Entries Tagged as 'groupon'

Night Out in Logan Square

June 2nd, 2011 · No Comments

Friday of Memorial Day Weekend.

Groupon for Real Tenochtitlan. Jess, Jen, Chad, Quinn and I. Quinn got arroz y frijoles and said his OJ tasted funny. Minutes later he passed out. I swear he didn’t have any pours from the pitcher of margaritas.

Jess and I split to go to Cole’s. Nathan’s band, The Pear Traps was on at 10:00 p.m. midnight.

Late night, Alice’s Lounge. This is really in Avondale, but I don’t want to change the post title. Polish dive bar. Crazy laser lights. Karaoke. The bar doesn’t close until 4 a.m. We did not stay quite that long.

Okocim.

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Bonsoiree

January 31st, 2011 · No Comments

In September of 2009, I bought a Groupon for Bonsoiree. The deal was $35 for $75 worth of food and I’d been wanting to try out this fine dining restaurant in my neighborhood since we moved here. The Groupon expired at the end of December 2010 and I still hadn’t used it by November. Well, on the night of November 15, the Michelin Guide announced the Chicago restaurants they were giving stars to. Bonsoiree was on the list. I woke up the next morning and knew I had to try for reservations that day. If I didn’t get them, they weren’t going to be had before the Groupon expired, since the announcement would drive people to the restaurant in droves!

I looked into reservations and mostly the only times available were either 5:00 p.m. or 10 p.m… except one day. One Wednesday they had a 6:00 reservation, so I grabbed it. Turns out it was the day before Jess’s birthday so it was a nice early birthday celebration.

We drove over to the restaurant at Armitage and California and even though we both live in Logan Square, we had to look around a bit. The building is TINY and nondescript. I’m sure we’ve been by it many times and not even noticed. Plus, there’s no branding or signage on the outside. Inside was intimate and modern, warm and inviting.. but outside? Not so much.

We’d decided ahead of time to get the 4-course menu for $45 each. Bonsoiree is BYO so Jess picked up a bottle of wine for us to share. The restaurant chilled it (it was white) and poured it for us throughout the meal.

I’m just going through these photos now at the end of January and we went in December, so I’m having to try to research to remember what the menu was back then!

Course 1: Pumpkin Salad with Escargot, White Anchovy, Baby Frissee, and Pumpkin 5 ways. I liked the salad, but not the anchovy so much. The frozen fennel-Thai basil mousse was awesome, though! Sorry, the descriptions are not that great.

Course 2: Scallop Motoyaki. Motoyaki is a Japanese style of cooking where they bake food topped with a mayonnaise-based sauce and serve it in an oyster shell. Sold! This dish was so rich and scrumptious!

Course 3: Kabocha-Nasturtium Soup with Oberon Caramel Drizzle. Basically squash soup with all of the garnishes around the plate – Maitake Chips, Cognac Apple Melt, Sesame-Cajun Spiced Chive Bits. The swirl in the middle was a sweeter caramel drizzle made with Oberon beer. So pretty to look at, plus so delicious. Each bite was different as we dipped the different garnishes in the soup.

Course 4: Buffalo Smoked Pork Shoulder, Bourbon-Barrel sauce, Salt and Pepper Sugar Snap Peas, Hominy-Coriander Tostone, Soy Sauce Flakes. The pork was so smoky and tender. In the upper corner, that’s a venison sausage meatball. This was a really generous portion. I was sort of afraid that we’d be still hungry after 4 small courses, but all of these courses were very generous.

Course 5: Boston Cream Beignets. So full, but always room for chocolate doughnuts and ice cream!

You’ll notice we got 5 courses, even though we requested the 4-course menu. Part of the reason we were so stuffed! Overall, we loved Bonsoiree. The food was so delicous and the portions very good sized. As far as gastro-gourmet-whatever restaurants, I’d put it right between Schwa and Alinea. More refined than Schwa, not as crazy as Alinea. I don’t know why they’re in this random, off-beat, spot in barely Logan Square, but whatever works for them. I’d recommend you go try it out, but I wonder now, how long you have to wait for a reservation! We totally lucked out getting a great discount with the Groupon at this Michelin-starred restaurant!

