I worked an hour or so late this evening and since it was so nice outdoors that instead of heading directly for the El for a ride home I decided to wander the neighborhood close to the office. Earlier in the day an unexpected visit to my Dentist took my in front of the location of the new Mexican-themed restaurant
Mercadito at which time I noticed the plywood enclosing the restaurant’s front had been removed and I peeked inside to see the restaurant ready to open. I stopped for a couple of minutes to gaze inside the open doors and one of the employees informed me the restaurant is now open for dinner but not yet for lunch.
From what I’ve read when researching Mercadito on the internet there are three locations in New York City, this new one in Chicago and one to open later in the year in Miami. The Sandoval brothers are the credited as the cooking influences of the business and alcoholic beverage consultant Tippling Bros. directs the liquor sales.
So, walking in the cool early-evening air I decided to head to Mercadito for a first look and to have a couple of cocktails. There were maybe 10 customers in the place at 6:30 but a flurry of activity with more employees than customers, mostly gathered at one of the bar. The facility is one deep and narrow room seating maybe 20 people between the window wall at the entrance and another 50 at tables in the dining area. I later learned the restaurant opened last Friday, for “Family and Friends,” and for anyone else who walked through the door and though little advertising as yet to be launched the restaurant launched its “soft opening” Monday of this week.

My choice of drink was a
Herradura Blanco tequila priced at $11 a shot. All clean/blanco tequilas are priced the same, the “regular” tequila is priced at $13 and the “reposado” at $15, if I’m recalling the prices correctly. A little steep for an oddly-situated and newly-opened place in River North. My first choice was actually
Don Julio, but the bottle could not be located. A good and smooth tequila, the
Herradura Blanco . . . and I’ve grown fond of the blanco’s. Such a shot of tequila is often accompanied by a shot of
sangrita or a grapefruit (or lime) flavored carbonated soft drink – nothing was offered gratis with mine and it was necessary to pay an additional $5 for a small bottle of
Jarritos Toronja and a $11 drink suddenly became a $16 one. The bartender did, when I asked about the sangrita, offer me a sample to taste.

Not wanting to drink without a little something to eat I asked to see a menu (half of which details various cocktails, other liquors, etc.) and selected the item described as: “corn masa quesadillas one of each with mexican cheese mahi mahi-tomatillo, shrimp-plantain, wild mushroom-epazote crema.” A server/bus boy came from behind me 15-minutes after I’d ordered and said, “Your quesadillas,” handed the plate to me and walked away. I studied the two quesadillas staring back at me from the plate and said to myself, “These aren’t quesadillas, they’re empanadas.”
I asked the bartender to hand me the menu once again thinking I’d misread it. He did as I asked and at the same time asked if everything was okay. I looked at the “quesadillas” as described on the menu and turned to the bartender and said, “It says here there are three quesadillas, but there are only two on my plate.” His reply was, “Sometimes there are three, sometimes just two – it depends on how big the kitchen makes them.” “Well, since I have only two quesadillas which two did I get, of the three listed on the menu?” “I don’t know,” he responded – “the server tells you what you’re getting when he brings it to you.” And that wasn’t the case – so I had to cut through what I think were empanadas (and not quesadillas) and pick them apart to see what I was eating. Seemingly deep (or pan) fried, hard shelled (so that a knife was needed to cut through to the middle) and at a cost of $9.50 - $4.75 each for the empanadas – the botana wasn’t worth it to me. My best guess is that what I received was one empanada of fish and one of mushroom-epazote crema.
Another dozen or so customers wandered into the bar and part-owner – the liquor partner - Paul Tanguay was behind the bar, in front of the bar, greeting friends, etc. The bar-area was a beehive of activity, mostly because all but one of the 4 or 5 bartenders or bar-backs or whomever they were studying drink recipes because they were unfamiliar with much of what was being sold. Someone else in Management was standing behind me with a bus boy, showing him how to do his job. The impression I got was that management hired, at least for the front-of-the-house mostly inexperienced persons, persons who’d not before worked in a restaurant or bar.
The strongest sense I felt sitting in the bar watching the activity around me – now having another
Herradura Blanco tequila before me – was that Mercadito is more about selling high-priced drinks than it is about concentrating on the food and that it’ll be more of a lounge than serves food than a restaurant that serves liquor.
The restaurant may open for lunch, in a month or two down the road – and I’d be willing to stop back and give it a try then – but given the price-point it’s chosen to function at and impressions I’ve formed about where the food quality might be long-term I don’t envision myself as a regular cocktail hour or dinner patron. I do with the restaurant every success.
Mercadito108 W. Kinzie Street
Chicago, IL 60654
(312) 329-9555
Website:
http://www.mercaditorestaurants.com