The ELG had a good lunch with its usual excellent company at Ten Mile House. It's a pleasant space, comfortable, and the service was very good--shout out to our waiter Daniel, who divided menu items not usually meant to be divided for the ten of us to try. We were impressed to see how much lunch business they had on a cold Wednesday.
The food was good and very competently executed. TMH does its own smoking, and you could smell a nice teasing tang of smoke in the room. I thought the smoked meats we had were their best offerings. The smoked chicken wings were meaty and very tasty, although served with an awfully bland ranch dressing (but I'm not a ranch fan). The ribs were very good--nice pull, some smoke flavor, nice rub with a spicy kick in no need of bbq sauce, although 4 were offered in the obligatory plastic squeeze bottles tucked in a cardboard 4-pack beer holder.
We also tried 2 wood-fired pizzas: the TMH, with bbq sauce, white cheddar, pork shoulder, thick-cut bacon, roasted garlic, and crispy onions, which I didn't try, and the Smoked Chicken, with garlic oil, fontina, roasted tomatoes, red onions, and arugula. The ingredients were fine and nicely proportioned on a decent crust (it's no Stop 50 or Spacca).
Our waiter told us the most popular sandwiches were the crispy grilled cheese and the fried chicken, so we ordered these. Additional ingredients can be added to the grilled cheese, so we added the excellent wood-roasted mushrooms, but to me, it's still just a grilled cheese sandwich. The toppings for the chicken sandwich were good, but the thin-sliced breaded chicken was boring, although well cooked, tender, and not dried out.
We also tried the poutine with smoked brisket. The brisket was good, and the poutine was served with a tasty giardiniera. Montrealers would not recognize the poutine, which was made with sliced, waxy potatoes in a thick sauce. Not bad, but not poutine, and not my thing.
Ten Mile House seems a very competent operation; Cabbagehead says it reminds him of an LEYE place, and that's a good comparison. I suspect it will do well in north Evanston.