A week or so ago I found myself at Max n Benny's for a lunch. First let me say that my corned beef sandwich was exceedingly good. The meat was fresh and freshly sliced, with a classic Vienna taste.* They constructed it well in the secret deli style where the meat went mostly in the middle of the bread, puffing things up and giving an overall appearance of zaftig-ness. In fact, they provided more than enough meat, without being neither obscene nor parsimonious. Much better than expected crusty rye, not Zingerman's thick, but thick cut, made the sandwich memorable. Then, let me say, that this bustling room sang just the way you imagine your deli to sing. It both tasted like a deli and seemed like a deli. The problem is not that this thing does not exist, it's that it exists nearly wholly out of the realm of "people like us", however you wanna define that.
I cannot say I am expert in about anything else on the Max n Benny's menu. I cannot even opine on the pastrami. Still, I can tell you that the menu contains about everything you want from a deli from chopped liver to actual, you better have cream cheese, salty "belly" lox, hand sliced thank you very much. Yes, JeffB, there is chicken in the pot. The huge gaping hole, a flaw that reminds me very much of our flaw in pizza by the slice in Chicago, is in the pickles/table garnish. Just as you cannot have good pizza by the slice** in Chicago because our codes require the pizzas sit under life sucking heat lamps, some law seems to prevent Chicago area deli's from leaving out trays of pickles. And if that's not bad enough, as much as I'd stack our corned beef against Noo-Yawk, we got a way to go on the pickles***. All in all, a lot here. A lot of nothing to do with Dillman's, right, but something, I think on the idea that Chicago has zero interest in deli.
*Our friend EatChicago was saying to me recently that when people say "there's no good Chinese food in Chicago", they mean there's no Chinese food that tastes the way they grew up with, in (the places they go to in) Chicago. I wholly agree with that. To some extent, it's also the same thing with corned beef. New York corned beef has a different taste profile than Vienna. Not sure what attributes what to what. Yet different is not better nor worse. Just different. I mean I like both tastes. Yet, for others, they are not not getting the taste they expect, so it tastes wrong/bad to them.
**With some notable exceptions like Freddy's, that don't worship at the alter of heat lamp.
***The one thing that I really expected better at from Dillman's was the pickles.
Think Yiddish, Dress British - Advice of Evil Ronnie to me.