Dine About Chicago PTC Style: Our Favorite Chicago Restaurants

After doing a roundup of some of our favorite restaurants in the Bay Area, we decided it would be a great idea to ask our Chicago counterparts for their most frequented and most favorite.

Avec – a very popular, therefore very crowded, restaurant. Many reviews say it is worth the wait and the communal tables add a new twist on the old restaurant environment.

Blackbird – Noted for its innovative menu and small but solid wine list.

North Pond – With a gorgeous view and knowledgeable staff, this would be a great place for a special occasion or visiting guest.

Adobo Grill – This is a great location to get something different than your usual Mexican food, but also a good spot for a delicious margarita!

Piccolo Sogno – This upbeat joint has great appetizers as well as an array of wines served by the glass.

Big Star – These homemade and creative dishes are served at a great price!

MK – Great food in an intimate atmosphere that’s not too packed together.

Fronterra Grill – This restaurant works with top notch ingredients and serves up some delicious Mexican dishes along with great margaritas and a wide selection of Mexican beers.

Custom House – Our chefs love the Braised Short Rib!

The Publican – a pork and beer lovers dream!

The Avenues – They have a fantastic 15 course tasting menu, set in the beautiful Peninsula of Chicago.

Everest – Our chefs see this as one of their favorite staples.

Sola – Awesome food and drinks. The room has great sound as well – you can hear the person sitting across from you.

Spring – This restaurant has great food, drinks AND service. A few of the PTC favorites are the Seared Maine Sea Scallops, braised oxtail, wild mushrooms, sweet soy, and baby bok choy.

Spacca Napoli – The service is great – your pizza comes out 5-10 minutes after you order them. All of their pizzas are made in the in-house wood burning Pizza oven. The pizza special with porcinis and truffle cheese is a favorite.

Mixteco – Great mole and it is BYOB!

Any or all of these restaurants are great options to show visitors, try out for the first time, or put on your regular list of restaurants – as tested and proven by our own Chicago foodies!

Bacon, It Is Everywhere – Including Your Undergarments

Remember not too long ago when the thing to do was be healthy, buy organic, go vegetarian? Well apparently that was a joke because the “thing” is now bacon. Bacon Vodka, bacon peanut brittle, bacon jelly beans, bacon gumballs, bacon wallets, bacon lampshades, bacon bras. It does not stop there and trust me it does not stop getting increasingly ridiculous. At first I thought this was a joke, a big practical joke on the average weight of Americans, and then it happened, the moment I realized this was all too real. I went to the grocery store searching for white chocolate to bake with. I found a wall of chocolate and figured this was where I would be finding my loot. But no. They had 7 varieties of bacon chocolate and no white chocolate. Now I am completely aware that NO ONE likes white chocolate, but are you really trying to tell me that there are more people who like bacon chocolate, than who like white chocolate? I was horrified.

There are some bacon products I can kind of understand (I will never completely understand bacon products):

  • Bacon Mayonnaise: you can use this on BLT’s,… well that’s the only thing that could legitimize bacon mayonnaise
  • Wrapping other things in bacon: I think this may be the culprit for making everyone crazy for bacon. My favorite recipe at Parties That Cook is the Bacon-Wrapped Prune/Persimmon with Blue Cheese and Honey-Balsamic Glaze. Another feature on the internet was bacon-wrapped hot dogs.

Ok the list ends there.

On to the list of bacon products that shouldn’t exist, because we all know these are the only reason we search the internet for bacon products:

  • Bacon bra, enough said.
  • Bacon flavored envelopes. The creators have this to say: “Technology has given us a lot lately. The car. TV. X-rays. The refrigerator. The Internet. Heck, we even cured polio. But what have our envelopes tasted like for the last 4,000 years? Armpit, that’s what.” I have a whole slew of things that I would place above flavored envelopes on the priority list, apparently that’s just me.
  • Bacon candy (lollipops, jelly beans), baked goods, and ice cream (I love you Humphry Slocombe but I won’t be trying this new flavor).
  • Bacon cake – an article online speaks of a woman who ordered a bacon wedding cake because it was her husband’s favorite thing other than her. Congratulations to him for finding the only woman on the face of the earth who would sacrifice her wedding day for his unreasonable obsession with bacon.
  • Bacon soap – I guess I’ll know when I meet the people who bought this product.

The bacon fad is hilarious for a nice rainy day internet search. Some of my favorites were the Mr. Bacon vs. Monsieur Tofu action figures, St. Anthony – the patron saint of bacon, the “I Love Meat” sticker collection, along with many more. There are plenty of people who are plenty passionate about bacon and love these new bacon products, and power to you, because it looks as though EVERYTHING is being produced with a big fat injection of bacon. I, myself, will be using the bacon fad as amusement on a day when facebook activity is slow.

I will provide you with a DELICOUS bacon-included recipe in hopes that someday you will join me away from the dark side:

BACON-WRAPPED DRIED PLUMS WITH BLUE CHEESE
AND BALSAMIC-HONEY GLAZE

Plums:

9 ounces of thinly-sliced bacon, cut in half

2 ounces soft blue cheese

3 ounces cream cheese

½ teaspoon fresh thyme leaves

Pinch of kosher salt

24 pitted dried plums (prunes)

Balsamic Glaze:

½ cup balsamic

1 ½ Tablespoons honey

Preheat oven to 350ºF.

Bacon: Lay the cut bacon on a cooling rack over a sheet pan. Transfer to the oven and partially cook the bacon (only 5 minutes).

Make Stuffing: Using a hand mixer or fork, mix the blue cheese and cream cheese together. Add the thyme and salt. Chill in freezer for 5 minutes.

Stuff Prunes: Using a pastry bag fitted with ¼-inch tip, stuff each prune with 1 teaspoon of the cheese mixture. Wrap with a piece of partially cooked bacon and fasten with a toothpick.

Broil: Place on a baking pan and broil on one side until the bacon starts to brown (about 2-3 minutes). Turn and finish cooking until the bacon is crisp (another 2-3 minutes). If left too long under the broiler, the cheese will melt and ooze out. Transfer to a platter, garnish platter with a few sprigs of thyme.

Balsamic Glaze: Combine balsamic and honey in a sauté pan and simmer/reduce for 2 minutes. Drizzle or brush over plated prunes.