Goings on

4 Fortnights – Real Winter Wonders

Monday, January 2nd, 2012

fort·night
[fawrt-nahyt] noun: the space of fourteen nights and days; two weeks.

Our favorite time of the year is back here in Chicago. Winter time, in Chicago where we hunker down. We’ve transformed our regular ’8 Weeks of Winter Wonder’ from years past into what it is now. We at SPG think this change allows us to pick the best deals as well as more time to enjoy them.

Fine print:

  • Weekdays, all day; Weekends, 8am – 10am
  • Dine-in only

The deals

½ soup & salad (or sandwich) – $6.50 (Dine-in Only) -  Monday Jan 2nd to Sunday Jan 15th

We’re bring it back again this year and we’re adding in the sandwich as an option. We’ll be cooking up some awesome soup for winter (if it arrives) and combining them with a tasting size of our yummy salads or a scrumptious half sandwich.

$5 Bread Pudding Pancake (Dine-in Only) - Monday Jan 16th to Sunday Jan 30th

Take in brunch with a plate of our Bread Pudding Pancakes for only one green Lincoln (excluding tax & tip).

Take home soup - Monday Jan 31st to Sunday Feb 12th

For these two weeks we’re packing up our soups into containers and freezing them to take home with you. Get a meal – take home some soup, perfect for the late winter.

Cupcake for cans - Monday Feb 13th to Sunday Feb 26th

We’re going back to a favorite way to end our ’8 weeks of winter’ with Cupcake for Cans. Bring in one canned good (or more) for one of our famous cupcakes. All cans will be donated to the Lakeview Pantry - give some goods get something great.

SPG Catering – Our Provisions, Your Platter

Friday, December 9th, 2011

Having people over is always remembered as fun. Everyone laughing after a couple drinks having a great time. You remember gatherings for that one time you planned a board game night and met your significant other. The struggle to pull it all together is usually lost in the fog of memories – that is until you try to have another. You end up stuck sweating over the stove, again. It’s time for the host to have as much of a good time as the guests. Don’t you deserve to play the purple car in Life, or join everyone else in a rowdy game of Apples to Apples?

Southport Grocery will help ease your stress of your get together. Let us do the cooking for you! Don’t have any idea what your guests will like? We have a pretty stellar catering menu to help guide your way to the land of tasty treats. Having a picnic in Grant Park? Getting together for a luncheon? SPG will pack up lunches or breakfasts in our pretty pink boxes, see our Box Lunch Menu for inspiration. What happens if you already know the perfect dish – the ideal little hand treat – for your wonderful guests? Our chef will work closely with you to get it right. We can build a menu from the ground up, just for you.

Still not enough? What about the fact that we’ll put our stacks of handmade food stuffs on top of your own dishes. That’s right. Those massive pretty plates you have buried in the dark places of your cabinets, those multi-pocketed dishes with a ‘dip’ center – bring those in and put them to great use! Make your party complete with serve-wave that truly is personal.

Too busy to pick it up? We deliver in Chicago city limits, no problem. Where else but SPG can you get a chef to personally see to it that your ordered items are awesome, put on your own dishes, and will even drive it to your house?

Put that personal touch on your catered order, bring together your party style and make our catering your own.

New Mixed Drinks at SPG

Wednesday, November 30th, 2011
For those who haven’t been in SPG for some time, or those who already know that they want the bruschetta before sitting down, or even those who simply skim the menu – may have missed a few new additions, namely our new mixed drinks. I had Lance, one of our managers and creator of these drinks, describe them for us.
The Hangover Helper [right] is simply basil-infused Tito’s vodka with San Pellegrino Limonata. We infuse the vodka in-house and it adds a rich herbaceous to the drink. The herby-ness, along with the slightly tart lemony citrus flavor and the bubbly-ness of the limonata is perfect for soothing your stomach after a rough night out or a great way to get an early start on a rough day out.
The Southern Screwdriver [left] is Bulleit Bourbon, peach puree and San Pellegrino Aranciata. It’s citrusy up front, with richly sweet bourbon flavor on the back end and just a hint of the peach’s sweetness to counteract the acidity of the aranciata. It’s a breakfast drink that’s just breakfasty enough that your friends won’t call you an alcoholic.
These new mixed drinks are joining our small set of breakfast concoctions, welcome additions to the group. Give them a try and drink up the new additions from our menu!

