Chicago Eats
From curried catfish to baba ghanouj, Chicago serves up what may be the finest ethnic cuisine going
- By Jamie Katz
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2009, Subscribe
The people of Chicago, that stormy, husky, brawling kind of town, sure know how to tie on the feed bag. Has any other American city patented so many signature foods? There's deep-dish pizza, smoky Polish sausages, Italian beef sandwiches au jus, and, of course, the classic Chicago-style hot dog: pure Vienna Beef on a warm poppy-seed bun with mustard, relish, pickled peppers, onions, tomato slices, a quartered dill pickle and a dash of celery salt. Alter the formula (or ask for ketchup) and you can head right back to Coney Island, pal. For better or worse, it was Chicago that transformed the Midwest's vast bounty of grains, livestock and dairy foods into Kraft cheese, Cracker Jack and Oscar Mayer wieners. And in recent years, emerging from its role as chuck wagon to the masses, Chicago finally bulled its way into the hallowed precincts of haute cuisine, led by renowned chefs Charlie Trotter, Rick Bayless and Grant Achatz, who's one of the forerunners of a movement known as molecular gastronomy. "They hate the term, but that's how people refer to it," says Mike Sula, a food columnist for the weekly Chicago Reader. "They like to call it 'techno-emotional cuisine.'" But does it taste good? "Oh yeah," he says.
Sula filled me in during a Sunday morning stroll through the historic Maxwell Street Market (now transplanted to Desplaines Street) on the Near West Side. We weren't there for the cutting-edge cuisine, but something much older and more fundamental. Call it street food, peasant food, a taste of home—by any name, Maxwell Street has been serving it up for a long time. So it made sense to include the market on my exploration of what may be the richest of Chicago's culinary treasures: the authentic, old-country eateries scattered throughout the city's ethnic neighborhoods.
In 1951, author Nelson Algren wrote of Chicago streets "where the shadow of the tavern and the shadow of the church form a single dark and double-walled dead end." Yet President Barack Obama's hometown is also a city of hope. Visionaries, reformers, poets and writers, from Theodore Dreiser and Carl Sandburg to Richard Wright, Saul Bellow and Stuart Dybek, have found inspiration here, and Chicago has beckoned to an extraordinary range of peoples—German, Irish, Greek, Swedish, Chinese, Arab, Korean and East African, among many, many others. For each, food is a powerful vessel of shared traditions, a direct pipeline into the soul of a community. Choosing just a few to sample is an exercise in random discovery.
__________________________
Maxwell Street has long occupied a special place in immigrant lore. For decades, the area had a predominantly Jewish flavor; jazzman Benny Goodman, Supreme Court Justice Arthur Goldberg, boxing champ and World War II hero Barney Ross, not to mention Oswald assassin Jack Ruby, all grew up nearby. Infomercial king Ron Popeil ("But wait, there's more!") started out hawking gadgets here. African-Americans also figure prominently in the street's history, most memorably through performances by bluesmen like Muddy Waters, Big Bill Broonzy and Junior Wells. Today, the market crackles with Mexican energy—and the alluring aromas of Oaxaca and Aguascalientes. "There's a great range of regional Mexican dishes, mostly antojitos, or little snacks," Sula said. "You get churros, sort of extruded, sugared, fried dough, right out of the oil, fresh—they haven't been sitting around. And champurrado, a thick corn-based, chocolaty drink, perfect for a cold day."
As flea markets go, Maxwell Street is less London's Portobello Road than something out of Vittorio De Sica's Bicycle Thief, with mounds of used tires, power tools, bootleg videos, baby strollers, tube socks and lug wrenches—a poor man's Wal-Mart. A vendor nicknamed Vincent the Tape Man offers packing materials of every description, from little hockey pucks of electrical tape to jumbo rolls that could double as barbell weights.
Sula and I sampled some huaraches, thin handmade tortillas covered with a potato-chorizo mix, refried beans, grated cotija cheese and mushroomy huitlacoche, also known as corn smut or Mexican truffles—depending on whether you regard this inky fungus as blight or delight. Sula said he was sorry we hadn't been able to find something more transcendent.
"Usually there's a Oaxacan tamale stand where they have the regular corn husk–steamed tamales, plus a flatter, larger version wrapped in a banana leaf—those are fantastic," he said. "Another thing I'm disappointed not to see today is something called machitos, kind of a Mexican haggis. It's sausage, pork or lamb, done in a pig's stomach."
Sula doesn't fool around.
____________________________________________________
The cultural heart of Chicago's widely dispersed Mexican community is Pilsen, an older neighborhood close to Maxwell Street that was once dominated by Czechs who worked in the city's mills and sweatshops. Many of its solid, artfully embellished buildings look as if they might have been transported brick by brick from old Bohemia, but the area's fiercely colored murals are an unmistakably Mexican declaration of cultural pride and political consciousness.
