Ive been thinking about Mack a bit recently - and just how much us foodies will miss him (tho I suppose the Original - and Nonpariel - UJ's has been closed for a couple of years ago now..)
I did actually hear that Uncle J's was owned by his step-daughter - have been there a couple of times recently. Its a pretty solid place now, really. Had very good tips there a couple of weeks ago - but the links, while decent, didnt live up to my memory - they were very clearly different from Mack's Recipe of Hot Links that have always been my Gold Standard (these were more smooth-ground than coarse-ground, without the fattiness and sage-y-ness that made the originals the best hot links ever made). Good to see Kevin Pang make the same point in the above article.
Ive actually gone on a bit of a Hot-Link hunt the past couple of weeks, in a despairing attempt to replicate the original greatness. Uncle J's was the first place I visited - and it was a decent link, like I said, but a different recipe.
I heard (from a fellow customer while in line at Uncle J's) that I-57 had a great hot-link....so visited them too (the one on Halsted). A very good link, slightly loosely packed, nicely spicy. But nothing like the original UJ's - a different flavor profile (this one had a slightly offal-y touch to the taste of it, which might appeal to some..)
Made a couple of trips to the new SouthSide Honey One - they are doing a good job with BBQ currently IMHO, and seem very busy and happy in their new location. Their Links were actually very good also - I havent always been a fan in the past. Theyre cut into small pieces (rather than being left as a "link" as most other places seem to favor), and the link was very spicy this last time - a good thing in my book. But again - very different from UJ's - a smooth grind, and a different flavor profile. (You might sense a theme here..)
I havent hit the UJ's in Richton Park in the last couple of weeks - its been a couple months since I was last there. They have had very good BBQ every time I visited them (only a handful, due to excessive distance) - but they too use a link with a different recipe to the original UJ's that Mack used, and always have..
Visited Barbara Ann's in the last couple of weeks - the link was decent, with a bit of a coarser grind to it. But not the spicyness (and no sage). The tips-and-links at Barbara Ann's were just ok on this trip - good by Northside standards, maybe, but not quite up to Honey One or Uncle J's on this particularly visit. To be fair, it wasnt the best time - sort of late-afternoon on a Saturday (before the real dinner-rush..tho it took ages to get the food anyway!)
Finally, also visited the Namesake - Uncle John's, on 83rd and Cottage Grove (in the same location with Dat Donuts) - the last place I met Mack, in the parking lot last year. This place is larger, with a parking lot, and quite different from the others. The BBQ was solid - not *great*, like the original UJ's, but pretty good. The Link wasnt up to the original - didnt have the same outer-crispness, for one. But the flavor profile was probably the closest to the original that I found in my exploration of any of the various Southside BBQ joints over the past couple of weeks. The grind was coarser than the rest, and they did have some sage and the odd chili-flake...in the hands of the late lamented Mack, these would still have been masterpieces, IMHO. As it was, they were merely "good".
My next trip down, I'll probably stop at Uncle John's on 83rd and Cottage again - hoping to hit them at a better time, and thus hoping for a link more like the original - one that was, I repeat, IMHO the best link ever smoked...
c8w