eatchicago wrote:greygardens wrote:One thing I've been unable to find in Chicago is Detroit style Coney Dogs. Yuuuummmmmy!
Can you please describe a Detroit-style Coney Dog for those of us who are not familiar with the particulars?
Best,
Michael
greygardens wrote:Addendum: I've never ever seen it done with cheese in Detroit. I think its more of a Cincinatti thing to do that, maybe?
greygardens wrote:One thing I've been unable to find in Chicago is Detroit style Coney Dogs. Yuuuummmmmy!
I've long been under the impression that Greek and Cincinnati chilis are the same beast given that they both spring from Greek diner food.
dddane wrote:being from the st.louis area, I miss St. Louis / Imo's style pizza... Its very unique and unlike anything else... the cheese is Provel, which is a mixture of provolone, white cheddar, and swiss, with some smokeyness. the sauce and crust are unique as well... i have a receipe, which gives a pretty good replication, if anyone is interested..
I've looked and looked, and I just can't find Provel cheese here in Chicago.
jimswside wrote:A good Philly Cheesesteak has eluded me for years since a place in Naperville closed. Ive had Philly's Best, and it didnt do it for me. I have pretty much given up hope of finding one.
BR wrote:mrefjl wrote:I was always a big fan of PB's until I finally got to Philly. I still like them, but less. Eastern style pizza on Touhy has better cheesesteaks - sometimes - rather inconsistent. PB's does have the tasty cakes in their corner.
Not sure I can agree. I am originally from NJ and have spent the better part of my life devouring cheesesteaks in Philly and I find that Philly's Best (at least the one on Belmont) measures up very well to the Philly versions. Sure the bread is different, but not terribly and PB makes a damn good sandwich. And oh those Tastycakes!
Panther in the Den wrote:
What is missing so we can attempt to find one that might be closer?
Thanks in advance!
jimswside wrote:Panther in the Den wrote:
What is missing so we can attempt to find one that might be closer?
Thanks in advance!
I found the PB version to be dry, with not enough onions, and just not up to what I took for granted. Like a good IB sandwich you should have to lean away from a Philly steak when eating it, so the melting cheese, and grease doesn't get on you. I have ony been to the one on Belmont, and was considering giving the Greektown one a final shot.
Panther in the Den wrote:I do frequent the one on Milwaukee and it is a glorious gloppy mess. Not dry at all.
I would give that one a shot. Might even meet you to indulge.
Philly's Best
2436 N Milwaukee Ave
Chicago, IL 60647
(773) 276-1900
Once again deep fried chicken places are a dime a dozen. What is hard to find is a place that will take the time and care to fry them up in a pan. Better yet to have them do the traditional and have the brine and then buttermilk presoaks.
whiskeybent wrote:Once again deep fried chicken places are a dime a dozen. What is hard to find is a place that will take the time and care to fry them up in a pan. Better yet to have them do the traditional and have the brine and then buttermilk presoaks.
I doubt they brine or use buttermilk, but does Laschett's pan-fry their chicken? They seem like they might.
Now, that would be worth a special trip. I have eaten a ton o' kufta kebabs, but (with possibly the exception of the now defunct Cafe Suron), have never seen them cooked over actual charcoal. The Albawadi website claims the meat is cooked on a "mesquite grill" which might mean that wood chips are tossed on a gas flame (hopefully not). If anyone knows of a kebab place that uses real lump charcoal, I would be interested also.Habibi wrote:Speaking of charcoal -
We are desperately in need of (IMO anyways) a Middle Eastern/Turkish/Central Asian place that cooks kebabs over live coals. These types of places are not all that uncommon in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn and parts of Queens. Nothing beats kofta kebab or lamb liver kabob (or even better lamb fat!!! kabob) tinged with real smoke.
The closest I have come here is Khan BBQ, which is simply stupendous.
The recent thread on Bridgeview Middle Eastern, however, revealed this interesting lead - Albawadi Grill, whose website (http://www.albawadigrill.com/) claims that they use "Nature Fire Wood" to cook their meats. Sounds very intriguing...........
The recent thread on Bridgeview Middle Eastern, however, revealed this interesting lead - Albawadi Grill, whose website (http://www.albawadigrill.com/) claims that they use "Nature Fire Wood" to cook their meats. Sounds very intriguing..........
Cool. Sounds like it's worth the trip. Do any of the joints along Kedzie or Devon use real coal?Mike G wrote:The recent thread on Bridgeview Middle Eastern, however, revealed this interesting lead - Albawadi Grill, whose website (http://www.albawadigrill.com/) claims that they use "Nature Fire Wood" to cook their meats. Sounds very intriguing..........
I have yet to go back in the kitchen but Pigmon was just there and says they do indeed cook over coals.