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (12)
Im trying to track down the warrren lee evanich that posted on this page. Please look me up on facebook!!!!!
Posted by Tina on July 14,2011 | 09:55 PM
I have lived in Chicago 10 years and am still in awe of the amazing ethnic food scene. The people and the food are all wonderful. Great article. Thank you.
Lisa
www.llworldtour.com
Posted by Lisa Lubin on November 17,2009 | 12:30 PM
It's hard to match the culinary variety that is Chicago. Even in our western suburbs 35 miles from downtown, you'll never travel more than 5 miles before running into a quandary.
What to have tonight? Decide between traditional selections, Indian vegetarian, pricey seafood, numerous Italian and pizza places, various Asian specialties, buffets, casual dining chain eateries, and of course - the choices for dessert. So many foods, so little time, so many frowns from my physician! That's tomorrow - but tonight? Gourmands unite!
Posted by Syed on August 7,2009 | 12:05 AM
REsponding to Berghoff's. They have been there since 1898 closed recently there main dining and had catering and bar area opened, lunches and light menu. But because of real estate now reopened restaurant. Also for people not in area great recipe book out BERGHOFF FAMILY COOKBOOK by Carlyn Berghoff and Jan Berghoff c.2007...
Posted by cathy on July 15,2009 | 02:39 PM
I am from Hammond,IN. and sad to say that Phil Smidt's is no longer in buisness.But if your looking for a place to get good pizza,go to Chicago Pizza and Oven Grinder on clark Street.
Posted by Warren Lee Evanich on June 27,2009 | 01:20 PM
I remember visiting Chicago back in 1970. My boyfriend and I found a restaurant where the owners brewed their own beer. If I recall correctly, the place had a German name...something like Berghoff's. Great food and great beer. Does anybody know if it's still there? I believe it had been in business for quite a few years before we visited.
Posted by Bill on June 4,2009 | 06:02 PM
True, Nuevo Leon is like a TacoBell. But I had bad service at Perez and notice they dont treat everyone equally, so my friends and I dont go there any more. I was raised in Pilsen and I support the local that support its community. I know plenty of great places here but thats for you to discover.
Posted by pollo on May 26,2009 | 10:57 PM
Fresh new restaurants in Pilsen include Perez Restaurant on 18th by Racine so give'em a try.
But... um, oh no, not Nuevo Leon... that's the Taco Bell of Pilsen. Ick, yuck, eww.
Posted by Sandra on May 26,2009 | 02:22 PM
La Condesa is okay, but a little lacking in the flavor department. For a great neighborhood spot, try Nuevo Leon on 18th between Ashland and Blue Island on the south side of the street. They have better mole and better guac.
Posted by Scott Horwitz on May 16,2009 | 09:50 PM
I spent five years in Chicago in the early 1970s, first on the South Side at the U. of Chicago, and then attended Northwestern U. for a year of grad school, so got to know the North Side a bit as well.
Even then, the diversity of ethnic food was astounding. Mexicans were largely on the south side then (Pilsen was stil Czech). My favorite place was La Luz del Dia on 94th Street, where workers from US Steel's South Works (now demolished) would come for take-out shopping bags full of tamales.
The Warsaw Restaurant on Milwaukee Ave. was the center of Polish cooking, with waitresses who spoke almost no English. And my vote for most unusual goes to a Yugoslav place on Lake Calumet, across the street from a ship chandelery, called The Golden Shell. I had a huge plate of cevapcici in its dining room, which featured fuzzy red wallpaper with a gold fleur de lis pattern.
And I haven't even gotten to Phil Smidt's in Hammond, with all-you-can-eat frog's legs, or to the sausage factories that sold to the public one day a week (my favorite was the Crawford Sausage Company -- Hungarian salami called prasky, scented with paprika). And of course the "Red Hot" vendors just of Chicago's campus, where every "Vienna Red Hot" came with mustard, pickle relish, onion, and one "small but devastating" pickled hot pepper. I can still taste that sausage.
Chicago in the 1970s was an ethnic food festival. I'm glad to hear that it still is.
Posted by Randolph Resor on May 3,2009 | 02:41 PM
I agree La Condesa is pretty rad, but there are too many places to choose from! Everyone you ask will have their favorite spot. Mine is the newly opened Mex Grill on Damen/18th... excellent for vegetarians!
Posted by Martine on April 30,2009 | 05:41 PM
What a pleasure to see one of our favorite restaurants)Podhalanka) and one of our favorite grocery stores(Devon Market) mentioned in a great article. Ethnic restaurants and grocery stores are one of the best parts of Chicago. I am a recent (well, 29 years ago today as a matter of fact) but my husband was born and raised in Chicago (more than 29 years ago-we'll leave it at that). One of our favorite activities is to troll some of the food and restaurant websites and seek our next destination. Rarely have we ever been disappointed. Further, I've NEVER been disappointed by "Smithsonian Magazine"
Posted by sheryl on April 28,2009 | 08:46 PM