Archive for 2010

Gingerbread, christmas harkens thee

Tuesday, December 21st, 2010

A few pictures from our bakers frosting the gingerbread men. So adorable! Pick up a few to top off those stockings or to attach to the top of your presents.

Gingerbread men get cold too, they need scarfs every once and a while

Natalie frosting our cupcakes with the signature swirl

Rebecca getting down to business, cute and fun business, but business no less

Holiday Treats – straight to your stockings

Tuesday, December 21st, 2010

Christmas party incoming? Holiday party tomorrow? Need to pick up something, but it can’t just be anything to a get together? We’ve got the solution – food and candy. Everyone loves both, and those who say they don’t are lying.

Grab from the plethora of items on our shelf. We may be small but we have a really diverse selection. Know someone who was naughty this year? Grab a Hammond’s Candy Coal for that rascal. Everyone loves chocolate and we’ve got loads of things for the chocoholic: TCHO’s Christmas boxes, Mille Lacs’ Trinkets, Mittens, and Snowflakes, Chocolate covered Hostess pretzels, fantastic chocolate covered grahams, too many more to name! Hard candy? Covered. Cookies? Handmade right here in the store, ready to devour! We’ve got jams, jellies, conserves that we make here – or take the bread pudding pancake mix over the grandma’s and make them in the morning for the family.

Fill up on stocking stuffers or full on gifts before it’s too late. And enjoy the holidays!

Our Christmas cookies

Monday, December 20th, 2010

Here come the holidays. Well, mostly they are already here. So, here are holidays. During this time of year there is a whole load of family rituals. We all have our traditions, Southport Grocery is no different. Lisa, owner and chef, carries on her grandmother’s tradition of making Christmas cookies.

It all started before anyone could remember, with Lisa’s grandmother making christmas cookies. Eventually it grew into such a custom each relative would bugger the poor woman into making their personal favorites – so everyone got a good spread. Then when Lisa was a little one she would join the gathering: head over to her grandmother’s and help make, bake, and stack cookies inside of old cake tins. Of course everyone would come over help pack up the cookies for christmas, but Lisa was one of the lucky ones, she got to have a little taste before everyone else. Her grandmother and her would get together and ‘sample’ the cookies with some tea after cooking the batches off.

Lisa wanted to share this part of her Christmas with our customers. Every year since opening we’ve baked off boxes and boxes of these fantastic cookies. It’s become a heartfelt tradition that we wanted to carry on you all. We put all the Christmas cheer, love, and a fair amount of sugar and butter into each cookie – making the ideal cookie mix.

Want to get your hands on a box? Run on by or call ahead to make sure we’ve got some. We only make a limited supply, and they go fast. They can go in gift baskets too.

Toni’s ‘stollen’ our notions of a holiday tradition

Friday, December 17th, 2010

Nestled in the Chicago suburb of Hinsdale, a city speckled with golf courses and a quaint downtown chock-full of adorable shops there is a bakery called Toni making the best German Stollen we have ever tasted.

What is a Stollen?

If you aren’t German you may not know, so we won’t hold it against you. It’s a traditional German cake made around the holidays, a lot like fruit cake, but a bit more ‘bread-like.’ The other big difference in fruit cake and stollen is that its almost always better, and in this case much better. It’s easily the best ‘holiday bread’ we’ve ever had. It’s sweet, bready, soft, and not overbearing with candied cherries or rock-hard. It’s covered in cinnamon sugar, instead of a mound of powered sugar, and its filled with all the things you’d expect all but the strange flavors that make some of us shutter.

Who makes it?

Well, not surprising it’s Toni. She had been around the world collecting the recipes of the world as she worked, and came across this Stollen recipe. We’re glad she did. After making her mark in Paris she came back with it in toe and started her shop. Decked to the nines in amazing cakes, sweets and pastries the lowly stollen has become a hit.

Where to get it?

