Albany Times Union (Sunday)

For the urban-minded: Chicago

Cities beckon those yearning again for some bustle, culture

- By Amy Tara Koch New York Times

As the pandemic ebbs in the United States, many travelers have been favoring outdoor, awayfrom-it-all getaways. According to travel planning site Tripit, over the Memorial Day weekend, major cities like Washington, D.C., and New York were trending down, while outdoorsy spots like Palm Springs, Calif., were newly popular.

“Two-thirds of my clients are booking houses, ranch stays and hotels in smaller coastal communitie­s,” said Shawna Owen, owner of Huffman Travel, part of the Virtuoso Network.

But as residents of big cities know, their hometowns are roaring back to life. Take Chicago’s Loop neighborho­od. It was a ghost town at the height of the pandemic. Now the area south of the Chicago River, known for its architectu­re and art-infused green spaces like Millennium Park, is abuzz with new hotels and restaurant­s and performanc­es at Grant Park.

The nearby West Loop, an industrial quadrant, has been flourishin­g since pioneering chefs like Stephanie Izard (Girl and The Goat), Sarah Gruenberg (Monteverde) and Paul Kahan (The Publican) opened restaurant­s there about 15 years ago. Incredibly, new hot spots emerged during the pandemic, including a groovy boîte modeled after an old-school Chicago “slashie” (a hybrid liquor store and bar).

All of this, plus a star-studded lineup for Lollapaloo­za in late July, signals what could be the tail end of the city’s COVID-19 cultural drought.

The Loop

The Carbide & Carbon building has been turning heads on Michigan Avenue since 1929, its polished black granite and green-and-gold terra-cotta a testament to art deco bravado. It was reborn as the Pendry Chicago hotel in May, embracing the grandeur while incorporat­ing contempora­ry conviviali­ty into the 364 rooms and public spaces.

Of particular interest: the 24th-floor terrace, which has never been open to the public. Called Château Carbide for the summer season, the deck’s striped lounge chairs, rattan lanterns, palm trees and fragrant rosemary bushes aim to channel Provence’s Côte d’azur. In keeping with the theme, there will be a rosé-focused wine list, charcuteri­e and French house music. From this perch, guests have an exceptiona­l perspectiv­e of the skyline and the top of the Carbide & Carbon building, which resembles a glittering Champagne bottle. Reservatio­ns are recommende­d (230 N. Michigan Ave.; 312-7779000).

The Grant Park Music Festival is back after taking 2020 off, with 21 concerts at the Frank Gehry-designed band shell at the Jay Pritzker Pavilion in Millennium Park. On tap as part of the 80-year-old classical music festival: the Grieg Piano Concerto, the “New World Symphony,” the “William Tell Overture” and loads of Dvorak, Beethoven, Brahms and Haydn.

Other Millennium Park events include a performanc­e of “Goshen” by Deeply Rooted Dance Theater, featuring gospel singer Le’andria Johnson and, as part of American Ballet Theatre’s ABT Across America, a production of Jessica Lang ’s “Let Me Sing Forevermor­e,” set to the music of Tony Bennett; and “Indestruct­ible Light,” a new piece choreograp­hed by Darrell Grand Moultrie, featuring music by Duke Ellington, Count Basie and Billy Strayhorn.

The series continues through Aug. 21 with concerts every Wednesday, Friday and Saturday. Free open seating is available in the Seating Bowl and on the Great Lawn. Reserved seating is $25.

Throughout the summer, a portion of State Street, the Loop’s main drag, from Lake to Madison, will close to traffic for a multiblock pop-up called Sundays on State. On tap: DJ sessions with Soulphonet­ics, creative movement classes by Ballet Chicago, live mural painting, karaoke-style Broadway singalongs by Porchlight Music Theatre, and a lounge by Southside Jazz Coalition where you can listen to vinyl.

The West Loop, Fulton Market

Earning three Michelin stars for four consecutiv­e years, chef Curtis Duffy cemented Chicago’s stature as a gastronomi­c epicenter. When his restaurant Grace abruptly closed in 2017, the city mourned the loss. Duffy and his longtime business partner, Michael Muser, are back with Ever, where a 10-course tasting experience unfolds in a space as wildly innovative as the menu.

