toria wrote:I love Southport grocery but its a tiny place and you are not likely to get in.
ekreider wrote:Mitchell's on Clybourn closed in September, 2011. viewtopic.php?p=389492#p389492
pairs4life wrote:ekreider wrote:Mitchell's on Clybourn closed in September, 2011. viewtopic.php?p=389492#p389492
Clearly I couldnt tell from the drive-bys I did on Clybourn.
Thanks
cleanplateclub wrote:We have friends in from Austria and have a short window of time on Saturday morning near Depaul for breakfast. We don't want to risk standing in a long line and not getting seated. There will be seven of us. Any ideas for a breakfast spot near DePaul that takes reservations?
cleanplateclub wrote:We are going this weekend and are in a tough spot. We need to go be there by 9:00 which further limits our options. I am still looking.
nsxtasy wrote:Of the breakfast places that don't accept reservations, most don't have waiting lines before 9:00. And I bet some of them might be willing to set up and hold a table at that early hour for a large group like yours if you call them in advance to ask. So you might want to consider giving a call to some non-reservations breakfast places (e.g. Toast, Bongo Room, Clarke's, Nookie's, or the Original Pancake House) to ask whether they can work something out for you.
d4v3 wrote:Actually, at that early hour, Nookies Too is probably a good suggestion. Are they still open 24 hours on weekends?
Leave it to Whole Foods to change the boundries of Lincoln Park for the first time in 150+ years. I guess the Clybourn Industrial Corridor is officially dead and buried. Remember back when there were actually hookers on Hooker street?abolt wrote:What about kingsbury street cafe? They are a relatively new place right across the street from the Lincoln park whole foods.
That is way too New York.gleam wrote:To be fair, some do call it "SoNo" (South of North).
d4v3 wrote:Leave it to Whole Foods to change the boundries of Lincoln Park for the first time in 150+ years. I guess the Clybourn Industrial Corridor is officially dead and buried. Remember back when there were actually hookers on Hooker street?abolt wrote:What about kingsbury street cafe? They are a relatively new place right across the street from the Lincoln park whole foods.
edit:Ok I guess it was actually real estate developers that started calling that area, south of North Ave, "Lincoln Park" (I don't know why this bothers me)
I would consider anything east of Larabee and south of North to be Old Town. I saw some realtors are calling the area south of Humboldt Park "Humboldt Heights". Oh well, enough of this tangent. I guess it doesen't matter to the OP what a neighborhood is called.pairs4life wrote:We've been on Mohawk b/w North & Division for over 10 years & the whole time Cabrini was there they still called the area Lincoln Park. If you had a truist, they called it Lincoln Park South. RIP Clybourn Corridor.