject was beef in downtown Chicago!)
ronnie_suburban wrote:I'd say I'm from the "Chicago area."
However, if someone saw me wearing my Cubs hat and asked me if I was from Chicago -- as happened during a recent vacation -- I'd likely say "yes" and not bother getting more specific than that.
stevez wrote:When I tell people in other cities that I'm from Chicago, they often tend to think I mean a suburb of Chicago.
Josephine wrote:In view of the number of posts from visitors to Chicago, it seems a service to those unfamiliar with the city to clarify which establishments are located within the city limits.
LAZ wrote:We have never yet been able to agree on a satisfactory definition of just what constitutes Chicago barbecue, and I doubt we ever will, but to claim that it stops at the city borders is, as I said in my earlier post, quibbling.*
*Although Rene G's explanation of what he was responding to lets him off the hook in that instance.![]()
Josephine wrote:In view of the number of posts from visitors to Chicago, it seems a service to those unfamiliar with the city to clarify which establishments are located within the city limits.
LAZ wrote:FWIW, Binko, when I asked a New York friend to recommend some restaurants in Manhattan, his list mostly concentrated on Queens.
LAZ wrote: But that folks who will blithely tell tourists to head down to 69th Street for barbecue or to Humboldt Park for Mexican food should feel a need to caution them about crossing the city line seems absurd.
Josephine wrote:LAZ wrote: But that folks who will blithely tell tourists to head down to 69th Street for barbecue or to Humboldt Park for Mexican food should feel a need to caution them about crossing the city line seems absurd.
It's not absurd if you weigh public transportation (including taxi availability) into the bargain.
LAZ wrote:But that folks who will blithely tell tourists to head down to 69th Street for barbecue or to Humboldt Park for Mexican food should feel a need to caution them about crossing the city line seems absurd.
Mike G wrote:Isn't charcoal made from wood? So aren't these all woodburning barbecue houses?
LAZ wrote:But that folks who will blithely tell tourists to head down to 69th Street for barbecue or to Humboldt Park for Mexican food should feel a need to caution them about crossing the city line seems absurd.
dddane wrote:i don't know a lot of people who would recommend humboldt park for mexican food (maybe for Maiz?), but can i point out that if they did no city line would be crossed--both of the above are in chicago?
dddane wrote:so one noticeable absence from the above list is Smoque, which has quite a fanfare. I guess the reason for that is obvious... but what exactly do they use? a mix?