I've always been a fan, but my normal routes no longer take me by there, so I haven't been in for over a year at least. Recently found myself heading up Michigan Ave. on a bus, miraculously ahead of schedule, and impulsively jumped out as we got to that stop.
Really, for the North Mich. address, the prices for most things are incredibly reasonable. I had just been to Bari a few days before, and the sub-prices are perfectly comperable, as is the quality, imho.
Where your avg. olive "bar" is at $10/lb. or more at Whole F. or TI, they are much less here, and priced by variety, rather than across the board. They don't have quite the range of the larger stores (Bari's cerignola were gorgeous and delicious), but what's there is as good and cheaper.
Their antipasto salad comprised artichoke hearts, ginormous marinated mushrooms, olives and red pepper. No bulking it out with celery chunks as filler. Came in at $7.50/lb or less.
They've always had D'amato bread and some others. This time my eye was caught by a huge loaf---more like 2 large rounds fused together looking rather like a pair of Botero buttocks. Must have weight 2.5 lbs. In a bag. No label of any kind. $2.99. It turned out to be marvelously crusty/tough/chewy on the outside and med. dense crumb inside. And with all the 'artisan' breads around for $4 per lb. loaf, it seemed like the bargain of the century.
Took home a pound of mixed cookies. These are the same mixed butter cookies (style-wise) that you see in most bakeries: sandwich cookies, thumbprints, nut crescents. But at $10/lb. they're several dollars cheaper than Swedish Bakery, Sel Marie, and the like, and I think they stack up well in comparison.
Finally, the deli case held a Canadian-made "porchetta" that I had never seen before. Pricey at $12.99/lb. but I love it. Salty, flavorful, firm, moist. As with prosciutto, a few thin slices go a long way. I can't vouch for it's Roman authenticity because it's been 14 years since I tasted real Roman porchetta. But it's darn good on its own terms.
Things you can get elsewhere (various cheeses, dried pasta, oil) are no bargain. But the things that are theirs alone seem to me a great value. Service was prompt, cheerful, and expert.
L'Appetito
875 N Michigan Av, 30 E. Huron
Chicago, IL
"Strange how potent cheap music is."