In an earlier thread there seemed to be a flicker of interest in Italian beef on the south side. There are many good places (more posts to come), including this one hidden in Bridgeport. It was mentioned a couple months ago on Chowhound by Bluskies57 (link at end) and came as a complete surprise to me as I didn't even realize there were businesses on that stretch of 32nd. So a few weeks ago I checked out Uncle Johnny's.
This is a real neighborhood Italian corner grocery that looks unchanged for many decades, right down to the ancient wood and glass coolers along the back wall. The store is quite small, with mostly regular groceries and some packaged goods with an Italian slant but few things out of the ordinary. If you're looking for special olive oils, cheeses, etc, go elsewhere.
At the front counter you can get Chicagitalian sandwiches made to order. In addition to cold subs they have Italian beef, sausage, meatball, steak, and breaded steak. I tried an Italian beef, a meatball, and a breaded steak. Things are clearly prepared to order; I could hear them beating/tenderizing my steak in the back, then I saw it being pan fried on a home-style gas stove. Beef is already sliced but gets dunked in gravy just before being put on the bread.
The Italian beef was very good, very thin slices of good quality beef in a very salty but tasty gravy. Giardiniera was good but perhaps not homemade. The one problem was the bread. I think they get it from Michelle's (at least their packaged breads come from there) and it just didn't have the required texture, too puffy. Still a very respectable sandwich. Uncle Johnny's sells beef by the pound ($7.50; advance notice requested) and that might really be the way to go. I still remember the sandwich of Chickie's beef on the Fox & Obel baguette that Gary brought. Then maybe a little giardiniera from Bari Foods and you'd have a sandwich to be reckoned with.
Breaded steak was good but not without flaws. The meat itself was excellent, without a trace of gristle or sinew that sometimes ruins an otherwise fine sandwich. Breading was good and not greasy (but there was a trace of old oil flavor) though it could have used a tad more seasoning. Eaten after the beef it seemed rather bland. Red sauce, sparingly applied, and sweet peppers were nothing special.
The football shaped meatballs were pretty good and came in quite a bit of sweetish red sauce. Again the bread was the weak link and the sweet peppers didn't add much. If this sandwich could have been topped with some mozzarella plus maybe a sprinkle of crushed red pepper and baked on the bricks of a pizza oven it could have been great.
While you're waiting for your sandwich be sure to tip your head back and take in the wonders of the Elvis shrine up on the top shelf.
Uncle Johnny's Grocery
500 W 32nd St
Chicago
312-225-6111
Mon-Sat 7-6, Sun 8-3
In summer Mon-Fri to 8pm
Original Post on Uncle Johnny's
http://www.chowhound.com/midwest/boards ... 48247.html