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Appetizers, small plates and sides | 100 best things we ate and drank in 2012
Published: November 29, 2012
405.rb.ft.AppsSmallPlatesSides
Mushroom and blue-cheese empanada at 5411 Empanadas Normally something as small as this palm-size pocket would be overpowered by blue cheese. Here, it’s balanced by a strong dose of thyme.
Photo: Sarah Lawhead405.rb.ft.100best.main.5411EmpanadasxSS.jpg158899311
Biscuits at Acadia The tiny biscuits served with every meal here have an uncountable number of buttery layers. Naturally, they’re served with even more butter and a pile of sea salt.
Photo: Colin Beckett405.rb.ft.100best.main.Acadia2xSS.jpg158899512
Blue crab salad at ATK Thai chef-about-town Andy Aroonrasameruang has an answer to ceviche: raw blue crabs, shells intact, marinated in fish sauce and lime juice before crowning a garlicky, spicy salad of Chinese celery and long beans. Pick up the shell, slurp out the intensely salty and sour crab flesh, and repeat.
Photo: Sarah Lawhead405.rb.ft.100best.main.ATKxSS.jpg158899763
Chopped chicken liver at Au Cheval This is the richest, lushest, silkiest, most sumptuous chopped chicken liver in the world—and it comes with a big quenelle of soft, salted butter.
Photo: Kari Skaflen405.rb.ft.100best.main.AuChevalxSS.jpg158907514
Belgian-style fries at Backwoods The best fries in Chicago? No. The best salty, crispy, mayo-accompanied food served from a takeout window until 2am in Boystown? Oh, hell yes.
Photo: Jason Little405.rb.ft.100best.main.BackwoodsxSS.jpg158900265
Thai-style fried chicken at bellyQ McDonald’s chicken nuggets, left in chef Bill Kim’s hands, would taste like this: tender, boneless meat triple-battered and coated in a sticky-spicy glaze.
Photo: Jason Little405.rb.ft.100best.main.BellyQxSS.jpg158900416
Cheese burek at Beograd Café Each morning, this Serbian bakery/café/bar bakes a couple hundred flaky rounds of feta-stuffed pastry pies, ideal as a breakfast washed down with the drinkable housemade yogurt (think fresh kefir). Arrive early while they’re still warm.
Pa amb tomàquet con jamón serrano y queso Manchego at Black Bull True, there is no actual cooking involved in the making of this simple dish, unless you count the toasting of the bread, which is softened with tomato and topped with a slice of earthy Manchego and a ribbon of great Spanish ham. Tell us why that’s a problem?
Photo: Colin Beckett405.rb.ft.100best.main.BlackBullxSS.jpg158900818
Hummus at Falafel & Grill Every grimy exterior cue to the contrary, this dive is doing everything right, down to the shockingly creamy, tahini-rich hummus.
Chestnut-mushroom soup at Goosefoot Between the scent of truffles and the creamy chestnut flavor, this soup bespeaks richness and luxury. Yet adorned with a few delicate crudités over celery-root puree, it’s just as much a display of chef Chris Nugent’s delicate, restrained sensibility.
Onion rings at Indie Burger There’s a lot to like about Indie Burger, not the least of which is its politics: These guys have done their research on what it means to be “local” and “sustainable” and haven’t sacrificed the burger’s flavor in the process. But enough political talk. Let’s talk about their crunchy, greaseless, perfect onion rings.
Photo: Sarah Lawhead405.rb.ft.100best.main.IndieBurgerxSS.jpg1589014111
Uni toro special at Kai Zan File making our own sushi under too much like work. Except: if one of the chefs here hands us this occasional special and instructs us to stir the quail-egg yolk into the surrounding rice, uni and super-fatty tuna, then dollop the silken mixture onto sheets of nori, yielding a hand roll whose combination of flavors feels…effortless.
Moqueca at La Sirena Clandestina Some things are harder than they look, and getting the fish, shrimp and mussels in this Brazilian seafood stew perfect is one of them. Luckily, this is the kind of thing that’s easy for a veteran chef like John Manion. The stew is even easier to eat.
Photo: Jason Little405.rb.ft.100best.main.LaSirenaClandestinaxSS.jpg1589018113
Soup at Lula Cafe If this year’s frequently changing, always surprising soups—squash with cacao nibs, apple with black quinoa—are any indication, we will never be able to predict what Lula will put into a soup, and the combination of flavors and textures will always be astounding.
Shaved vegetable salad at Maude’s Read this list a hundred times and you’ll find only one bona fide, meat-free salad, and you’re looking at it: an inspired combination of thinly shaved vegetables (beets, fennel, carrots, cabbage) with rich Bleu d’Auvergne cheese and big sprigs of fresh parsley.
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Jumbo buffalo wings at Monti’s Chef James Gottwald and wife Jennifer Monti’s neighborhood spot is an homage to Philly, so, um, no one tell them the origin of these impressively meaty wings.
Biscuits at Nana They share a bill with fried chicken, jalapeño slaw, and mac and cheese, but these fat, rich buttermilk biscuits (part of Nana’s Sunday-night family-style supper) still hold their own.
Baccalà frittole at Ombra We slowly came around to Ombra this year, learning to appreciate the lively Italian joint for what it’s good at: namely, a glass of wine at the bar and snacks like these piquant, crispy cod fritters.
Photo: Andrew Nawrocki405.rb.ft.100best.main.OmbraxSS.jpg1589025118
Charcuterie board at Paris Club It’s not a board; it’s a miniature table. And the pistachio-studded country pâté, short-rib-and-foie-gras terrine and devastating foie-gras mousse atop it are so fantastic we wish we were miniature people so we could just sit down at it every night for dinner.
Ribollita soup at Publican Quality Meats It wouldn’t be a Paul Kahan restaurant if it didn’t put extraordinary care into a rustic, replenishing $4 cup of peasant soup.
Zaalouk at Shokran This traditional cold salad of soft, sweet eggplant and tomatoes is the sleeper hit at this quiet Moroccan spot (which itself is a sleeper hit of the Northwest Side).
405.rb.ft.100best.main.ShokranxSS.jpg1589029121
Yang-nyum tong doc (deep-fried chicken with spicy sauce) at Ssaboo Hourglass Every Korean bar worth its soju has a take on fried chicken, but ever since it was a Lawrence Avenue dive bar back in the ’90s, this favorite has reigned supreme for its version: a whole hacked-up chicken marinated in top-secret gingery-garlic goodness, chilled overnight, double-fried and bathed in an equally secret sweet-and-spicy glaze.
Beef tongue at Yusho Just like all the small plates at Yusho, the tongue dish changes week to week. Here, we’re referring to the first iteration, where thin slices of tender, fat-slicked tongue, tasting like the best pastrami, were bunched together on a skewer. You know what they say about tongue tasting you back? We ate this tongue so quickly it didn’t have a chance.
Mushroom and blue-cheese empanada at 5411 Empanadas Normally something as small as this palm-size pocket would be overpowered by blue cheese. Here, it’s balanced by a strong dose of thyme.
It's okay to be a show-off.
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