stevez wrote:Try La Gondola. It's nothing earth shattering, just well executed red sauce Italian. I actually prefer it to Sabatino's (which isn't saying a whole lot).
NoteNeither La Gondola or Sabatino's would be my first choice, but since you specified North Side, your choices are somewhat limited.
La Gondola
2914 N. Ashland Avenue
Chicago, IL 60657
(773) 248-4433
La Gondola
1258 West Belmont Avenue
Chicago, IL 60657
(773) 935-9011
Octarine wrote:I had a great chx parm at La Villa on Pulaski just n of Addison last night. Very nice salad bar as well.
itshissong wrote:Just wanted to bump this in case others had ideas. Less about the chicken parm, although I'm always looking for a great one, especially in sandwich form, and more about the cheapish red sauce place. I can't figure out why Chicago's Italian American scene, outside of pizza, is so lackluster. It's bizarre to me, albeit I've concluded that this might just be a regional thing and easy to find, inexpensive Italian American food may just be the province of the East Coast. Would be sad, if true.
KajmacJohnson wrote:itshissong wrote:Just wanted to bump this in case others had ideas. Less about the chicken parm, although I'm always looking for a great one, especially in sandwich form, and more about the cheapish red sauce place. I can't figure out why Chicago's Italian American scene, outside of pizza, is so lackluster. It's bizarre to me, albeit I've concluded that this might just be a regional thing and easy to find, inexpensive Italian American food may just be the province of the East Coast. Would be sad, if true.
What do you consider inexpensive? I still say La Villa (which I mentioned above) is pretty good but may not fit your inexpensive criteria. I wouldn't say it's pricey but it is not cheap either, It's pretty moderately priced.
veghound wrote:There are fewer red sauce joints than on the east coast. While they aren't red sauce joints, you should check out Mia Fracesca restaurants. Their food is consistently good and they sometimes have menu items that are similar to what I think you are looking for. Not quite it, but it may scratch the itch. I know you're looking for north side, but when you get disappointed and decide to travel, I'd recommend Bruna's on 18th and Oakley.
I said this on the Chinese thread too, but I console myself with the better Mexican, Ethiopian and Thai food here.
dupreeblue wrote:itshissong - I understand your craving. I was born/bred on LI & have the same desire for a solid eggplant parm. (And a deli chicken cutlet w/american cheese, lettuce, & tomato on a fresh bagel, but that's not related to this thread.) My favorite eggplant parm that I've found is from Rosebud, on Taylor. It's not spot on perfect, but I've taken a few other NY ex-pats there, and it satisfies the craving for all of us, without having to make it yourself.
Josephine wrote:I'm gonna take some heat for this, but on the FAR North side- actually in Evanston - my favorite red sauce place is still - after 25 years- Dave's Italian Kitchen on Chicago Ave. I can't pass up their lasagne. Their parm dishes are guilty pleasures as well. But it's best to stay away if you are among those who feel garlic ought to be a gentle suggestion rather than a theme. The portions and prices are in line with the needs of an NU linebacker. Here is the main thread. I believe there is another thread ( which I can't find just now), with a title something like: "Dave's Italian Kitchen- Some Sauce with Your Garlic?" I love Dave's, and what with the spate of Vampire sightings in recent years. . .well, one can't be too careful.
JeffB wrote:A few observations from the son of a Neapolitan East Coaster who grew up running through the kitchen of a classic red-sauce joint in PA.
Most Ital-Am "red sauce joints," East Coast or Chicago, are awful. The more interesting restaurants of other ethnicities (including more serious Italian spots with regional focus) have elbowed out the ubiquitous red sauce joint here as on the East Coast in recent years. Good. See also American-Chinese.
Here, as there, you are more apt to find the red sauce joint of your memories in a suburb than in the City, particularly those suburbs that are populated by families from the old Italianate neighborhoods here. Think West and Southwest. Plenty of meatball subs and chicken parm to be had in Tinley or Downers. (Or Berwyn or Melrose Park or Elmwood Park etc. etc. for nearer 'burbs with long histories of Italian Americanism.)
The stuff you seek has largely been relegated to the back of the pizza takeout menu. But that does not mean it will be bad coming from such places. I happen to think the parms and such from establishments such as D'Agostino's, ChiCago's, and Art of Pizza are good for what they are and are better than the pizza. I know this because I have a son who is addicted to meatball subs, so we have tried many of them. Deep dish spots such as Lou Malnatis do a fine job too. In fact, using the Find-A-Food feature on Menupages, hundreds of Chicago spots serve chicken or eggplant parm.
And there's still the original suggestion from way up thread - Sabatino's - which should fit the bill, even though the brothers are from Pisa and their non-red sauce stuff is objectively better. If you have not tried the typical tourist spots that don't get much love on LTH, such as Rosebud or Tuscany, they are fine and have it.
Other options that you might like that I can endorse:
J&C Bombacino's (def. what you are looking for, close to the Loop)
Oggi on Grand (very close to the kind of place one might find on a corner in an Outer Borough, at least at one time).
Bertucci's Corner in Chinatown (classic, stubbornly obscure pre-Sox venue)
Club Lago on Orleans
Tufano's Vernon Park Tap (Taylor St.)
Panozzo's South Loop
Philly's Best (not great, but East Coast)
Freddie's Bridgeport
Club Lucky
Gene & Georgetti (seriously, the parms are the cheapest things on the menu and not terrible)
JeffB wrote:Nearly all of the places I endorsed are old-fashioned, Americanized Southern Italian places (well, Club Lago, Sabatino's and all the Heart of Italy spots (such as Brunas upthread) have Northern roots but sling red gravy). The stuff is in my blood, and if you look back over the years you will see that I have spent much time following these sorts of places. I didn't pick up a copy of Where to come up with that list of rare grooves. I'm actually interested. So you misunderstood my point or I didn't make it well. A great red sauce place can be very special and I will love it. That said, the Italian American restaurant in this country has such a low common denominator, is seen by aspiring restaurateurs as an easy entry (pasta and tomatoes are cheap, right?) and so many of us paesani truly believe that their nona's meatballs were the greatest food ever made, that the Atlantic Seaboard, much of Chicagoland, and the stripmalls of Phoenix, Florida and, increasingly, Wal-Mart parkinglots around 'Merica (Olive Garden, Carraba's) are drowning in shitty sugo.
Go forth and partake. If you work in the Loop, Bombacino's is a good first step.
itshissong wrote: The only other point I'd make and I'd love your take on this is that I do feel that there is something of a crowding out of good traditional red sauce places by both the more authentic regional cuisine places that have sprung up and the downmarket (re:shitty) Italian American places/chains. In other words, the crap Italian American doesn't compete with authentic regional cuisine, but both, to a certain extent, compete with the good Italian American places and, thus, those places increasingly lose out. Frustrating, to say the least.