Belly – Cool Rewards Made Easy

Monday, November 14th, 2011

Have you ever wanted a rewards program that worked everywhere you went? How about a rewards program where the rewards are worthwhile, fun, and interesting? Yeah, us too. Announcing Belly .

Strange name, awesome rewards. It’s an easy to use rewards program that a whole mess of businesses on Southport are using. The cards work at getting you great rewards from all sorts of local business. It’s amazingly simple to use and we’ve cooked up some pretty awesome rewards: from a youtube video playlist put together by our in-house comedian, all the way up to us delivering you breakfast for two! Pick up a card, sign up, and get flopping!

Holiday ’11 Happenings

Friday, November 11th, 2011

Here is a quick list of what is happening here at SPG in the coming months:

Events
- Shop Lakeview 11/1-12/31
- Holiday Stroll [flyer PDF]– Friday 12/1

Holiday Hours
- Closed Thanksgiving
- Christmas Eve 8am-1pm
- Closed Christmas day
- New year’s eve – 8am-5pm
- New year’s day – tbd

Yes, we can!

Friday, October 28th, 2011


Yes, we can!

Can: verb (canned , canning) 1. preserve (food) in a can.

5 summers and 4 winters have come and gone since we started canning here at Southport Grocery.  The summers have seemed like only a few fleeting moments, while the long winter nights left us yearning for anything that resembles sunlight.  In fact, winter is a main reason preserving is so important to us, simply because we don’t have the luxury of much more than 4 months of good harvesting.  What started as a labor of love in generations past – when food rarely wasn’t wasted, and rarely came from a box – the tradition of canning continues in our kitchen.  We take the best produce from farms across the midwest and follow classic recipes, as well as creating several of our own.  Not only a great way to keep happy and healthy, it’s also a simple way to support our local food culture that does not thrive all year long.

 

Here’s a peek at our ever-evolving list of canning projects, most of which you can find on our shelves all year long!

SOUTHPORT GROCERY & CAFE CANNING

fruit preserves: cherry, mirabelle plume, blueberry, blueberry-rhubarb, blueberry-raspberry, peach, sugar-free peach, peach-raspberry, peach butter, apple butter, applesauce, apple-raspberry sauce, rhubarb-strawberry, ginger-pear

conserves: pear-almond, blueberry-citrus

pickles: lemon, dill, spicy, bread & butter

tomatoes: green tomato relish, whole roma, crushed, marinara sauce

specialty: ”jake’s giard”, hot pepper jelly, cherry-jalepeno jam, habenero gold jelly

Ripe blueberries from June!  With these we make traditional blueberry preserves & some delicious combos including blueberry-rhubarb & blueberry-raspberry preserves!

June brought ripe cherries to Mick Klug Farms, we bring them to your table in preserved form.

Plums, to be halved and soaked into their own juices.. a healthy way to dress up some yogurt or vanilla ice cream!

Fresh cucumbers making their transformation into tasty pickles!

Pickle-mania!!

Doug prepares cans of our spicy pickles.


Duck Confit Hash

Wednesday, August 24th, 2011

Idaho potatoes, duck confit, caramelized onions, eggs ~ sunny side up..

On the menu for a limited time.

Chef Derrick at Green City Market

Thursday, July 21st, 2011

Green City Market ~ Lincoln Park

Local food sources, when given proper respect, can be the lifeblood of a community.  In fact, the earliest days of “city planning” was merely a collection of people that gathered near, and lived around a marketplace.  Times do certainly change the landscape, but, as with Chicago’s city markets, the core values have never changed.  In our bustling cityscape it’s easy to forget about the far stretches of fertile land that supply us citygoers with nutritious crops from the earth.  Furthermore, the farmers and families that care, nurture, and gather the fruits of the land are of the upmost importance, and these are not things to be taken for granted.  We work directly with the dedicated, kind people that harvest these foods to put a healthy, satisfying meal on your plate.  So to better understand how the market helps us on a weekly basis, I took a trip with Chef to one of Chicago’s largest and most well known markets..

garlic scapes.. lookin' good!

