Kennyz wrote:Fresh produce is vital in Italian cooking, and I just can't understand how a place that is supposed to be of Italian mind can have no shame in carrying the crap that Bari carries.
Kenny- You're from the East Coast. You know that it is dotted with ramshackle Italian grocers like Bari that focus on sandwiches and a smattering of prepared foods, but also contain a serviceable, at best, grocery goods area attached. Bari, and places like it that I just mentioned, are
not about some faux Disney-esque attempt to recreate a Tuscan grocer and have a store that completely services anyone who wants to cook Italian at home with perfect, seasonal finocchio and the best artisinal olive oil, cured anchovies just flown in from Sicily and sweet aged balsamics from the best producers in Modena. Bari is the
real deal, from an Italian-American standpoint. That you want it to be something else,
i.e., the best Italy has to offer, kind of makes me sad. What sandwiches with processed meats? Those with Prosciutto? Salami? I guess those meats are processed, sure.
I don't think anyone who takes two steps into Bari will be confused as to what their business is about. Anyone who's there at 5:15 and sees the guys there who play softball during the summer at nearby Eckhart Park and are picking up trays of sandwiches; or the old Italians in from the suburbs on a Saturday afternoon to catch up and pick up a sangwich; or the lines going down the aisle from the back sandwich counter. I can't imagine that, if it gets a GNR, people will be disappointed to learn that Bari is not, in fact, the finest source for Italian home cookery in Chicago.
To me, Bari is one of those dying, urban neighborhood gems and I would be very sad to see it go away and replaced with some chef-of-the-moment attempt to do exactly what you're advocating. It would be boring, less soulful, and probably not that much more satisfying, food-wise, at least to me. That's why I support Bari as a GNR. To me this is a shoo-in for its sandwich operation, but also for some other prepared items, like its vin cotto. I'm not as enamored with their prepared giardiniera as others, or their peppers, but so be it. They're also my (and, I believe, Coalfire's) primary source for Italian sausage.
Anyhow, Bari has been expressly nominated for its prepared foods, so why do we keep talking about its produce and its packaged goods and produce?