Albany Times Union (Sunday)

AROUND THE WORLD IN THESE 5 CHICAGO NEIGHBORHO­ODS

Visitors can ‘travel’ from Mexico to India, to Vietnam, Italy and Germany

- By Amelia Rayno

The modest “kitchen,” if it could be called that, had drawn a crowd.

Under the shade of a white plastic tent, a man and woman bowed over a grill, flipping tortillas. Fragrant smoke spiraled into the air. A cluster of diners stood in the street, awaiting their prizes.

“Try one of these quesadilla­s, chica,” a man observing the operation told me. “You’ll feel like you’re in Mexico.”

Wandering Chicago’s Pilsen neighborho­od indeed felt like an experience near to a Mexican vacation. And Mexico wasn’t the only country I immersed myself in after a quick flight to Chicago, where a host of vibrant, long establishe­d neighborho­ods let travelers feel as if they have landed abroad.

Over the course of a long weekend, I explored five such areas, starting with Pilsen, where I stayed.

Populated predominan­tly by people of Hispanic heritage since the 1970s — before that, the makeup was heavily Polish — Pilsen has deep Latin roots and wears them on its sleeve.

Taquerias, panaderias and bodegas line its bustling main thoroughfa­res, 18th Street and Blue Island Avenue, near the popular Loop.

Like many major-city neighborho­ods, gentrifica­tion is taking hold — a subject that inevitably arises in neighborho­od coffee shops and bars — but Pilsen’s charms have not been lost.

Fifteen years ago, gang violence made it difficult for even the people who lived there, let alone tourists, to fully experience the beauty of the neighborho­od. These days, mercados sit next to boutiques, juice bars and artist studios. Hotshot restaurant­s have pulled in food lovers from across the city. Crime has drasticall­y dropped.

Sombreros are worn on the streets. Carts sell chicharron­s (pork rinds) outside Harrison Park. Beautiful brick and stone buildings, erected in Eastern European architectu­ral style, are awash in color with street art tableaus painted over their once somber exteriors.

Prices across the neighborho­od haven’t caught up with the rest of the city, making Pilsen an attractive place to stay. I rented a pristine, Scandinavi­an-designed Airbnb for less than $100 a night and ate great meals for less than $15. The National Museum of Mexican Art, in the heart of the neighborho­od, has gained national repute but remains free.

The 2.8-square-mile neighborho­od claims enough taquerias for a week’s worth of crawls — Taqueria Atotonilco was the best I found. Bakeries such as Panaderia Nuevo Leon fill the sidewalks with the smell of baking masa and pastries. The highlight? One afternoon, I crammed along with dozens of others into Carnitas Uruapan, a small restaurant touting a major pork operation. As I waited for a table, I watched the parade of trays with meat and chicarrons coming from the kitchen to the counter, where a man was lopping off pieces and wrapping them in paper for customers to take home.

He invited me to sit with him and his family, and we ordered taquitos. He was right. Pilsen’s bold flavor and warm spirit had gotten me again.

It was time to move on to other parts of the city, but I could barely pull myself away.

India On Devon Avenue

My nose alerted me to my arrival on Devon Avenue.

Whiffs, then waves, of curry, garlic and onions drifted through the open windows of my Lyft. It was immediatel­y clear: I had made it to Chicago’s desi corridor.

The area — about 20 blocks of Devon Avenue, near the city’s northern boundary — is one of the best known of its kind. It became popular after the first location of the Patel Brothers’ store, an Asian-american grocery chain with outlets nationwide, debuted there in the mid-1970s. Today, the stretch is lined with restaurant­s, bakeries and Indian snack shops, markets overflowin­g with produce and stores with racks of saris pulled out onto the sidewalks.

With scores of authentic eateries, it wasn’t hard to find a good meal. I chose Mysore Woodlands because of its creative approach to vegetables. For the $9.99 lunch special, I received a spinach and

cheese dosa (rice crepe) much larger than my head and two medhu vada (savory doughnuts dipped in a lentil soup) along with a spicy Indian tea.

I couldn’t pass up window shopping at Sukhadia’s, one of a handful of sweets emporiums in the area. The store’s burfees and pista rolls, colorful cookies made with chickpea flour, were perfection­s in paper boxes.

Little Italy

Welcome to Little Italy, the sign greeted me, then implored, Time to mangia.

Just like the Italians to get right down to business with the food.

After arriving at one end of Taylor Street, where most of the activity resides, I wandered over to the beautiful Arrigo Park and admired the European-style architectu­re that surrounded it. Nearby was the National Italian American Sports Hall of Fame. Across the street, a statue of New York Yankees great Joe Dimaggio, born to Italian immigrants, perpetuall­y swings his mighty bat.

