Since I too managed to eat this weekend at Semiramis, tried the apple fritter from Old Fashioned Donuts for the first time, and also plan on shamlessly stealing the Annals of the Overlooked in a forthcoming post, I shall add on my own weekend report:
Thursday night it was pizza from
Grand Slam. This pizza stands as the best thin cut Chicago pizza I have had in ages, and surely one better than any on the
recent thin cut pizza athon. Plus, you can get an extra large pizza and a small pizza for less than twenty if you mention the "coupon" when ordering!
Friday it was beating MikeG to Semiramis where our table shared a whole roast chicken, shredded lamb over lamb rice and lotsa mezes (and lotsa garlic sauce). Probably my favorite place to open in 2005 (so far). Dessert was
Toot's, which may not have great dogs, but I love their sof-serve.
Saturday as usual we visited the farmer's market (to be blogged) and finally made it to a very interesting butcher shop on the Oak Park-Chicago boarder (more info to come). We also sampled that fritter. It surely is a great as portrayed all these years. And we at terrific Chinese food at a place that I hope soon will not be so over-looked.
Sunday we had the ideal dinner for 100 degrees, three "eat fire" dishes from Thai Avenue. We got the bamboo salad, the Northern style laab (with chicken) and the nam tok with beef. Each was similiar in some ways, but each very different in the end. My favorite dish at Thai Avenue remains the wet Northern laab*. It is wonderfully complex in flavorings, with spicing only Erik M would know but with endorphin producing heat at the end of each mouthful. And it is always nice to spritz up your ground chicken with strings of pork skin and ultra thin slices of liver (how do they slice the liver so thin?).
On Sunday, we also got around to trying Bobtail Soda Factory for the first time. I liked their Spy influenced** decor perhaps a little better than the ice cream, but it was still good enough ice cream (if no where in the league of Cupid, Gayety, etc.).
Finally, on Sunday night, I picked up some Czech bread at the recently re-modeled and re-named Czeck AND Slovak store. I was very worried when I saw the for sale sign on the Czeck Bakery near Central and Belmont as without the crucial inclusion of a sixth cuisine to the Greek, Arabic, Polish, Bulgarian, and Mexican, people would no longer believe me that the 3100 block of Central was the city's premier Chow Block. The new version of the store seems about the same with perhaps a bit more in the deli case.
Since my athoning took me across two of my favorite streets, Lawrence and Montross, I passed manny a place for next time.
Rob
*Note, the Northern Style laab is not on the English menu at Thai Avenue, but if you make clear,
Northern, it is easy to get. Also, if you tell Thai Avenue hot, they will accomodate.
**Special MikeG reference in honor of his thread.
Think Yiddish, Dress British - Advice of Evil Ronnie to me.