 

Chef Derrick goes to the Green City Market

Our story begins around midnight – before anyone is at the market, and few are thinking about food, work, or much other than the full night’s rest that lies ahead.  Meanwhile, in La Crosse, Wisconsin,  Al from the Nordic Creamery is just waking up for a drive to Chicago.  Running on only 2 hours of sleep, he makes the 5 hour drive to Chicago to arrive in Lincoln Park just as the sun begins to peeks over the lake.  This is the market life for many vendors like Al from throughout the Midwest.  They travel from far and wide to bring their goods to the city and hopefully make enough profit to keep their families and businesses afloat.

8 a.m.  Chef Derrick DeJaynes starts his day in the kitchen on Southport.  While managing a small checklist of morning responsibilities, he makes a few sandwiches for our steadfast vendors – who won’t have much time during their busy work day to eat.. Chef doesn’t always make it to the market, so the friendly gesture of a small meal acts as a token of appreciation for the times he’s not there..  This week, his creation is not something off of our menu, but a delicious construct of egg, ham, maple/mustard glazed apricots, arugula and mayo on grilled challah bread.. a sweet and savory surprise for hungry and deserving farmers.

Grilled sandwiches for our farmers!

A little after 9 a.m. we take a pleasant morning drive down the lake shore and into the park.  Al, our restless dairyman, is among our first stop at the market, and has our cheese ready.  A few quick jokes are shared as we also talk with Dave from Leaning Shed Farms who’s quick to point out his latest harvest of garlic scapes, the flowering stalks that grow from the bulbs.. we grab a dozen or so that will be used in our summer canning project.  I check out a neat looking plant with purple fruit budding alongside small white flowers.  I’m told by our farmer friend that it is an Aurora Pepper plant and that I should take one for our garden.  We pay, gather our goods, leave a couple sandwiches (including one for Al’s son – who seems to need one following the long night of travel) and head across the park for some more freshly grown goods.

 

Garlic scapes from Leaning Shed Farm

 

Aurora pepper plant

As 10 o’clock rolls around we’re headed to the Genesis Growers (from downstate – St. Anne, Il) stand where our standing order of 10 heads of baby lettuce is waiting.  Chef and farmer Vicki discuss the failing cauliflower and broccoli stalks that are giving into the recent heat wave.  Fortunately, the majority of the farms other crops have been thriving.  We grab our box of produce and head to the next tent over, Mick Klug Farms, a Michigan outfit that raises mostly sweet crops.. namely apricots, sweet corn, sweet and sour cherries, blackberries and raspberries, among others.  Here we pick up a bounty of blueberries for our summertime Blueberry Salad (w/blueberry vinaigrette.. yeah, we love us some blueberries!), as well as cherries and apricots that will be included in our canning/preserves project that will hit our shelves later this summer.  The Klug folks were about as excited about Derrick’s sandwich as we were their fruit!  Most certainly a win-win.  One last quick stop by North Judson, Indiana’s Green Acres Farm camp for a couple of pounds of arugula before finding a great mid-morning snack from Las Manas Tamales.

fresh Michigan blueberries!!

 

Derrick makes a deal with Abby from the Klug Farm

sweet cherries.. soon to be preserves.

Derrick takes a look for our standing order box at Genesis Growers tent

Heading out of the market we caught a glimpse of Chef Rick Bayless giving an interview and setting up for a presentation.

Market go-ers eagerly await the Chef Bayless presentation

After loading up the van – it’s a quick ride through the city back to the cafe.  Everything goes into our big fridge downstairs, and the garden-fresh eatables wait to become a tasty addition to one of our many signature dishes.  Derrick plants the pepper plant as his day comes to a close.. a proper homage and fitting end to our day at the market.

