Watching ‘The Bear’? Here’s where to find a taste of Chicago around L.A.
It took “The Bear” to jump-start the popularity of the Italian beef, one of Chicago’s most iconic dishes, here in Los Angeles and beyond. But now that it has, the floodgates have opened. The world is finding out just how comforting, flavorful and craveable the city’s cuisine can be.
There’s the razor-thin-sliced beef nestled against hot giardiniera in an Italian beef — the sandwich that Carmy, Sydney, Richie, Tina, Marcus and others serve on the hit FX dramedy, which just released its third season. Then there are the acidic pops of sport peppers and pickle spears in a celery-salt-dusted Chicago dog, neon with green relish and brightened by onions and tomatoes. Rich, gooey deep-dish pizzas are so hefty that the takeout boxes could be used as free weights, while the thinner tavern-style pies — cut into squares for easy sharing — make for an ideal communal meal. While some of these items are more difficult to find in L.A., they can be found flourishing if you know where to look.
That delicious-looking Italian beef Carmy makes in ‘The Bear’? It was created by chefs Courtney Storer and Matty Matheson. Storer shows us how to make one at home.
“I think the show kind of put that [Italian beef] on the map and let everybody know about it, that it’s a delicacy,” said John Grondorf, who operates Tiny’s Hi-Dive: a “high-class dive bar” and his ode to Chicago. “But also, there’s a lot of Midwesterners and Chicagoans that live in Los Angeles. They came out in full force [when we opened]. We don’t have just Chicagoans; there are people from Wisconsin, Michigan — they’re all coming because they want a taste of home, and we try to give them a little bit of that.”
To the casual observer these dishes might appear simple: roast some beef, throw it on a roll with some giardiniera, or slide a hot dog into a bun with some relish and pickle — but the devil’s in the details. How thinly are they slicing the beef? Is it cooked in the jus? How hefty and pillowy is the bread? What brand of relish and giardiniera is that? How wet is the sandwich, and do I get a choice? Where’s the celery salt? Is the hot dog bun steamed, or not?
At Pasadena’s Institute of Culinary Education and Santa Monica’s Pasjoli, ‘The Bear’s’ Jeremy Allen White sharpened his skills to play a chef.
These can make all the difference to native Midwesterners and the discerning palate.
“Chicagoans are fanatically protective of their foods,” former L.A. Times Food columnist Lucas Kwan Peterson once wrote, adding, “We Chicagoans hear what you say about us and our food. We hear every little gibe and good-natured insult.”
Chicagoan Courtney Storer, the culinary producer of “The Bear,” worked tirelessly to nail the recipes used for the show and continues to make the occasional Italian beef around L.A. through her pop-up, Coco’s To Go-Go. She’ll be popping up with legendary Chicago beef shop Mr. Beef — which helped inspire “The Bear” — this weekend. You’ll be able to find Mr. Beef’s iconic Italian beef sandwiches at the West Third Street location of Uncle Paulie’s Deli on Saturday and Sunday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., with no preorders and no online delivery orders. “Old school,” said Uncle Paulie’s co-founder Paulie James.
Sales are up for the juicy, hefty Italian beef sandwich across Los Angeles.
If you can’t make it to this weekend’s pop-up, there are a fortunate number of L.A. and Orange County restaurateurs and bar owners — be they from Chicago or simply devotees of the cuisine — who pay attention to the intricacies. And because this is L.A., it’s also possible to find gluten-free tavern-style pies and vegan Chicago dogs. Here are 13 spots to find a taste of the Windy City’s specialties across our own city, with pizza puffs, gravy bread and Malört included.
Unlike the restaurant in ‘The Bear,’ daily menu changes bring calm, not chaos at Chez Panisse, one of our great American restaurants.
Coco's To Go-Go
Doughbox
The Escondite
Fresh Brothers Pizza
Gino's East of Chicago
Juicy J's
Larry's Chili Dog
Masa of Echo Park
Mustard's Chicago Style Eatery
Portillo's
Rance's Chicago Pizza
Rita's Deluxe
Tiny's Hi-Dive
“You can’t be a Chicago bar and not make the things that are staples,” said co-owner John Grondorf, who grew up in Chicago before moving to Los Angeles. “We’re very legit. If we’re gonna do it, we’re gonna do it the right way.”
He and his girlfriend, co-owner Kelly McLaren, import the buns, the peppers, the relish and the Vienna Beef from Chicago, and they’re such purists that even the rolls in the Philly cheesesteak are from the cherished Amoroso’s Baking Co. in Philadelphia. During the pandemic, with less traffic on the roads, they frequently trekked to Portillo’s and dreamt of opening their own, closer, bar that would offer these delights — and then, in 2022, they did.
Eat your way across L.A.
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