There's a first time for everything, so let this be my first LTH post on an eating and drinking place. Insert thrilled expression smiley face here (

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Thank you for having me.
Anyhootinanee, been looking forward to this opening since learning about the concept. Of course, I've been following its development online. I do feel like Big Star the Big Picture hasn't been revealed yet, but do believe that the stage it is at now is well worth commenting on. The Big Picture I prophesize about is the life that Big Star will take on when then the taco window is open and the patio is filled with 100 seats.
So, it seems like it has been made clear that Big Star is a bar with food. The ID check at the door sets that tone upon entering and the wrap around bar welcomes you once you make it inside. Even though Big Star is "just" a bar with food, I hope that a discussion is spurred off about other bars with food in Chicago because for one, I think it could make for interesting discussion and two, you can never have too long of a recommended eating and drinking list.
I guess I'll summarize my visit to Big Star (the pre-supercharged, bored-out Big Star) like this: There are several things that I look for in a good dining experience. Not necessarily in any order, I look for these general things:
1. Good food;
2. Good drink;
3. Good service;
4. Good design;
5. Good value;
6. Good music.
More specifically, I look for:
1. A chef-driven menu with real food made with real good ingredients;
2. A carefully crafted bar menu that includes interestingly sourced beers, spirits and wines and well-mixed drinks;
3. Service that includes a pleasant greeting at the door and when exiting the door and amicable table and bar service;
4. A creative design vision that blends form and function;
5. Whether cheap or expensive, the experience should be worth the money;
6. Good music, is unfortunately, more often than not, an occasional bonus at restaurants and bars. More often than not, bars win over restaurants in this category. Music at restaurants ranges anywhere from non-existent, muffled, too-loud or generic. Since everyone's taste in music differs, just as taste in food differs, I believe, again, that good music at a bar or restaurant is often the result of the same effort that went into the food or drink menu. A place that is known for good music didn't just turn on the DMX box.
Finally, to be even more specific here are some of my observations and experiences as they relate to each of the six points:
1. Chefs Paul Kahan and Justin Large have created a well-edited menu of authentic style tacos on hand-made tortillas with locally sourced and pastured meats. They have also included some appetizers like queso fundido that is bound to be a favorite dish of my wife and I for years to come. Salsas, guacamole, side dishes are all made by a chef-run kitchen with farm-fresh ingredients;
2. The bar menu is a collaboration between the operators and a well-known mixologist/barman. Since I don't many folks behind the stick I'm not "personally" familiar with him but I know he has a following similar to the type of following that good chefs in Chicago have. The bar menu ranges from a dollar 7 oz. Schlitz on draft to high-end bourbons and tequilas with reasonably priced, well-mixed cocktails comprised of fresh-squeezed juices and herbs and good bottles of beer in between. Square ice cubes are a sophisticated touch for the sophisticated distillations.
3. Good service begins with the greeting at the door. Good service continues to the bar or the table in the form of congeniality, a professed knowledge of the food and drink menu and a properly poured drink. Good service ends with a salutation on exit.
4. Good design should be apparent on the exterior of the space and flow into the interior. There should be an identifiable vision and everything should have it's place. Form and function are the body and the movable parts of the operation. The design should enable the food to get to you without a hindrance when things are hopping and it should make the food look good on the bar or the table. You should feel good sitting at the bar and you should be able to see your friends at the other side of the bar (hinting at the benefits of a U-shaped bar);
5. 2-3 bucks for tacos. 7-8 bucks for a margarita, 3 buck cans of beer, a dollar short pour of beer is the average price range here but the sky is the limit depending on your drinking habits. Big Star is a value;
6. Music can be lumped into the design category as audible wallpaper but can most definitely stand as a category of it's own. Meant to serve as the soundtrack of Depression era Bakersfield California, old country tunes play from the turntable. It will be interesting to see if the music is woven into atmosphere of the large patio when it opens.
I guess after all this careful analysis I could summarize Big Star as a bar that offers a distillation of most, if not all of the things that I look for in a restaurant. That said, who wants to join me at the bar for dinner?!