Cogito wrote: I still cannot figure out how "peppers" somehow become a mixture of chopped peppers, celery, carrots, and oil in this city. If I wanted giardiniera, I'd ask for it. It's not the same thing as a hot pepper. Is that so hard to understand?
mrefjl wrote:Cogito wrote: I still cannot figure out how "peppers" somehow become a mixture of chopped peppers, celery, carrots, and oil in this city. If I wanted giardiniera, I'd ask for it. It's not the same thing as a hot pepper. Is that so hard to understand?
At Chicago area IB stands Hot or Hot peppers stand for hot giardinera. Simple enough I'd have to say. Most every city has it's odd food terms.
Cogito wrote:I know, if you understand English and read my first post about this issue, you would not need to repeat the same info. My point is that giardiniera is not the same thing as hot peppers and should be referred to as such.
My point is that giardiniera is not the same thing as hot peppers and should be referred to as such.
mtgl wrote:I personally enjoy Pop's, but there are those in this 'hood who argue against it.
Pop's Chicago (The original location, I believe...been there my whole life...)
10337 South Kedzie Ave.
(773) 239-1243
G Wiv wrote:Occasionally the hot peppers on my Italian beef are so spicy I have to race to the bubbler for a cooling sip of water or take a big slug of soda to beat the heat.
elakin wrote:My point is that giardiniera is not the same thing as hot peppers and should be referred to as such.
If you understood Chicagoese, you would've never asked for "hot peppers" on a beef sandwich in the first place, and the entire semantic discussion wouldn't have had to have taken place.
teatpuller wrote:maybe people call giardiniera "hot peppers" because that's what it's made of.
mtgl wrote:Back to the subject: I had a beef at Mr. Beef back in March and found the hot giardiniera lacking in both flavor and heat. Am I alone in feeling that way?
No, you are not alone. I had a beef from Mr. Beef yesterday and the giardiniera was both flavorless and very weak in terms of heat. Meat and gravy were just okay. Overall, pretty mediocre sandwich. I eat about 3 or 4 Italian beefs per year and was sorry I wasted one on Mr. Beef; will have to make it down to Al's some time soon to get a good experience back on top of the "most recent beef" pile. For what it's worth, my wife really liked the Italian sausage she ordered.mtgl wrote:Back to the subject: I had a beef at Mr. Beef back in March and found the hot giardiniera lacking in both flavor and heat. Am I alone in feeling that way?
Matt wrote:No, you are not alone. I had a beef from Mr. Beef yesterday and the giardiniera was both flavorless and very weak in terms of heat. Meat and gravy were just okay. Overall, pretty mediocre sandwich. I eat about 3 or 4 Italian beefs per year and was sorry I wasted one on Mr. Beef; will have to make it down to Al's some time soon to get a good experience back on top of the "most recent beef" pile. For what it's worth, my wife really liked the Italian sausage she ordered.mtgl wrote:Back to the subject: I had a beef at Mr. Beef back in March and found the hot giardiniera lacking in both flavor and heat. Am I alone in feeling that way?
viaChgo wrote:I go to the Al's in River North a couple times a month for lunch to scratch the IB itch and it definitely does the trick.
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elakin wrote:My point is that giardiniera is not the same thing as hot peppers and should be referred to as such.
If you understood Chicagoese, you would've never asked for "hot peppers" on a beef sandwich in the first place, and the entire semantic discussion wouldn't have had to have taken place.
Khaopaat wrote:elakin wrote:My point is that giardiniera is not the same thing as hot peppers and should be referred to as such.
If you understood Chicagoese, you would've never asked for "hot peppers" on a beef sandwich in the first place, and the entire semantic discussion wouldn't have had to have taken place.
Ghazi wrote:LMFAO! This made my day. Too damn funny.
stevez wrote:mtgl wrote:I personally enjoy Pop's, but there are those in this 'hood who argue against it.
Pop's Chicago (The original location, I believe...been there my whole life...)
10337 South Kedzie Ave.
(773) 239-1243
I enjoy Pop's quite a bit. They've got the whole package; perfectly cooked beef, good gravy and an excellent version of giardinara. The other location in Homewood(?) was good as well. They scored pretty high in the Beefathon as I recall.
NancyEsq wrote:I need to get a bunch of Italian Beef for an event I'm catering in a couple of weeks. If you had this list of choices - which would you choose? I need a place that charges less than $10/pound for the beef. Which of these should I absolutely avoid? Is there another choice I should call?
BUONA Beef
Duke's Drive-In
8115 S. Harlem Ave.
Bridgeview, Illinois
708-599-0576
Pops Italian Beef & Sausage
Tony's Italian Beef
9664 W 131st St,
Palos Park - (708) 671-1710
Tony's Italian Beef
7007 S Pulaski Rd,
Chicago - (773) 284-6787
Jay's Beef
2255 W North Ave
Chicago, IL, 60686
Beef - $8.50/#
Bread $2.75/loaf
http://www.jaysbeef.com/index.php
Dengeos - Skokie
3301 W. Main St.
Skokie, IL
(847) 677-7911
Dengeos - Buffalo Grove
195 W. Dundee Rd.
Buffalo Grove, IL
(847) 520-0004
Jim & Pete's.
Thank you all for the help!
tvproducer wrote:Hello all Italian Beef fans. My name is Josh Diaz and I am a producer on a new food/travel TV series. We will be filming at Al's Italian Beef and Mr' Beef this weekend 12/11-12/13 and we want all of the super-fans of these restaurants to be there to show their support for their favorite Italian Beef spot. The crew will be filming at Al's No 1 Italian Beef. 1079 W Taylor St Chicago on Friday starting at 11:15am and Mr. Beef at 666 N. Orleans, Chicago on Saturday starting at 11:00 am. On Sunday, we will be filming a blind taste test of both sandwiches with 5 special guest judges at a yet to be decided location. If you are interested in coming to the filming on any of these days please contact me and I will give you more information.
Thanks
Josh
Cbot wrote:Pop's is #1 for Italian beef. The location in the Palos Heights area has some of the best Italian beef I have every had. They also have great sasuage and awsome grilled chicken sandwich's get the chicken on the Vienna bread not the hamburger bun.
http://www.popsbeef.com/
Phil wrote:Tell Mr. Beef on Orleans that if they would just add 1-2 inches to the bun, and the size of their sandwich, they'd be the best in the city, and have more customers.
If Mr. Beef made 3' long sandwiches with 10 lbs.of beef that still wouldn't make them the best in the city. They where one of the better beefs, years ago.
Johnnie's has one of the smaller(est) around and they're the best.