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Arthur Treacher's fish and chips, one location remains [1]; Aunt Jemima's Kitchen; Big Daddy's Restaurants; Bikinis Sports Bar & Grill; Bill Knapp's; Blue Boar Cafeterias; Boston Sea Party
Brasserie Jo was a Chicago restaurant that received a James Beard Foundation Award for Best New Restaurant in 1996. Jean Joho was the founding chef. [1] It closed in 2010 after being open for 15 years. [2] A pop-up, carry-out only option opened in 2020. [3]
Chez Paul was a French restaurant in Chicago, Illinois.Established in 1945 by Paul Contos, Chez Paul became famous under Paul's son, Bill. When it was open, it was the oldest French restaurant in Chicago, [1] and was only exceeded in prestige by Le Francais (which is also closed).
Tru was a French restaurant located in the Streeterville neighborhood in Chicago. Tru was opened in 1999 by Rick Tramonto and Gale Gand with the backing of Rich Melman's Lettuce Entertain You Enterprises. It was a Michelin one-star restaurant since the Chicago guidebook's inception in 2011; in 2017 the restaurant was awarded two Michelin stars. [1]
The James Charnley Residence, also known as the Charnley-Persky House, is a historic house museum at 1365 North Astor Street in the near northside Gold Coast neighborhood of Chicago, Illinois. Designed in 1891 and completed in 1892, it is one of the few surviving residential works of Adler & Sullivan .
The Chicago Pizza Pie Factory was a chain of pizza restaurants. The chain originated in Crown Passage (off Pall Mall) as The Chicago Pizza Pie Factory and was started by entrepreneur Bob Payton in 1976–7. [1] The London establishment also had a bar. This was the start of a series of restaurants forming the My Kinda Town chain. [2]
Acadia opened in 2011, and was founded by Ryan McCaskey, a Vietnam-born chef who had been adopted by a Chicago couple as part of Operation Babylift. [11] He learned to cook at an early age and spent summers in Maine as a child. [12] McCaskey was executive chef and sole owner of the restaurant. [13]
Gale Gand is a Chicago-based pastry chef, cookbook author, television personality, and winner of the 2001 James Beard Foundation Award for Outstanding Pastry Chef. Gand was the host of the Food Network show Sweet Dreams. [1]