Mrs. JiLS and I ventured for breakfast today to the new hot spot, i.e., "Hot Spot" near the Armitage/California intersection. Whether that's Logan Square or "West Bucktown" depends on who your real estate agent is, but I'd say whatever the neighborhood, the character of Hot Spot is about 90% Bucktown. This trendy-looking breakfast spot is decorated in eye-popping fashion, with day-glo walls, floors and ceilings that would not be out of place in the romper room at Peter Max's house. Anyway, the place is nicely set up with a counter in front and two small dining rooms in back, probably seating about 50. The menu is typical artsy-Bucktown-Wicker Park fare; I think the menu could've been randomly assembled from Earwax, Lula and Leo's Lunch Room. I don't intend this pejoratively, simply to provide some idea of what to expect. The food was actually more than just decent and the service was attentive. Plus they had a big plate of free mini-muffins (cranberry, and delicious) by the register and didn't say a word when I grabbed three of them.
I ordered biscuits and gravy. Similar to my one experience at Leo's Lunch Room, the gravy at Hot Spot was mushroom rather than sausage, but this turned out fine because they made it rich and spicy enough that I hardly cared. One of my pet peeves with B&G served in this area is the general lack of flavor in the gravy; Hot Spot didn't have any problems in that regard, and I left the pepper shaker untouched. The biscuits were "cat heads" -- larger than my preferred "plop" size, but they came off pretty well. (I usually find the bigger biscuits to be tough or dried out; these were neither of those things.) Scrambled eggs on the side were, as Cathy2 would say, scrambled eggs on the side. "Country" potatoes were half-inch cubes fried up; nothing special but not bad, either. Coffee was so-so on the first cup; it improved dramatically as the meal progressed (probably due to increased customer traffic; I think our first cups came from an old pot.)
Mrs. JiLS had the corned beef hash and eggs. A minor mistake was quickly corrected (eggs ordered over-easy came out hard on the first try; replacements, cooked properly, were brought back in an impressively short period of time -- literally, about 30 seconds flat -- I think they robbed somebody else's eggs for us!). The corned beef hash was of the "big chunk" variety rather than finely minced and was delicious. The meat was flavorful, almost closer to pastrami, and blended well with the large cubes of potato and a dose of onion, as well. The eggs were eggs (over-easy). A little conversation arose between us about the varieties of corned beef hash. Mrs. JiLS, who grew up in Syracuse, NY, is more used to the finely-minced variety. I've seen both, but tend to associate the fine variety with delis and the chunky with steakhouses or specialty breakfast spots like Hot Spot. My theory is the finely-minced hash is a way of getting rid of the stale ends of the sandwich meat from the prior day (mincing hides myriad flaws), while the chunkier style uses a higher grade of raw material and is intended to show off how good the corned beef was before it got hashed. Just a theory, of course (*sits back and waits for thread-hijack*).
Hot Spot has a few rough edges, but given they opened up only about a week ago, I'm fairly well impressed. I foresee return visits.