Stay tuned to our blog as we’ll unfold some of the projects that are relevant to our farmer friends, including the canning project that will feature some of those delicious fresh fruits.

Strawberry Secret Supper

Tuesday, June 28th, 2011


Summertime = Strawberries

It’s a simple equation that many “add up” this time each year, so we thought, “Why fight it?”, and focus our June Secret Supper on the season’s favorite fruit!  As usual, we took a few simple ideas and made them our own using the best ingredients that we could find.  

Our first offering started as a simple baby green salad from Genesis Farms with a strawberry dressing, to which we added a baked cheese tuile using “barely buzzed” cheese from the Beehive Cheese Co. and to finish – fresh strawberries dipped into a basil and sweet pea gelee (gelatin).  Suffice to say that this equated to much more than a salad with a fancy cracker and strawberries covered in a weird jello.  We will be offering a similar Strawberry Salad on our cafe menu for a limited time.

 

Onion-infused spetzle on the grill, a delicious, savory side to accompany our main event…

 


Berkshire pork loin w/braised spring onions, spetzle, chimichurri & pickled green strawberries

Our main course of the night was a juicy and generous portion of Berkshire pork loin.  This heirloom pork, known as Britain’s oldest pig breed, lay on top of a spring onion spetzle and presented with a big spoonful of house-made chimichurri – a green herb sauce native to South America.  Braised spring onions and pickled green strawberries provided sweet and tart morsels that balanced the big flavor of the marbled white meat.

 

strawberry shortcake in a jar w/mascarpone whipped cream

To wrap it all up, we made cute little Strawberry Shortcakes in a jar!  A soft layer of cake made with hibiscus basil orange blossom simple syrup from Jo Sno Syrup (a local sweetener we used instead of traditional white sugar) provided a sweet foundation for our guest of honor – fresh strawberries.  The only thing we had to add on top was a freshly whipped cream that we sweetened with the same orange-hibiscus syrup we used in the cake.  The nicely portioned desserts gave us the spoonfuls of sweetness we needed to satisfy our post-dinner sweet-tooth.

We’d like to thank those that were able to join us, and invite those that haven’t been to a Secret Supper before to join our e-mail list so you’ll be among the first to know about all up-coming events.  We’d also like to thank Hold the Ketchup for the nice write-up they did on the event, we always appreciate feedback!

 

 

Your new SoPoGro tour guide..

Friday, June 24th, 2011


 

Hi there.. I’m Zach, and I’m the new marketing man and social media tour guide for all things SoPoGro.  You may recognize my face from the cafe floor and “around the neighborhood”.  I started working here in October of 2005 and  have recently been blessed with the job of handling the information you and your friends get from our lovely storefront.  I have a nice view from our office that overlooks the Southport/Addison intersection where I monitor the Facebook and Twitter feeds, keep the menu up-to-date, write e-mails and blogs (about the cafe, our products and events, etc.) as well as being involved with other fun projects that concern the store and our neighborhood.   I will also play host, waiter, sampler, barista, bartender, fine foods connoisseur, etc., as is the nature of working at a busy restaurant that’s also a grocery store. Here are some fun facts to further introduce myself..

Zach’s Facts:

Zachary Drummond

28 yrs old from Huntington, WV

Avid bicyclist – and just got my motorcycle license.

Musician – and will soon to have my own recording studio. I play piano/keyboards, guitar, trumpet and drum set proficiently, and work with a local studio called TrackForce.  You may have heard some of my original compositions (briefly, and in the backround) on The Oprah Winfrey and Dr. Oz TV shows.  I write and play for an original rock band called The Reunion.

I moved here at 18 to attend Columbia College Art + Design school and also studied Music Education at Northeastern Illinois U.

I enjoy traveling and believe that exploring other places and their cultures is an important part of the human experience.  Furthermore, I believe a meal is one of the simplest and most cherished activities that you can share.. and it’s the best place to learn about yourself and those around you.

So don’t be a stranger.. say “Hi” or drop me a note on Facebook.. I look forward to meeting you!