joby wrote:Does Iberico have any really good sweets (nothing really jumped out at me from their online menu)? If not, are there any places nearby that are open later and have good sweets (we are game for anything as long as it has sugar in it and is not terribly expensive!) for after dinner?
joby wrote:Does anyone have any thoughts on "The House of Fine Chocolates"--
(www.houseoffinechocolates.com).
I found it on a website while searching the Belmont/Clark shopping area. It also said there was an Intelligentsia Coffee shop next door.
Would that be a better choice than our original idea of Ann Sather's (on Belmont) rolls to go-- before shopping the Belmont/ Clark area?
joby wrote:Just wondering if anyone had had anything at "House of Fine Chocolates" and if it was worth a detour.
earthlydesire wrote:Joby -- in that hood is a great independent coffee seller called The Coffee & Tea Exchange. They have a lot of great coffees and teas and the accoutrements to serve them up -- it's not a "coffeehouse" per se; you can't get a latte and a nosh or anything, but if you're looking for some fun coffee or tea to take home...it's a great place. it's on Broadway near Buckingham.
joby wrote: My daughter just saw the picture of the House of Fine Choc. city scape cake from the cake thread mentioned below--her vote is to go as soon as we arrive in Chicago and get a whole cake and ALSO all of the other days we are in the city! Sounds like a plan to me!
joby wrote:OK, we are not into goth, toys, paraphanalia, etc.!! The girls do like vintage clothing (especially older as in 40's-50's dresses/shoes/handbags, gloves, hats) and Goodwill/Salvation Army type stores (for the variety of things one might find).
When we had a transportation snafu this past summer on our Chicago adventure, we ended up riding the #22 Clark bus almost the whole route from south to north. We saw some really large shopping areas along that route that looked fun (not weird/wild). If memory serves me right (and it doesn't always!) it was around the Graceland cemetary area. It looked rather upscale??
Is there a large unique shopping area in that location or am I wrong?
We have the Michigan/State/Oak street areas covered on other days, I think. So, we wanted to branch out to some other unique area to look/shop that is still affordable to buy at.
Suggestions/comments?
Mhays wrote:Joby, I think you're talking about Andersonville, where Ann Sather's used to be - definitely a less charged atmosphere for walking around and looking at stuff (though the Belmont area has more fun stuff like Army surplus stores, Uncle Fun's etc.) That's around the 5200 block of Clark St.
nr706 wrote:Last I checked, Hopleaf doesn't open 'til 3 in the afternoon, but for a family in search of mussels and Belgian frites, it can't be beaten.