Dmnkly wrote:I don't know if they're affiliated, but while I haven't been to the Taylor location, my folks live near the one up north and my father says their beef is awful. Single trip, but take that for what it's worth.
This is...not the same as the Patio Beef near the Edgewater Dominick's, right? Just checking.
cilantro wrote:I've had both and can definitely appreciate the difference. But even a good Italian beef is not something I'm ever likely to crave. I think it's the kind of thing you need to have grown up eating to really enjoy. Kind of like Bill McNeal and his sandwiches....
Kman wrote:For Suzy - go to Johnnie's. It's that good. If you find you don't care for it then you can say with certainty that IB is just not for you, and that's OK. At least any doubt about whether you had tried the "right" IB places will have been removed. I like mine dipped and hot, and Johnnie's is IMO the absolute best (even though it's a pain to get to from this Albany Park resident, it's worth it).
I wonder if most of the folks who really like ib are also proponents of hot giardiniera.
Santander wrote:Alternatively, start with a beef and sausage combo. You like Italian sausage, yes? Try Johnnie's combo (dipped, and loaded with peppers), and then the next time order it with no sausage
elakin wrote:I wonder if most of the folks who really like ib are also proponents of hot giardiniera.
i don't think so. i grew up eating IB's dipped, no peppers, and loved them. it's only since i've been an adult that i've added giardiniera to my standard order. but i agree, now, that the giardiniera really makes the whole thing work.
am a transplanted Californian who loves the food and variety Chicago offers (although I still mourn the superior sourdough). I would gladly sing the praises of Chicago food over anything Berkeley or SF can offer. I've even learned to like some of the charming local specialties, like that pizza casserole thing and a proper Chicago dog.
However. I have tried several variations on the Italian Beef theme and all I can come up with is...I don't get it. Why is this sandwich so popular?
Suzy Creamcheese wrote:Hot and dipped, you say?
seebee wrote:food for thought -
I wonder if most of the folks who really like ib are also proponents of hot giardiniera. I do like ib, but it certainly just is NOT an excellent ib unless my nose is sweating. Sure, the beef is obviously an integral part, but the salty/oily/hot contrast that the giardiniera brings makes the sammich sing for me. An ib with weak or bad or no giardiniera is really kinda uninspiring. The sweet peppers are NOT a substitute, imo. Might be part of the reason I like Tore's so much. The beef is not as heavily salted..er, I mean um, seasoned, but the giardiniera will sizzle you.
ucjames wrote:Actually, IB might be my personal defining food for Chicago. At times when I'm traveling for extended periods, I find I can generally track down an acceptable pizza eventually. Probably not Chicago-style, but there are certainly other worthy styles of pizza and I can usually find at least one. I might not be able to find a Chicago-style hot dog everywhere I go, but I can usually find something that will satisfy a hot dog craving. But Italian beef?! Fuhgeddaboutit.
All right, it looks like Al's is the closest to me (not too far from work) so that's the one I will try first. Hot and dipped, you say?
ListenerCh wrote:A beef has to have peppers!!!
I won't eat a beef sandwich unless I have hot giardineria, and enough of it so that I can put some on each and every single bite..
Without the peppers the beef is too one-dimensional and boring. I have no idea how and why some people eat it without giardinera, but I know plenty of people who do.
Da Beef wrote:ListenerCh wrote:A beef has to have peppers!!!
I won't eat a beef sandwich unless I have hot giardineria, and enough of it so that I can put some on each and every single bite..
Without the peppers the beef is too one-dimensional and boring. I have no idea how and why some people eat it without giardinera, but I know plenty of people who do.
Your dead on about that. In fact the hot peppers a place serves is one of the big factors in the taste and texture of the beef and just how good the place is. For example peppers from Chickies, Al's, Johnnies and Carm's in Hillside are all totally different and make for a unique taste to that stands beef. If you ate them all plain they would have a very similar taste. There are days when I find myself fiending for a beef from pop's because of the hot peppers and then there are days when I want a beef from Carm's for their amazing giardinara.
ucjames wrote:The differences between those stands' beefs may be too subtle for your unrefined, pepper-loving palates on their own, but they are there, believe me
ucjames wrote:The differences between those stands' beefs may be too subtle for your unrefined, pepper-loving palates on their own, but they are there, believe me
stevez wrote:ucjames wrote:The differences between those stands' beefs may be too subtle for your unrefined, pepper-loving palates on their own, but they are there, believe me
My palate is very pepper loving, but I can taste the difference easily. In fact, there is at least one place on that list that I don't think even rates consideration as an acceptable beef...peppers or not.