The Kankakee area is somewhere that I've meant to take the kids to see whatever natural delights are to be seen there (specifically,
this park), but the lack of a lunch destination kept it pushed down the list behind other more appetizing destinations.
This thread changed that, and with a beautiful fall day in hand, we headed to Bourbonnais for Jimmy Jo's and nature.
As noted above, Jimmy Jo's is aiming for Texas style barbecue, and the way the building sits on the highway, less restaurant than roadside meat warehouse, instantly reminded me of a lot of the Texas places, such as in Elgin or Llano. Yes, that's a Shiner beer neon sign in the window.

Also, like Louie Mueller's, say, but unlike a gussied-up city place like Smoque, they know that if you have something to say to your customers, there's no better way to say it than on butcher paper tacked to the wall.

Clearly they've felt the need to explain slow-smoked barbecue to customers used to some other thing calling itself barbecue. They use
Alto-Shaam Smoker/Hold ovens, I don't know a lot about those but it was easy to see the effects of the system-- on the plus side, the ribs and brisket had a definite smoke ring and reasonable, if not Texas-heavy, smoke taste; but on the minus side, brisket in particular was a little mushy/soggy from the holding time. Still, this was definitely in the top third of barbecue in the Chicago area, the St. Louis ribs in particular were quite good:

and the brisket was likable enough, but would have been better a half hour or an hour earlier:

Of the sides, the beans were easily the standout, with rich molasses/BBQ sauce flavor with a hint of spice, and little chunks of burnt end in them. Cole slaw was bland and too mayonnaisy, and corn was boiled to death (as it almost always is, that's why I don't order it out). They have three sauces-- the "Chicago-style" sweet-and-spice tinged sauce is actually better than most sauces you get here, more depth to it. The "Texas" sauce was my favorite because it lowers the sweet and ups the spice, although I'd say it still was closer to many Chicago sauces than to what I've had in Texas. I tasted the last, the North Carolina vinegar style, even though we didn't have pulled pork to go with it, but it was way too vinegary (the same problem I had with Brand BBQ's). I know they use vinegar in North Carolina, but not so much it clears your sinuses on the first taste.
Anyway, this is a solid, if not great yet, bbq place well worth checking out, and certainly based on past reports of the direness of the Kankakee area food scene, it appears to have singlehandedly raised the level of dining there, at least by offering LTHers one good option in the area. Though if you're hungry for French dressing on your pizza afterwards, there
is a Monicel's right around the corner.
Thanks, Glennpan and Cbot, for alerting me to this place. As for the park, it's a small-scale version of what's far grander at Starved Rock some miles to the west, but the kids had a good time with the simplest of pleasures (including squeezing the goo from inside honey locust bean pods, which has an amazing banana-liqueur flavor-- thanks
Nance Klehm!)