gocubs88 wrote:I have been all over the suburbs trying many different bakerie's baguettes and I have my favorites
Are you talking about La Farine? Good overall bakery, terrific baguettes.AngrySarah wrote:There is a newish bakery on Grand or Chicago I have heard good things about but have not sampled.
sarcon wrote:edited to add: I've had better luck with the Trader Joe's on Lincoln & Grace than other locations. The ones I've had from the Ontario Street location are not as good. I don't know why this would be - I can't imagine each location bakes their own?
alain40 wrote:
Bonjour in Hyde Park
gocubs88 wrote:My all time favorite food is a baguette with salt and pepper.
Katie wrote:gocubs88 wrote:My all time favorite food is a baguette with salt and pepper.
Just curious, do you mean a baguette, buttered, with salt and pepper, or with olive oil, salt, and pepper, or just a dry baguette with salt and pepper?
In no specific order since one day one baker would make a perfect baguette with a crunchy crust and with plenty of alveoles in the internal part that we call the "mie" in French, and the next day, especially if the weather is muggy, the whole thing would be too compact and possibly mushy or mealy.
Bennison's in Evanston
Cook au Vin at Logan Square Farmer's Market on Sunday. The owner, Vincent Colombet, will open his first real bakery, called La Boulangerie, at the corner of Milwaukee avenue and Logan Blvd this month.
Fox and Obel until a few months ago
Bonjour in Hyde Park
bjt wrote:a little worried about the "Fox and Obel comment "until a few months ago" comment that I copied above. Really? ...
Vital Information wrote:Bennison's especially, seems to be so divisive (and KennyZ has not weighed in yet), but I'm on the fan side of their stuff.
Kennyz wrote:Vital Information wrote:Bennison's especially, seems to be so divisive (and KennyZ has not weighed in yet), but I'm on the fan side of their stuff.
I have nothing new to say about Bennison's. I haven't bought bread from them in over a year because of the consistent disappointments prior to that. I'm willing to buy the argument that only the stuff they sell at farmer's markets sucks, and that the stuff (and the staff) in the store is better.
Kennyz wrote:I'm willing to buy the argument that only the stuff they sell at farmer's markets sucks, and that the stuff (and the staff) in the store is better.
alain40 wrote:F&O used to bake bread twice a day and that made a whole difference when you buy a baguette at 5:00 PM to take home for dinner. For a while now I believe that they have been baking baguettes only in the morning.
Vital Information wrote:Man bread, especially baguettes, is one vexing subject. It reminds me of pizza the way that people can approach the same product from opposite sides. Bennison's especially, seems to be so divisive (and KennyZ has not weighed in yet), but I'm on the fan side of their stuff. Maybe some is in the timing or baker, as, for instance, I had a quite mediocre experience at La Farine. I've also had better and worse Red Hen. Not a baguette, but I've never found the greatness (well, maybe goodness) that some see in D'Amato's.
That said, I do think we are experiencing a bread renaissance in Chicago. Not just Bennison's at the market, which I think really improved what's out there, but especially Cook Au Vin and Crumb and even La Briola (for n. For La Briola, get the sea salt ciabatta. No one's mentioned Medici yet in this thread, and there top notch too.
The other day, I tried the most expensive bread in Chicago (I think), Hendrix, and it might even have been worth the price. I'm sure others will disagree.
Vital Information wrote:I do think we are experiencing a bread renaissance in Chicago.
gocubs88 wrote:I asked a friend who frequently visits France for his rec, and he basically said that once you had a true French baguette you can never eat American breads.
Khaopaat wrote:sarcon wrote:edited to add: I've had better luck with the Trader Joe's on Lincoln & Grace than other locations. The ones I've had from the Ontario Street location are not as good. I don't know why this would be - I can't imagine each location bakes their own?
They probably both get them from the same source...but I could see storage methods & product turnover making a big difference in quality. Maybe Lincoln Ave. goes through baguettes faster than Ontario St., resulting in more frequent shipments & restocking.