snekse wrote:My wife and I are taking a 4 day trip to Chicago in June with the principal focus of our time being on food.
Well I just wanted to thank everyone for their help and give you all a quick run down of where we ate. Let me just say 4 1/2 days in Chicago is not enough time. There is just too much to see and so much to do. Seemed like there was far more cultural things to do then in San Francisco. A cheap place to visit as well, aside from the sales tax

that is. I'll through my blog link down at the bottom so you can see the pics.
FRIDAY:
We got in late and didn't make it to the hotel until well after 10:30. We were both hungry and tired, so we figured we just find the closest thing. Unfortunately since we didn't make it onto the street until a little before 11:00, everything was pretty much closed. We asked someone where a late night food place was and they pointed us to...
South Loop Club (
http://www.cityinsights.com/slc.htm)
Honestly it was perfect. A great plunge right into a local hang out to throw us into the vibe of Chicago. We got a Chicago dog and headed back to the hotel to eat in our room and relax.
SATURDAY:
We had a lot planned for the day, so we were out the door by 8:00 (actually that was pretty much every day). Our first breakfast in Chicago...
Orange (
http://www.cityinsights.com/chicago/orange.htm)
Well, I forgot about their 2 locations and I forgot to map everything out before we went, so we headed to the Clark Street location. I'm actually glad we did. We got to see a neat part of town and stumbled across an Ann Sather location - score breakfast for another day!
We both like Orange a lot. You'll find out how much later in this post. We went all out with Frushi, 2x juice, a flight of pancakes and French Toast kabobs. The frushi was so-so, the juice was what you made of it, but the rest was great.
We hit Hancock, Navy Pier and the Art Institute (snacking at the Pier and the Art Institute) all before we headed to dinner at....
Alinea (
http://www.alinearestaurant.com/)
I'll save that for my blog post. Let's just say it didn't live up to my expectations. Wasn't bad, but wasn't extraordinary.
SUNDAY:
Well after I did some digging around in my maps, I realized the other Orange location was just 3-4 blocks from our hotel, so we ate downtown location Sunday morning. I had the Cinnamon Roll pancakes and my wife had the pan-fried oatmeal. She was in love.
We had plans to hit the Field Museum, the Aquarium and possibly the Planetarium all in the same day if we had time. The best laid plans.... Long story short - we left the field museum at around 1:00 with the idea of going to Manny's for lunch, then coming back and hitting the aquarium. Neither of those happened. As people warned me, look at the hours before you head somewhere. All I can say is I need a laptop. With Manny's being closed, we hit the joint on the other side of the parking lot. We decided to split an Italian Beef Sandwich then go to Little Italy to get a slice of Chicago Style Pizza and some Gelato. After much walking in some hot and muggy weather, those two things didn't happen either. Needless to say my wife was not happy. No aquarium, no pizza, no gelato - I would like to take this time to publicly apologize to my wife and say "I'm sorry".
Completely beat, we went back to the hotel to get ready for dinner at...
Blackbird (
http://www.blackbirdrestaurant.com/)
Again, I'll leave comment for the blog. Probably our least favorite dinner of the trip, but that's not saying much and it was 1/4 of the price
MONDAY:
Monday we were heading down south for the Museum of Science & Industry, so we decided to eat in Chinatown since it was sort of on the way. I would like to tell the city of Chicago that they need to get a GIANT fork lift and move that museum closer to downtown! Actually the trip home was more direct and not that bad. Taking the Red Line is a BAD idea. It took entirely too long.
Okay, back to the food. We almost didn't eat at the Phoenix. We were standing outside of what we *thought* was the Phoenix just dumbfounded at the Closed sign. CLOSED! I swear I read they were open for Dim Sum daily at 8:00 - it was now 9:00 - NOT AGAIN! We just stood there for a couple of minutes not saying a word. Then right as we were about to leave, a guy comes up and opens the door to the shop next to us (letting in a guy in a white dress shirt that had been standing there the whole time) and asks if we were there to eat. We were at the wrong restaurant! So yes, we got a chance to eat Dim Sum at the Phoenix. I certainly took care of any Dim Sum fix I might have had. Pretty close to what we had in Oakland.
We spent the day at the Science & Industry Museum which was awesome. The body exhibit, which I just saw on TV the week before, was absolutely enthralling. We ate lunch at the museum to conserve time. Luckily we were able to push back out dinner reservations so we were able to stay until they closed. So once again, back to the hotel to change and head out to...
Charlie Trotter's (
http://www.charlietrotters.com/restaurant/)
Blog, blog, blog, blog...
TUESDAY:
Since we were going to be spending the day on the Mag Mile, I decided we should hit...
Ann Sather's (
http://www.annsather.com/)
for some Swedish pancakes and make our way down the mile. I'm glad we went, but I wouldn't go back. The food just wasn't that good. The Swedish pancakes I had in the past were almost like crepes. These were weird and almost custard like. The Swedish sausage was disgusting and the potato pancakes my wife got were still on the plate when we left. But hey, at least I can say we went there.
We spent the day looking at all the shops on the mile, again, just so say we did. Nothing all that interesting. We did plan ahead though and made reservations for lunch at...
Ralph Lauren (
http://www.rlrestaurant.com/)
Again, everything you guys said was pretty true. Again, I'm glad we went, but next time we will follow your guidance a little more. For this trip however, it fit very well into our theme. Wasn't bad, but not really worth the money.
We stopped at Vosges to pick up some fire bars which is one of my favorite chocolates. We also stopped at Teuscher and picked up a Dark Chocolate Champagne truffle. We tossed around the idea of stopping at either Neiman Marcus for a pop-over or the little Italian deli at the base of the Hancock center for Gelato. The Gelato won. Not bad - better then anything in Omaha. Back to the hotel, a bit of a nap, a change of clothes and off to...
TRU (
http://www.trurestaurant.com/)
Okay, I'll talk briefly about this. We had the chef's table and we both thought it was the best meal of the trip, but didn't feel that way until about half way through the desserts. Stellar. More on the blog once I get to this one.
WEDNESDAY:
We had to leave our hotel by 1:00 to make our flight so we had a crunched day. We went to Orange one last time (we looked at the menu at the Peninsula hotel the day before and decided we didn't want to eat there like we had planned). Then, because I'm a little crazy, we went up to Trotter's ToGo to grab food to take back to Omaha with us (Yes, I brought a cooler full of ice and food on the plane). That took far longer then expected, so we grabbed lunch at CT ToGo as well. We were hoping to take another shot at getting a slice of Chicago Style pizza on the mag mile, but no go on that one.
So that was our trip. It was a lot of fun, but exhausting. We will do things a little differently next time, but I enjoyed it for what it was.
Thanks again to everyone who helped us. If I didn't take you up on a suggestion, please don't feel hurt. There was a lot of factors that played into where we decided to go and we just didn't have time to make it to several places we had wanted to go including Hot Chocolate and Cafe Gelato. Next time though!
If you want to read more and see all the pretty pics, head over to our blog. Not everything is up yet, but it's coming soon.
http://gfc.snekse.com/