potus wrote:Two of us will be flying into Chicago Thursday evening (Feb 16) and leaving Sunday night. Just realized that we will be in Chicago right in the middle of Chicago Restaurant Week; that makes me worried that it would be difficult for us to get into any good restaurants without having made reservations way ahead of time.
We will be staying at the Fairmont and will probably not be renting a car. Saw No Reservations episode of Bourdain visiting Chicago in which he was driving all over to get to interesting places: Burt's Place, Calumet Fisheries, Silver Palm Restaurant, L2O Restaurant, Fat Johnnies Famous Red Hots, Blackbird Restaurant, Moto Restaurant, Hot Doug's, and Avec Restaurant. Is it worth our while to rent a car?
Wondering what real people in Chicago would recommend if we would like a real Chicago experience. I am very adventurous about ethnic cuisine being from Toronto, Canada, but not trying to find the best of the cuisine of any particular part of the world that Chicago has to offer; I was on a coach tour of Europe operated by Chinese people once and instead of sampling the local flavors, ended up in a Chinese restaurant in Rome, Venice, Paris, etc. However, I would be interested in ethnic restaurants that are representative of the culture of a city, e.g. Japanese food is very important in Vancouver.
I am more interested in simple food cooked well and not that interested in molecular gastronomy, foam, plating, the hipness and decor of the restaurant, or any other fancy frills. It is probably impossible to get into Charlie Trotter's restaurant, but do people think that it is worth it? I am not against fine dining, but am not focused on the fancy, ultra-expensive places which are just about hype.
Sorry for the long post with so many specific details. This forum has been very helpful. Any further help would be greatly appreciated! Thanks guys!
I'm guessing that you are coming to Chicago for a nice weekend, not necessarily a "food tour," but I may be wrong. It's easy to eat well in Chicago without running all over the place, renting a car, or booking reservations months in advance (you can do that to but it's not required).
I recently moved to Minneapolis and just shot back to Chicago last weekend. One of the things I enjoyed was grabbing an early dinner (6-6:30pm) on Friday at Longman & Eagle in Logan Square. We took a cab from downtown. It's nothing fancy - just a gastropub feel with really good food. They were recently awarded a Michelin star. They do not take reservations so get there early. If you have to wait, not problem, it's also a bar. This is a neighborhood place and where my friends in Chicago go for dinner. From there, we walked across the street to the Logan Square "L" stop, went downstairs (subway), grabbed a $5 fare card and shot south (towards Forest Park, NOT Ohare), to the Damen stop (or just take a cab if you can find one). It was still early enough to hit Violet Hour for some cocktails without standing in line. Violet Hour is a "prohibition" style cocktail bar but is also laid back, albeit pretty hip. You are now in the Bucktown/Wicker Park area and cabs are everywhere. Across the street, you'll see Big Star - a whiskey bar that serves small tacos, run by the same group that owns Publican, Backbird, Avec. The food is good here but the bar is nice as well. Hipsters listening to country music and snacking on tacos - if that sounds interesting to you. If you like beer, you can go a little south ($5-6 cab) to Small Bar or Bangers and Lace for a nice selection of U.S. micro brews, or north ($5-6 cab) to the Map Room for a nice selection of beer from everywhere. Again, cabs still everywhere.
That's one idea for one night - hit a neighborhood, eat well and drink well - all with locals, all within a cab ride from your hotel.
Beefs are a good idea, so is pizza but I would just shoot for lunch to sample these old school, Chicago "must haves." As mentioned, Portillo's on Ontario is good for a beef or hot dog and the above mentioned pizza places should work for you as well.
Mexican is a must while in Chicago. The most touristy/travel friendly is the above mentioned Frontera Grill -but locals still go here as well. The other options above are great also. Just do some sort of quality Mexican here.
You won't need a car, unless of course you ARE doing a food tour, then throw my suggestions out the window.
As you know, LTH is a great reference but it can be hard to search through all the posts so also take a look at Time Out Chicago. Grab one at a local book store in Toronto (if available) or grab one when you get off the plane. It's a decent overview for the weekend.
Have fun.
"It's not that I'm on commission, it's just I've sifted through a lot of stuff and it's not worth filling up on the bland when the extraordinary is within equidistant tasting distance." - David Lebovitz