Adding to the wow factor, the restaurant opened mid-pandemic and has already earned two Michelin stars. A 10-course tasting menu is $285 per person. Wine pairings, $185 per person, nonalcohol­ic pairings, $105

(1340 W. Fulton St.).

At his debut restaurant, Rose Mary, “Top Chef ” winner Joe Flamm channels the lively, local spirit of family-run Croatian taverns, or konobas.

Flavor-packed dishes like citrusy coal-roasted beets with pistachios, honey and kaymak (a thick cheese); beef burek; puffed pastry stuffed with onions and mozzarella; roasted clams with smoked ramp butter and bread crumbs; and gnocchi with pasticada (beef cheeks seared in bacon fat and slow-cooked with prunes and figs) pair perfectly with a wine and beer list also sourced from the region.

The whitewashe­d walls accented with brick, red clay and deep blue tile succeed in evoking the rustic beauty of the Adriatic. Coming soon: a chef’s table experience with a bird’seye view of the open kitchen. Entrees start at $17 (932 W. Fulton St., 872-260-3921).

Smyth has always been a bit of an outlier. The cozy ambience — exposed brick, rough hewed wood rafters, cozy rugs, simple wooden furniture, classic rock playlist — is matched by emphatical­ly pretense-free service. This, plus whiz-bang flavors that are high-concept yet familiar have earned the restaurant a cult following and, not surprising­ly, two Michelin stars. (BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM.) The chefs and owners, John and Karen Shields, are celebrated for their commitment to small producers and specialize­d farmers like Mike Murphy, the Shields’ source for dragon’s head, Vietnamese cilantro, lemon leaf and other esoteric herbs grown exclusivel­y for Smyth.

Not all vendors are Midwestern. An agricultur­al cooperativ­e in Valley Center, California, called San Gabriel Ranch provides the exotic produce for an avocado dish seasoned with cured citrus, eucalyptus oil, finger limes and a tangy paste of Bangkok guava that has the texture of gelato.

A 16-course tasting menu is $240; wine pairings start at $125 (177 N. Ada St., #101; 773-9133773).

Madison Street Corridor

Juice @1340, an easy walk south of Fulton Market, is not your typical wine shop. First off, it’s what Chicagoans call a “slashie,” where you can drop in for a drink and also take home a bottle or a six-pack. It’s also run by a triumvirat­e of cool kids with pedigrees from some of Chicago’s most popular restaurant­s.

Bartender Danielle Lewis spearheads the beer arm, which focuses on niche breweries, including local outfits like Hop Butcher, Marz and Pipeworks. Tim Williams, a cocktail impresario, crafts riffs on classics, and sommelier Derrick Westbrook shines a spotlight on lesserknow­n wines or wine options like Austrian Evolúció Blaufränki­sch and Black-owned vineyards such as Brown Estate Vineyards.

Events will be a focal point: Think pop-ups for emerging culinary talent and a beverage version of a Chef ’s Table called Fresh Pressed. Cocktails and wines by the glass are $10 to $14; bottles of wine, to $200.

 ?? Photos by Michelle Litvin / New York Times ?? The Grant Park Music Festival, which returned to the Jay Pritzker Pavilion at Millennium Park in Chicago on June 27. As the pandemic ebbs, the Loop and nearby neighborho­ods in Chicago have roared back to life.
Photos by Michelle Litvin / New York Times The Grant Park Music Festival, which returned to the Jay Pritzker Pavilion at Millennium Park in Chicago on June 27. As the pandemic ebbs, the Loop and nearby neighborho­ods in Chicago have roared back to life.
 ??  ?? The 24th-floor terrace of the Pendry Chicago hotel, in the Carbide & Carbon building.
The 24th-floor terrace of the Pendry Chicago hotel, in the Carbide & Carbon building.
 ??  ?? Chef Curtis Duffy, front left, works in the kitchen at Ever in Chicago.
Chef Curtis Duffy, front left, works in the kitchen at Ever in Chicago.

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