Hog Butcher for the World,
Tool Maker, Stacker of Wheat,
Player with Railroads and the Nation's Freight Handler;
Stormy, husky, brawling,
City of the Big Shoulders
And so on goes the poem by Carl Sandburg that described Chicago in the
early 20th century.
When we visited for the first time recently, we really didn’t know what
to expect. We heard it was one of the
great cities in the country to visit but didn’t exactly grasp why that
was. Now we do.
A View of Chicago From Willis Tower (aka Sears Tower) |
Okay then, just what is so alluring about the place? I can only speak for myself of course but
here goes:
The Sports Scene: Chicago is
truly one of the great sports towns in the country. They eat it up. Football, basketball, baseball (two teams),
hockey and soccer are all represented professionally. It’s written and talked about in the media
extensively. And when a team isn’t
performing the sportswriters tend to go into lambasting mode. They’ve been doing that all year with the Chicago Cubs’
baseball team. BowlingWidow and I
attended a Cubs game at Wrigley Field, a gem of an old ballpark that was built
in 1916. I tried to give the poor Cubs
some luck by buying a cap with the 1914 Cubs’ logo on it but they still lost
5-3.
Outside of Wrigley Field at the Home Plate Entrance |
The Food Scene: Chicago is the
best place in the nation to get a good steak.
Too bad we really don’t eat steak.
Not to worry. Every ethnicity is
represented here in the culinary sense.
You’ve heard about Chicago style hot dogs and deep dish pizza, but we also had some
of the best Mexican food in history.
Famous chef and restaurateur Rick Bayless lives in Chicago and he has
ways of procuring the best Mexican ingredients.
We had incredible meals at his Frontera Grill on Clark Street. BowlingWidow had one with three different
kinds of mole sauces and I had a fabulous meal of marinated shredded pork with
onion and black beans and a snappy habanero salsa. Yes, of course, they gave me steamed
tortillas to fill up with the mixture.
The Art Scene: Here I’m talking
about paintings. We don’t “get”
art. I usually am way off the mark on
what paintings represent or are supposed to represent. I don’t know a still life painting from an
impressionist painting and frankly it’s not that big of a deal to me. But for someone that is into art I understand
that Chicago is one of the best places outside of Paris to take it all in.
The Museum Scene: There’s the
Field Museum, The Museum of Science and Industry, The Planetarium. And that’s just for starters. The sad reality is that we didn’t get to see
any of them on this go around. They tend
to close early in the day and we didn’t plan as well as we could have. The silver lining is that now we have a
reason to go back to Chicago in a couple of years.
Chicago From the Chicago River |
The Scene Scene: For the best
view of any city, head to the top of the Willis Tower (formerly the Sears
Tower). You’ll be at the 104th
floor with an opportunity walk out “over the streets below” on the 4-foot glass
section that juts out from the building.
We also took an educational Architecture Cruise on the Chicago River where
we learned a lot about the massive structures that dominate the skyline.
BowlingWidow in Seated Yoga Pose over Chicago at the Top of the Willis Tower |
- Go to Portillo’s on Ontario Street for a real Chicago dog. But don’t even ask them to put ketchup on it. It’s a felony in Illinois to even ask.
The Portillo's Chicago Hot Dog: A True Work of Art |
- Don’t expect to find any good beer at Wrigley Field. The best they have is Dos Equis Light in a can. Avoid Old Style Beer. They call it that because it was brewed in the year Wrigley was built.
- Visit Millennium Park and take your picture in the reflection of The Bean (actually called Cloud Gate). It’s required during your time in Chicago.
The Cloud Gate Sculpture: We're in the Distance Taking the Picture |
- Stay in the Loop area if you can (we stayed at the Central LoopHotel). It’s worth being close to a lot of things as well as having great access to the Elevated Rail System. Anything around $150 a night is a great deal here.
- By and large, people are friendly and willing to help out if you have a question about how to get somewhere. Even more so than in the Southeast, we found. And certainly more so than in downtown Seattle.
- Don’t buy the Chicago style caramel/cheese popcorn mix and bring it on the plane. It goes stale really fast.
At Midway Airport: A Business That Has My Full Support |
- Bottles of hot sauce WILL get confiscated from your carry-on luggage. We had no checked baggage on this trip and bought a couple of bottles of habanero sauce to go from Frontera Grill. The TSA caught this and took them away from me. I can only imagine how good those TSA after-work fondue and appetizer parties are at Midway Airport.
2 comments:
I had a great time in Chicago years ago, BowlingJoe. My grandma was born there. She lived in the German neighborhood at the turn of the century. I traced down the address. It's now in Chinatown, right underneath a freeway!
Pilla, we were able to see Chinatown from the top of Willis Tower to the south. We didn't make it there, however.
How are you doing? I saw the post where you ended up in a cast and hope you're out of that and getting around well now.
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