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Hot
cakes
Batter up for our take on the best pancakes in town
By Phil Vettel
Tribune restaurant critic
Published January 12, 2006
Today we salute the noble pancake, that
syrup-topped breakfast staple that
earns sneers from dieters and cheers from just about
everybody else.
There's nothing like a great pancake--piping hot, uniformly
light brown with an inner texture like a fine bakery cake.
At once self-sufficient and versatile, pancakes are great
adorned with a pat of sweet butter and a drizzle of maple
syrup, and yet they work brilliantly with fresh fruit,
flavored syrups, confectioners' sugar and candied
pecans--sometimes all at once.
I get hungry just thinking about them--or I would, if I
hadn't been eating pancakes for breakfast for the better
part of the last three weeks. That's not blood currently
coursing through my veins; it's strawberry syrup.
A lot of independent restaurants--Red Apple in Carol Stream,
Lou Mitchell's in the city--make superior hotcakes. But for
this story, I focused on the multi-unit pancake houses
scattered about the city and suburbs. Why? Because there
always seems to be one close by. They're packed with
customers, especially on weekends, and the price is always
right.
Here are my favorite (and not-so-favorite) pancake houses:
Blueberry Hill Pancake House
Location visited: 7340 S. Illinois Highway 83, Darien,
630-734-1300
Other locations: Aurora, Bridgeview, LaGrange, Homewood;
www.blueberryonline.net
Comments: If the reliable buttermilk pancakes at this comfy,
country-cozy restaurant don't thrill you, at the very least
they'll put you in a happy mood. The pancakes are tasty and
thirsty; I particularly like the blueberry-banana pancakes,
which fill every inch of the plate.
Flapjack rating: Three (flippers)
IHOP
Location visited: 1137 S. Mannheim Rd., Westchester,
708-343-4420
Other locations: Matteson (24 hours), 38 others in Chicago
area; www.ihop.com
Comments: The first time I visited an IHOP is when my Uncle
Al treated my family after church one Sunday. All those
pancakes and five varieties of syrup--I was in heaven. The
syrups that wowed me more than 30 years ago seem too sugary
and artificial these days--the electric-pink strawberry
syrup is particularly disturbing--but IHOP continues to
produce pancakes that are fluffy and light, if a little
bland. Best of all, IHOP is conducting an "All you can eat"
pancake promotion through Feb. 19; start with a $4.99
five-flapjack stack (or breakfast combo) and you can eat
until--well, I guess we'll find out, won't we?
Flapjack rating: Two (flippers)
Lumes Pancake House
Location visited: 9060 W. 159th St., Orland Park,
708-226-0777
Other locations: Batavia, Chicago, Frankfort, Palos Heights,
Villa Park
Comments: There isn't a Lumes on every corner, but if you
drive around the south suburbs it can feel like it. Bright,
clean and very popular, Lumes offers buttermilk pancakes,
crepes, blintzes and waffles with all manner of fruit
toppings, including cinnamon-apple and cherries. The
confectioners'-sugar-dusted pancakes are fine plain,
however, and for the sturdy (and patient) there are
oven-baked pancakes that take 20 to 40 minutes to make. One
of them, the Signature Baby, arrives as a large puffy bowl
filled with chopped fresh fruit. I'm not sure you can call
it a pancake, exactly, but it tastes OK. I prefer the
regular flapjacks here.
Flapjack rating: Three (flippers)
Original Pancake House
Location visited: 531 N. LaGrange Rd., LaGrange Park,
708-354-2112
Other locations: Chicago, Oak Forest, Oak Park, Park Ridge,
others; www.orginalpancakehouse.com
Comments: This chain dates to 1953, and its sourdough-yeast
pancakes never disappoint. The cakes are light and have the
texture of a good bakery-store cake. Order the strawberry
pancakes and you'll get strawberry syrup, which is really
thickened strawberry juice and tastes terrific. Maple syrup,
served warm, is always available as well. The LaGrange Park
location isn't much on looks, but oh, those pancakes.
