Rene G wrote:David Hammond wrote:Had the Big Baby at Little Market Brasserie last night:
[see above]
Little Market American Brasserie
10 E Delaware Pl
Chicago
312-640-8141
http://littlemarketbrasserie.com/
Vital Information wrote:Now, the rest, the up-scaling of the whole thing. Uber-LTH Villain, Steve Plotnicki, is fond of saying that many of us want our food declasse. That once it's made "better", it does not taste the way we want/expect. Sadly, after Great Lakes pizza, I kinda agree with him. Give me the grease baby. In this instance (again), I found none of it really worked. For instance, the brioche bread did not merge into the meat juices like a good burger bun does. It stood there like a snobby neighbor not wanting to drink the PBR at the block party. Honestly, the condiments just tasted weird.
In Serious Pig, John Thorne wrote:When I lived in Boston, the "Best Burger" awards were consistently bestowed on a clean-scrubbed, wholesome place right across the street from Harvard Yard—Bartley's Burger Cottage, which serves what it is pleased to call "the hamburger with a college education." … Eventually you come to understand that you don't want a hamburger with a college education. You want one that flunked out of high school—or rather got kicked out, for bad attitude.
In another thread, stevez wrote:With the nomination for GNR status of both Nicky's and Schoop's, this appears to be the year of the regional burger chains. I'm gratified that in both cases, the flagships of the chains were singled out for GNR status and not the entire chains. This Nicky's is clearly operating at a different level than some of the other Nicky's outposts and I'm glad to support this nomination. I had a recent meal here, which I posted about in the main Big Baby thread.
Edit: Nickys started in summit, ill in 1966 and the name and burger joints have been around almost 50 years. The first original chicago nickys opened in 1967 on Archer&Austin. Then came 58th Kedzie and the rest followed.
The Big Baby, the double cheeseburger defined by a crown of grilled onions and widely beloved by generations of Chicago South Siders, has a documented history that dates back nearly 50 years, so why has it been denied the title of the Chicago-style burger?
Although the Chicago-style hot dog is well-known, and most Chicagoans can recite the ingredients without thought, there's no burger associated with the city. And yet, the Big Baby arguably deserves the title. And if you ask at least one fan who has studied the burger's origins, the fact that it was invented on the South Side, and not the North, is to blame.
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Sweet Willie wrote:Some co-workers and I are helping out at Greater Chicago Food Depository on a Saturday morning in Sept. To help turn out I offered to buy a big baby burger to each person who committed to helping out for a couple hours at GCFD.
Nicky's opens at 10:30am on Saturdays, I recall really enjoying that burger. Looking for feedback, is Nicky's still the spot our group should stop at? (GCFD is only ~12 mins away via car)
BrendanR wrote:Last week's Curious City from WBEZ tells the interesting yet murky story of the origins of the Big Baby.
Link
pudgym29 wrote:I have had two of the three hot dogs (and most of the fries) for Sunday's dinner. The hot dogs are well constructed. ‘Everything’ consists of a dill pickle spear, dill relish [not neon green], diced onions, and mustard. Tomatoes and | or peppers might be optional, and might be extra cost. (I did not ask or inquire.)
Doh!Binko wrote: You missed the most important info! Natural casing or skinless? (Though I seem to remember it being skinless, as I would have thought I'd store that nugget of info in my noggin were it a proper hot dog.)
Binko wrote:You missed the most important info! Natural casing or skinless?
Chicago’s Iconic Big Baby Burger Goes Vegan on the South Side
Dave148 wrote:Chicago’s Iconic Big Baby Burger Goes Vegan on the South Side
https://chicago.eater.com/2024/10/30/24 ... aby-burger