kenji wrote:Zofia's for Polish food just over the NW Side border into Niles, it turned into Irene's but don't even know what's there now:
http://articles.chicagotribune.com/1993 ... ner-omelet
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Still, it's a pretty real experience. The elaborate meal service includes cocktails, Pan Am almonds in little silver packages and stewardesses who carve the Chateaubriand steak or fork over a chicken breast, along with vegetable and roast potatoes, from a cart. It's served on real Pan Am china.
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At $295 for a single ticket in first class, the Pan Am Experience costs as much as a real flight. But those who came aboard say it was worth it to step back in time.
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George and Ada Ashkenaz immigrated from Russia early in the 1900s, and first opened a small delicatessen store near Roosevelt and Karlov in 1910. When the Jewish population moved north and west to the suburbs, the Ashkenaz family moved to Rogers Park, opening their first deli on Morse Avenue. It was a small shop, 10 by 30 feet or so, in which Ada Ashkenaz did the cooking in a tiny kitchen at the rear. During the mid-30s they acquired a space at 1432 West Morse Avenue and opened a new restaurant. It burned in 1939, and the couple had no insurance. Sam Ashkenaz, who graduated from Purdue that year with a degree in electrical engineering, joined his parents to help recoup the loss, borrowed money from the restaurant's suppliers, fixed the restaurant and was back in business in 1940.
EvA wrote:A nice reminiscence of Ashkenaz Deli on Morse Avenue in Rogers Park:George and Ada Ashkenaz immigrated from Russia early in the 1900s, and first opened a small delicatessen store near Roosevelt and Karlov in 1910. When the Jewish population moved north and west to the suburbs, the Ashkenaz family moved to Rogers Park, opening their first deli on Morse Avenue. It was a small shop, 10 by 30 feet or so, in which Ada Ashkenaz did the cooking in a tiny kitchen at the rear. During the mid-30s they acquired a space at 1432 West Morse Avenue and opened a new restaurant. It burned in 1939, and the couple had no insurance. Sam Ashkenaz, who graduated from Purdue that year with a degree in electrical engineering, joined his parents to help recoup the loss, borrowed money from the restaurant's suppliers, fixed the restaurant and was back in business in 1940.
EvA wrote:A nice reminiscence of Ashkenaz Deli on Morse Avenue in Rogers Park:
Artie wrote:The Rush St area Ashkenaz was on Cedar a few doors east of Division. I too remember their store in Edens Plaza but no recollection of them inside a grocery store.
adipocere wrote:Decades ago when I worked in the loop, I would partake of a cafeteria style breakfast at a restaurant on south Wabash. Maybe at the corner of Jackson? It was cheap! I think steak and eggs for like five bucks? I'm sure it's long gone. Anyone recall the name and address? And when did it close and why? Long live the cheap loop sit down breakfast!
adipocere wrote:Decades ago when I worked in the loop, I would partake of a cafeteria style breakfast at a restaurant on south Wabash. Maybe at the corner of Jackson? It was cheap! I think steak and eggs for like five bucks? I'm sure it's long gone. Anyone recall the name and address? And when did it close and why? Long live the cheap loop sit down breakfast!
adipocere wrote:Decades ago when I worked in the loop, I would partake of a cafeteria style breakfast at a restaurant on south Wabash. Maybe at the corner of Jackson? It was cheap! I think steak and eggs for like five bucks? I'm sure it's long gone. Anyone recall the name and address? And when did it close and why? Long live the cheap loop sit down breakfast!
edc wrote:justjoan wrote:Two places that seem like they've been long gone, but are still going:
Ramova Grill
Hamburger King
huh?? ramova''s grill IS gone. whatever do you mean? ...
Rob's (Vital Information) quote about Ramova is on the first page of the thread and from 2004, well before Spring 2012 when Ramova closed.
Several of the recent posts above, starting with jordanhojo's, were in a separate thread and merged into the larger thread originating in 2004.
Acclaimed South Side Chef Could Resurrect 82-Year-Old Bridgeport Diner and Its Storied Chili. Duck Inn chef Kevin Hickey is part of a $23 million project to revive the Ramova Theater and its restaurant