In recent years the neighborho­od — on Chicago’s Near West Side, just north of Pilsen — has become more of a mixed bag of food cultures, lessening the feeling of strolling through Rome. Still, I got the feeling that inside the marinara-infused restaurant­s — especially the likes of the Rosebud, a mainstay for 39 years — little has changed.

Around happy hour, as the many eateries churned to life, the scent of roasting garlic gave me the only hint I needed. It was time to mangia. Davanti Enoteca was jammed with patrons clinking glasses of red wine and diving into bowls of pasta; I followed their lead.

Southeast Asian On Argyle Street

The petite woman worked with practiced precision, slicing open the oversized, buttery croissants that would be made into sandwiches later, one by one.

It was still early, and Argyle Street — a packed three-block stretch in the heart of Uptown, just inland from Lake Michigan’s lovely Montrose Beach — was just stirring to life. The area that has long served as home to Southeast Asian restaurant­s and businesses was quiet, with few cars and bikes weaving through the bridge arch that reads “Asia on Argyle.”

Inside La Patisserie P., a tiny Frenchviet­namese bakery boasting several cases of carb-laden treats, the day was in full swing. Eyeballing the coconut tarts and curry buns, I finally chose a jian dui — a Chinese rice-flour doughnut filled with sweet red bean paste — savoring the sesame-covered pastry slowly.

After a brisk walk along Lake Michigan, I turned back toward the neighborho­od’s streets. Shopkeeper­s, some selling intricate china vases and hosts of maneki-nekos (the waving Japanese cat figurines), pulled baby kumquat trees and aloe plants onto the street to tempt passersby. Suddenly, the area, ablaze with painted murals, had come alive.

On this day, I was on the hunt for lunch, and the pho shops had all just opened.

I landed at Pho 777, not for a steaming bowl of noodle goodness, but for the banh xeo — a shrimp and pork egg crepe that is served with lettuce and herbs for wrapping around each bite.

Germany In Lincoln Square

Gidding Plaza was in the midst of becoming a masterpiec­e.

At least, I’m pretty sure that’s what one toddler, eagerly scribbling chalk across the stone platform, believed.

It was Sunday afternoon, near the end of my trip, and I was in Lincoln Square, the historic German area on Chicago’s North Side — along with everyone else. Bikers and dog walkers wandered through, along with a couple of men smoking cigars. The families, though, stayed, converting the quaint, brownstone­and shop-surrounded plaza into a makeshift playground, albeit one as picturesqu­e as they come. Under the gaze of cherubs, which beamed from the intricate bases of vintage-style green lampposts, tiny stamping feet galloped and twirled.

For some, the three-block stretch of Lincoln Avenue has played the role of a sort of mini-europe since the late 1800s, when German immigrants started a pickling operation nearby, and ultimately settled by the thousands. Unfortunat­ely, the Chicago Brauhaus, the 40-year-old brick behemoth that fronts the plaza with bold German architectu­re, recently closed, taking with it a dose of European flair. But the real gem of the mini ’hood — stretching from one green entrance arch to another — is still going strong. I could have spent an hour in Gene’s Sausage Shop, a two-story maze of cured meats, cheeses, beer and so much more, particular­ly if the rooftop were open for sausage grilling and beer drinking, as it is in the summer months. But I tore myself away for a pint at Huettenbar, one of the longest-standing pubs in the area.

There was more to see, but it was almost time to go home. I was full from all the food; sore from all the walking. I was happy and tired. After all: I’d been around the world and back.

 ??  ?? On Devon Ave., on Chicago’s north side, some 19 blocks of Indian restaurant­s send whiffs o
On Devon Ave., on Chicago’s north side, some 19 blocks of Indian restaurant­s send whiffs o
 ?? Photos by Amelia Rayno / Minneapoli­s Star Tribune ?? of garlic and curry into the air.
Photos by Amelia Rayno / Minneapoli­s Star Tribune of garlic and curry into the air.
 ??  ?? Little Argyle Street, in Chicago’s Uptown area, is home to a substantia­l collection of Vietnamese bakeries, pho shops, beautiful murals and Asianameri­can owned boutiques.
Little Argyle Street, in Chicago’s Uptown area, is home to a substantia­l collection of Vietnamese bakeries, pho shops, beautiful murals and Asianameri­can owned boutiques.
 ??  ?? On Devon Ave., on Chicago’s north side, visitors can window shop for beautiful saris.
On Devon Ave., on Chicago’s north side, visitors can window shop for beautiful saris.

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