Monster Road Trip [General]
2011 Aug 25

I can offer suggestions at both ends.
New Orleans: Bon Ton cafe www.thebontoncafe.com/ - have a rum ramsey. Only one person alive knows how to make them. Great softshell crabs too.
Also Mothers which has great fried oyster poboys. www.mothersrestaurant.net/
If you are heading out to tour the plantations, just about any roadside shack with a lot of trucks parked outside is a safe bet.
Cafe du Monde is on everyone's list for cafe au lait and beignets, but a great place that is off the tourist track is Morning Call in Metairie www.morningcallcoffeestand.com
Chicago:
Burt's place - Morton Grove, north of the city
www.urbanspoon.com We saw this place on "No reservations" and definitely worth a trip. Burt is the guy who invented deep dish pizza, and has given it to all the places he worked in Chicago who now claim to have the best. But if you drive up to his place you won't be disappointed. He and his wife run it, and you need to make a reservation, because he can only cook two pizzas at a time. When we were there we saw people come in to order takeout and he'd tell them to come and pick it up in THREE HOURS, because he has such a limited capacity. I don't think it will be around much longer, so give it a try.
We also loved Jose Garces' Mercat la Planxa in the Blackstone Hotel. www.mercatchicago.com High energy tapas style place with amazing food and really interesting cocktails. Bonus is that because they are in a hotel they serve amazing breakfasts too.
Frontera Grill is well known but also worth the almost 2 hour wait. www.rickbayless.com
It's Rick Bayless' flagship restaurant and has an active bar scene. I think of his tamarind margaritas often and the food is really top notch. The sauces are so complex and unlike anything I've had anywhere else. Loved the duck and the various fish. Picture is of Cazuela of pork. If you don't want to wait, he serves the best food court fare anywhere at Frontera fresca in the food court at Macy's (formerly Marshall Fields).
You definitely need to get some Garrett's popcorn, chicago mix.
www.garrettpopcorn.com/
It's a mixture of cheese corn and nutty caramel corn and it needs to be eaten right away. They are all over town, and there's an outlet at O'Hare which makes it great for the flight back to Ottawa.
Chicago Curry House in the south loop has the best Indian food in town, and I love their cherry stuffed Kashmiri Naan.
www.curryhouseonline.com/
At Macy's on State Street there is an old wood panelled dining room called The Walnut Room www.visitmacyschicago.com Its menu is a throwback: meatloaf, chicken pot pie etc., but it's the kind of old fashioned dept. store dining room experience that doesn't exist any more.
If you were starting in Chicago and heading to NOLA, I'd also tell you to try Heaven on 7 www.heavenonseven.com
It's curiously located on the 7th floor of a high rise office tower, and their cajun specialties are quite good, but definitely not as good as what you'll find in NOLA.
I look forward to hearing about all the places you'll find in between.
New Orleans: Bon Ton cafe www.thebontoncafe.com/ - have a rum ramsey. Only one person alive knows how to make them. Great softshell crabs too.
Also Mothers which has great fried oyster poboys. www.mothersrestaurant.net/
If you are heading out to tour the plantations, just about any roadside shack with a lot of trucks parked outside is a safe bet.
Cafe du Monde is on everyone's list for cafe au lait and beignets, but a great place that is off the tourist track is Morning Call in Metairie www.morningcallcoffeestand.com
Chicago:
Burt's place - Morton Grove, north of the city
www.urbanspoon.com We saw this place on "No reservations" and definitely worth a trip. Burt is the guy who invented deep dish pizza, and has given it to all the places he worked in Chicago who now claim to have the best. But if you drive up to his place you won't be disappointed. He and his wife run it, and you need to make a reservation, because he can only cook two pizzas at a time. When we were there we saw people come in to order takeout and he'd tell them to come and pick it up in THREE HOURS, because he has such a limited capacity. I don't think it will be around much longer, so give it a try.
We also loved Jose Garces' Mercat la Planxa in the Blackstone Hotel. www.mercatchicago.com High energy tapas style place with amazing food and really interesting cocktails. Bonus is that because they are in a hotel they serve amazing breakfasts too.
Frontera Grill is well known but also worth the almost 2 hour wait. www.rickbayless.com
It's Rick Bayless' flagship restaurant and has an active bar scene. I think of his tamarind margaritas often and the food is really top notch. The sauces are so complex and unlike anything I've had anywhere else. Loved the duck and the various fish. Picture is of Cazuela of pork. If you don't want to wait, he serves the best food court fare anywhere at Frontera fresca in the food court at Macy's (formerly Marshall Fields).
You definitely need to get some Garrett's popcorn, chicago mix.
www.garrettpopcorn.com/
It's a mixture of cheese corn and nutty caramel corn and it needs to be eaten right away. They are all over town, and there's an outlet at O'Hare which makes it great for the flight back to Ottawa.
Chicago Curry House in the south loop has the best Indian food in town, and I love their cherry stuffed Kashmiri Naan.
www.curryhouseonline.com/
At Macy's on State Street there is an old wood panelled dining room called The Walnut Room www.visitmacyschicago.com Its menu is a throwback: meatloaf, chicken pot pie etc., but it's the kind of old fashioned dept. store dining room experience that doesn't exist any more.
If you were starting in Chicago and heading to NOLA, I'd also tell you to try Heaven on 7 www.heavenonseven.com
It's curiously located on the 7th floor of a high rise office tower, and their cajun specialties are quite good, but definitely not as good as what you'll find in NOLA.
I look forward to hearing about all the places you'll find in between.
2011 Aug 25
Great suggestions Blubarry. Mothers was already on the list. The Bonton Cafe sounds like a great idea. I've been to Cafe Du Monde so maybe we will change it up this time. Don't really know Chicago well so your suggestions are helpful. Rick Bayless is a fav of ours so we are gonna try and get into Frontera...thanks for a heads up on the wait. OH, and thanks for reminding me of Garretts. I read about it on another blog. Seems there are long lines there as well, but a must do.
Thanks again,
Maureen
Thanks again,
Maureen
2011 Aug 25
Have you checked out the second season of Alton Brown's "Feasting on Asphalt"?
"The journey began in Venice, Louisiana, with Brown and his crew tracing the Mississippi River north.Feasting on Asphalt 2 was filmed during April and May 2007, and consists of six episodes along the Great River Road. Brown deviates from the Great River Road, however, missing several of the cities that travel along the Mississippi River; rather than following the river through towns such as Grand Rapids, Minnesota, and Bemidji, Minnesota, Brown cuts straight over from Crosby, Minnesota to Itasca State Park in order to reach the source of the Mississippi River."
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Check out the Wikipedia entry for each episode's places/establishments and coordinates with notes on them. en.wikipedia.org
"The journey began in Venice, Louisiana, with Brown and his crew tracing the Mississippi River north.Feasting on Asphalt 2 was filmed during April and May 2007, and consists of six episodes along the Great River Road. Brown deviates from the Great River Road, however, missing several of the cities that travel along the Mississippi River; rather than following the river through towns such as Grand Rapids, Minnesota, and Bemidji, Minnesota, Brown cuts straight over from Crosby, Minnesota to Itasca State Park in order to reach the source of the Mississippi River."
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Check out the Wikipedia entry for each episode's places/establishments and coordinates with notes on them. en.wikipedia.org
2011 Aug 25
Live4food, you bet! It was the partial inspiration for this year's trip. We do diverge from the River Road so we can explore other parts of Mississippi and Tennessee, but we certainly are taking lots of clues from the show.
I wonder if that restaurant is serving those rib tips on pancakes? :-)
I wonder if that restaurant is serving those rib tips on pancakes? :-)
2011 Aug 25
Happy Mouth if you have a chance when going through Nashville
check out Martins BBQ Joint in Nolensville.
www.martinsbbqjoint.com
check out Martins BBQ Joint in Nolensville.
www.martinsbbqjoint.com
2011 Aug 27

