Dr. K wrote:Where can I find yummy salads beyond the second-thought additions on most menus in town? Something featuring the freshly-pulled-out-of-the-soil green things that the Midwest has in abundance. Something beyond the ubiquitous chopped salad/chicken caesar fare I find everywhere....
Kennyz wrote:
I think we need to start more broadly with where you've been eating and why you've been choosing those places. I eat out a lot, and it's extremely rare for me to end up at the "ubiquitous" places with nothing but chopped salad or chicken caesar. Just about everywhere I eat has something more interesting than that.
Kennyz wrote:I think we need to start more broadly with where you've been eating and why you've been choosing those places. I eat out a lot, and it's extremely rare for me to end up at the "ubiquitous" places with nothing but chopped salad or chicken caesar. Just about everywhere I eat has something more interesting than that.
Dr. K wrote:You're right, Kenny -- maybe I should stop eating at TGIFriday's and Applebees and start eating at all them fancy restaurants just like you. Please. My most recent rotation has included Publican, Bonsoiree, Taxim, Great Lake and L20. Does that mean I can sit at the cool kids' table?
Dr. K wrote:Kennyz wrote:I think we need to start more broadly with where you've been eating and why you've been choosing those places. I eat out a lot, and it's extremely rare for me to end up at the "ubiquitous" places with nothing but chopped salad or chicken caesar. Just about everywhere I eat has something more interesting than that.
You're right, Kenny -- maybe I should stop eating at TGIFriday's and Applebees and start eating at all them fancy restaurants just like you. Please. My most recent rotation has included Publican, Bonsoiree, Taxim, Great Lake and L20. Does that mean I can sit at the cool kids' table?
My question was a serious one. If you have spent any time dining in the Bay Area, Seattle and/or Portland, you would know that Chicago pales in comparison when it comes to treating fresh vegetables. Which I find ironic, given the abundance of agriculture in the region. What I was really getting at was the fact that in my reent dining experiences I have found that salads are generally an afterthought. Even when chefs attempt something creative, they tend not to be well executed.
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Dr. K wrote:Where can I find yummy salads beyond the second-thought additions on most menus in town? Something featuring the freshly-pulled-out-of-the-soil green things that the Midwest has in abundance.
Dr. K wrote:Even when chefs attempt something creative, they tend not to be well executed.
Dr. K wrote: If any of you have ever been to Tender Greens in San Diego, you'll know what I'm talking about. $10 gets you any of a dozen or so salads, each hand-tossed before you with premium ingredients -- Gunthorp chicken, local organic eggs, heritage bacon, heirloom tomatoes, etc. I have tried places here in town, like something called Veg Out on Broadway, or another place further down with Lettuce in its name -- they are just run-of-the-mill supermarket-quality salad bars.
Dr. K wrote:For the record, I would have been happy to clarify after the original post, but when the first response you get is patronizing/insulting, it's easy to get distracted.
Dr. K wrote:What I really was/am after is not a night at Mado/Moto et al, but just a simple neighborhood place where I can have a salad for lunch. If any of you have ever been to Tender Greens in San Diego, you'll know what I'm talking about. $10 gets you any of a dozen or so salads, each hand-tossed before you with premium ingredients -- Gunthorp chicken, local organic eggs, heritage bacon, heirloom tomatoes, etc.
Dr. K wrote:I have tried places here in town, like something called Veg Out on Broadway, or another place further down with Lettuce in its name -- they are just run-of-the-mill supermarket-quality salad bars. Bleh. Other lunchy places--Toast, Bongo Room--not so good. I tried to get a salad at that new place on North Ave (that sounds like Nightwood, but isn't), and they had zero options. Same with Bananas Foster up north. I'm sure there are places out there that I have yet to find (I've only been in town a couple of months), and that's why I asked.
toria wrote:I'll fight anyone over the dreaded spring mix. Seitan, not so much.