The GP wrote:From the
Openings and Closings thread:
kaiytea wrote: Also, the windows have been papered up at the ill-fated De Angelos deli and sushi just north of Chicago and State next to Quang Noodle, and a sign is advertising El Souk: hummus, falafel and kabobs. Hoping, hoping, hoping it'll be good.
and in this week's Dish:
El Souk (808 N. State St.; 312-751-8600), a tiny Middle Eastern counter-service restaurant with artwork straight from Morocco, opened August 10th across from Loyola University. The menu sounds pretty straightforward—think falafel, tabbouleh, shawarma, baklava—but the item we can really get behind is the combo plate, either three or four choices of meat, priced at $11 and $13, respectively. “If you order four meats, the plate weighs about 4 pounds,” says Nadiya Bocheva, the manager.
A friend and I walked over to El Souk for lunch today. With the demise of the place that used to be in the 700 N. Michigan building, there have been no decent Middle Eastern spots in the North Michigan Avenue area. I had the lentil soup and a falafel sandwich. My friend just had the falafel sandwich with a side of feta. I will definitely go back for the soup. It was very similar to the lentil soup at Taste of Lebanon, a version I like very much. Both have a peppery profile that hits the spot for me. The falafel sandwich left little to be desired. The falafel was hard and cold, and I don't think that was because I got it to go. Next time, I'll try a kafta or shwarma sandwich. Since they have only been open a week, I'm willing to give them a chance to get settled.
El Souk Restaurant
808 N State
Chicago
312-751-8600
http://www.elsoukrestaurant.com/(website has music)
I miss Pita Pavillion @ 700 as well, especially since they were great for healthy food like their turkey burger and Greek Salad. But there's still Sayat Nova as a reasonable, relatively quick Middle Eastern choice during lunch (1/2 block east of Michigan on Ohio), as well that Lebanese place in the 500 N. Michigan food court for a take-out or QSR option. The Lebanese place does an OK meat and veggies in pita, but I'd dock them several points for convenience-store quality hummus and Mexican hot sauce for a zip. You also have a quasi-Middle Eastern option in Jaffa Bagels in that food court: "quasi" because they do have felafel and hummus, and fairly a good turkey/deli plate as QSRs go, it's not a true menu of Middle Eastern dining as such.
FYI, I stopped by El Souk myself about a week ago, and other than being hearty food, it didn't have much to recommend it. The kefta plate I ordered was bland, as was the rice, and it really need the harissa.
Personally I would kill for a place at the level, albeit not the pricing, of Mizrahi Grill for lunch downtown, with the full array of toppings they have (or maybe I'm just missing turkey shwarma from our last trip to Israel today).