Best place to get it in Chicago is here at Southport Grocery, come by and pick it or call ahead to make sure you get yours! Bring a loaf for dessert, or make an extra special breakfast and make a holiday stuffed french toast – oh so tasty. What ever you do this christmas, don’t go without trying a loaf of this sensational stollen.

truffle truffle – So good they named it twice

Friday, December 17th, 2010

Truffles, easily made, but infinity tough to perfect. That is for us commoners, but for those with the chocolate version of the Midas Touch, like Nicole at truffle truffle, whirl the ingredients and textures together into the perfect little pearls.

What are the flavors?

Ah, glad you asked. There is an ever changing bundle of flavors from truffle truffle. Each season gets their own collection, this winter is gingerbread, peppermint bark, spiced orange & roasted pistachio. Yeah, it sounds awesome, but try them – oh boy. We carry just the seasons, but there is broad stroke of themes on their site – each tasty and delicious. But truffle truffle doesn’t just make truffles, they create heavenly caramels, luscious s’mores, and more! The caramels also come in seasons too like this winter’s current selection: chestnut honey, poached pear, eggnog and pomegranate blood orange. The eggnog is one of our favorites, a surprisingly rich flavor mixed in with the caramels, creamy and hints of dark liquor and nutmeg – so good. Or grab a seasonal s’more; talk about decadent! Pulling in the flavors of the season they create collections packed neatly into handmade flavored graham crackers, with their own marshmallows stuck in between then enrobed in chocolate – no open flame required. Each confection is made with love and passion, something you can taste in every bite.

Is it just one person?

Oh no, Nicole has a great team of people. They all used to saunter into our bakery in the middle of the night to make their treats, but now have moved to a space all their own – thats what happens when you do things right. Nicole does all of flavor profiling, using her staff as the guinea pigs. After serving in the Army, she wanted to do something a little bit less stressful – chocolates. Little did she know that her business would grow so quickly – leaving her barely enough time for sanity; for a good reason, her sweets are incredible. We’ve searched and these are the best truffles Chicago has to offer, hands down.

Where are they available?

Here at Southport Grocery of course. We try and keep our collaborative effort, the Southport Grocery Cupcake Truffle, in as well as their seasonal collections – the twelve pack tins and the cupcake truffles available individually. Want something more, special, or we’re low? Let us know, we can order it and get it in for you! Give truffle truffle a try, your sweet tooth will thank you.

What others are saying – just a bit behind

Thursday, December 16th, 2010

A touch behind on the updates here, but we wanted to thank all of those who have written or mentioned us. We get busy doing other projects all the time, but wanted to make sure we thanked everyone that was nice enough to write about us.

Anatomy of a Sandwich: Lakeview – Steve Dolinsky departs on a new food adventure: hunting for Chicagoland’s best sandwiches. Our Walleye Pike was the first on his pilot program. Thanks Steve!

Real food for Real People: Southport Grocery blog – Jimmy over at Red Pandora mentioned our post about his awesome popcorn and talked up our blog; so nice.

Cindy La Ferle’s Home Office: Variations on a weekend – Cindy does some fall cleaning, shopping, and visiting with her son over a long weekend. Her son introduces her to “one his favorite restaurants” – us! Thanks for mentioning us Cindy and a shout out to your son Nate.

Everything gal: Southport Grocery – Kenna wrote that we help her “fall in love with breakfast just a little bit more” each time she visits. Great picture of the stuffed french toast and thanks a bunch for the write up.

Food Life: Grocery Shopping – The Ritz-Carlton Residences blog mentioned us as a great place to pick up gourmet items and that we have “one of the best quick meals [they've] ever had.” Thanks guys!

Best of: Chicago’s Best BLT –  CBS Chicago hunts down the city’s best BLTs and ours made the cut – in great company too; thanks CBS!

Cupcakes Take The Cake: Chicago’s Southport Grocery – The ladies over at CTTC, wrote a super nice post about us saying we have “the best vanilla cupcake in Chicago, and possible the world.” You are making us blush!

Midwestern Masticatory Musings: Southport Grocery & Cafe, Chicago IL – One of the most proflic posts about us we have ever read, really well written, tons of photos, very concise – amazing and immensely flattering.

