gooseberry wrote:That's because it's a pub. Even in Britain(especially London), it's very common for pubs serve thai food and a lot of those are run by large corporate entities. I don't understand your comparison...are you saying it's a good or bad thing? Actually, lots of ethnic restaurants serve hamburgers, pizza, etc. for the kids. The one's that don't, probably don't need to in order to survive.
Irish Times is great. Can't wait to head back.
Irish pubs are one of the most common restaurant genres in the city; most go out of their way to tell you about bringing the bar or tap fittings over from Ireland, hiring Irish staff, fostering Irish folklore and traditional music evenings, drawing the Guinness just right. I've greatly enjoyed Irish pubs from Dublin to Dingle, and celebrate that curries and crispy duck are part of the culinary fabric, but these speak more to British colonial influences than to focus groups on what sells.
In addition to the large percentage of Chicagoans with Irish heritage, there are many recent Irish immigrants in the city; I'm not sure of the number in relation to Pakistani (to pick one culture) immigrants, but certainly I've met many first generation Irish eating at Irish pubs (go talk to Kevin Henry at Lanigan's, or even on special occasions up at Chief O'Neill's). There is an Irish cuisine, and I love it; I regularly defend it to people worried about food quality in Ireland, or those skittish about black pudding, potato farl, and good rashers or bangers on menus here.
Irish Times
is great, serves rasher sandwiches, makes excellent shepherd's pie, knows how to pour. What I am poking fun at is that even the good pubs clutter the menu with Italian, Chinese, Mexican, and Cajun selections, as if to say that they expect that most of the people that cross the lintel couldn't possibly survive on Irish food. Grab your salmon and boxtie, but you must enjoy the Celtic Caesar and a Shamrock Quesadilla (both real items on Chicago Irish pub menus) while you wait. It's an approach I don't see in many other cuisines.
What blows is when the pubs do a much better job on those items than the traditional foods, and I've been in that situation a lot in the area. One could argue that since there's no such thing as a pure Irish "restaurant" in Chicago - they're all pubs - they need to have sports-watching nosh on hand. I'll grant that Thai food in British pubs in England (see linked article
here) from the prevalence of Thai cooks could be seen to validate Mexican food in Irish pubs in America (if the Mexican food was good). I won't, though, forgive Healy's, Curragh, or Fado for quizzical responses when the traditional items are ordered and then serving half-ass, half-cooked dishes. Just brand yourselves a TGI Friday's or Bennigan's and have some honesty about it.