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Saturday, October 13, 2012

Two of the Top 15 Best Sandwiches found in Bridgeport!

The 50 Best
Sandwiches
in Chicago
Old Oak Tap BLT
Edited by Carly Boers, Penny Pollack, and Jeff Ruby
Contributors: Cassie Walker Burke, Elly Fishman, Peter Gianopulos, Noah Isackson, Maryanne Johnson, Esther Kang, Megan Lovejoy, Graham Meyer, Matt Schur, Lena Singer, Emmet Sullivan, Jennifer Tanaka, Joanne Trestrail

For generations, sandwiches were the ultimate guilty pleasure of subcultures that had no patience for guilt: hungry bachelors, school kids, working stiffs, old men in delis. To fridge-foraging rubes like Dagwood, quality wasn’t half as important as quantity. The sandwich was one of the only snacks you were allowed to pile as high as you wanted with anything you desired and cram into your face with both hands—a meal so inelegant and blithely proud of its inelegance that it came in six-foot segments for parties. And we ate it. Standing up.
Now we’ve got French dips made with shaved prime rib, po’ boys with organic shrimp, and grilled cheese with fancy pimiento cheese. Hell, you can get a buttered ciabatta layered with local eggs, house-cured speck, and fontina for breakfast at Balsan if the idea of spending $19 for a ham and egg sandwich does not scandalize you. What in the name of John Montagu is going on here?
The sandwich pendulum has always swung erratically from the treat of the nobility to the fuel of the proletariat. But what we’re witnessing now is the sharpest swerve yet toward the land of fine dining—a shift that overlaps, not coincidentally, with the great democratization of Chicago’s restaurants. Ground zero for the boom is Publican Quality Meats, where Paul Kahan regards sandwiches as serious dishes. So does Acadia’s Ryan McCaskey, who makes a mean lobster roll, and Rick Bayless, who offers up a vegetarian stunner at Xoco.
To guide you through the bustling sandscape, we fanned out across the city and suburbs, hitting spots high and low in search of anything delicious between two slices of bread. For the purposes of this story, we defined “sandwich” in the strictest of terms: no wraps, dumplings, or open-faced pretenders. Hamburgers and hot dogs didn’t qualify. Italian beef sandwiches did, but not one made this list. (Face facts: Chicago’s spongy grease bomb is not among the better contributions to the genre.) We gave points to the well crafted, the fresh, and the robust, anchored by bread with enough distinct character to bolster the proceedings without overshadowing or interfering.
The result: our list of Chicago’s 50 best sandwiches, ranked in order of deliciousness. Some are ingenious, such as Scofflaw’s layered masterpiece of braised brisket, pork belly, and pork loin. Others are blunt and glorious classics, done simply and done right. (Meatball sub from Bari, take a bow.)
In our research, we learned that the sandwich is a wily chameleon, soaking up and synthesizing every trend, be it the resurgence of house-cured charcuterie or the sudden ubiquity of arugula. We learned to ask for extra napkins ahead of time. And we learned, above all, that quality and quantity can intersect in restaurants, and there’s no shame in that. Only joy.
Photograph: Anna Knott; Food Stylist: Lisa Kuehl

Original Article:  Chicago Magazine



Wednesday, October 10, 2012

A Baby Boomlet in Bridgeport-Chicago Magazine: Dennis Rodkin

A Baby Boomlet in Bridgeport

Posted October 10, 2012, at 9:35 a.m.
By Dennis Rodkin

Kids at a birthday party in Bridgeport
In another sign of the renaissance of family living in the city, a townhouse development in urban Bridgeport is witnessing a baby boom of the sort that’s usually associated with suburban neighborhoods.

At the 39-unit Lexington Square, nine babies were born in 2011, as the builder announced in this press release. Two more babies were born this summer, and five more are on the way—two of them any day now. That’s in addition to the 12 children who moved with their parents into the new homes along the 3600 block of South Sangamon Street. On Saturday, six of the boom babies and their parents celebrated in the Lexington sales center/model home along with ten other children (pictured above).
“It feels like where I grew up in Orland Park, with so many little kids all on the same block,” says Lisa Chatys, who lives in the development with her husband, Martin, their six-year-old son, Cohen, and their 16-month-old daughter, Harlow. “Kids ride their bikes around here at night, and they can all play in the park across the street.”
That’s Donovan Park, where, for now, most of the Lexington babies can do little more than toddle. Harlow Chatys isn’t yet old enough for playgroups in the Donovan Park field house; her brother, Cohen, played baseball there over the summer, and his parents envision the park being a mainstay of their children’s future. “We don’t have to put the kids in the car to drive to a park,” as they did in their former River West address, notes Martin Chatys. “That’s one of the things that attracted us: this feels like a neighborhood for families.”
Because Martin Chatys is a Chicago cop, the family is required to live in the city. (Martin was born in Poland, but he moved to Chicago’s Marquette Park neighborhood as a boy.) But Lexington’s president, Jeff Benach, believes other homeowners will stay even if they don’t have to. “If you find a city neighborhood with a bunch of kids and [parents] interacting with each other like on a suburban cul-de-sac, it’s golden,” he says.
Benach, a second-generation homebuilder, says that, traditionally, his and his father’s companies expected about 50 percent of a townhouse development to be bought by first-time buyers with no kids and 40 percent by empty-nesters. At Lexington, “it’s been 100 percent families,” Benach says. “We intended these [units] to be single-family home substitutes.” With three bedrooms all on one level, there isn’t the stacking effect that can make townhouses awkward for families with young kids.
On top of that, “the overall length of time spent in one home has doubled,” Benach says. (That’s probably due in part to the decline in home values that keeps people in one spot.) Fundamental to keeping these families in Chicago will be the availability of a good education (as we discussed Monday in a segment on WBEZ’s The Morning Shift). But most of the parents of this gaggle of babies have several years before they have to cross that bridge and decide whether suburban schools have a stronger pull than city life.
In the meantime, there’s all the fun and dining of Bridgeport—not to mention the fireworks. From the upstairs windows and roof deck of the Chatys house (and others in the development that face east), there’s a fine view of the fireworks that go off a few blocks east during White Sox games at U.S. Cellular Field. What kid wouldn’t want to watch that while safe at home?

Photograph: Nick Castle
 
To read the original story as published.