nr706 wrote:Airplanes still have food?
teatpuller wrote:nr706 wrote:Airplanes still have food?
Yeah. If you're unfortunate to fly enough they reward you with food.
shotzy wrote:The Cochinita Pibil from Zapatista in Lincoln Park. Devoid of taste and excessively salty. We also had some of the worst service I've encountered in a long time.
chezbrad wrote:The Black Oak Arkansas @ Kuma's. If I really wanted to experience the McJordan Burger again, I would have just invented, you know, time travel.
Burgers at Kuma's mystify me, quite frankly: the patty is way too big, its ground bland, the toppings heavy and flavorless. Good news: by assenting to my girlfriend's wish that we try this place just once, I'll now never have to go here again.
sr1329 wrote:Huge patty, flavorless, far too lean, and what's up with that overly dense pretzel bun?
One other thing that may have influenced our experiences is that they sold out as restaurants here tend to do when they get some press...
They used to serve hand cut fries, now they buy them frozen off the Sysco truck...
sr1329 wrote:chezbrad wrote:The Black Oak Arkansas @ Kuma's. If I really wanted to experience the McJordan Burger again, I would have just invented, you know, time travel.
Burgers at Kuma's mystify me, quite frankly: the patty is way too big, its ground bland, the toppings heavy and flavorless. Good news: by assenting to my girlfriend's wish that we try this place just once, I'll now never have to go here again.
Thank you. For all the hype that place gets I could never understand why. Huge patty, flavorless, far too lean, and what's up with that overly dense pretzel bun? I felt like all I was tasting was the bun. Also the fact that places need to hide their burger behind a bunch of "toppings" is unfortunate. A good burger doesn't need a hundred different things on it. One other thing that may have influenced our experiences is that they sold out as restaurants here tend to do when they get some press. They used to serve hand cut fries, now they buy them frozen off the Sysco truck. It's a general trend, that when a restaurant gets some press they lower their quality on everything since people will be driving in from the suburbs and waiting for 2-3 hours to get whatever it is they serve. So it doesn't actually have to be good, it simply has to create the perception that it is good. A dozen and half topping laden "creations" with clever names and risque artwork will do the trick.
EvanstonFoodGuy wrote:sr1329 wrote:chezbrad wrote:The Black Oak Arkansas @ Kuma's. If I really wanted to experience the McJordan Burger again, I would have just invented, you know, time travel.
Burgers at Kuma's mystify me, quite frankly: the patty is way too big, its ground bland, the toppings heavy and flavorless. Good news: by assenting to my girlfriend's wish that we try this place just once, I'll now never have to go here again.
Thank you. For all the hype that place gets I could never understand why. Huge patty, flavorless, far too lean, and what's up with that overly dense pretzel bun? I felt like all I was tasting was the bun. Also the fact that places need to hide their burger behind a bunch of "toppings" is unfortunate. A good burger doesn't need a hundred different things on it. One other thing that may have influenced our experiences is that they sold out as restaurants here tend to do when they get some press. They used to serve hand cut fries, now they buy them frozen off the Sysco truck. It's a general trend, that when a restaurant gets some press they lower their quality on everything since people will be driving in from the suburbs and waiting for 2-3 hours to get whatever it is they serve. So it doesn't actually have to be good, it simply has to create the perception that it is good. A dozen and half topping laden "creations" with clever names and risque artwork will do the trick.
I with you on this trend of tasteless beef with a bunch of toppings. A good juicy beefy tasting burger can be as good as a nice steak, would you pile on a bunch of weird toppings on a decent steak? At home If I have good quailty ground beef I'll just use salt and pepper on a nice fresh bun (I like bakery fresh potato buns).
jimswside wrote:I am a big fan of Longman & Eagle, Ive been 3 times, once for brunch, once for an early dinner, and for drinks.
Really bad:
1) Tete du cochon... not good, bitter tasting pork(creosote), the mustard smear does not work at all with this dish, and even a runny egg yolk couldnt fix this dish. Flavors were off, and not balanced at all. Really kind of muddled imho. Comparing apples to oranges perhaps, but the cochon dish served @ Cochon in NOLA blows L & E's version out of the water. Similar as far as the porks place on the plate, way better execution.
Neither do I. About two years since my last Susie's, well after midnight, I'd had a few drinks and not eaten dinner. Picked up two dogs and fries from the drive-thru. When I unwrapped, about 15-minutes later, fries a soggy greasy mess, limp skinless dog with the bun glued to outer wrapper. I tossed 90% and had a bowl of cereal.gleam wrote:I don't get the Susie's love, either..
sr1329 wrote:Will Lincoln Park ever get a decent restaurant? Ok, well they do have Nookies and Del Seoul. Both are not mind-blowing or anything, but real God sends for the neighborhood.
Pie Lady, when using Splenda, try reducing the amount by about 1/3 (e.g., use 2/3 cup Splenda if the recipe calls for 1 cup sugar). Sometimes I even reduce it by half. It seems to really help avoid that overly sweet taste that artificial sweeteners impart. Keep in mind that you may need to reduce the liquid in the recipe slightly, or increase another dry ingredient slightly, to make up for reducing the amount of Splenda.Pie Lady wrote:...probably would have been delicious had I not used Splenda. I made it sugar free for my dad and that's all I could taste; just that biting, phony, chemical sweetness....