Exploring Wisconsin Supper Clubs
The Food. The Drink. The Culture.
Every Thanksgiving, a substantial population in the United States sites down to a turkey dinner. Yet every week, communal meals of Friday night fish fry and Saturday night prime rib dinner are shared on a large scale in Wisconsin. It is a habitual ritual practiced only in Wisconsin.
We will endeavor to learn how the Supper Club Culture has been so embraced in Wisconsin. There will be Meals, presentations and the showing of an award-winning film documentary celebrate Wisconsin’s supper club culture April 8-9 in Racine and Kenosha counties.
The immersion, organized by the nonprofit Greater Midwest Foodways Alliance in Chicago, coincides with the Wisconsin Department of Tourism’s announcement to make supper clubs a major marketing campaign this year.
“Wisconsin Supper Clubs: The Food. The Drinks. The Culture.” begins with a family-style Friday Night Fish Fry at 5 p.m. April 8 at Colony House, 25811 119th St., Trevor, and a welcome with brief remarks by Mary Bergin, author of Wisconsin Supper Club Cookbook. Prepaid reservations are required: the cost is $25-$28, which includes the meal and a $10 donation to the GMFA.
Free to the public from 1-4:30 p.m. April 9 at the SC Johnson Golden Rondelle Theater, 1525 Howe St., Racine, is a panel of presentations and viewing of “Old Fashioned: The Story of the Wisconsin Supper Club” by filmmaker Holly De Ruyter. Reservations are advised. Doors open at 12:30 p.m.
Speakers are Bergin; Terese Allen, author of Café Wisconsin Cookbook; Jim Draeger, author of Bottoms Up: A Toast to Wisconsin’s Historic Bars and Breweries and Dave Hoekstra, author of The Supper Club Book: A Celebration of Midwest Tradition.
SC Johnson is funding the event as a part of its Community Interest Program series.
Dinner at HobNob Supper Club, 277 Sheridan Rd., Racine, begins at 5 p.m.April and features a talk by Draeger about Wisconsin’s cocktails and book/DVD signings. The cost for the five-course dinner (featuring a 13-ounce prime rib cut or flounder stuffed with crab and shrimp) is $60 and includes a $20 tax-deductible donation to the GMFA.
The cash bar will include specially priced Brandy Old Fashioned cocktails, due to a generous donation by Christian Brothers. For additional details about the events, menus and to make reservations, go to
www.greatermidwestfoodways.com or call 312-380-1665.
Greater Midwest Foodways Alliance is dedicated to celebrating, exploring and preserving unique food traditions and their cultural contexts in the American Midwest, from the Appalachians to the Ohio River Valley, the Great Lakes to the Great Plains and Prairies.
“Old Fashioned: The Story of the Wisconsin Supper Club” was the winner of Best Documentary at the Lake Superior Big Water Film Festival and the audience choice for Best Wisconsin Documentary at the Central Wisconsin Film Festival.
“Travelers love to experience the local culture and sample the local fare,” says Ed Lump, president and CEO of the Wisconsin Restaurant Association. “They want to experience traditions of the places they visit. There is nothing that captures all of this better than the local supper club.”