sundevilpeg wrote:Sighted while out today:
Also, the Indian resto on the corner of Howard and Dodge (formerly a Thai place, and before that, a diner-ish joint) is now closed.
sundevilpeg wrote:Also, the Indian resto on the corner of Howard and Dodge (formerly a Thai place, and before that, a diner-ish joint) is now closed.
KajmacJohnson wrote:sundevilpeg wrote:Sighted while out today:
Also, the Indian resto on the corner of Howard and Dodge (formerly a Thai place, and before that, a diner-ish joint) is now closed.
Memories flood from that dinerish joint. My dad used to take us there about twenty years ago. It was called Gold Mine and was good but not great. But I will always remember it because my uncle once accidently walked into the women's bathroom.It's interesting to see the changes over the years and the different cuisines that have popped in over the years.
sundevilpeg wrote:Sighted while out today:
Ubaa is definitely gone for good. Though the hand written sign on the door indicating a temporary closure is still up, as of today there is now a gigantic FOR LEASE sign on the side facing Crawford Ave. Sad.
Also, the Indian resto on the corner of Howard and Dodge (formerly a Thai place, and before that, a diner-ish joint) is now closed.
sundevilpeg wrote:There was a wonderful store just across the street from Gold Mine - the Oriental Market and Cooking School. Tremendous resource for all kinds of Asian ingredients, frozen foods, seeds and plants, cookbooks, etc., as well as a full slate of Asian cooking classes. Run by Pansy Luke and her husband, Chu-Yen, they sold off the property in 2002 to a condo developer, and presumably made a pile o' cash. I wish every time I go past the half-empty block of condos on Howard & California that the store and school were still there. . . .
Oriental Market and Cooking School, 2801 W. Howard St., Chicago (RIP)
stevez wrote:KajmacJohnson wrote:sundevilpeg wrote:Sighted while out today:
Also, the Indian resto on the corner of Howard and Dodge (formerly a Thai place, and before that, a diner-ish joint) is now closed.
Memories flood from that dinerish joint. My dad used to take us there about twenty years ago. It was called Gold Mine and was good but not great. But I will always remember it because my uncle once accidently walked into the women's bathroom.It's interesting to see the changes over the years and the different cuisines that have popped in over the years.
It was the Gold Coin before that. In those days, it was one of several Jewish Deli-style coffee shops in the area (RIP Sam & Hy's, S&L, Barnum & Bagel, Gold Coin). The last one standing is What's Cooking in Lincoln Village, but it's only a shadow of its former glorious self.
AngrySarah wrote:I'm told that Terragusto closed. That makes me sad - it was Mrs AS' favorite Italian place.
nsxtasy wrote:sundevilpeg wrote:Also, the Indian resto on the corner of Howard and Dodge (formerly a Thai place, and before that, a diner-ish joint) is now closed.
Bombay Kabab House. That's not a surprise, having to compete with Devon Avenue a mile and a half south and the very popular Mount Everest two miles north. We tried it once and weren't impressed.
PortPkPaul wrote:AngrySarah wrote:I'm told that Terragusto closed. That makes me sad - it was Mrs AS' favorite Italian place.
Saw this typically polite quote from Theo:
Even though the restaurant is about to celebrate five and a half years, Gilbert said it was just time to move on. "When I originally put it together, I had a specific clientele— foodies who got it who had great bottles of wine and had no place to go," Gilbert said. "As the economy tanked the demographic shifted. Those great customers we had were crowded out by people who didn't care about the food, but could BYOB their Two-Buck Chuck."
mbh wrote:Icosium Cafe on Clark just north of Fullerton which had moved into the former Mamacita's space has closed. There is note on the window that the Clark & Foster location is still open.
Icosium Cafe
2433 N. Clark
Chicago, Il 60614 Closed
Icosium Cafe
5200 N. Clark
Chicago, IL 60640
773-271-5233
sdrucker wrote:I still occasionally miss Zweig's kishke in meat sauce and knishes from my north suburban youth, as well as Sam & Hy's
EvA wrote:sundevilpeg wrote:There was a wonderful store just across the street from Gold Mine - the Oriental Market and Cooking School. Tremendous resource for all kinds of Asian ingredients, frozen foods, seeds and plants, cookbooks, etc., as well as a full slate of Asian cooking classes. Run by Pansy Luke and her husband, Chu-Yen, they sold off the property in 2002 to a condo developer, and presumably made a pile o' cash. I wish every time I go past the half-empty block of condos on Howard & California that the store and school were still there. . . .
Oriental Market and Cooking School, 2801 W. Howard St., Chicago (RIP)
We were just reminiscing about this store the other night. Really miss it! The condo building that has never rented its ground-floor stores is a poor replacement, and it seems that, without parking, those stores will never be rented even if the economy picks up.
sundevilpeg wrote:Steve Dolinsky just posted on Twitter that Carlos in Highland Park will be serving its last meal on New Years Eve 2011. Pretty startling, IMO.
BR wrote:Huge news for those of us in Lincoln Square ... and even those elsewhere in the city. Chris Nugent, chef at Les Nomades, will be opening byo restaurant Goosefoot in the former Rendezvous Bistro spot at 2656 W. Lawrence (between Rockwell and California), possibly as early as next month. The restaurant will have 36 seats, and offer two tasting menus: 8 courses for $90, and 12 courses FOR $140.
Details here.
riddlemay wrote:PortPkPaul wrote:AngrySarah wrote:I'm told that Terragusto closed. That makes me sad - it was Mrs AS' favorite Italian place.
Saw this typically polite quote from Theo:
Even though the restaurant is about to celebrate five and a half years, Gilbert said it was just time to move on. "When I originally put it together, I had a specific clientele— foodies who got it who had great bottles of wine and had no place to go," Gilbert said. "As the economy tanked the demographic shifted. Those great customers we had were crowded out by people who didn't care about the food, but could BYOB their Two-Buck Chuck."
Wow. Talk about making sure that as few people as possible use the word "lamented" when they refer to the "late Terragusto"!
stevez wrote:It was the Gold Coin before that. In those days, it was one of several Jewish Deli-style coffee shops in the area (RIP Sam & Hy's, S&L, Barnum & Bagel, Gold Coin). The last one standing is What's Cooking in Lincoln Village, but it's only a shadow of its former glorious self.
spinynorman99 wrote:stevez wrote:It was the Gold Coin before that. In those days, it was one of several Jewish Deli-style coffee shops in the area (RIP Sam & Hy's, S&L, Barnum & Bagel, Gold Coin). The last one standing is What's Cooking in Lincoln Village, but it's only a shadow of its former glorious self.
You forgot the Pickle Barrel, at Howard and Western.
nsxtasy wrote:Didn't Belden Corned Beef Center have a place on Howard for a while, too? In addition to their original Lincoln Park location on Belden?