Wrigleyville Trending Topic: Not your typical community meeting – Folks over at Chicago Now

Best of Chicago: Best museum-worthy cupcakes – a nice little post about our cupcakes and the rumors are true, they can be picked up at Columbia’s Cafes. Thanks for the post!

Red Eye: Your next crawl craving? Cakes, cookies, and more – Post about the growing dessert crawls, where Bridget Houlihan co-host of the Chicago Bits podcast says we “have the best cupcakes in Chicago.” Thanks Bridget for the love, and thanks Linda for mentioning us!

Wasbigelatine: 2010 gift guide – Dropped our name when writing about Jo Snow Syrups. We agree with you, a bottle of her stuff should be on everyone’s list.

The Social Network Butterfly: Here’s to the ladies that brunch – In a fantastically interesting social experiment, Brigitte takes one of her friends to our friendly confines for brunch. Glad the two of you had a great time and good luck with the rest of the 500+ friends!

If we missed you, let us know – we’ll add you to the list. Thanks for all those who think, write, talk, babble about us; we are listening and greatly appreciate it.

Our new coffee overlords: Metropolis

Wednesday, December 15th, 2010

 

A wise man once said “the times they are a-changin’.” Sure, he meant the greater social structure of America and the world at large, but I thought I’d marginalize his saying by introducing our new coffee mongers: Metropolis.

As everyone knows, coffee is pivotal to the brunch experience, some would say a necessity to anything before 11am. We needed a smaller roaster, a place locally situated here in Chicago only. We were in need of a change. The problem is that we are a needy bunch; our new roasters had to be local, big enough to dole out the copious amounts of beans we go through, be able to supply and repair our machines, have similar business ideals, and be cool enough to let us feature smaller local roasters every so often too. Boy did we find one.

Great people, infinitely nice, and extremely knowledgeable. Before we signed anything they invited us to poke around their roasting site with one of the owners, Tony. Our first visit was eye opening; their passion was palpable: from the time and love they put into the regular roasts, to how OCD they are about new beans. They showed us their World War II era coffee roasters, their fancy bag sorter, met nearly all of their amiable staff, had a cupping, and talked shop.

After a quick show around the roasting room they led us into the cupping room. It is here that they teach new clients latte art and brew form, pick their next line of coffee, and the proper beans for their regular lines. On one side, they have a beautiful relic of a machine that roasts small lots of beans for tasting – because as everyone knows, you never buy without a taste. On the same wall, small packages litter the counter – hand-packed sample bags from the far reaches of the coffee making world, the edges of tree coated mountains. On the other side of the ‘cupping room’  sits every form of brewing imaginable: drip, pour-overs, a slick espresso machine, vacuum brewers, a french press or two, unknown shapes of glass, stainless steel, and filters. Floating in the middle of the room is a reused metal table covered with tiny plastic containers with masking tape placed on the lids, origins and roasts scrawled atop in permanent marker. A veritable smorgasbord of coffee aromas and flavors pepper the its edges in small glass cups waiting to be brewed.

On the far side of the room there is a massive window facing the two roasters Metro uses. The roasting machines are hulking masses of pig iron placed forward near the sound-proof glass where the cupping, break room, and offices are – a low rumble is more felt than heard. Samples of the darkening beans are checked with what looks like a broom handle stuck in the front of a furnace; the skilled roasters are looking for color, smell, sound, size. They listen to the beans over the sound of hip-hop, indie, and classic rock pushing it’s way across the open room, the mechanical noise of the machines themselves, and the roaring 1,200 degree ‘afterburners’ – blowers that disintegrate all the particulate matter. Kitty corner to the roasters, the labeling and bagging is done in machine gun succession – slapping stickers and sorting them in a home-made shelving system made from rebar and plywood, pouring in the beans, then weighing the multitude of bags. Late in the afternoon, while we were there the first time, the area had mellowed to a hum of movement and clean up filled the gaps between the last count of bags.

Back in the cupping room, Tony tells us about the process of acquiring the coffee, the process in which the coffee gets to shelves and behind the Cafe. After all of the tasting, sniffing, slurping, and haggling – the beans are selected for innumerable reasons. Metropolis sources its coffee just like we vet the items on our shelves – try to pick the best there is, the best for the makers (farmers), flavor, and price. Here, below, is the process from tree to your cup.

