Cathy2 of February 27, 2004 wrote:(Caveat: I had this beautifully written post, which disappeared in internet ether this morning when I tried to post. I have not been able to replicate its' exquisite rhythm. Alas, this is a drier rendition than the one I wrote quickly for chuckles)
Ash Wednesday is the annual kick off to 40 days of deprivation from Coke (carbonated soda), Cookies and Candy ... note I did not include Cake in my trilogy. In years past, I have used this period to kick habits or at least minimize their presence in my life style. It is also interesting to learn if I have the discipline to pull it off, especially when the family youth do their best to sabotage!
Wednesday evening friends and I decided to haunt George's What's Cooking for an after meeting dinner. I am familiar enough with George's to rarely bother to read the menu as I have found a small collection of foods I like. However, on a meatless day like Ash Wednesday I am forced to read the menu with a fresh eye. After scanning the menu, I found two candidates: Spinach crepes with hollandaise sauce or a grilled tilapia sandwich. As I am dickering in my mind over which to select, I find myself the last to order and impulsively go with the spinach crepes with extra hollandaise sauce on the side.
In my minds eye, the spinach crepes I envision are simple crepes with a Stouffer Spinach Souffle type filling and some insipid commercial hollandaise sauce sparingly applied. I am really preparing myself for a grump fest over an ill-chosen selection from an untested section of the menu.
My imagination may be vivid and thankfully wrong, as my meal was really terrific. These crepes were no plain Jane's; they were a trilogy of freshly made, slightly sweet, eggy batter with chopped fresh spinach in the body of the crepes themselves. Clearly cooked in butter with some areas a pleasant crispness and others a tender softness. Inside was a whisper of cheddar cheese to give it body. The Hollandaise sauce was freshly made and generously offered. I really did not need the side boat of Hollandaise sauce, though I used most of it. By the end of the meal, you could see small droplets of butter separating out from the egg base in the Hollandaise sauce. What a wonderful way to go meatless.
This urban bit of Chowhounding was simply looking at a regular stop from a new angle. Pushing yourself beyond the tried and true.
Cathy2 wrote:Hi,
In Deerfield, there is a Greek (leaning toward Jewish) family style restaurant, which I believe is related to the same one you're referring to in Chicago.
bjt wrote:Well, it's too bad to hear that What's Cooking's cooking isn't really cooking, but I guess I'd still rather sit in a rose-colored booth at What's Cooking enjoying a humble bowl of kreplach soup than sit in a cookie cutter Panera where the soup was made at a commissary out in Des Plaines or some other suburb. It's funny, is this some kind of twisted reverse food snobbism? Willing to sacrifice overall quality for ambience and supporting a seemingly family-owned joint? Interesting. Thank god I'm no food critic. Anyhow, thanks for the input.
bjt
This branch of What's Cooking is located nearly across the street from Max & Bennie's, one of my current favorite Chicago deli's. Instead of What's Cooking? I would ask Why Bother? (when a great deli is right across the street).
stevez wrote:My favorite kreplach soup these days is either at Max & Bennie's or Barnum & Bagel in Skokie, with the nod going to B&B whenever possible.
stevez wrote:My favorite kreplach soup these days is either at Max & Bennie's or Barnum & Bagel in Skokie, with the nod going to B&B whenever possible.
eatchicago wrote:My grandmother who, in my humble opinion, makes the finest kreplach on the planet, will only eat B&B kreplach if she's not eating her own. This is not to say that she doesn't complain about them,
G Wiv wrote:Sounds like my kind of grandmother!
Willkat98 wrote:I like the grandma talk, because grandma just made up 64 kreplach for the five of us. Its a holiday tradition.
Vital Information wrote:We once almost at at that Chinese buffet in the mall. There was a lot of stuff on it that looked OK (or a bit better than OK). I think Wiv has also confessed to eating at that buffet.
bjt wrote:well not exactly but close . . . I had a bowl of kreplach soup at What's Cooking!
bjt wrote:well not exactly but close . . .
G Wiv wrote:I'll be back to try the kreplach, both soup and LAZ's potsticker's gone wrong.
riddlemay wrote:My default answer for kreplach soup in the city (as well as matzo ball soup) is The Bagel. It's almost too obvious. You think a place called "The Bagel" and located on Broadway in Chicago (and which has, what's more, committed the "crime" of having an outpost in Old Orchard Shopping Mall in Skokie) can't really be the best. But in fact, to my taste, it really is.