Tyler Nickell

Over the last several months, the Weekly has dispatched writers to explore the long-lived and fledgling culinary institutions of the South Side, from Calumetā€™s beloved bridge-side fish stand to a newly opened Bronzeville taco shop, from sprouting vegetable gardens to well-worn restaurant booths. The resulting stories are ones that record the resonances of tradition embedded in the new, and innovation embedded in the old. One writer writes about the ā€œrenaissanceā€ of regional Chinese cooking in Bridgeport, while another reports on how houses of worship are incorporating urban agriculture into long-standing food justice projects. A third traces the legacy of the late Jolyn Robichaux of Baldwin Ice Cream by interviewing a younger generation of Black entrepreneurs shaped by Robichauxā€™s persistence as much as by Baldwinā€™s hearty ice cream cones.

We harbor no illusions that in this, our second-ever Food Issue, the Weekly has done anything more than trace out a slightly broader swath of the vibrant and complex cultural network that is the South Side foodscape. Think of the articles, illustrations, and interviews that follow as a second round of samplingsā€”stories which we are grateful to our neighbors for sharing with us, and which we are proud in turn to share with you.

✶ ✶ ✶ ✶

Journey to the West: Chinese Restaurants in Bridgeport (Isabelle Lim)

Theyā€™re building the small corners of Bridgeport that they can call home, and with each day and each dish, slowly reshaping a neighborhood.

Tradition in the Kitchen (Michael Wasney)

ā€œWhen are you going to do the next class?ā€

Italian Done Right (Bridget Gamble)

ā€œWhatā€™d I tell you,ā€ she said. ā€œBetter than family.ā€

Cultivating Faith in Food (Michael Wasney)

Several garden plots at a time.

Hopping Around the Breweries (South Side Weekly)

All the information you need about the South Sideā€™s very own craft beer.

Around the South Side in Three Drinks (Emeline Posner)

Ginger, nuts, and ā€œiced teaā€

Calumet Fisheries (Christopher Good)

In an era of health food, Calumet Fisheries is devoid of pretensionā€”no seating, no bathroom, no credit cards, no nonsense.

Peachy PerfectĀ (Lewis Page)

The success isnā€™t effortless. Peachā€™s menu items are purposefully crafted, diverging from the standard diner fare.

Not Your Mother’s Tamales (Maria Babich)

ā€œI mean, most people love nachos. So why not pop a tamale right on top of there?ā€

The Varied Veganism of the South Side (Michelle Gan)

Three vegan restaurateurs discuss their origins and aims.

An Unlikely Love Story (Mira Chauhan)

ā€œLove is what this community needs more of.ā€

Breaking the Freezer Barrier (Rachel Kim)

ā€œI just want to continue the legacy that she laid down.ā€

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