Coffee itself is always picked by hand, it can be tricky to get industrial equipment up the side of a mountain let alone teach a piece of slag the finicky growth of coffee in general. There is a massive supply chain to go from the the branch to the brewer, and Metro does their homework on getting the best to your mug. Tony, explained that by the time the coffee hits your lips thousands of people had their hands in creating that perfect brew. It starts with the farmers that handpick each berry either by strip or selective picking, getting payed by pound (or kilo). They then either dry it themselves or sell to the coops and collectives who dry the cherries. From there it’s a matter of dry processing – laying out the coffee on massive slabs to dry – or wet processing – taking off the husk, liquid separation and then fermentation. Then it’s bagged and sold to shipping companies that move it to the major cities. Then those companies sell to exporters who (sometimes) have pay off the crane operators to get it on the boats where it is shipped over the expansive blue oceans in burlap sacks full of green kernels. Eventually it reaches our shores where the exporter either sells direct or to a distributor state side. The coffee arrives at Metropolis’ loading dock, and is added to the ebbing brown hills of bags and pallets at the rear of their massive roasting room. There the sacks wait until they are emptied into massive blue recycling containers for further sorting. Right before roasting the beans are moved to smaller white containers with vacuum hoses attached to the bottom that suck the beans into the respective roasters. They make the magic happen, weigh, bag and ship their bags to distributors, stores, and retailers (like us) who sell or brew it where finally you get to drink it. A long arduous process that requires a masterful hand in each step to make a great roast – luckily Metropolitan is there to do all the heavy lifting for us.

That is what is great about them, down to earth and always there to help and they really know what their doing. Get to know Metropolis at their location on Granville or come by our cafe and taste their passion for distinct and delicious coffee.

Val’s doughnuts

Tuesday, December 14th, 2010

One of our “pinch-hitter” bakers, Val – a server at the Publican, and had mentioned that she wanted to give making doughnuts for us a go. Instantly we loved the idea! Who doesn’t love handmade fluffy doughnuts? So this Saturday (12/18) she’s frying up some for you! A bag of six handmade cinnamon-sugar or chocolate glazed doughnuts for $7.95. Take them with to the table or walk and munch while shopping for those last presents. Val was in today testing out the cooking process for our kitchen and making us scrumptious samples. Here is a few photos from her visit:

Val cutting out her doughnuts, trying to ignore the camera

Getting all in her business, the sweet doughy goodness soon to be in our tummy

Oh my…

Val can be seen around town selling her doughnuts at markets and shops. We’re going to be keeping our ear to the ground on these, for sure.

Holiday Stroll – A night in photos

Tuesday, December 7th, 2010

There were droves of people in most stores, usually too many to get any worthwhile photos. Here are those up to snuf:

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The “This is Lakeview” LAMP party


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How would you change Lakeview?

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A room of information and informing in the old Fianco space

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M4 Men was stuffed full of people, could only get a photo outside

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Uncle Dan’s bustling with holiday cheer

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Sweet Girl and Cream wine package

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Dan from Cream Wine dishing out of the wine and the ladies from Sweet Girl sampling their mousse

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Carolers wishing us a great holiday – in song form

TCHOs Christmas Series Boxes

Monday, December 6th, 2010

We’ve written about TCHO before, but they’ve really outdone themselves this year – adding amazingly designed holiday themed boxes to their repertoire. They are the perfect thing to bring as a host gift or share the squares of awesome tasting chocolate at your next holiday party, you never want to show up empty handed. Want the perfect gift? Bring a 12 or 48 box of TCHO chocolate squares with splendid art on top. They are packed neatly inside a nice box too with a magnetic top, and can be reused for jewelry or crafts. Both boxes come with a collection of their flavor profile: Fruity, Chocolatey, Citrus, & Nutty. All tasty tasting chocolate for your guests or someone else’s guests to enjoy. So spread some holiday spirit with these delicious chocolates, available on our shelf now.