Jonah wrote:Just a possible alternative: Pastoral, the excellent cheese shop, is on Lake, practically across the street from Pritzker. They make some of the best sandwiches around and have cheese. They have very little dessert (just one or two items), however, and Fox and Obel is very strong in the department.
JOnah
mrbarolo wrote:...* An 8 oz. container of mixed baklava from Jaafer Sweets, $5.99. The pieces were fresh and delicious. ../
riddlemay wrote:Article in Crain's today.
kateem wrote:Maybe they should just be a cafe.
Cynthia wrote:Maybe they could move somewhere like the North Shore. Lots of money and free parking. Where they are now seems like it's more surrounded by tourist stuff. Hard to believe that's the best location for a grocery store.
riddlemay wrote:Cynthia wrote:Maybe they could move somewhere like the North Shore. Lots of money and free parking. Where they are now seems like it's more surrounded by tourist stuff. Hard to believe that's the best location for a grocery store.
There's a ton of people living around there now. (That's why for example, counterintuitively, The Purple Pig actually is a neighborhood restaurant.) I shopped at Fox & Obel in its first years a few times, and then once or twice after it was taken over by the guy from the Jewels, and my sense agreed with the general consensus I picked up here, which was that the store became somehow more "ordinary." I've seen it happen with other retailers, too--in an attempt to survive against competition or against difficult economic times, a business decides that it must become less special, when (if only it realized it) being special was the one thing it had going for it.
On Sunday, June 5, 2011, Dose, a year-round, monthly European-style market, will launch at Chicago’s River East Art Center. The modern, lofted halls will provide an open, airy backdrop for this dynamic gathering, where the finest selection of vendors offer artisan food, innovative fashion and high design under one roof.
bean wrote:If I'm not mistaken, this is in the same building that Fox & Obel occupies:On Sunday, June 5, 2011, Dose, a year-round, monthly European-style market, will launch at Chicago’s River East Art Center. The modern, lofted halls will provide an open, airy backdrop for this dynamic gathering, where the finest selection of vendors offer artisan food, innovative fashion and high design under one roof.
http://dosemarket.com/
It seems that this would attract the type of vendors that F & O should already be doing business with, at least as far as food goes. To say nothing of the customers.
bean wrote:If I'm not mistaken, this is in the same building that Fox & Obel occupies:On Sunday, June 5, 2011, Dose, a year-round, monthly European-style market, will launch at Chicago’s River East Art Center. The modern, lofted halls will provide an open, airy backdrop for this dynamic gathering, where the finest selection of vendors offer artisan food, innovative fashion and high design under one roof.
http://dosemarket.com/
It seems that this would attract the type of vendors that F & O should already be doing business with, at least as far as food goes. To say nothing of the customers.
gastro gnome wrote:bean wrote:If I'm not mistaken, this is in the same building that Fox & Obel occupies:On Sunday, June 5, 2011, Dose, a year-round, monthly European-style market, will launch at Chicago’s River East Art Center. The modern, lofted halls will provide an open, airy backdrop for this dynamic gathering, where the finest selection of vendors offer artisan food, innovative fashion and high design under one roof.
http://dosemarket.com/
It seems that this would attract the type of vendors that F & O should already be doing business with, at least as far as food goes. To say nothing of the customers.
I know everyone is in love with tickets these days, but why exactly do I have to pay $10 to get into a market?