Oh. P.S. Jess and I were talking about how almost every course at Bonsoiree had an Asian influence. I just read now that the chef/owner Shin Thompson was born in Honolulu and grew up between the U.S. and Japan. I think the restaurant is officially described as French-Japanese fusion. I also read that Bonsoiree started out as an illegal underground dining experience that was located in different people’s apartments around the city. Of course, now they’re all legit and everything!

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I Wish Korean Food & Culture Lesson

January 20th, 2011 · 5 Comments

Last year Jen and I bought Groupons for a Food Tour from I Wish. I Wish is a company that tries to help you answer the question, “What do you wish you could learn?” In their food section they have many different kinds of cuisines that you could choose from for the Groupon.. and the Groupon got you in for $20 instead of the usual $40 – 45.

Jen and I choose the Korean culture and food class at Waba Korean Restaurant. We were to learn the the staples of traditional Korean cuisine while you are guided through a tasting tour of some favorite Korean dishes. Learn all about Korean culture, here and abroad, and how food has influenced the culture and history. And all the while, we of course got to eat.

Waba is a decent place. Nice, but not too fancy. Lots of TVs in the dining room. The food was great. It’s basically one room with a bar. In the photo below, the bar is kind of to the left and behind me:

The reason I mention the bar first, is because that’s where we started out. I had this Korean beer called Hite. They also had soju on special, but I’d had that before and I’d never had Hite, so I decided to try that.

Good beer. Light and refreshing. Cool and Fresh! Just like the label says!

Now, I just want to make a note before I talk about the food that we had. Jen and I attended the course in November. I took a couple notes, scribbled on a scrap of paper, but not a lot…. and I can’t remember every detail now that a few months have passed. With each dish we were told how it was prepared, when its served, some history and we were also told stories of historic as well as modern-day Korea. Well, I’m just going to try to at least remember the names of the dishes I took photos of and try to do a little bit of internet research on them!

Banchan are side dishes that are usually served in small portions and come out at the beginning of the meal. There’s always kimchi, maybe even multiple forms of it. My favorite banchan was a potato dish, shown on the bottom right.

Next up was japchae, a dish made from cellophane noodles, stir fried in sesame oil with various vegetables. It can be served hot or cold, in our case it was cold. I thought this noodle dish was ok, but it was not my favorite. I don’t think I was expecting it to be cold. This dish is always made with vegetables and sometimes with meat. Ours had some bulgogi (grilled marinated beef) in it.

This is kimchi bokkeumbap, which is kimchi fried rice. The photo doesn’t look very appetizing because we used the same plate that we used to eat our japchae. Don’t let that deceive you, though. The kimchee fried rice was one of my favorite dishes of the night. Ours was made with rice, kimchi, vegetables, and SPAM. Gasp! This might be the first time I ate SPAM. I’ve actually had it a few times since November, though.

This is miyeok guk, or seaweed soup, made from seaweed and soup stock. Ours also had a bit of meat in it. I think it was bulgogi again. Bulgogi seemed to be sprinkled in everything! Our instructor told us this is a very nutritious soup and is served to pregnant women and on special occasions like birthdays.

Next we tried a serving of bulgogi and somehow I did not take a photo of this. I think it’s because this was my other favorite dish of the night and I dove right in! Bulgogi is made from thin slices of sirloin or other prime cuts of beef. This meat is then marinated in a mixuture of shoyu, sugar, sesame, garlic and the like. Then the meat is grilled or pan fried.

Sitting next to us were some actual Koreans. Haha. They were really fun and filled us in on additional information about all of the food we were eating. I was wondering why they took this class, then I found a Yelp review from one of them. They thought they were signing up for a cooking course when they bought the Groupon. I must admit, I thought the same thing.

