Kennyz wrote:And then, oh and then... to scoop some marinated vegetables with just an everyday spoon so that they land directly on top rest of the ingredients!
Kennyz wrote:Are you people kidding me? They slice a store bought piece of bread in half and top it with processed, pre-sliced deli meat. It is admittedly a good sandwich . . .
ronnie_suburban wrote:Is this enough to warrant a GNR? Personally, I'm still undecided. It's one of my top 2 Italian-style subs in the city (Fontano's on Polk being the other) but after we left Bari, we headed to Nhu Lan Bakery, where, quite honestly, this sandwich was surpassed in many respects. That doesn't mean it's not worthy but it does eat away at Bari's specialness, to some degree.
jimswside wrote:does Bari cut the meat for each sandwich to order, or is i presliced? if it is presliced I would be disappointed.
Kennyz wrote:jimswside wrote:does Bari cut the meat for each sandwich to order, or is i presliced? if it is presliced I would be disappointed.
presliced, along with the presliced cheese, presliced tomatoes, and preshredded lettuce.
jimswside wrote:Kennyz wrote:jimswside wrote:does Bari cut the meat for each sandwich to order, or is i presliced? if it is presliced I would be disappointed.
presliced, along with the presliced cheese, presliced tomatoes, and preshredded lettuce.
thats pretty sad.
Kennyz wrote:jimswside wrote:does Bari cut the meat for each sandwich to order, or is i presliced? if it is presliced I would be disappointed.
presliced, along with the presliced cheese, presliced tomatoes, and preshredded lettuce.
G Wiv wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote:Is this enough to warrant a GNR? Personally, I'm still undecided. It's one of my top 2 Italian-style subs in the city (Fontano's on Polk being the other) but after we left Bari, we headed to Nhu Lan Bakery, where, quite honestly, this sandwich was surpassed in many respects. That doesn't mean it's not worthy but it does eat away at Bari's specialness, to some degree.
Ron,
I don't really see how the deliciousness of Nhu Lan diminishes Bari subs, plenty of room in our artery blocked hearts for more than one sandwich. That said, Bari and Nhu Lan are apples and oranges, chicken Boti at Khan to Tony's Three Chili Chicken at Lao Sze Chuan, maki roll at Tampopo to Arancini at Riviera.
To my way of thinking the main thing Bari and Nhu Lan have in common is the shape of the plate to mouth delivery vehicle.
Enjoy,
Gary
aschie30 wrote:Kennyz wrote:jimswside wrote:does Bari cut the meat for each sandwich to order, or is i presliced? if it is presliced I would be disappointed.
presliced, along with the presliced cheese, presliced tomatoes, and preshredded lettuce.
There is many a time -- many a time -- at Bari when they do, indeed, slice the meats and cheeses to order. While I don't doubt that at busy times they slice meats in bulk from their deli case to accommodate that demand, but that is a far cry from what you're implying, if not stating outright, with your comparison to Quizno's. ... I don't know how often you've been to Bari in your lifetime, but this answer just states a lack of experience, at best, irresponsibility, at worst. Tsk, tsk.
Jefe wrote:Fresh baked bread from D'amatos plus high quality imported meats plus house made giardienera equals arguably my favorite sandwich in Chicago, others think so too. Every time I embark on a long distance car trip, an Italian is my bag lunch (and dinner too depending on the breadth of the journey). Also perfect for a hunger relieving lunch in the middle of a particularly arduous workday. Not a bad little European deli either, a stop every time I make pizzas for fresh Italian sausage and imported cured this and thats.
viewtopic.php?f=16&t=2073&hilit=bari
Kennyz wrote:I think I still have a problem with this. We can call Bari a "restaurant" if we want, but serving prepared food is a small part of its operation. It is primarily a retail store, and not a particularly good one. I know there are other cases of GNR's where not everything on the menu is a hit, but I think this really stretches that too far.
Kennyz wrote:I just think that a GNR winner should be good at whatever its primary mission is.
aschie30 wrote: the lines down the aisles for its sandwiches and the number of guys working the sandwich portion of the business
gleam wrote:Bari's subs pale in comparison to those from the nearby GNR Graziano's. Frankly I'd rather see Graziano's get both GNRs and Bari get none.
gleam wrote:I know you aren't supposed to compare GNRs against GNRs, but it's really hard not to in this case.
ronnie_suburban wrote:I'm not exactly sure where I stand on Bari. Yes, I love their giardiniera but even though I still like them, I'm not nearly as into their sandwiches as I once was, mainly because there are many of the same type I enjoy more (Fontano's, Graziano's, Al & Joe's, Minelli's, etc.) The best aspect of the sandwiches might be the bread, which comes another GNR. I'm neutral (leaning toward no) on renewal.
=R=