I am intrigued, but I am not sure that I understand. It is 60% caramelized ground up gingerbread cookies? How is that accomplished?nsxtasy wrote:Edzo's offers an off-menu-flavored shake that I love! The flavor is "Speculoos". Speculoos is a spread from Belgium made of cinnamon-ginger cookies (think Nutella, but cinnamon-ginger-cookie flavored), and its popularity is spreading like wildfire. There's a small upcharge (a dollar, I think) for the special flavor shake. If you ask, they'll give you a little bit of Speculoos on a spoon as a free sample. Long live the Speculoos shake!
d4v3 wrote:I am intrigued, but I am not sure that I understand. It is 60% caramelized ground up gingerbread cookies? How is that accomplished?nsxtasy wrote:Edzo's offers an off-menu-flavored shake that I love! The flavor is "Speculoos". Speculoos is a spread from Belgium made of cinnamon-ginger cookies (think Nutella, but cinnamon-ginger-cookie flavored), and its popularity is spreading like wildfire. There's a small upcharge (a dollar, I think) for the special flavor shake. If you ask, they'll give you a little bit of Speculoos on a spoon as a free sample. Long live the Speculoos shake!
champs2005 wrote:Im pretty sure Edzo's uses that Speculoos spread in the shakes. Like they do with Nutella. Perhaps they crush in a few cookies too? It's been a while since I had one.
What I was referring to is the Speculoos website says that the spread is 60% caramelized ground cookies. I was curious about how somebody caramelizes cookies. I thought caramelization is a process that involves sugar. Is it possible to caramelize other starches?champs2005 wrote:Im pretty sure Edzo's uses that Speculoos spread in the shakes. Like they do with Nutella. Perhaps they crush in a few cookies too? It's been a while since I had one.
d4v3 wrote:What I was referring to is the Speculoos website says that the spread is 60% caramelized ground cookies. I was curious about how somebody caramelizes cookies. I thought caramelization is a process that involves sugar. Is it possible to caramelize other starches?
boudreaulicious wrote:Lincoln Park location closes tomorrow (Sunday, 11/30/14) according to this FB post. Pretty shocking considering that they were advertising specials for yesterday with no word of closing. Not much info in the FB post. Wishing Eddie and crew well and hope it wasn't too big of a hit for them.
Dear Friends,
We regret to inform you that due to circumstances beyond our control, Edzo’s Burger Shop in Lincoln Park will be permanently closed after Sunday, November 30th, 2014. Thank you for all of your patronage over the past two years; it was truly a pleasure to serve each and every one of you and we will be forever grateful that we had the opportunity to do so. We apologize for any inconvenience and we wish all of our friends and neighbors the best. Gift cards can be redeemed at our Evanston location (1571 Sherman Ave, Evanston, IL 60201).
- Thom, Lukas, and the Edzo’s Crew
jnm123 wrote:Wonder if this closing has anything to do with the Rahm Emanuel-driven ever-increasing cost of doing business in the city of Chicago.
nsxtasy wrote:jnm123 wrote:Wonder if this closing has anything to do with the Rahm Emanuel-driven ever-increasing cost of doing business in the city of Chicago.
Maybe it was due to all the earthquakes in the past few months. You know, other stuff that never happened, either.
jnm123 wrote:Wonder if this closing has anything to do with the Rahm Emanuel-driven ever-increasing cost of doing business in the city of Chicago. From what I hear, Edzo's/LP was doing pretty well. Wassup?
jay2021 wrote:Lack of revenue would be the logical explanation
nsxtasy wrote:jnm123 wrote:Wonder if this closing has anything to do with the Rahm Emanuel-driven ever-increasing cost of doing business in the city of Chicago.
Maybe it was due to all the earthquakes in the past few months. You know, other stuff that never happened, either.
jay2021 wrote:That would make sense if they had a 2 year lease and 2 five year options. That being said it's unlikely that there wasn't atleast an initial five year lease considering the investment. A corporate lease independent of the original shop in Evanston would afford them the opportunity to bow out of the lease before term by dissolving or bankrupting the corporation without anyone getting hurt personally.
The owner of Edzo's Burger Shop, Eddie Lakin, cited a lack of traffic as the reason for closing.
"We just weren't making our rent basically," Lakin said. "I kind of held on for a while hoping it would turn around."
Edzo's original location in Evanston has been in the black since it opened, and had been helping keep the Lincoln Park shop afloat, according to Lakin.