New Post: Day one of our 2011 Monster Road Trip - New Orleans! Po'boys, jambalaya and shrimp remoulade. Oh, my! happymouth.ca/?p=4032
2011 Aug 28
keep em coming. Its going to be a long time until the kids are old enough to leave before I'll get to do a trip like this. Love it! Chicago go to avec - don't miss it. If you are in Chicago on a Sunday go to Maxwell St market for the best mexican food north of the border. Outstanding regional mexican for ridiculously cheap.
2011 Aug 28

New Post: New Orleans Day 3: The mighty Muffaletta and elegance at the Rib Room.
happymouth.ca/?p=4205
happymouth.ca/?p=4205
2011 Aug 29

New Post: Road Trip Day 4, crossing into Mississippi. Roadside meats, Crawfish Mac 'n' Cheese, and killer BBQ in Natchez at the Pig Out Inn.
happymouth.ca/?p=4334
happymouth.ca/?p=4334
2011 Aug 30

New Post: Road Trip day 5 from Natchez to Jackson, MS - Pecan pie for breakfast, hot tamales, and saucy BBQ.
happymouth.ca/?p=4403
happymouth.ca/?p=4403
2011 Aug 31

New post: Mississippi swamps, Where the King was born, Rib Alley and sandwiches at Elvis' favourite table.
happymouth.ca/?p=4482
happymouth.ca/?p=4482
2011 Sep 1
Happy Mouth while in Memphis don't forget to to visit Charles Vergos Great ribs second best I have tried.
www.hogsfly.com/VisitUs.php
www.hogsfly.com/VisitUs.php
2011 Sep 2

New Post: Completing the Natchez trace & tremendous BBQ sandwiches off the grid.
happymouth.ca/?p=4536
happymouth.ca/?p=4536
2011 Sep 4

New Post: Authentic Cajun food in the backwoods (really!) of Tennessee.
happymouth.ca/?p=4665
happymouth.ca/?p=4665
2011 Sep 28

...and the memories are still inspiring us to recreate some dishes!
New Post: Easy Crab and Corn Chowder. An easy family recipe adapted and inspired by New Orleans.
happymouth.ca/?p=5191
New Post: Easy Crab and Corn Chowder. An easy family recipe adapted and inspired by New Orleans.
happymouth.ca/?p=5191
Happy Mouth Blog
More info in the post:
happymouth.ca