When Brendan Sodikoff dropped the word "delicatessen" from the name of his Dillman's restaurant in River North last year after customer complaints, he turned up the heat on questions that have been simmering for years: What exactly is a delicatessen? Why do they have a hard time in downtown Chicago? What do they have to do to survive?
Evil Ronnie wrote:Chicago once supported two downtown Jewish city clubs...The Standard Club and The Covenant Club. The Covenant club has been gone for at least 20 years and Standard has been declining since the '08 meltdown. Different priorities for the younger generation of downtown workers.
Evil Ronnie wrote:spinynorman...an Arby's Reuben isn't a Reuben but most people think it is and that is the problem. Nobody knows from Reubens anymore so people are happy with the dreck from Jason's Deli and the like.
Evil Ronnie wrote:spinynorman...an Arby's Reuben isn't a Reuben but most people think it is and that is the problem. Nobody knows from Reubens anymore so people are happy with the dreck from Jason's Deli and the like.
zoid wrote:Just my 2¢, but I blame the changing workforce.
Even when I entered the workforce which was only 25 years ago people actually worked more or less 9-5 and took hour lunches. People placed importance on building relationships at work and a big part of that was having lunch with clients and coworkers. If you had a problem you could have lunch with your boss and talk it through.
Now you have to be in by 8, stay till 6, and work through eating lunch at your desk or you’re seen as not committed or even a slacker.
Going to a deli is more time consuming than getting something from today’s fast-grab lunch options. You can pick up something from a fast food place and be back at your desk in 15-30 minutes and in a lot of today’s job’s that’s what’s expected, and I’m talking everything from bank tellers to folks with 6 figure jobs. It just seems to me the world changed and traditional deli doesn’t fit like it used to, now it’s a weekend/evening treat and the loop just doesn’t have much weekend/evening traffic.
Evil Ronnie wrote:Like I said, not many people seem to know from Reubens any more.
riddlemay wrote:I also think zoid's analysis of the changing workday and how it impacts sit-down restaurants in general is right on.
toria wrote:When I began work there were two delis nearby. Ashkenaz had a place on Dearborn near Adams I think and there was place called the Dill Pickle that was either on Jackson or Van Buren. You could get a good corned beef sandwich or reuben. Seems like the younger generation has abandoned this type of food. I asked my Jewish co workers "lets find a place to go out and have a nice corned beef sandwich". They rejected it saying they don't eat that type of food anymore its unhealthy. Then they went to the microwave and put their sweet potato in. That's what they were having for lunch. I find that mostly I get my reubens now at greek coffee shop diner kind of places. I would kill for a great corned beef sandwich. I don't like marble rye.
jlawrence01 wrote:I quit going to delis when I realized that I no longer enjoyed a 24 oz, $14 sandwich for lunch. I would rather eat much lighter.
spinynorman99 wrote:riddlemay wrote:I also think zoid's analysis of the changing workday and how it impacts sit-down restaurants in general is right on.
Totally inaccurate, as I mentioned in my response to zoid. Lots of business at sit-down spots all over the Loop and beyond. And at most spots, if you don't have a reservation, you're SOL. I've had many business lunches and client lunches all over the Loop.
riddlemay wrote:Spiny, I'm aware you said that in your response to zoid, but it doesn't match up with my own observation of sit-down places in the Loop disappearing left and right.
It's almost like you're saying, "Who you gonna believe, me or your lyin' eyes?"
toria wrote:... there was place called the Dill Pickle that was either on Jackson or Van Buren.
phaseolus wrote:toria wrote:... there was place called the Dill Pickle that was either on Jackson or Van Buren.
I used to love that place! One of my college friends took us there when we all took a day trip to explore Chicago, and he sold it to the rest of us as the site of The Blues Brothers' apartment. I think the whole building explodes late in the movie. After that trip I made it a point to eat there whenever I was in the neighborhood.
The Harold Washington Library is across the street from where this used to be, right?
spinynorman99 wrote:phaseolus wrote:toria wrote:... there was place called the Dill Pickle that was either on Jackson or Van Buren.
I used to love that place! One of my college friends took us there when we all took a day trip to explore Chicago, and he sold it to the rest of us as the site of The Blues Brothers' apartment. I think the whole building explodes late in the movie. After that trip I made it a point to eat there whenever I was in the neighborhood.
The Harold Washington Library is across the street from where this used to be, right?
It was at Van Buren, just west of State Street (where the crappy Pritzker Park is now).
Evil Ronnie wrote:Chicago once supported two downtown Jewish city clubs...The Standard Club and The Covenant Club. The Covenant club has been gone for at least 20 years and Standard has been declining since the '08 meltdown. Different priorities for the younger generation of downtown workers.
Chicago’s elite Standard Club to close May 1