Flapjack rating: Four (flippers)
Pancake Cafe
Location visited: 1264 State St., Lemont, 630-243-9505.
Other locations: Naperville, several in Wisconsin (same
menu, different owners); www.pancakecafe.com
Comments: The Lemont operation, the only one owned by TV
weatherman Andy Avalos, impresses with its warm good looks,
piped-in classical music and other homey touches. The big
sellers here are the oversized baked pancakes, including a
banana-pecan version that's a killer. In addition to regular
coffee, there's Andy's Blend, a signature hazelnut coffee
that's so popular the restaurant sells it by the bag.
Flapjack rating: Four (flippers)
BEST BET
Walker Bros. Original Pancake House
Location visited: 825 Dundee Rd., Arlington Heights,
847-392-6600.
Other locations: Glenview, Highland Park, Lake Zurich,
Lincolnshire, Wilmette; www.walkerbrosoph.com
Comments: Although part of the Original Pancake House chain,
Ray Walker's franchises do things a little differently--and
to my mind, a little better. The blueberry pancakes here are
the best I've had in my life, absolute hotcake heaven, and
the banana pancakes drizzled with apricot glaze are just as
good. Indulge in the big, baked apple pancake if you dare
(it feeds at least two), or take a frozen one home for a
morning when you don't feel like leaving the house.
Flapjack rating: Five (flippers)
- - -
A short stack of flapjack bests
Most creative pancakes: Orange, with locations in Printer's
Row (75 W. Harrison St., 312-447-1000) and Lincoln Park
(3231 N. Clark St., 773-549-4400), offers a changes-weekly
pancake flight ($10.95) of four thematically linked
flapjacks. Past toppings have included champagne-tequila
syrup with Pop Rocks, and popcorn, chocolate-covered raisins
and marshmallows.
Best Out-of-Pancake-House experience:
Buy a Walker Bros. Frozen Apple Pancake ($7.95 at any
location, as well as Sunset Foods stores), heat according to
package directions and enjoy. The topping may not turn out
quite as crisply as it does in the restaurant, but the
flavors are true.
Fanciest pancake house: The 6,000-square-foot,
marble-trimmed palace that is Coco's Pancake House (9505 S.
Roberts Rd., Hickory Hills, 708-599-7838) has to be seen to
be fully appreciated. Come for the soaring Corinthian
columns, stay for the hotcakes.
Best throwback decor: Walker Bros.'
Arlington Heights location (825 Dundee Rd., 847-392-6600)
evokes a '70s fern bar with its oak-clad walls, leaded
glass, antique-look lamps and brass trim.
Best pancake you can (theoretically) eat with your hands:
The pancake sandwich at The Breakfast Club (1381 W. Hubbard
St., 312-666-3166) is a two-fisted layering of pancakes and
meat (bacon, sausage or ham), topped with an egg (any
style). And no, nobody eats it like a sandwich.
Lightest. Pancakes. Ever. I swear, the pure maple syrup is
the only thing keeping the aptly named Heavenly Hots stuck
to the plate at Ina's (1235 W. Randolph St., 312-226-8227).
Most expensive pancakes: In a quick survey of Chicago's
upscale hotel restaurants, the priciest pancakes we found
are the $16 Chocolate-Chunk pancakes served at the
Ritz-Carlton Cafe, Ritz-Carlton Chicago (160 E. Pearson St.,
312-573-5160).
Most indulgent pancakes: If there's a richer concoction than
the banana and macadamia-nut pancakes, smothered in
white-chocolate anglaise and warm maple cream, at Bongo Room
(1152 S. Wabash Ave., 312-291-0100; 1470 N. Milwaukee Ave.,
773-489-0690), we don't wanna know about it.
-- Phil Vettel
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pvettel@tribune.com
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