Bibimbap literally means “mixed meal,” which is appropriate because everything you see is stirred together just before it’s eaten. Bibimbap ingredients can vary. Ours had rice, vegetables, sprouts and bulgogi. What doesn’t vary is the egg on the top. We also stirred in gochujang (chili pepper paste), which is very common.

Next up was budae jjigae or “army base stew.” This soup is named this because after the Korean war, meat was scarce in Korea. People ate a lot of spam and hot dogs and other types of canned meats that were available as surplus foods from US Army bases. We’re told that budae jjigae is still very popular in South Korea and that SPAM is also surprisingly popular to this day. This reminded me of Hawaii a bit!

And one last photo of the outside of Waba Korean Restaurant as we were leaving. Jen and I had a fun time at the class. The food was good and you can see that we got to try a lot of different things. At the end they were even giving people seconds on things they had more of. We bought the Groupon for the lesson for $20, so we totally got our money’s worth. I don’t know if I’d think the same if I paid the full I Wish price of $40. Fun night, though.

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Havana Grill

December 13th, 2010 · 1 Comment


Havana Menu, River North, Chicago


Havana Grill, River North, Chicago


Ceviche Mixto: Marinated seafood in lime, veggies, mango and avocado. served with tri-colored chips


Torta De Pollo: Our specialty seasoned chicken breast with lettuce, tomato, onions and chipotle mayo. served in an onion ciabatta bread


Cross section of the Torta Cubana


Torta Cubana: Traditional cuban sandwich with smoked ham, pork loin, melted cheese, spicy mayo, pickles, tomato and lettuce. served in a brioche bun

I had a Groupon for Havana, so Alden and I went and checked it out for lunch. I had been to this restaurant before it was Havana. It was called Mambo Grill. Someone’s still paying to keep Mambo Grill’s site up, and if you look at it you’ll see the menu for Mambo and the menu for Havana are almost exactly the same. If you look at photos on Yelp, you’ll see that the interior has not changed at all either. Second verse same as the first.

Annnyyywayyy….. I liked it. The ceviche was awesome. And big. I thought the long plantain chips were a unique touch even though I kind of liked the crispness of the tortilla chips better. And maybe it was because I gorged so much on ceviche, but I could only eat half of my sandwich and fries. I ate the other half for lunch the next day. I had the cubano, Alden had the pollo. My sandwich was tasty, but the chimichurri sauce was not good. Not when you’ve had chimichurri from El Nandu! Also, all sandwiches are served with “Latin fries.” The fries were tasty, but there was nothing Latin about them, that I could tell. They were a mix of regular and sweet potato fries.

I think we only paid in the single digits for lunch that day, after the Groupon. Awesome. I’d go back.

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Caipirinha!

October 13th, 2010 · 1 Comment

In August I had a Groupon for Cafe 28 that was going to expire soon so Dallas and I met up with Paul Baker and Kate for dinner. Cafe 28 is a Cuban-Mexican restaurant on Irving Park Road that Dallas used to live near. We used to go for brunch and dinner sometimes and it was always good. Since Dallas doesn’t live near there any more, we haven’t been to dinner at Cafe 28 for probably years. I was excited to go back!

I arrived a bit earlier than everyone else so I sat at the bar. I ordered a caipirinha and chatted with the bartender a little bit. When my drink came, I took a sip and was like “Whoah! That is strong!” and the bartender was all “Well, it should be. It’s all liquor!” Oh. Ok. The bartender reminded me that the caipirinha is made from cachaca (like rum, but made from sugarcane) and a bit of lime and sugar. I love this drink though! It’s Brazil’s national cocktail. As far as I can remember, the first one I ever had was at Esperanto in New York 5 years ago. Love at first sip. I will always remember that as being the best one I had…. tons of muddles limes. Delicious.

As for Cafe 28. It was great, as always. And we hadn’t been out with Paul and Kate for ages, so it was good to catch up with them. Fun night!

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